Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance (ALFA) - Chris Carroll, Eleanor Smith, Lorraine Fontana - interviewed by Charlene Ball
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| - | This is Charlene Ball recording an interview | 0:02 |
| with Eleanor Smith and Lorraine Fontana | 0:06 | |
| about the Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance | 0:10 | |
| from the years 1972 to 1994. | 0:15 | |
| And I'd like to start-- | 0:20 | |
| - | Today's date. | |
| - | And today's date is April the 2nd, (laughs) 2013. | 0:23 |
| And you've already started talking | 0:28 | |
| about your early members about, | 0:32 | |
| your early memories of ALFA. | 0:33 | |
| I've got it. | 0:38 | |
| I'd like to ask you if you would like to tell, | 0:39 | |
| do you think of yourself as a Southerner, | 0:43 | |
| and did you grow up in the South? | 0:45 | |
| - | No, I don't think of myself as a Southerner, | 0:51 |
| in a way, because I did not grow up in the South. | 0:54 | |
| I grew up in the Midwest. | 0:57 | |
| I lived at Koinonia Farm down in South Georgia | 1:01 | |
| in 1973 and 1974, | 1:06 | |
| then I went away and then I moved back here about a year, | 1:09 | |
| about a year later. | 1:14 | |
| Must've been about '75. | 1:17 | |
| So I've been here ever since. | 1:19 | |
| - | When did you first join? | 1:20 |
| What about you, Lorraine? | 1:22 | |
| - | Well, I'm a Southerner now | 1:26 |
| 'cause this is where I live and I've lived | 1:28 | |
| probably more years here altogether in my life | 1:30 | |
| than anywhere else. | 1:33 | |
| But I grew up in New York City | 1:34 | |
| and I came down here after college. | 1:36 | |
| So since '68 till now, | 1:39 | |
| except for five years I was back in New York | 1:43 | |
| and a few years I was out in L.A. | 1:46 | |
| - | I was really impressed, Lorraine, | 1:49 |
| with what you wrote about how people ignored | 1:50 | |
| Southern lesbian feminist contributions, | 1:53 | |
| and how you were basically ignored | 1:56 | |
| when you went to a conference in, | 2:02 | |
| well, in the North, | 2:07 | |
| and which only two people came to your workshop. | 2:08 | |
| - | Now or then? | 2:12 |
| - | It just depends however you wanna answer. | 2:13 |
| - | She's askin' you now. | 2:17 |
| - | Are you a Southerner now and were you then? | 2:18 |
| And sit close so it can pick you up. | 2:22 | |
| - | Well, I'm afraid I probably am now. | 2:27 |
| (women laughing) | 2:29 | |
| I mean, really I've never lived | 2:31 | |
| north of the Mason-Dixon line | 2:33 | |
| so I probably don't have too much of a way | 2:35 | |
| to wiggle out of it, | 2:38 | |
| but I don't really wanna be a Southerner. (laughing) | 2:39 | |
| - | But why? | 2:44 |
| I'm gonna ask you that. | 2:45 | |
| - | Why? | |
| - | Go ahead. | 2:46 |
| - | Why not? | |
| I mean, what do you mean, why? | 2:48 | |
| You know why. | 2:49 | |
| - | Why would you not want to be a Southerner? | 2:50 |
| No, I wanna hear. | 2:51 | |
| - | 'Cause it's the most backward freakin' part | 2:52 |
| of the whole goddamn country, that's why. | 2:53 | |
| - | Ooh. | 2:55 |
| - | I'm over it. | |
| I hate 'em all. | 2:56 | |
| I hate every damn one of 'em. | 2:58 | |
| - | That sounds like those people you, | 3:00 |
| that didn't come to your panel. | 3:02 | |
| - | Yes, to me it's a non-Southern way | 3:04 |
| of looking at the South, | 3:07 | |
| as everybody here is backwards. | 3:08 | |
| It's generally a backward part of the country. | 3:10 | |
| We don't have much to say about anything. | 3:13 | |
| We're not smart enough | 3:14 | |
| to have a theoretical idea in our heads. | 3:15 | |
| I think that's generally how, | 3:19 | |
| I mean, I know that. | 3:20 | |
| I come from New York. | 3:21 | |
| - | When you were in ALFA, | 3:22 |
| did you run into that with people coming | 3:23 | |
| from out of town and joining ALFA? | 3:25 | |
| Did they-- | 3:28 | |
| - | Oh, just like me. | |
| I mean, anyone that sounds like me, | 3:29 | |
| and the Southerners here probably didn't trust a whole lot | 3:31 | |
| because of how, and also our style was so different. | 3:34 | |
| People didn't particularly like my style | 3:36 | |
| because it was such a different kind of way | 3:39 | |
| of relating to people, being obnoxious, you know. | 3:41 | |
| - | No. | 3:46 |
| - | Yeah, really. | |
| - | (laughing) Okay. | 3:47 |
| - | But the example that you were referring to, | 3:49 |
| this is a good example. | 3:51 | |
| When Vicki Gabriner, Sally Gabb, and I | 3:53 | |
| were all three founding mothers, | 3:57 | |
| as we call ourselves, of ALFA, | 4:00 | |
| along with a bunch of other women, | 4:01 | |
| we went to the CLAG's, | 4:03 | |
| CUNY CLAG's Dykes in the '70s | 4:07 | |
| America, with a KKK, | 4:12 | |
| America with Lesbians in the '70s. | 4:14 | |
| And it was great. | 4:18 | |
| We thought, oh wow, this is a great conference | 4:20 | |
| so we wanted to go. | 4:21 | |
| And we put in a submission for doing a workshop | 4:23 | |
| and it was gonna be about, | 4:26 | |
| in fact, Sally was gonna go at one point | 4:28 | |
| and she couldn't, so she helped | 4:30 | |
| write the little blurb about the workshop, which is-- | 4:31 | |
| - | So when was the conference exactly? | 4:34 |
| - | It was a few years ago. | 4:36 |
| And now I'd have to look up the date. | 4:37 | |
| - | It wasn't in the '70s. | 4:39 |
| It was a retrospect-- | 4:40 | |
| - | No, it was a few years ago. | 4:41 |
| And yeah, it was about looking back. | 4:42 | |
| Older women and young women looking at, | 4:45 | |
| what about those lesbian feminists and dykes | 4:47 | |
| back in the '70s? | 4:49 | |
| But our workshop was, Sharon named it. | 4:52 | |
| I think I had a little problem with the name | 4:56 | |
| 'cause it was supposed to be a little sarcastic or somethin' | 4:57 | |
| but it didn't really seem like it. | 5:00 | |
| It said, lesbians in the '70s in the city too busy to hate. | 5:01 | |
| (woman laughing) | 5:07 | |
| Anyway, but clearly it was about Atlanta | 5:10 | |
| so it was subtitled talking about Atlanta, | 5:11 | |
| lesbian feminism. | 5:13 | |
| And this was a huge conference with, | 5:15 | |
| you know, many hundreds of women. | 5:17 | |
| We had two people other than ourselves, | 5:19 | |
| two people that showed up to our workshop. | 5:22 | |
| And I think it was a lot because, you know, | 5:26 | |
| Southern lesbians, ALFA. (blows through lips) | 5:28 | |
| And not that people knew about us or had any idea, | 5:31 | |
| but there were much more interesting things to go to. | 5:33 | |
| There were lots of things happening every hour. | 5:36 | |
| So yeah, it felt, | 5:39 | |
| and it hurt, but it didn't surprise me | 5:41 | |
| as I thought about it. | 5:44 | |
| I said, ah, typical. | 5:45 | |
| Who wants to hear about women | 5:48 | |
| who think Atlanta is a city too busy to hate? | 5:50 | |
| Racist assholes. | 5:53 | |
| That's probably the thought pattern that went on. | 5:55 | |
| - | Well, getting back to ALFA, | 5:57 |
| Cris, you just joined us. | 5:58 | |
| What brought you to ALFA, and when? | 6:01 | |
| - | 1976, Elizabeth Knowlton. | 6:05 |
| (women laughing) | 6:08 | |
| That would be the answer. | 6:12 | |
| - | Okay. | |
| - | Elizabeth brought me to Atlanta. | 6:14 |
| - | How did Elizabeth bring you to Atlanta? | 6:17 |
| - | Well, she lived down here | 6:19 |
| and she owed me a favor, a big favor. (laughs) | 6:22 | |
| Anyway, you know Elizabeth and I, | 6:28 | |
| Elizabeth had brought me out in North Carolina | 6:29 | |
| and then she had moved down here | 6:33 | |
| a year, a year and a half later. | 6:38 | |
| And I must've had her address. | 6:40 | |
| I guess I did. | 6:43 | |
| Or I got it. | 6:46 | |
| But I think I must've had it somehow. | 6:47 | |
| Anyway, so I was ready to get out of Durham | 6:51 | |
| for a lotta reasons, | 6:56 | |
| but mostly because I had been straight | 6:57 | |
| in Durham mostly and I wanted to be gay. | 6:58 | |
| And it seemed like Atlanta was gonna be | 7:01 | |
| a better place to be gay than to be straight. (laughs) | 7:04 | |
| Or for me, at least. | 7:07 | |
| And so I wrote Elizabeth | 7:11 | |
| and I can't remember exactly how I phrased it | 7:12 | |
| but I'm pretty sure I said, | 7:16 | |
| "I'm moving to Atlanta, can I stay with you?" | 7:17 | |
| (women laughing) | 7:19 | |
| And I did, for a few days. | 7:22 | |
| And then, of course, Elizabeth immediately | 7:25 | |
| found me a place. | 7:26 | |
| (phone ringing) | ||
| Actually, the first place I lived was-- | 7:27 | |
| - | Go, go grab-- | 7:29 |
| - | No, I'm waiting. | 7:30 |
| - | Actually, the first place I, | 7:32 |
| was that the first place? | 7:35 | |
| Well anyway, Elizabeth soon, | 7:37 | |
| with all her many connections, | 7:39 | |
| the first thing I did was I sublet | 7:41 | |
| a little apartment from Joanne, | 7:43 | |
| oh crap, what was her last name? | 7:46 | |
| The childcare person, you know who I mean. | 7:48 | |
| Dark hair, frizzy. | 7:52 | |
| - | Oh yeah. | 7:54 |
| - | Rainey. | |
| From Joanne Rainey. | 7:56 | |
| And I sublet her apartment. | 7:57 | |
| I don't know where she was off to. | 7:59 | |
| And then in September I moved into a basement apartment | 8:01 | |
| that Saralynn and Cynthia had | 8:04 | |
| in the house they rented, | 8:06 | |
| and I lived there for maybe a year or a little less. | 8:08 | |
| - | So the founding mothers of ALFA | 8:11 |
| were you, Sally Gabb, and Vicki Gabriner. | 8:13 | |
| - | Oh, you wanna list names now? | 8:16 |
| Wow. | 8:18 | |
| - | Well, was it a large group? | 8:19 |
| - | I'm sorry, this is the kinda stuff | 8:21 |
| that doesn't come in my memory very well. | 8:23 | |
| I have to have-- | 8:25 | |
| - | I thought Micky was one of the founding mothers, no? | 8:27 |
| - | No. | 8:29 |
| - | She came later? | |
| - | No, yes. | 8:30 |
| Founding mothers included people that were, | 8:31 | |
| women that were in gay liberation, | 8:36 | |
| women that were... | 8:38 | |
| I don't know if any women were in women's liberation here. | 8:42 | |
| But they were women who had been | 8:45 | |
| in other social justice movements. | 8:46 | |
| There were bunches of women who went on to events, | 8:49 | |
| the Venceremos Brigade. | 8:50 | |
| Okay. | 8:54 | |
| Alice, and I forget her last name. | 8:56 | |
| - | Alice Ellen? | 8:58 |
| - | No. | |
| Not Alice Teeter, another Alice. | 9:00 | |
| You know, instead of writing down names | 9:03 | |
| that I can't remember, | 9:05 | |
| I will give you a list. | 9:06 | |
| - | That's okay. | 9:07 |
| I guess the idea I wanted is, | 9:09 | |
| it was a group of women larger than two or three. | 9:10 | |
| - | Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes. | 9:13 |
| - | Okay, great. | |
| Were you all involved in women's liberation | 9:16 | |
| or what other kinds of things | 9:18 | |
| were you involved with that led you to ALFA? | 9:19 | |
| - | I was just gonna say that I came down, | 9:23 |
| I didn't mention when I came down, I think it was '74, | 9:27 | |
| and I was in Durham also, | 9:30 | |
| but I hadn't met up with lesbians really. | 9:32 | |
| And I wrote to ALFA, I had heard of it. | 9:35 | |
| And guess who answered my letter? | 9:38 | |
| Lorraine Fontana. | 9:40 | |
| (all chuckling) | 9:42 | |
| She answered it in a nice, long handwritten letter | 9:43 | |
| which I wish I still had. | 9:46 | |
| And was very welcoming. | 9:49 | |
| And so I came down already knowing about ALFA | 9:51 | |
| and I joined it. | 9:54 | |
| - | Back then we got letters. | 9:57 |
| It wasn't email. | 9:59 | |
| They didn't know our phone numbers. | 10:01 | |
| So, yeah, we got letters. | 10:04 | |
| - | So were you in disability activist rights then? | 10:06 |
| - | No, I wasn't yet, by a long shot. | 10:10 |
| - | But you were, | 10:14 |
| you did go immediately to Koinonia | 10:15 | |
| or was that before? | 10:16 | |
| - | Koinonia was before that. | 10:18 |
| - | Okay, okay. | |
| - | I was involved in a rival immediately with ALFA, | 10:22 |
| but I also went down and helped | 10:26 | |
| Georgia ERA efforts, which several of us did. | 10:30 | |
| - | Oh yeah? | 10:33 |
| See, I didn't know that. | 10:34 | |
| - | I would stuff envelopes and lick envelopes. | 10:36 |
| Not a lot, but several times. | 10:38 | |
| - | Yeah, 'cause that was over. | 10:40 |
| In '76 by the time I got here, that was over. | 10:41 | |
| - | Yeah, I think I came down in '74 or '75. | 10:43 |
| I wish I remembered. | 10:46 | |
| - | I was at, when was that march | 10:47 |
| with Betty Friedan and Kate Millett and all those? | 10:49 | |
| - | That must've been earlier. | 10:52 |
| - | 'Cause I was there. | 10:54 |
| - | You know a way to find out? | 10:56 |
| I mean, seriously, you find out dates just to look. | 10:57 | |
| Now, unless it's earlier than the first ALFA newsletter, | 11:00 | |
| but if it's in later '74 on, | 11:02 | |
| that's how you find the dates for stuff. | 11:06 | |
| Unless you have another time. | 11:09 | |
| It was the ALFA timeline too, remember. | 11:10 | |
| Remember that I made out for the anniversary | 11:12 | |
| and for the birthdays. | 11:14 | |
| That might have a lotta stuff in it, too. | 11:16 | |
| But I can't pull up dates. | 11:18 | |
| - | So did you have a job | 11:20 |
| or you got a job after you got down here, Eleanor? | 11:21 | |
| - | After I got down. | 11:23 |
| - | Uh-huh. | |
| And you were an ESL teacher that time? | 11:26 | |
| - | My first job | 11:30 |
| was with food stamps. | 11:33 | |
| - | Oh yeah? | 11:39 |
| Like Saralynn, huh? | 11:40 | |
| - | I guess. | 11:41 |
| When I came down, I had really exceeded | 11:44 | |
| my ability to cope. | 11:46 | |
| Coming down, knowing almost no one. | 11:48 | |
| And so I was kinda going nuts | 11:52 | |
| and I found Karuna very early on. | 11:55 | |
| They were just starting, | 11:59 | |
| and they were written up, I think, in Creative Loafing. | 12:01 | |
| And I went to Karuna to get | 12:03 | |
| some psychological help in coping. | 12:06 | |
| - | How did you find a place to live? | 12:10 |
| - | I had that just before I moved down. | 12:12 |
| - | You found that first. | 12:16 |
| - | Well, Joanne Able helped me find it. | 12:18 |
| She was driving around and saw it, | 12:19 | |
| 'cause there were almost no accessible places. | 12:21 | |
| - | Say what Karuna is for people listening to the tape. | 12:23 |
| - | Karuna is Karuna Counseling for Women & Their Friends. | 12:27 |
| They were brand new. | 12:31 | |
| They had just started, | 12:33 | |
| and I read about them and I thought, oh, I need this. | 12:34 | |
| - | So you became one of the counselors there, right? | 12:39 |
| - | Later, much later, yes. | 12:42 |
| About seven years later. | 12:44 | |
| - | One of the things I remember about Karuna | 12:45 |
| was that they did not require you | 12:47 | |
| to have degrees in counseling, | 12:49 | |
| and that, for me, was I think a mixed blessing. | 12:52 | |
| Because I think some of my therapists | 12:57 | |
| got in over their head. | 12:59 | |
| But anyhow. (chuckles) | 13:01 | |
| But how did that affect you? | 13:03 | |
| - | What, finding Karuna? | 13:06 |
| - | Just the general, | 13:09 |
| the alternative way it had of its approach. | 13:11 | |
| - | Oh, well I was glad, I was glad. | 13:14 |
| Our first group, frankly, was not that good. | 13:17 | |
| They didn't know how to lead groups. | 13:20 | |
| But I was so glad to have found 'em | 13:22 | |
| and they learned a lot later. | 13:24 | |
| It really, you know, it was kind of very, very helpful. | 13:26 | |
| - | So who was there besides Geri and Susan? | 13:30 |
| - | Well, there was a woman, | 13:33 |
| a straight woman who was leading a group with Susan | 13:36 | |
| and that's what I joined. | 13:39 | |
| And I can't remember her name. | 13:40 | |
| She stayed there a good while. | 13:42 | |
| - | Phyllis, was that Phyllis? | 13:44 |
| - | No, Phyllis came a little later, I think. | 13:45 |
| - | Was it Doris? | 13:47 |
| - | Doris. | |
| - | Doris, right. | 13:49 |
| - | Yes, ma'am, very good. | |
| - | She was my therapist. | 13:52 |
| - | Oh, okay. | 13:53 |
| - | Yeah. | |
| So that was a positive experience for you | 13:57 | |
| for the most part. | 14:00 | |
| - | Yes. | |
| - | Being in Karuna. | 14:01 |
| - | Yes. | |
| - | So I wanted to ask y'all a little bit | 14:03 |
| about activism and what you consider to be activism. | 14:04 | |
| - | Did you want us all to answer the questions | 14:07 |
| you're asking? | 14:08 | |
| I don't know-- | 14:09 | |
| - | Okay. | |
| - | Well, I just wanna know | 14:11 |
| as you're going on to-- | 14:12 | |
| - | I wanted to go in a kinda flowing way, | 14:13 |
| but if you'd like to go back and answer a question-- | 14:16 | |
| - | No, no, no, I'm just asking you | 14:17 |
| how you wanna do it. | 14:19 | |
| - | Okay. | 14:21 |
| - | 'Kay. | |
| - | Well, I guess I would like to jump, | 14:22 |
| because this is really central, I think, | 14:23 | |
| to what I want to do. | 14:25 | |
| What do y'all consider to be activism? | 14:27 | |
| - | Anything and everything. | 14:31 |
| - | Okay. | 14:33 |
| - | Any action you take. | 14:35 |
| - | Then I would somewhat disagree. | 14:37 |
| My view would be... | 14:40 | |
| Well, Cris, you answer while I think. | 14:50 | |
| (women laughing) | 14:52 | |
| - | That's not fair. | 14:55 |
| - | Well, I'm kinda with Lorraine, | 14:59 |
| anything and everything. | 15:00 | |
| But I think for us, | 15:02 | |
| the kinds of activism we've had to do our whole lives | 15:05 | |
| have really been about | 15:08 | |
| kind of turning people's worldviews upside down. | 15:10 | |
| And so that's been part of why | 15:13 | |
| it's been anything and everything, | 15:15 | |
| because everything we did was a challenge | 15:18 | |
| to what women were supposed to do. | 15:21 | |
| And we weren't supposed to be happy | 15:24 | |
| doing what we were doing. (laughs) | 15:26 | |
| I mean, we weren't supposed to be happy | 15:27 | |
| being unmarried and in flannel shirts, you know? | 15:30 | |
| We were supposed to be doing other things. | 15:33 | |
| So I think that's a very different view. | 15:36 | |
| And of necessity it's a different view | 15:42 | |
| and it's sort of, from just politics, | 15:44 | |
| like, okay, I wanna change this policy about X | 15:47 | |
| or I wanna get government funds for Y. | 15:50 | |
| Our worldview changing led to those things. | 15:55 | |
| We had to challenge that worldview as women | 16:03 | |
| and then that very naturally | 16:05 | |
| led into challenging the worldview | 16:07 | |
| of what it is to be gay or lesbian or-- | 16:09 | |
| - | Yeah, I more or less agree with Cris | 16:13 |
| except that, you know, going out to dinner | 16:14 | |
| and eating tacos, that's not activism. | 16:18 | |
| So at some point-- | 16:20 | |
| - | But you know what? | 16:21 |
| It almost was, because when we went out to dinner | 16:22 | |
| with a bunch of women in flannel shirts-- | 16:25 | |
| - | There you go. | 16:28 |
| - | They knew we were not the right kinda women. | 16:29 |
| - | I totally agree with you. | 16:32 |
| - | I didn't mean | |
| anything and everything you did in your life. | 16:34 | |
| It was like, if the intent of it was | 16:35 | |
| in relation to whatever issue you were dealing with. | 16:38 | |
| - | Exactly, and that's what I mean, too. | 16:41 |
| - | Okay. | 16:44 |
| - | But I mean, there were a lot of people, | 16:45 |
| women who were going to bars | 16:47 | |
| and even that you might think of as activism. | 16:50 | |
| But I don't think you can, | 16:53 | |
| maybe even you wanna go this far. | 16:54 | |
| A woman sitting in her house | 16:56 | |
| wishing she was a lesbian. | 16:58 | |
| (women laughing) | 17:00 | |
| - | Oh, come on. | 17:02 |
| - | No-- | 17:03 |
| - | Wishing about it. | 17:04 |
| - | It's an important question. | |
| So I would buy what Cris said. | 17:06 | |
| What was activism in the '70s | 17:09 | |
| would not be activism now. | 17:12 | |
| - | Possibly, yeah. | 17:14 |
| - | Interesting, okay. | |
| - | Depending on where you live. | 17:16 |
| - | Because people are more used to seeing lesbians | 17:18 |
| or it's not as radical to see a lesbian? | 17:20 | |
| - | Yes, because some of the early work done created... | 17:23 |
| There's something about activism | 17:28 | |
| that would kind of need to be | 17:30 | |
| a little bit on the edge, I think, | 17:33 | |
| before I would call it activism. | 17:35 | |
| But it could be eating out in your flannel shirts. | 17:36 | |
| - | Well here's the thing. | 17:39 |
| Maybe what it's about, 'cause this is what comes to my head, | 17:40 | |
| is whatever action you take | 17:42 | |
| that is the raising of somebody's consciousness | 17:45 | |
| or the change in consciousness. | 17:49 | |
| - | Right. | 17:51 |
| - | And that could be anything from talking | 17:53 |
| to your cousin about who you are | 17:56 | |
| and what it is like to be-- | 17:59 | |
| - | Exactly. | |
| - | To changing and making legislation happen | 18:01 |
| in Congress. | 18:04 | |
| - | Right. | |
| Or it could be going out to eat in your flannel shirts | 18:06 | |
| if it's 1975 or '76 or '77, | 18:08 | |
| and acting like dykes. | 18:12 | |
| - | Can I just say this, | 18:15 |
| I was just reading a story, | 18:16 | |
| again, one of the newsletters I looked up. | 18:18 | |
| And it was during the Great Southeast Lesbian Conference-- | 18:20 | |
| - | Oh, I remember that. | 18:23 |
| - | In '75. | |
| And some women had come from outta town | 18:25 | |
| and I forget their names. | 18:27 | |
| There were four women who had gone to eat somewhere, | 18:28 | |
| and I think it might've been at plaza, | 18:30 | |
| over near the Plaza Drugstore at, | 18:33 | |
| what's the diner that's still there? | 18:36 | |
| - | The Majestic. | 18:38 |
| - | The Majestic. | |
| - | Majestic, I think it might've been. | 18:39 |
| It doesn't mention that in the article. | 18:40 | |
| But there was a story about, | 18:42 | |
| remember they were arrested. | 18:44 | |
| They had been charged something incorrectly, | 18:47 | |
| and when they went up and they were, | 18:51 | |
| you can imagine who they looked like | 18:54 | |
| and what they were dressed like. | 18:56 | |
| When they went up and complained about it | 18:57 | |
| and insisted that they didn't wanna pay for that, | 19:00 | |
| they had some real angry responses from people | 19:03 | |
| and then one of the women said something like, | 19:06 | |
| "We're not gonna fuckin' eat in this place anymore." | 19:08 | |
| And then a policeman that was sitting nearby | 19:09 | |
| got up because of the cursing | 19:12 | |
| and started to be an argument. | 19:14 | |
| And ended up arresting them | 19:17 | |
| because they wouldn't stop arguing and settle down | 19:19 | |
| and he charged 'em with disrupting | 19:23 | |
| and this, that, and the other. | 19:25 | |
| And they were dropped, but they all got taken in. | 19:27 | |
| - | Wow. | 19:31 |
| - | And had bail, you know, and all this stuff. | 19:32 |
| Yeah, and they felt it was because of who they were. | 19:34 | |
| - | Of course it was. | 19:37 |
| - | Right, if a man had said that, | 19:38 |
| that wouldn't have occurred. | 19:40 | |
| Well, speaking of that conference, | 19:42 | |
| which I guess was '75. | 19:44 | |
| I remember organizing for that | 19:45 | |
| and working pretty hard on it, | 19:47 | |
| and one of the huge controversies | 19:48 | |
| that almost broke it up early on, | 19:51 | |
| or at least almost made ALFA pull out | 19:55 | |
| was whether there would be separatist workshops. | 19:58 | |
| And there was a huge brouhaha. | 20:03 | |
| And the ALFA women were by and large | 20:06 | |
| insisting there would be lesbian-only workshops, | 20:08 | |
| and the men were pissing and moaning | 20:13 | |
| along with some of-- | 20:15 | |
| - | No, no, no, that was just the lesbian conference. | 20:17 |
| - | Yeah, totally two different things. | 20:19 |
| You're not talking about | 20:20 | |
| the Great Southeast Lesbian Conference-- | 20:21 | |
| - | Yes, I am, I'm talking about the Great Southeast. | 20:21 |
| - | Wasn't there a gay-- | 20:23 |
| - | Well, there weren't any men | |
| at the Great Southeast Lesbian Conference. | 20:25 | |
| - | No, I'm talking about an early conference. | 20:27 |
| - | Yeah, you're talking about | 20:28 |
| the first Southeast Gay Conference. | 20:29 | |
| - | There you go. | 20:31 |
| - | Yeah. | |
| - | That was that. | 20:32 |
| - | 'Cause I went to that. | 20:34 |
| - | That was much later. | |
| - | Oh. | 20:35 |
| - | I believe that was-- | |
| - | Actually it wasn't, | 20:36 |
| because I was working for The Great Speckled Bird | 20:37 | |
| at that time, so it might've been earlier. | 20:39 | |
| It might actually have been earlier than '75. | 20:40 | |
| - | I think it was earlier. | 20:43 |
| - | I think it was earlier, pretty sure it was. | 20:44 |
| - | Oh, it was earlier. | 20:45 |
| That national conference was, wow. | 20:46 | |
| One of the biggest. | 20:48 | |
| - | The National Lesbian Conference was much later. | 20:50 |
| - | Much later, and the battles were much different. | 20:51 |
| - | Yeah, this was a gay conference. | 20:55 |
| - | So you were involved in the Southeast Gay Conference? | 20:56 |
| - | Yes. | 21:00 |
| - | Ahh. | |
| - | And you were too, I think. | 21:01 |
| Maybe you weren't. | 21:03 | |
| - | I was involved with maybe covering it, | 21:04 |
| but I don't remember being involved in-- | 21:06 | |
| - | For The Speckled Bird? | 21:08 |
| - | I don't remember. | |
| - | Well, we were helping organize it | 21:10 |
| and I remember that we were getting | 21:11 | |
| in these big fights with men. | 21:12 | |
| We were almost ready to withdraw | 21:14 | |
| or they were almost ready to withdraw. | 21:16 | |
| And we met at Susan Barrett's house over there | 21:18 | |
| and there must've been 25, 30 men | 21:21 | |
| and women in the room. | 21:23 | |
| We never hung out with men. | 21:24 | |
| Boy, were we mad at them for saying that, | 21:27 | |
| no, that would be divisive | 21:29 | |
| to have women-only workshops. | 21:31 | |
| And I think we prevailed | 21:34 | |
| and I think there were lesbian workshops. | 21:36 | |
| - | Well I remember, because if it was | 21:38 |
| where Elizabeth and I gave a panel thing | 21:41 | |
| on lesbian history or lesbians-- | 21:46 | |
| - | At that. | 21:48 |
| - | In history at that. | |
| And I remember some men, or a man came in | 21:50 | |
| and Elizabeth said sarcastically, | 21:54 | |
| "We're so glad that men are so interested | 21:55 | |
| "in women's issues." (laughs) | 21:57 | |
| - | Okay, and what year did you get to? | 21:58 |
| - | I don't remember the year. | 22:00 |
| - | Can't remember the year you got to Atlanta? | 22:01 |
| - | Oh, when I got Atlanta? | 22:03 |
| - | Yeah. | |
| - | Seven, I only came to live permanently in '77. | 22:05 |
| - | Okay, see this was much later, you're talking-- | 22:11 |
| - | Wait, but I was coming over a lot earlier | 22:13 |
| to visit my partner who lived here. | 22:17 | |
| So I was over here a lot. | 22:19 | |
| - | 'Kay, but that first gay conference | 22:20 |
| was real early in the '70s. | 22:22 | |
| - | Mm-hm. | 22:24 |
| - | Okay. | |
| - | Yeah, I think you're thinking of a different one. | 22:25 |
| I think there was a gay conference, | 22:27 | |
| then there was a Southeast Lesbian Conference, | 22:28 | |
| and then later, later-- | 22:30 | |
| - | That's different. | |
| - | Maybe even in the early '80s. | 22:32 |
| - | There were other events. | 22:34 |
| There wasn't just one Southeast Gay Conference. | 22:35 | |
| - | Well, we can look up when-- | 22:37 |
| - | They were a series. | |
| - | This was before the lesbian, the big lesbian conference. | 22:39 |
| - | Uh-uh, there were two big lesbian conferences. | 22:42 |
| There were. | 22:46 | |
| - | You mean, national lesbian conferences? | 22:47 |
| There was one national. | 22:48 | |
| - | There was the Great Southeast one. | 22:49 |
| - | But that's just a regional thing. | 22:50 |
| - | Okay. | 22:52 |
| - | Yeah. | |
| - | And then there was the other-- | 22:53 |
| - | The national one. | 22:54 |
| - | The national one, yeah. | |
| - | Okay, okay. | 22:57 |
| So we can look up conferences. | 22:58 | |
| - | Lots of early conferences. | 23:00 |
| - | Lots of things we're actually gonna-- | 23:02 |
| (women laughing) | 23:03 | |
| Yeah, so we know what activism is. | 23:04 | |
| What did ALFA mean to you, okay? | 23:08 | |
| A big, global question. | 23:11 | |
| When you came to ALFA, what were you looking for? | 23:14 | |
| Did you find it? | 23:16 | |
| - | Well, I didn't come to ALFA, so-- | 23:18 |
| - | You started it. | 23:19 |
| - | Talking more about why | |
| I came here after college, | 23:21 | |
| and I came here for something totally different, | 23:23 | |
| which is I was in VISTA. | 23:25 | |
| - | Were you already a lesbian then? | 23:27 |
| When did you come out? | 23:29 | |
| - | No, no, I wasn't out. | |
| I didn't even consider myself a lesbian. | 23:32 | |
| And I loved Atlanta, | 23:34 | |
| so after finishing, | 23:36 | |
| I had re-upped for a second year | 23:39 | |
| but then didn't finish that | 23:41 | |
| because of other personal stuff that was goin' on. | 23:42 | |
| So I went back to New York | 23:44 | |
| but I had applied to graduate schools | 23:46 | |
| and included Emory in case I wanted to come back to Atlanta. | 23:48 | |
| And I decided I did, 'cause I loved Atlanta. | 23:51 | |
| So I came back as a graduate student, right, | 23:53 | |
| and during the period I was in graduate school | 23:56 | |
| is when I came out. | 23:58 | |
| I lived with a house of women, | 24:00 | |
| not that they were coming out. | 24:00 | |
| But my background was in leftist politics | 24:02 | |
| and anti-racist stuff so I connected with, | 24:07 | |
| first of all, when I was in VISTA | 24:10 | |
| we formed a city-wide food cooperative | 24:12 | |
| and part of that was still functioning. | 24:14 | |
| So when I came back, I got involved in | 24:16 | |
| a little Five Points food co-op buying club. | 24:18 | |
| This was before Sevananda started. | 24:21 | |
| And through that and through some anti-imperialist stuff | 24:23 | |
| and, you know, the women who were in Venceremos Brigade | 24:28 | |
| who had been in, | 24:32 | |
| who had been in SDS, | 24:34 | |
| who had been in the civil rights movement, | 24:37 | |
| who had done a lot of other political stuff, | 24:39 | |
| these were the women that came together | 24:41 | |
| and started talking. | 24:43 | |
| And some tried to go into the Gay Liberation Front | 24:45 | |
| and I never really went to meetings | 24:48 | |
| but I went to some of their events, | 24:50 | |
| and found the same sexism as they had in SDS and the Left. | 24:52 | |
| So it was women who wanted to kinda get away | 24:56 | |
| from the sexism and say we got to organize ourselves. | 25:01 | |
| We have to get together ourselves. | 25:04 | |
| And so a lot of those women, | 25:05 | |
| believe it or not, even though ALFA didn't start | 25:06 | |
| as a social or anything, | 25:09 | |
| those of us that were left at the time DAR II started, | 25:10 | |
| that's why we formed DAR II | 25:14 | |
| 'cause we really had a class | 25:16 | |
| as well as a race and sex analysis. | 25:18 | |
| So the people who were leftists | 25:21 | |
| decided to talk about socialism again. | 25:22 | |
| - | So that reminds me of, | 25:26 |
| can I interrupt with a question? | 25:27 | |
| - | Mm-hm. | 25:28 |
| - | You know, they always say Stonewall | 25:30 |
| started the gay liberation movement. | 25:32 | |
| But to me, that ignores | 25:35 | |
| that women started coming out as lesbians. | 25:38 | |
| When I came to ALFA, | 25:42 | |
| I had never heard of Stonewall | 25:44 | |
| and I haven't heard of that uprising for years. | 25:46 | |
| So it's my impression, and I'm asking you guys | 25:49 | |
| and you three, really, | 25:52 | |
| is your impression similar to mine | 25:54 | |
| in that the Stonewall Uprising | 25:57 | |
| had virtually little if anything | 26:00 | |
| to do with the lesbian movement in Atlanta? | 26:02 | |
| - | Oh, in Atlanta. | 26:05 |
| Well, this is how I would put it. | 26:06 | |
| The Stonewall Uprising and what came out of that, | 26:10 | |
| Gay Liberation Front, the gay activist alliances, | 26:13 | |
| the New York base and in other parts of the country, | 26:16 | |
| that was the early gay movement as we knew it, right? | 26:19 | |
| And women who started coming out, | 26:22 | |
| that's what they were led to, what was there. | 26:24 | |
| - | I see. | 26:26 |
| - | And in New York and in Atlanta, | 26:27 |
| not far behind, it wasn't very long after New York, | 26:29 | |
| the lesbians and various organizations | 26:33 | |
| started forming lesbian feminist alliances or groups | 26:36 | |
| because of the same kind of experiences | 26:39 | |
| working with men. | 26:41 | |
| - | So indirectly, Stonewall did influence the-- | 26:42 |
| - | Yeah, 'cause the gay movement | 26:47 |
| existed as men and women at first, but-- | 26:48 | |
| - | That's good to know. | 26:50 |
| - | But didn't the Gay Liberation Front in New York | 26:52 |
| actually precede Stonewall? | 26:53 | |
| - | Precede Stonewall? | 26:57 |
| - | Precede. | |
| - | No. | 26:58 |
| - | Are you sure? | |
| - | No, yeah, I'm pretty sure. | 26:59 |
| - | See, my impression was that lesbian feminism | 27:02 |
| was going on culturally, | 27:06 | |
| which was mainly what I was into, | 27:08 | |
| before Stonewall. | 27:11 | |
| - | I don't know that, | 27:13 |
| when you say culturally, I don't know what you mean. | 27:14 | |
| Do you mean women got together and did stuff together? | 27:15 | |
| - | No, Daughters of Bilitis, for example. | 27:17 |
| - | Yeah, but that isn't lesbian feminist, to me. | 27:20 |
| - | Well it was, in a way, but it was earlier. | 27:23 |
| It was another generation. | 27:25 | |
| - | In other words, something identified | 27:26 |
| as lesbian feminist didn't come before Stonewall. | 27:28 | |
| - | Well for me, lesbian feminism started | 27:30 |
| when I went to college, went to graduate school | 27:32 | |
| and met Julia Penelope, Julia Stanley. | 27:35 | |
| She was teaching linguistics and she was radical, | 27:37 | |
| and that was the first time | 27:41 | |
| I heard the time lesbian feminist, I think. | 27:43 | |
| And that was early '70s, before Stonewall. | 27:44 | |
| - | Well Stonewall was in '69, remember. | 27:48 |
| - | Oh okay, you're right. | 27:51 |
| But maybe it had influenced her, | 27:53 | |
| but it hadn't really impacted me. | 27:55 | |
| She is what impacted me, and-- | 27:57 | |
| - | Yeah, and you're saying what Eleanor said | 27:58 |
| which is Stonewall, that wasn't relevant. | 28:00 | |
| What was relevant was what they, | 28:03 | |
| yeah, the women they found-- | 28:04 | |
| - | What the women were doing, uh-huh. | 28:05 |
| - | And other people had different experiences | 28:08 |
| who had been through either | 28:09 | |
| kind of trying to relate to Gay Liberation Front, | 28:11 | |
| and the Gay Liberation Front | 28:14 | |
| got the name from national liberation. | 28:16 | |
| I mean, it was all about leftist politics, | 28:18 | |
| all that stuff that was happening. | 28:20 | |
| So the women that I'm talking about, | 28:21 | |
| and me and other people, | 28:23 | |
| that's the framework we were operating under. | 28:25 | |
| Just kinda connecting with there's the food co-op here | 28:27 | |
| which is about economic stuff, | 28:30 | |
| and there's racism, anti-racism over here | 28:31 | |
| which is about civil rights movement | 28:33 | |
| and going to Black Panthers, | 28:34 | |
| and all this stuff is going on at the same time. | 28:36 | |
| - | I see. | 28:38 |
| - | And Cuba, people went to Cuba | 28:39 |
| because it was the Socialist Revolution, | 28:40 | |
| so it was one part of that. | 28:42 | |
| So you might've come from a different angle | 28:44 | |
| like the education setting, | 28:47 | |
| learning about stuff through the education setting | 28:49 | |
| which is not at all where I, | 28:52 | |
| when I was in college it was nothing like that. | 28:53 | |
| Got involved in anti-racist stuff | 28:56 | |
| but not anything about gay or lesbian | 28:58 | |
| or anything like that, feminism even. | 29:00 | |
| It was only when I came down here | 29:03 | |
| that I really connected that stuff | 29:04 | |
| with the other stuff that I had already. | 29:06 | |
| So different people, it's different things, | 29:08 | |
| obviously, different people where they-- | 29:10 | |
| - | But it's still interesting historically | 29:12 |
| because you would say here's how it happened, | 29:14 | |
| even though it's too simplistic. | 29:16 | |
| Leftist politics, Gay Liberation Front, | 29:18 | |
| lesbian rebellion. | 29:22 | |
| - | Yeah. | 29:24 |
| - | Exactly. | |
| - | Yeah, that's how I see it. | 29:25 |
| - | That seems accurate to me. | 29:26 |
| I will say, though, I recently realized, | 29:28 | |
| I don't mean in the last few years, | 29:30 | |
| I realized I was actually in New York City | 29:31 | |
| the summer Stonewall happened. | 29:33 | |
| Because I had this job as a mother's helper, | 29:35 | |
| basically as a nanny sort of person, | 29:39 | |
| and I was living on the Upper West Side that summer | 29:41 | |
| for like six or seven weeks. | 29:44 | |
| And I was mostly there because I wanted | 29:46 | |
| to escape my family, so. (laughs) | 29:49 | |
| So I had come home from college | 29:52 | |
| and I had this connection with a college buddy | 29:54 | |
| of mine that lived in New York, | 29:57 | |
| or she lives in New Jersey | 29:58 | |
| but that part of New Jersey, it's close to New York. | 30:00 | |
| And so I got this job as a mother's helper | 30:03 | |
| and on my day off I used to go down to the Village. | 30:05 | |
| And I remembered getting very radical newspapers | 30:12 | |
| while I was there. | 30:16 | |
| - | And you were still straight at that time. | 30:16 |
| - | Well, yeah, as straight as I ever was. | 30:18 |
| - | Village Voice? | 30:20 |
| - | You know what, | 30:22 |
| I think they were independently published papers. | 30:23 | |
| I could be wrong. | 30:26 | |
| - | The Village Voice existed at that time. | 30:27 |
| - | Yeah, yeah, I know it did. | 30:29 |
| - | But I think they were, | 30:29 |
| one of them, wasn't there a Women's News? | 30:31 | |
| I'm not sure what all the dates are on those things. | 30:34 | |
| - | There was The Rat. | 30:36 |
| - | You know, that might've been what it was. | 30:37 |
| But I would get them. | 30:39 | |
| I swear, I didn't understand half of what I read in them. | 30:40 | |
| I really didn't know very much about sex. (laughs) | 30:43 | |
| I mean, you know. | 30:46 | |
| But there was definitely a lot of, | 30:48 | |
| there were definitely some intense feminist writings. | 30:52 | |
| - | You made up for lost time. | 30:54 |
| - | I tried. | 30:56 |
| (women chuckling) | 30:57 | |
| And even though I don't even remember, | 30:59 | |
| I mean, I never read the paper everyday there. | 31:01 | |
| I might've seen stuff on TV. | 31:04 | |
| Stonewall was never on TV. | 31:05 | |
| So I don't remember hearing about Stonewall | 31:07 | |
| while I was there. | 31:09 | |
| - | Even if you were there sometimes, | 31:10 |
| you might not have-- | 31:11 | |
| - | Right, exactly. | |
| Yeah, it was like a small blurb | 31:13 | |
| in The New York Times or something, right. | 31:14 | |
| - | The Village Voice covered it. | 31:16 |
| - | Yeah, but I don't remember picking that up | 31:17 |
| and I don't think I would've felt connected to it | 31:20 | |
| even if I had, 'cause it wasn't a place, | 31:23 | |
| I mean, I never went to a bar while I was there. | 31:25 | |
| I wasn't old enough. | 31:28 | |
| Well, I guess I was then. | 31:29 | |
| I was over 18. | 31:31 | |
| But anyway. | 31:32 | |
| But still, stuff was already happening. | 31:34 | |
| Stonewall kinda crystallized it | 31:37 | |
| and got a lotta people involved in it | 31:39 | |
| and made it more visible and probably energized it. | 31:42 | |
| - | Stuff happened out in California | 31:45 |
| similar to Stonewall years before Stonewall. | 31:48 | |
| - | In Los Angeles. | 31:51 |
| - | I mean, really. | |
| About people deciding not to take it anymore | 31:53 | |
| and fighting back with the cops. | 31:55 | |
| - | Oh yeah? | 31:57 |
| I hadn't read that. | 31:58 | |
| - | There was a Compton Cafeteria event | 31:59 |
| which is this big famous event I barely remember. | 32:00 | |
| What's his name told us about that. | 32:04 | |
| - | What's his name? (laughs) | 32:07 |
| - | Oh my god. | 32:08 |
| - | Duncan? | |
| - | No, not Duncan T. | 32:10 |
| - | This is what happens. | |
| - | Dave, no. | 32:11 |
| - | He had all the whole series, | 32:13 |
| he's now at Princeton. | 32:15 | |
| - | Oh, oh yes, oh that guy. | 32:16 |
| The young guy. | 32:19 | |
| - | (laughs) He's younger than me. | 32:20 |
| You and me together, oh my god. | 32:21 | |
| - | The kid, the kid, the son of Latvian parents. | 32:22 |
| - | Yeah, he's a LGBT historian, | 32:25 |
| and of course a lotta stuff happened before. | 32:27 | |
| But I'm just saying, | 32:30 | |
| you didn't hear the phrase. | 32:31 | |
| Now you're saying yes but I've never heard | 32:32 | |
| the phrase lesbian feminism before-- | 32:34 | |
| - | ALFA? | 32:38 |
| - | The stuff happened | |
| in New York and, you know, | 32:39 | |
| that's when we heard about it | 32:41 | |
| and we said, yeah, lesbian feminism. | 32:43 | |
| - | Right. | 32:46 |
| - | But maybe there were people | 32:47 |
| who said they were lesbian feminists | 32:48 | |
| who were coming out pretty early. | 32:50 | |
| - | Well, it was all mixed up | 32:51 |
| 'cause there was the feminists | 32:52 | |
| and then there were lesbians that came out in feminism | 32:53 | |
| and then some of the feminism made. | 32:55 | |
| But yeah, because lesbian feminism formed | 32:57 | |
| because the feminists didn't like the lesbians | 32:59 | |
| and gay men didn't like the lesbians | 33:01 | |
| and the lesbians were like, | 33:02 | |
| "Well, we're outta here." (laughs) | 33:03 | |
| - | Right, right. | 33:05 |
| It was all about that same, late '60s, early '70s. | 33:06 | |
| - | Right, yeah. | 33:08 |
| - | Now one of the things I thought | 33:09 |
| was so interesting when I got into the women's studies, | 33:10 | |
| in the women's studies world | 33:14 | |
| and started reading about it | 33:16 | |
| is how narrow the early writings in women's studies were. | 33:17 | |
| How they said that the women's movement | 33:21 | |
| began a certain way in New York, | 33:26 | |
| and then there were these categories, | 33:30 | |
| there were socialist feminists | 33:32 | |
| and cultural feminists and radical feminists | 33:34 | |
| and mainstream feminists, and I was-- | 33:39 | |
| - | Like they were very different from each other. | 33:41 |
| - | Like they were very different. | 33:42 |
| And I remember talking to Eleanor about that | 33:43 | |
| and she said, "Yeah, but that's not the way it was | 33:45 | |
| "because you might have one woman | 33:48 | |
| "who'd be doing all those different things | 33:49 | |
| "in one day." | 33:51 | |
| - | Right. | |
| - | And so that was such a, | 33:53 |
| and what that did was erase lesbians | 33:56 | |
| from anything except sex. | 33:59 | |
| So the straight feminism, | 34:03 | |
| straight feminists that came in | 34:04 | |
| and gave us a little class | 34:05 | |
| on the history of the women's movement | 34:06 | |
| just had one day about lesbian feminists | 34:08 | |
| and that was about sexual issues. | 34:10 | |
| You know, about the right to be lesbians. | 34:12 | |
| - | Yeah, yeah. | 34:14 |
| - | (laughing) So that was just all very interesting to me. | 34:16 |
| - | Oh, I remember something that brought me to Atlanta | 34:21 |
| prior to writing to Lorraine. | 34:23 | |
| That was down at Koinonia in, I guess '74, | 34:27 | |
| so I must've moved here in '75. | 34:33 | |
| Where we got The Great Speckled Bird down there. | 34:36 | |
| That's where I first read about ALFA. | 34:39 | |
| And the first thing that blew me away | 34:41 | |
| was this picture of the Red Dyke Theater, | 34:44 | |
| of the women performing in the Red Dyke Theater. | 34:47 | |
| And I thought, I gotta be one of them. | 34:51 | |
| - | (laughing) All right, yee-ha! | 34:54 |
| - | Where was Red Dyke Theater started, do you know? | 34:56 |
| - | No. | 34:59 |
| - | Was any of you part of it then? | 35:00 |
| - | Years, you're not gonna get any accurate | 35:04 |
| unless I look at something. | 35:07 | |
| - | That was the first thing I-- | 35:08 |
| - | And it had already started when I got here in '76. | 35:09 |
| - | I wish I had known you were gonna ask for dates | 35:11 |
| 'cause I would've brought the timeline | 35:13 | |
| and we would've been able to look it up. | 35:14 | |
| - | It had already started in '75 | 35:15 |
| 'cause that's where I read about it. | 35:16 | |
| And in fact, that's the first | 35:17 | |
| large group of lesbians I ever saw, | 35:20 | |
| was going to a performance. | 35:23 | |
| - | Yeah, I remember that. | 35:24 |
| - | And Womansong was also-- | 35:26 |
| - | That was later. | 35:28 |
| - | That was later. | |
| - | I always thought it was actually earlier. | 35:30 |
| Womansong Theatre was before ALFA even existed. | 35:31 | |
| - | Really? | 35:34 |
| - | Well, you're thinkin' of the second version of it. | 35:35 |
| - | Oh, okay. | 35:36 |
| - | Yeah, a reincarnation of Womansong Theatre. | 35:37 |
| But Womansong Theatre, | 35:39 | |
| and Elaine Cole was one of the members of it. | 35:40 | |
| She was an ALFA founding mother. | 35:43 | |
| - | Who also founded the organization | 35:45 |
| that led to concrete change. | 35:49 | |
| She was a woman with a disability. | 35:51 | |
| - | Well now, she was on disability later, | 35:53 |
| not when she formed ALFA. | 35:55 | |
| She wasn't disabled then. | 35:56 | |
| She was disabled 'cause of that knife stabbing-- | 35:57 | |
| - | Something happened to her back. | 35:59 |
| - | Yeah, that was later. | 36:01 |
| But when she formed ALFA, in early ALFA, | 36:02 | |
| she was one of the women | 36:04 | |
| that lived in the first ALFA house with me | 36:05 | |
| and Corinne and Sally-- | 36:07 | |
| - | I didn't know that. | |
| - | And a bunch of other women, yeah. | 36:08 |
| That house was on Mansfield Street. | 36:09 | |
| And she was the one that started | 36:12 | |
| the first lesbian radio show on WRFG. | 36:14 | |
| It was her show, Lesbian Woman. | 36:16 | |
| - | I had no idea. | 36:17 |
| - | And she was also a leftist, very much a gay person. | 36:18 |
| What was I saying about her to begin with, though? | 36:23 | |
| There was a reason I was saying-- | 36:26 | |
| - | That she was a founder of Womansong Theatre. | 36:27 |
| - | Yeah, not a founder, but she was one of the members | 36:30 |
| of the early Womansong Theatre | 36:31 | |
| which was a feminist theater group. | 36:33 | |
| But she was the, | 36:36 | |
| she might've been the only lesbian | 36:38 | |
| or one of two lesbians in the group. | 36:40 | |
| The other women were straight women. | 36:41 | |
| Trying to remember the name. | 36:44 | |
| I can't remember, I'd have to look it up somewhere. | 36:46 | |
| But yeah, there were maybe six, | 36:48 | |
| six women in that group. | 36:51 | |
| And they performed all over. | 36:52 | |
| And after it started, they were still around, | 36:55 | |
| the original group. | 36:58 | |
| But then it disbanded and then later | 36:59 | |
| this Womansong Theatre you're thinking of | 37:01 | |
| was a reiteration of that. | 37:02 | |
| Gene Allen was in it then, | 37:04 | |
| and she wasn't in the first one. | 37:06 | |
| - | Yeah, okay. | 37:08 |
| So you were here in '70, '71? | 37:11 | |
| - | I moved here in '68. | 37:13 |
| - | Okay, and then you were in grad school then in '68? | 37:15 |
| - | No, in '68 I was in VISTA. | 37:18 |
| - | Yeah. | 37:20 |
| - | So it was in '60, it was in the beginning of '70 | 37:21 |
| I moved back to New York | 37:23 | |
| and then back here a few months later. | 37:24 | |
| - | I see. | 37:26 |
| - | And graduate school in '70. | |
| - | What were you going to grad school with? | 37:28 |
| - | Psychology. | 37:30 |
| (woman laughing) | 37:32 | |
| The first year was experimental psychology, | 37:33 | |
| then I decided that was too away from reality | 37:35 | |
| so I maybe clinical psychology would be more, | 37:38 | |
| put me into working with people. | 37:40 | |
| And then I decided I didn't wanna be | 37:42 | |
| a damn full-time student. | 37:44 | |
| I wanted to do the important stuff, | 37:46 | |
| which turned into ALFA work. (laugh) | 37:47 | |
| - | I think you were already at Xerox | 37:50 |
| by the time I got here. | 37:52 | |
| - | Ah. | 37:53 |
| - | Is that right? | 37:54 |
| There was a group of the Xerox girls. | 37:55 | |
| - | I was the first ALFA, the first dyke in Xerox. | 37:57 |
| - | Were you? | 38:01 |
| - | Yeah, I was the first one. | 38:01 |
| In fact, when I got in there | 38:03 | |
| there was only one other woman who was working at Xerox. | 38:04 | |
| And she was on maternity leave at the time. | 38:07 | |
| - | And were you doing the same kinda, | 38:10 |
| 'cause you were a repair person. | 38:12 | |
| - | Yeah. | 38:14 |
| - | That was the first thing you did. | 38:14 |
| - | Technical representative. | 38:16 |
| That also, just to put that in, | 38:19 | |
| that was a very common thing back then. | 38:21 | |
| Everyone wanted non-traditional jobs. | 38:23 | |
| If you weren't gonna be getting a degree | 38:26 | |
| and be a professional, then you wanted, | 38:29 | |
| you know, what's a non-traditional job? | 38:31 | |
| I wanna work somethin' that, you know. | 38:33 | |
| So a lotta the jobs I had were about that. | 38:35 | |
| - | That would be Barbara's claim to fame. | 38:37 |
| She was one of the first women bike mechanics | 38:38 | |
| and she came to Atlanta and started Dancers | 38:42 | |
| with Jean James, and there were virtually | 38:45 | |
| no womens bike mechanics. | 38:48 | |
| - | Yeah, yeah. | 38:50 |
| - | And she'll probably say this | 38:50 |
| in her little writing thing, | 38:51 | |
| but people would come in and say, | 38:53 | |
| "May I speak to the owner?" | 38:55 | |
| (women laughing) | 38:57 | |
| They would think that they were cashiers or something. | 38:58 | |
| - | Uh-huh, uh-huh. | 39:00 |
| Now I remember, I remember that kinda stuff. | 39:02 | |
| I mean, in fact, | 39:04 | |
| give you another example. | 39:05 | |
| And this was the earliest example for me. | 39:06 | |
| So it was, god, when I first stopped doing graduate school | 39:08 | |
| so I guess it was '72, I think. | 39:12 | |
| But I needed a job, | 39:16 | |
| so I went to the state to look up | 39:17 | |
| the kinda jobs they had. | 39:19 | |
| And I took a test for, | 39:20 | |
| what do they call, surveying assistant, | 39:24 | |
| you know, people that go out and they do all this. | 39:26 | |
| And I got this great grade, | 39:29 | |
| like, they had to interview me | 39:31 | |
| 'cause I got one of the best grades. | 39:32 | |
| Whatever kinda test it was, I don't know. | 39:34 | |
| So I got called in and they had the nerve to tell me, | 39:36 | |
| and I had no sense then, | 39:38 | |
| I had no legal kind of analysis at that point | 39:39 | |
| that what was and wasn't allowed. | 39:44 | |
| They said, "You did really good on this | 39:47 | |
| "but we just don't hire women to do this." (laughs) | 39:49 | |
| So that was it. | 39:51 | |
| We just didn't hire women, forget it. | 39:52 | |
| So I had also applied to other stuff | 39:54 | |
| and it was like this really trippy thing | 39:55 | |
| where you would go and they'd try to talk you outta stuff. | 39:58 | |
| Like, I almost got talked out of workin' for Sears | 40:00 | |
| as a refrigeration technician. | 40:03 | |
| Again, I did good and they had, you know, | 40:05 | |
| said, "You know what this involves? | 40:08 | |
| "So you have to sometimes install ice makers." | 40:10 | |
| It was one of these, | 40:13 | |
| installing ice makers was the new thing | 40:14 | |
| in refrigerators, right. | 40:16 | |
| "And that means you have to climb around | 40:18 | |
| "and go in the basement sometimes | 40:20 | |
| "in the crawlspace under a house, | 40:22 | |
| "and there's like, sometimes there could be snakes." | 40:24 | |
| But they really did this kinda thing where, | 40:27 | |
| you know, you don't want this job. | 40:28 | |
| And I was like, "Ah, it's okay. | 40:31 | |
| "I'll be okay." (laughing) | 40:33 | |
| By that point, they were a little smarter I think | 40:35 | |
| and they realized maybe we can't just | 40:37 | |
| tell 'em we don't hire women. (laughs) | 40:39 | |
| - | Yeah, right. | 40:41 |
| - | But I was the only woman | 40:42 |
| in that co-training class in Sears. | 40:43 | |
| Everybody in the morning would be there | 40:46 | |
| getting their orders and getting their schedule, | 40:48 | |
| I was the only woman. | 40:51 | |
| So it was that kind of, everyone loved that, | 40:53 | |
| you know, trying to do that and doing that, | 40:56 | |
| getting you kinda. | 40:59 | |
| Plus, they were good jobs | 40:59 | |
| 'cause jobs for men usually were good paying jobs. | 41:00 | |
| - | Yeah, I remember a lot of women electricians, | 41:05 |
| carpenters and stuff. | 41:08 | |
| - | All that. | 41:09 |
| - | Yeah. | |
| So this document says that ALFA | 41:11 | |
| had three emphases: social, political, and educational. | 41:14 | |
| Do you all remember it as any differently from that? | 41:20 | |
| Or if so, what were you mostly focused on? | 41:24 | |
| - | Well, you know it's interesting | 41:29 |
| because I think the term political at that time, | 41:30 | |
| that didn't mean like electing people to office. | 41:34 | |
| It meant maybe advocating for different laws | 41:37 | |
| at the most. | 41:41 | |
| - | And marching in the parade, for example. | 41:43 |
| - | Yeah, we weren't even close enough | 41:45 |
| to consider introducing bills into the state legislature | 41:48 | |
| or anything like that. | 41:51 | |
| - | Marching. | 41:54 |
| - | The definition of political | 41:55 |
| was more about just saying, | 41:56 | |
| "Hey, we should have rights." | 41:58 | |
| (women laughing) | 42:00 | |
| That was being political. | 42:01 | |
| - | Right, right. | |
| - | And protesting. | 42:03 |
| You have to understand, someone put that wrong | 42:03 | |
| and they put the stuff that was political under social, | 42:06 | |
| but demonstrating at the General Constitution. | 42:10 | |
| We got a lotta groups to demonstrate with us | 42:14 | |
| 'cause they wouldn't put our name in any kind of, | 42:16 | |
| we wanted to run an ad about this is where we meet | 42:18 | |
| and they wouldn't print it because, | 42:21 | |
| lesbian, you know. | 42:23 | |
| So we had demonstrations there, did that kinda stuff. | 42:25 | |
| - | Very political. | 42:29 |
| - | Very. | |
| - | And political being part of the gay pride marches | 42:31 |
| and having an open house | 42:34 | |
| or having some event during that week was pretty up there. | 42:35 | |
| - | I would say organizing the conferences | 42:39 |
| would be considered-- | 42:40 | |
| - | And having a women's only space | 42:41 |
| and having an organization was a political act by itself. | 42:43 | |
| - | Yeah, absolutely. | 42:46 |
| - | But in terms of educational, | 42:48 |
| working on the newsletter. | 42:50 | |
| And I happen to have a picture, | 42:51 | |
| not a very good one 'cause it's a Xerox. | 42:52 | |
| This is newsletter committee | 42:56 | |
| meeting on my porch. | 42:59 | |
| - | Oh, right. | |
| - | You've seen that. | 43:01 |
| - | Yeah, I have a copy of that picture, a photo of it. | 43:02 |
| - | See, it's Cris, | 43:05 |
| and it's Maryellen and Karen. | 43:06 | |
| - | Karen, okay. | 43:09 |
| - | Elizabeth was on it some of the time. | 43:10 |
| And I don't know who-- | 43:13 | |
| - | Oh, I think she was always on it. | 43:14 |
| - | Yeah. | 43:16 |
| - | I was on it sometimes. | |
| Early on I was on the newsletter committee. | 43:19 | |
| That's great, look at you, my gosh. | 43:21 | |
| - | Yes, she had hoisted herself | 43:24 |
| onto the arm of the wheelchair. | 43:26 | |
| (women laughing) | 43:27 | |
| Wow, very cute women, all of you. | 43:29 | |
| - | We didn't think so at the time, but. | 43:32 |
| (women laughing) | 43:34 | |
| - | Oh, yeah. | 43:36 |
| - | So about the, | 43:37 |
| well, I covered pretty much the political. | 43:41 | |
| What about, what did you focus on in particular? | 43:45 | |
| Everything at once? | 43:49 | |
| Or did each of you have a different focus? | 43:49 | |
| Cris I know was involved in the women's music aspect | 43:51 | |
| and you've interviewed about that already, haven't you? | 43:56 | |
| Didn't Beth interview you? | 43:58 | |
| - | Mm-hm. | |
| - | That was Lucina's Music, right? | 44:00 |
| - | Mm-hm. | 44:02 |
| - | Was that your main focus, | 44:03 |
| when you were in ALFA, was the music? | 44:06 | |
| - | Well you know, | 44:10 |
| my main focus was just living. | 44:14 | |
| (women laughing) | 44:16 | |
| Becoming a lesbian, finding out what that meant, | 44:18 | |
| what was involved. | 44:23 | |
| Finding a job, took me a really long time to find a job. | 44:26 | |
| Unemployment was pretty bad. | 44:29 | |
| I think it was five or six, | 44:31 | |
| of course, doesn't seem that great now. | 44:33 | |
| It took me a long time to find any kind of permanent job. | 44:37 | |
| I did temp work for a long time. | 44:41 | |
| - | And then you were with WRFG, too. | 44:47 |
| - | Well, and that was my job, | 44:49 |
| but it took me a year or so to find that. | 44:50 | |
| Then I was also, I guess by that time | 44:54 | |
| maybe I was already the Olivia Records rep. | 44:56 | |
| I didn't really think, | 45:03 | |
| there was some potential for income with that | 45:04 | |
| but I didn't really of it as an income sort of potential | 45:06 | |
| as more of just a, | 45:09 | |
| a work kind of, you know. | 45:12 | |
| - | And your main focus, Lorraine, was mainly-- | 45:14 |
| - | It was a main of change depending on | 45:16 |
| what year it was, what was happening, what was needed. | 45:19 | |
| I mean, at first it was working with the library, | 45:24 | |
| creating a library, then I was on a newsletter committee, | 45:27 | |
| and then I would be with the speakers, | 45:30 | |
| Speakers Bureau stuff, or whatever I could do | 45:34 | |
| in terms of work and wherever was needed. | 45:40 | |
| - | Well how long did the other founding mothers | 45:44 |
| stick with it? | 45:48 | |
| Because my remembrance is that you were, | 45:49 | |
| you know, you were there and clearly central, | 45:51 | |
| and I don't remember the other founding mothers much. | 45:53 | |
| - | The original, really the other founding people | 45:56 |
| and the original people, | 45:59 | |
| none of them really were, | 46:01 | |
| a lotta the people moved away, like Vicki. | 46:04 | |
| I had moved to L.A. in '76 and she, | 46:05 | |
| by the time I got back | 46:09 | |
| I think she was needing or ready to leave | 46:10 | |
| and Sally had already left. | 46:13 | |
| A lotta the early women that were, | 46:15 | |
| the early women had formed even before ALFA started | 46:18 | |
| two women's households, collectives | 46:22 | |
| called Upstairs Downstairs. | 46:24 | |
| It was on Clifton. | 46:26 | |
| (women laughing) | 46:27 | |
| They were the people, like I said, were involved, | 46:30 | |
| some of them with Sojourner Truth Press, | 46:31 | |
| some of them with various socialist | 46:33 | |
| and anti-imperialist organizations | 46:37 | |
| and the food buying club. | 46:39 | |
| We used to meet there sometimes | 46:41 | |
| to distribute the food in their backyard. | 46:42 | |
| And some of them were the same women | 46:45 | |
| who went on, and they were ALFA founders, | 46:47 | |
| to be in Rubyfruit Jungle and Lavender Coven | 46:50 | |
| which were houses that were formed when ALFA was formed. | 46:55 | |
| - | And Peachy and Micky were both in Red Dyke Theater | 46:59 |
| 'cause I remember them on the stage | 47:03 | |
| in about '75. | 47:06 | |
| Vicki was still in ALFA when I came here. | 47:08 | |
| - | Yeah, she, like I said, when I came in '79 | 47:11 |
| she was still here or she had just left, I'm not sure. | 47:14 | |
| - | Oh, it was '79. | 47:17 |
| Oh yeah. | 47:19 | |
| - | I'm just saying, you know. | 47:20 |
| - | You were here way before '79. | 47:22 |
| - | I wasn't here in '76 to '79. | 47:24 |
| I was in California. | 47:26 | |
| - | You weren't? | 47:28 |
| - | Yeah, I was goin' to law school. | 47:29 |
| That's when I went to Peoples College of Law. | 47:31 | |
| - | So you took a leave of absence. | 47:32 |
| - | But I remember you, I remember you here, don't I? | 47:33 |
| - | No, I mean I might've, | 47:37 |
| when I came back and visited, maybe. | 47:38 | |
| Claudette and I both went to California | 47:40 | |
| and we would come back, like, I guess to visit. | 47:42 | |
| A couple times we visited. | 47:44 | |
| - | Oh okay, okay. | 47:46 |
| - | But she was here when she wrote | 47:47 |
| the letter to me in '74 or '75. | 47:49 | |
| - | Yeah, well that was before I was here. | 47:51 |
| I'm just trying to figure out-- | 47:52 | |
| - | When she moved back? | 47:54 |
| - | Mm-hm. | |
| - | And you came in what year now? | 47:57 |
| - | '76. | 47:59 |
| - | '76. | 48:01 |
| - | May, I think it was May. | 48:02 |
| - | I tell ya, a lot of what I did, | 48:05 |
| especially later, tended to be | 48:08 | |
| as an ALFA representative to other things. | 48:13 | |
| So although I was on the newsletter committee for a while, | 48:16 | |
| but I don't remember after coming back from school | 48:20 | |
| and I was trying to, | 48:24 | |
| I was still in school here | 48:25 | |
| and I took the bar and all that. | 48:26 | |
| And I even went and did some legal work in Savannah. | 48:28 | |
| So there was a lotta time | 48:32 | |
| when that was where a lotta my time was, | 48:33 | |
| going to school and learning the law and all that. | 48:36 | |
| When I did kinda reconnect with ALFA, | 48:44 | |
| I would do things like be the ALFA rep | 48:48 | |
| to the National Anti-Klan Network, | 48:51 | |
| or be the ALFA rep working with-- | 48:53 | |
| - | Excuse me, to the na-- | 48:54 |
| - | National Anti-Klan Network, NAKN. | 48:55 |
| Now, it changed its name to something else. | 48:57 | |
| It exists as something else now. | 48:59 | |
| Do you know what I'm talking about? | 49:01 | |
| I forget. | 49:03 | |
| I'll have to look that up, too. | 49:04 | |
| It changed its name. | 49:05 | |
| C.T. Vivian was the head at that time. | 49:09 | |
| And things like working with black and white men together | 49:11 | |
| because they had, in California | 49:16 | |
| their chapters there had done anti-racist work | 49:18 | |
| and they brought that work to Atlanta | 49:21 | |
| and the Anti-Discrimination Project, | 49:23 | |
| and I was the ALFA rep and worked with them on that. | 49:25 | |
| So that's the kinda stuff that I would, | 49:27 | |
| you know, report to ALFA and we'd discuss it | 49:30 | |
| and try to get other people involved | 49:33 | |
| in that kinda work. | 49:35 | |
| Working with the Police Advisory Committee, | 49:38 | |
| which was very early on. | 49:41 | |
| What happened now is that there's LGBT folks | 49:43 | |
| in what's called the Police Advisory Committee. | 49:45 | |
| They're the go-betweens for the gay community. | 49:48 | |
| And police, back then the Police Advisory Committee | 49:51 | |
| were queer folks that met with the police | 49:55 | |
| and talked about problems that were occurring | 49:58 | |
| with the police enforcement | 50:01 | |
| and what they were doing and the harassment. | 50:03 | |
| - | Such as Liz Hill being arrested in a car. | 50:07 |
| Do you remember the year for that? | 50:11 | |
| She was just holding hands and kissing a woman. | 50:14 | |
| - | Who was this again? | 50:17 |
| I'm sorry. | 50:18 | |
| - | Liz Hill. | |
| - | Ah, no I don't remember that. | 50:19 |
| - | Speaking of police harassment. | 50:21 |
| - | And she was arrested? | 50:22 |
| - | I don't think she was, though. | 50:23 |
| Were they holding hands or kissing? | 50:24 | |
| - | For just sitting there and doing it. | 50:26 |
| - | Yeah, I think they were just driving while lesbian. | 50:27 |
| (women laughing) | 50:30 | |
| Seriously. | 50:31 | |
| - | Wow. | 50:32 |
| - | Or parked while lesbian. | 50:33 |
| - | Pretty much, yeah. | |
| - | But anyway, it'd be interesting to ask her | 50:35 |
| about that, if you wanted to. | 50:37 | |
| She was one of the people we still know | 50:39 | |
| who was arrested. | 50:41 | |
| Or at least, I think she was arrested. | 50:43 | |
| She was definitely harassed. | 50:45 | |
| - | She was arrested. | 50:47 |
| She had to get a lawyer and the whole nine yards. | 50:49 | |
| It took a year to get that freakin' thing resolved. | 50:51 | |
| - | That would be an important-- | 50:54 |
| - | I don't remember that, | 50:55 |
| so maybe it was during that '76, '79. | 50:56 | |
| - | I think that was '78, maybe '77. | 50:58 |
| - | I missed a lot. | 51:00 |
| People say things and I go, | 51:01 | |
| "I don't remember that at all." (laughing) | 51:02 | |
| - | Yeah, right. | 51:03 |
| - | 'Cause I wasn't here. | |
| - | I remember hearing about it now. | 51:05 |
| - | Do ya? | 51:07 |
| - | Yeah, yeah. | |
| I was shocked. | 51:09 | |
| - | By the way, the first ALFA house was not accessible. | 51:10 |
| And I would go and kinda wait outside | 51:15 | |
| until somebody came along. | 51:18 | |
| And I remember I arrived at one meeting | 51:20 | |
| and there was nobody coming along, | 51:23 | |
| and I literally went over to the window | 51:25 | |
| and I picked up, bent over and picked up gravel | 51:28 | |
| and threw it against the window screen | 51:30 | |
| till finally somebody noticed. | 51:34 | |
| - | Damn, I wish they'd hurry up and invent cell phones! | 51:34 |
| (women laughing) | 51:37 | |
| - | Then they did! | 51:39 |
| But, I don't know who did this | 51:41 | |
| but some women at ALFA put on a ramp, big work day. | 51:44 | |
| I remember I cut the ribbon. | 51:49 | |
| - | At the McLendon house? | 51:50 |
| - | You talking about the first house? | 51:51 |
| - | The McLendon house, no, the second one. | 51:53 |
| - | No, we know that, yeah, the ramp there. | 51:55 |
| But the original house-- | 51:57 | |
| - | But McLendon didn't have a ramp at first. | 51:58 |
| That's the one that didn't have a ramp. | 52:00 | |
| - | So is that the one you threw the gravel against? | 52:02 |
| - | Mansfield didn't need it. | 52:03 |
| That's why I'm thinkin' | 52:04 | |
| you were talking about the first ALFA house. | 52:05 | |
| - | No. | 52:06 |
| - | The first ALFA house was at Mansfield, okay. | 52:08 |
| - | Okay, the McLendon house | 52:09 |
| you threw the gravel against the window, okay. | 52:10 | |
| - | It was unusual that they put one on | 52:15 |
| rather than unusual that there wasn't. | 52:17 | |
| - | Yeah, it was. | 52:19 |
| - | I was very happy with them, | |
| and it was a very nice occasion. | 52:21 | |
| - | Mm-hm. | 52:24 |
| So how many women, | 52:26 | |
| do you have a sense of how many women | 52:27 | |
| were actually members? | 52:28 | |
| - | 50, 100? | |
| Quite a few. | 52:31 | |
| - | While you were involved in ALFA. | 52:32 |
| - | It varied, 'cause I was at ALFA-- | 52:35 |
| - | There wasn't really a membership thing. | 52:36 |
| - | For a long time. | 52:37 |
| - | I mean, it wasn't a matter | |
| of being a member or being not. | 52:40 | |
| - | Yeah, there was a membership. | 52:42 |
| There was a membership definitely. | 52:42 | |
| You paid a fee, you paid membership fees | 52:44 | |
| and you had, yep. | 52:46 | |
| - | Hm, I don't remember that part. | 52:47 |
| - | But it was very cheap, | 52:49 |
| like five dollars or year or something. | 52:50 | |
| - | It was a scale. | 52:51 |
| It was supposed to be a sliding scale | 52:53 | |
| from five, $2.50 or whatever, something like that. | 52:54 | |
| Whatever you could afford. | 52:57 | |
| - | Yeah, so that's why I think the membership | 52:58 |
| was 50 to 100. | 53:00 | |
| - | It varied a whole lot. | 53:02 |
| I think at one point there probably | 53:04 | |
| were more than 100 people who were members | 53:07 | |
| on the membership list, for sure. | 53:09 | |
| - | But not that active, some. | 53:11 |
| - | But I don't remember what years that might've been. | 53:13 |
| - | Then there were a lotta people | 53:15 |
| who would show up who probably | 53:16 | |
| weren't on the membership list. | 53:17 | |
| - | Yeah, well there were some pretty big meetings there | 53:19 |
| crammed into that living room. | 53:21 | |
| - | Actually meetings, people came to meetings a lot less | 53:24 |
| than they either joined or came to events. | 53:26 | |
| - | Yeah, a lotta people came | 53:31 |
| to the dances in particular, didn't they? | 53:33 | |
| - | What were some of the first dances? | 53:35 |
| - | Fundraisers. | 53:37 |
| - | Azalea? | 53:38 |
| Was there something before the Azalea? | 53:39 | |
| - | I remember the Azalea. | 53:40 |
| I don't know. | 53:41 | |
| - | I remember the first ones. | |
| I don't know, it mighta been having a Halloween dance. | 53:43 | |
| There were Halloween dances I know back then. | 53:46 | |
| - | There were Thanksgiving dinners in the ALFA house. | 53:48 |
| - | Yeah, that's right, they were also, yeah. | 53:51 |
| - | And then of course some of those-- | 53:53 |
| - | Which we called Dykes-giving. | 53:54 |
| - | First events were concerts. | 53:56 |
| - | Mm-hm, yeah, and you've been interviewed | 53:58 |
| about the concert, about your involvement with the chorus. | 53:59 | |
| 'Cause I've read your piece. | 54:04 | |
| - | Oh, the chorus came a little later, yeah. | 54:04 |
| - | Okay. | 54:07 |
| - | The chorus came in, | 54:08 |
| I think '81 'cause I had been in a chorus | 54:11 | |
| out at San Francisco when my field trip out there. | 54:15 | |
| And I thought, well, when I came back, | 54:19 | |
| Atlanta needs a chorus. | 54:22 | |
| And we finally got one going. | 54:23 | |
| - | So you kind of spearheaded that? | 54:25 |
| - | Mm-hm. | 54:27 |
| - | Okay. | |
| - | I spearheaded it. | 54:29 |
| We sang off of little mini-graft sheets | 54:30 | |
| in the ALFA house with no director. | 54:32 | |
| And Judy Haley was one of 'em, | 54:36 | |
| so she's the other co-founder | 54:38 | |
| because she's the one that found the director | 54:40 | |
| later at a party. | 54:42 | |
| - | Right, and I've talked to them about that. | 54:45 |
| - | Yeah, so it's written up. | 54:47 |
| That's written up, if you don't have it. | 54:49 | |
| - | I have it. | 54:51 |
| In fact, I was there. | 54:52 | |
| Well, a couple of different interviews about that. | 54:54 | |
| - | Okay, so that's all there is to say about that. | 54:57 |
| - | Yeah. | 54:59 |
| Well, I'm not sure. | 55:01 | |
| Is there anything you all would like to add | 55:02 | |
| to this interview that you think hasn't been covered? | 55:04 | |
| - | Do you have a particular focus | 55:09 |
| on what you wanna write? | 55:12 | |
| - | My focus was mainly the different kinds of activism | 55:13 |
| involved with ALFA that you three, | 55:16 | |
| or should've been four, five, were involved in. | 55:18 | |
| - | Did you get what you wanted? | 55:23 |
| - | Pretty much. | 55:25 |
| What I seem to have come up, | 55:26 | |
| I'd like to find out if you all | 55:27 | |
| think you've said what you would like to have included | 55:29 | |
| in another article about, in this chapter. | 55:32 | |
| - | I think there were very few women of color. | 55:35 |
| - | Okay. | 55:38 |
| - | There was only one other disabled person | 55:40 |
| I remember that ever showed up, | 55:42 | |
| and that was a deaf woman. | 55:44 | |
| - | Mm-hm. | 55:45 |
| - | Well, since you mention the deaf community, | 55:49 |
| there was a whole period of time | 55:53 | |
| when there was some effort made at ALFA | 55:55 | |
| to have a lotta women learning sign language, ASL, | 55:58 | |
| because of Deborah, I think, was the first woman. | 56:04 | |
| But then there were a whole lotta women | 56:08 | |
| who ended up coming during that period | 56:10 | |
| of a year or two when we were really getting into it, | 56:13 | |
| because they felt then they could communicate | 56:16 | |
| with people at least basically. | 56:18 | |
| And I have bunches of pictures, too, | 56:20 | |
| of events happening at the house. | 56:22 | |
| - | Who were deaf? | 56:24 |
| Women who were deaf? | 56:25 | |
| - | Yeah, deaf community women. | 56:26 |
| There was, you know, | 56:27 | |
| they have a gay community themselves, deaf gay folks. | 56:28 | |
| - | So I didn't know that there were that many | 56:32 |
| that came to ALFA, that's cool. | 56:33 | |
| - | But they weren't necessarily ALFA members | 56:38 |
| but they did, you know, | 56:39 | |
| because of that, because of what we were doing | 56:40 | |
| with the classes-- | 56:42 | |
| - | They went there. | |
| - | And wanted to learn. | 56:44 |
| - | That's a great story. | 56:45 |
| - | Yeah, that is. | 56:48 |
| - | So, I mean, ALFA was ahead of the curve | 56:49 |
| in a way with disability rights | 56:50 | |
| for those two reasons. | 56:52 | |
| - | Uh-huh. | 56:53 |
| - | Even though... | 56:56 |
| Oh, nevermind. | 56:59 | |
| - | Even though there weren't very many ALFA members? | 57:00 |
| - | Well, even though the bar was set so low nationally. | 57:05 |
| (women laughing) | 57:08 | |
| - | Yeah. | 57:10 |
| - | But still, same way | 57:11 |
| with the Michigan Womyn's Music Festival. | 57:12 | |
| Way ahead of the curve. | 57:14 | |
| Cris and I-- | 57:18 | |
| - | In fact, my memory may be wrong. | 57:19 |
| Talk to First E folks who were actually members | 57:21 | |
| of the E-Church or Ex-Church back then. | 57:23 | |
| But my memory is that the reason, | 57:26 | |
| one of the main reasons they put a ramp on their church | 57:28 | |
| is that we told them we wouldn't hold | 57:32 | |
| any more of our events there if it wasn't accessible. | 57:34 | |
| That's after we put our ramp in and we were all great. | 57:37 | |
| We're accessible now, | 57:39 | |
| so if you can't be accessible | 57:40 | |
| we're not gonna hold our events there and pay you-- | 57:42 | |
| - | And they needed the money. (laughs) | 57:44 |
| - | That was in the '80s | 57:46 |
| because when chorus first started meeting there, | 57:47 | |
| there was no ramp. | 57:50 | |
| And the women pulled me up and it was always scary | 57:51 | |
| 'cause that's a huge flight of stairs with no rail. | 57:54 | |
| - | I remember reading a newsletter article. | 57:57 |
| I don't still have my old newsletters | 57:59 | |
| but I remember reading a newsletter article | 58:01 | |
| in which someone, I think it was Christina Ishtar | 58:03 | |
| was saying, "We will not hold our dances | 58:06 | |
| "at First E unless they build a ramp | 58:08 | |
| "and make it accessible." | 58:10 | |
| And it was built. | 58:12 | |
| - | And you know, one of the women | 58:13 |
| who took a big hand in that, I think, was Pam, | 58:14 | |
| that very heavy woman. | 58:17 | |
| - | It never would've been built without her. | 58:19 |
| - | Pam, what was her name? | 58:21 |
| - | She's deceased. | 58:24 |
| Pam Martin. | 58:25 | |
| - | Pam Martin, right. | 58:26 |
| - | Yeah, that's right. | |
| - | And she founded a fat, uh-- | 58:29 |
| - | Fat Dykes. | 58:31 |
| - | Fat Dykes, right. | |
| - | She was the original founder of Fat Dykes. | 58:32 |
| - | Right. | 58:35 |
| - | I remember the first time | 58:37 |
| that Fat Dykes rode in the parade. | 58:38 | |
| We rode in a pickup truck, | 58:40 | |
| and after we rode in the pickup truck, | 58:42 | |
| I don't know what year it was, | 58:45 | |
| we went out and drove around in front of Lane Bryant. | 58:46 | |
| (women laughing) | 58:50 | |
| I'm proud, fat, and proud! | 58:52 | |
| (woman clapping) | 58:54 | |
| We got together at somebody's house | 58:58 | |
| and looked at the footage on the news, | 58:59 | |
| and this African American newsreader | 59:02 | |
| was reading about the parade and all that stuff, | 59:05 | |
| and apparently had never said the word lesbian before, | 59:10 | |
| and he hadn't practiced it. | 59:13 | |
| And so saying the word, | 59:15 | |
| so it's funny, this piece of footage. | 59:17 | |
| I wish we had it. | 59:19 | |
| It's something like this. | 59:19 | |
| "More than 5,000 gays and lu--" | 59:22 | |
| (women laughing) | 59:25 | |
| His mouth almost fell off! | 59:29 | |
| - | Don't they prepare for these things? | 59:33 |
| - | That's funny. | 59:36 |
| - | It was all so new. | 59:37 |
| - | Yeah, it was all so new. | 59:39 |
| Okay, well I guess that will be it, | 59:41 | |
| if you all are pleased. | 59:44 |
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