crossposted on Holy Bullies and Headless Monsters
An incident is taking place in a private New York school which lgbts are being blamed for.
But the thing is that we had nothing to do with it.
Here is what we know: according to New York Post columnist Andrea Peyser, a private New York school staged a student production of La Cage aux Folles, the famous Tony-award-winning Broadway play about a gay couple and their meeting with the parents of their son's fiance.
Or as Peyser called it:
. . .a cross-dressing, limp-wristed, gay comic romp whose main characters are a pair of “married” men.
Peyser's column in general is ignorant and goes for the jugular from the beginning:
A Manhattan dad nearly choked on his Wheaties when his 14-year-old son timidly asked:“Dad, do I have to wear a dress to school?”
No joke. These conversations went on in kitchens and living rooms around the city, as a top school that educates learning-disabled and autistic children staged a student production of “La Cage aux Folles” — a cross-dressing, limp-wristed, gay comic romp whose main characters are a pair of “married” men.
As the show packs in adult audiences on Broadway with campy star Kelsey Grammer and a cast of drag queens (right), the kiddie version of “La Cage” was cooked up by the executive director of Child School, a private institution on Roosevelt Island that takes on youngsters from kindergarten through middle school.
Other than the words of a very nasty columnist, I really don't know what happened here. And if the reports turn out to be as she described, I am NOT defending the school.
The problem I have with Peyer's piece are the comments it encourages, like such:
A big swing back to the right is coming to America because of things like this. Gays, you have the right to do whatever the hell you want to do to yourselves, but now that's not good enough. Kids have to be taught to accept your perversions, and that's not right. Say what you want but being gay is unnatural. Basically it's a crime against nature.
. . . I'm not anti-gay but I don't go nor take my kids to the village gay pride parade every year. I'm not anti- African American but I didn't go to the million man march. This isn't about hate. That's what the left always cries when anyone disagrees with them. This is about standing up for what's right, looking out for kids. Simply put, La Cage is an adult play and not appropriate for 10 to 14 year olds. Hate? This is about Love, loving our kids enough to speak out.
What the hell does the lgbt community in general have to do with this situation other than the fact that the play had lgbt characters? What's with this implication that somehow lgbts secretly plotted to “indoctrinate” children into crossdressing?
I'm sure that – barring what the truth may actually be in this case – there are as many lgbt parents as appalled by the staging of the very mature La Cage aux Folles as heterosexual parents.
And that is what reasonable people in general should be concerned about – a mature play being put on by children.
Again please bear in mind that I say “barring what the truth may be,” because Peyser seems to be more about inducing shock rather than telling the real story.
Were parents made aware of the play?
Did the school make participants sign permission slips?
Were there changes made to the play to address the fact that children were playing the characters?
You see these are the types of questions which needed to be asked and they would have been asked . . . by a columnist who is up to her job.




9 Comments


What a bunch of morons.Seems to me the American populace is very, and I do mean very ignorant, about sexuality, sex and LGBT in general. How can they get away spewing such BS? Why do morons continue to equate being gay with being crossdresser? One who does not equate to being LGBT. You can still be straight.
” New York Post”Fox ‘News’ in print form. Would one expect any better from such a thing?
Other high school plays…Other high school plays feature married and even unmarried heterosexual couples. Unlike Le Cage, many of those plays reference the specific sexual behaviors of the couples. All those mature themes tend to go by without protest.
This isn’t about mature themes, or Lend me a Tenor and The Crucible would get the same treatment.
I wouldn’t want to see this play staged, eitherBecause it would be far too easy for a farce about straight attitudes towards gay people to turn into an over-the-top expression of homophobic stereotypes. But pissing and moaning about cross-dressing? What does Ms. Peyser think of the large number of cross-dressing days done throughout America as part of high school spirit weeks?
been going on for yearsIn my high school in the early 70′s there was a school pageant where the football players wore tutus. It was very funny.
My kid’s school staged a play that was full of violence and child abuse. It was called, ‘Oliver Twist’.
This.La Cage Aux Folles was written so that it wouldn’t be threatening to straight audiences in the 1980s (who, it was hoped, might get over themselves a little bit and actually empathize with a non-heterosexual character or two). For it to work at all, it really has to be put on by a cast which is a combination of gay and aggressively gay-positive performers. A school is really not the right place for this production — but not because of “adult content”. La Cage is less “adult” in themes than a lot of productions I’ve seen done in schools (hell, even pick a Shakespeare play and it’ll be far more “adult” than La Cage), but it requires a bit more maturity of attitude than I think you can expect from middle-schoolers and younger.
OTOH, I couldn’t object to putting “I Am What I Am” into a middle-school musical revue.
Not to mentionThe musical version of the play Oliver!.
This pretty well sums up this Fox print “news” “journalist”
Right.
WTFIn the 1980s I went to an all boys school- If some of the boys DIDN’T drag up there would have been no school plays! Honestly though I had to sashay down the stage in a bikini to the tune of “Itsy-bitsy, Teeny-weeny,Yellow Polka Dot Bikini”, an experience that certainly put me off drag for life…