Orlando Sentinel
COMING OUT, BLENDING IN
Orlando Welcomes Gays --Sort of
By Jeff Kunerth
Sentinel Staff Writer
April 14, 2002
Once
a month, domestic partners Wilbur Parrott and Bob Kingston invite about 30 gay
and lesbian friends over to watch comedies, musicals and film
classics.
For movie-night newcomers, they distinguish their south Orange
County house from all the beige-colored lookalikes on the block with a
pansy-patterned flag near the front door.
That flag is subtle enough not
to draw attention. But the rainbow-colored gay-pride flag that they used to fly
every day in Provincetown, Mass., stays tucked away.
"It can be offensive
to some, and I want to fit into the neighborhood," said Kingston, 60, who has
served as homeowners' association president, of the gay pride flag. "I would
compare it to putting a Confederate flag out."
To be gay in Central
Florida is to live a delicate balance: fitting in without denying who you are.
It's OK to be gay -- but not too gay.
"There is still an atmosphere of
'Don't get in my face with it,' " said Rich Gause, 44, a librarian at the
University of Central Florida. "I don't walk around Lake Eola holding hands with
my partner."
For much of the gay population, Orlando is the land of
live-and-let-live -- neither overtly hostile nor overly friendly. It's a place
where tolerance is based largely on gays being benign and inoffensive.
So
when members of the gay community push for an anti-discrimination ordinance in
Orlando that would give gays, lesbians and bisexuals the same employment and
housing protections as women, racial minorities and the disabled, they risk
violating that Don't Stick Out doctrine of gay life in Central Florida.
A
hearing on the ordinance is scheduled for Tuesday before Orlando's Human
Relations Board.
The ordinance is a calculated risk to seek symbolic
equality in conservative Central Florida, and it could provoke the kind of
anti-gay backlash Orlando hasn't seen since it allowed gay-pride flags to fly
from city light posts in 1998.
"The risk is confirming the fear that
discrimination based on sexual orientation would be officially sanctioned within
the city limits," said Tom Dyer, publisher of Watermark, a gay publication. "If
the votes aren't there, then gays and lesbians will know they live in a city
where the governmental body does not fully embrace them."
But even
failure is better than not trying at all, Dyer said: "If the condition of
acceptance is we must be invisible, that's not acceptance at
all."
Growing influence
The push for a gay-rights ordinance
may come with risks, but it also reflects the economic clout, political
influence and large numbers of gays in Central Florida.
The gay
community's economic impact on Orlando is found in the revitalization of
downtown neighborhoods, the creation of the gay "ViMi" business district along
Virginia and Mills avenues, and the $100 million spent by visitors who attend
Gay Days at area attractions, according to the event's sponsors.
Its
political influence is evident in the election of Patty Sheehan, a lesbian, to
the Orlando City Council and the courting of gay voters by City Council
candidates.
By the rule-of-thumb estimate that 10 percent of the
population is homosexual, there are about 160,000 gays and lesbians in the metro
area of Orange, Seminole, Osceola and Lake counties. And in the only government
tally of gays, 9,171 couples in Central Florida voluntarily identified
themselves as same-sex partners in the 2000 census.
Although concentrated
in downtown Orlando neighborhoods, same-sex couples are scattered throughout
Central Florida's cities, towns and suburbs.
Every month, gays and
lesbians from DeBary, DeLand, Deltona, Eustis, Longwood, Sanford and Ormond
Beach get together for dinner at different Central Florida restaurants. The
group, with a mailing list of 300, calls itself Over The River because everybody
comes from both sides of the St. Johns River.
For many, it's the only gay
social group between Daytona Beach and Orlando.
"It's their lifeline to
the gay community. We try to provide a safe haven in a public place," said one
of the group's organizers, who requested anonymity because of fears of reprisals
from gay-bashers.
Gays outside Orlando's downtown "Gay Town" district
often feel threatened and endangered, she said. "People in the ViMi district
live in a little cocoon. There's the gay community center, gay restaurants and
the gift store. That's not the norm."
Parallel worlds
Gays
throughout Central Florida live in parallel worlds. One is the world inside the
clubs, church walls, private homes, social activities and support-group
surroundings where they feel safe and uninhibited.
They have formed
groups that get together to watch movies, dine, play softball, bowl, sing,
dance, roller skate, discuss politics and worship.
For Bob Bella and Ross
Gentry, a weekly gay ballroom-dancing class provides an opportunity to learn to
salsa together. Before, when they took lessons aimed at straight couples, they
danced with women instead of each other. As a consequence, both learned to lead,
but neither knew how to follow.
"When I heard about this, it was like a
dream come true," said Bella, 57.
Along with the bars and nightclubs, gay
groups and activities provide sanctuaries of acceptance for homosexuals who
often think they must conceal their sexual orientation from neighbors,
co-workers, employers and landlords.
Outside those havens, it's another
world -- one of caution, vulnerability and fear.
Even those who are "out"
to friends, neighbors and family members sometimes second-guess whether they
should identify themselves to the larger community. Many curtail their
activities in the gay community for fear of being seen or
photographed.
The Joy Metropolitan Community Church, whose membership is
90 percent gay, does not publish a church directory -- in an effort to protect
the identities of its members. Few cars in the church parking lot bear any
gay-identifying bumper stickers.
Living in those two separate worlds
often starts at home, where gays first experience scorn and ostracism. For Sarah
Bapst, it began the day she told her mother she was a lesbian.
"She said,
'I love you, and you'll burn in hell,' " said Bapst, 31, a physical-therapy
manager. "I just felt very alone. My mother was ashamed of me. From that point
on, I realized you have your family of choice -- and you have your biological
family."
Many Orlando-area residents tolerate gays as long as they remain
inoffensive and invisible. Jerry Ross, a 78-year-old former rancher and citrus
grower, considers a gay bumper sticker a blatant act of homosexuals flaunting
their sexuality -- same as kissing, hugging and hand-holding.
"When I see
them kissing or caressing each other in public, it makes me nauseous," Ross
said.
Others support gay equality, but not homosexuality
itself.
"I'm a Christian, so I don't agree with what they are doing, but
I love them as individuals -- hate the sin, but love the sinner," said Sheldon
Walker, a 27-year-old YMCA worker who backs the anti-discrimination ordinance
for gays.
Although instances of violence against gays are rare in
Orlando, fears of ostracism, scorn and prejudice -- real or imagined -- do cause
gays and lesbians to modify their behavior. There are neighborhoods they prefer
and places they avoid. They know which restaurants are gay-friendly and which
are not.
"I think gays are more likely to set their own limits by not
wanting others to be uncomfortable," said Joel Strack, 42, a longtime gay
activist.
And in fact, many gays find Orlando a good place to be. George
Lytle said he has found Orlando to be far more accepting than his native Maine
or Polk County, where he worked before moving to Orlando.
When Lytle and
his partner reserved their tuxedos and registered at Target and Linens 'N Things
for their Holy Union ceremony -- the gay equivalent of a wedding -- nobody
objected that the couple consisted of two men.
"People here are more
tolerant and accepting than any place I've ever been," said Lytle, 37, who
volunteered to list himself as the bride. "It's such a great
feeling."
Disunity in the community
For some gays,
acceptance by the larger community is not as big a concern as the disunity
within the gay community itself. A common complaint of Orlando-area gays and
lesbians is that the gay community here is less unified than gay populations in
other cities.
"I just don't see us as being a very cohesive community,"
said Lee Moody, a 36-year-old computer programmer who helped start Orlando's Gay
Lesbian Bisexual Community Center of Central Florida.
Organizations exist
for lesbian black women, gay Asians, gay teenagers, gay alcoholics and jolly
overweight gay men who call their group Girth & Mirth. Yet no single group
or organization seems capable of galvanizing the community's splintered
subcultures -- whether it's for gay-pride parades, support for the Gay Lesbian
Bisexual Community Center or for Orlando's anti-discrimination
ordinance.
"It's complacent and impatient at the same time," Dyer said.
"Everybody wants something to happen -- and they want somebody else to do
it."
The community center, founded in 1987, envisions itself as the
center of the gay community, a one-stop information-and-referral service that
also serves as a safe-haven home for gay and lesbian support groups.
"It
is still the most important institution in our community," said Chris
Alexander-Manley, 44, a former executive director of the center. "The amount of
people we reach, the number of people we help, has only grown every
year."
The community center is credited with spawning the gay-pride
parade, the Orlando Gay Chorus and the Metropolitan Business Association -- all
of which are now independent organizations.
But the center has struggled
with financial support and direction in recent years, even as the gay community
has grown. The center is without an executive director and is still recovering
from an embezzlement scandal five years ago.
Even worse, some say the
center is simply irrelevant to the lives of many Orlando-area gays and
lesbians.
"Gay community centers are leftovers from the 1980s, when there
was a need for those centers," said Craig Friend, 40, assistant professor of
history at UCF. "But the gay community has become so mainstream the center's
purpose is no longer viable."
Similarly, the Central Florida Pride
Parade, which started in 1991 with 500 gays and lesbians carrying flags and
holding hands around Lake Eola, has lost support.
For the past few years,
it has been a one-woman show kept afloat by Debbie Fritts, a former vice
president of the gay community center. Part of the parade's problem, Fritts
said, is that the gay community in Orlando is fractured into small,
often-competing groups.
"There are a lot of us here, but nobody comes
out," said Fritts, 48, a finance officer. "We want to see everybody coming
together -- make it one big group and not a ton of tiny groups."
At a
recent organizational meeting for the parade, attended by eight people, Fritts
said she hoped to boost the parade's profile with greater participation, more
bands and better floats. The parade, she said, should reflect the range within
the gay community -- not just the extremes.
"I'm sorry, but a float is
not a drag queen in the back of a convertible," she told the parade's
organizers.
Much of the separation that divides the gay community
originates from the bars that cater to specific gay subcultures. "Bears" --
hairy-chested men who favor denim and leather -- have their bars. "Twinks" --
young men -- have theirs. The two seldom mix. Lesbians have their own bar that
does not admit men.
While heterosexuals also have specialized bars --
cowboy bars, reggae bars, blues bars -- bars and clubs have always played a
special role in the gay and lesbian community.
Going back to 19th-century
America, gay bars have provided privacy and freedom to homosexuals who were
ostracized, threatened, beaten and killed by those who viewed them as perverted,
wicked and sinful. Just as the churches provided blacks with safe places to
congregate during the days of segregation, bars assumed the same significance to
gays.
In fact, some gays refer to Saturday night at the bars as "going to
church." Then, the next morning, many attend services at Orlando's Joy
Metropolitan Community Church.
The church is one of 350 nationwide
spawned by a ministry that began in the gay bars. The Rev. Troy Perry started
the church in 1968 in California by recruiting gays who had been kicked out of
mainstream churches.
In her sermons, Joy MCC's the Rev.Carol Trissell
emphasizes that being gay or lesbian is only one facet of a person's
life.
"We are complex human beings with many parts to us. We don't want
to be known as Bob -- gay. Or Jane -- gay-lesbian," she preached at a recent
service. "We are on a journey to wholeness, to integrate all the different parts
of who we are together to reflect the God who created us."
Jeff
Kunerth can be reached at jkunerth@orlandosentinel.com or
407-420-5392.
Copyright © 2002, Orlando Sentinel
Close Window to Return to TBC
Web Site