Being gay in the 50s

The BBC's First Homosexual: How we made s work into a play

He decided the new function needed a narrative and a nature for the audience to invest in.

"Firstly, there's a concrete story, which is of the internal struggle in the BBC to build the documentary," he says.

"There's only one man in the whole programme who talks openly about same sex experiences and he's paraded as a 'cured homosexual'.

"So, I wanted an actual lesbian to be the centre of the play. And that's the second story, which I've invented, of Tom, a working-class shop assistant from Scunthorpe.

"He acts as our window on to the period. Through a series of monologues, he takes us with him as he discovers and experiments with his sexuality.

"He's in a void though as the culture around him tells him almost nothing about homosexuality, except for reports of a few high-profile men being arrested.

"His journey leads him ultimately to listening to the broadcast of the documentary on the BBC House Service in and we see its life-changing impact

The journalist Peter Wildeblood may not be a domesticated name in Britain today, but he was in Along with the wealthy Lord Montagu and Michael Pitt-Rivers, Wildeblood was sent to prison for lgbtq+ offences in a case that shocked Britain. His case is the subject of Against The Statute, a film premiered at the BFI Flare motion picture festival and aired on BBC2 to mark the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality.

The post-war period saw a major upswing in the number of such cases coming before the courts in the UK and the US. This was not because men were having more sex with other men, but because the authorities on both sides of the Atlantic were acting with increased vigour to grab them. In , the American biologist Alfred Kinsey and his team of scientists had published Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, with its shock findings that same-sex incidents were widespread across the population.

Panic reactions, including shots to identify secret homosexuals hiding in the closet, were spurred by fears that the Soviet Union was using information about private lives t

Government Persecution of the LGBTQ Community is Widespread

The s were perilous times for individuals who fell outside of society’s legally allowed norms relating to gender or sexuality. There were many names for these individuals, including the clinical “homosexual,” a term popularized by pioneering German psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing. In the U.S., professionals often used the term “invert.” In the midth Century, many cities formed “vice squads” and police often labeled the people they arrested “sexual perverts.” The government’s preferred term was “deviant,” which came with legal consequences for anyone seeking a career in public service or the military. “Homophile” was the term preferred by some early activists, small networks of women and men who yearned for group and found creative ways to resist legal and societal persecution. 

With draft eligibility officially lowered from 21 to 18 in , World War II brought together millions of people from around the country–many of whom were departing their home states for the first time–to pack the ranks of the military and t

How LGBT Civil Servants Became General Enemy No. 1 in the s

As the search for male lover State Department employees intensified, so did the pressure. People were questioned, publicly humiliated and mocked by investigators. They were encouraged to denounce others and describe suspected homosexuals. And in , President Eisenhower signed Executive Request , which defined a laundry list of characteristics as security risks, including “sexual perversion.” This was interpreted as a ban on homosexual employees, and even more firings took place. Publicly humiliated and devastated by the decline of their income and their reputations, some even killed themselves.

Others, like Frank Kameny, fought support. Fired in , he petitioned the Supreme Court for relief in recognition of his civil rights. They declined to seize the case, so he picketed the White House. He fought to counter workplace discrimination for the rest of his animation. Kameny wasn’t the only person galvanized by the public targeting of LGBT people—in , the Stonewall Riots made gay rights a front-page issue, and the movement Kameny helped start an