NO STRAIGHT LINES: The Rise of Queer Comics

June 27th, 2021

It’s the final Sunday of Pride month. NYC is gearing up for a virtual Pride Parade, which is being televised and sponsored and a real Queer Liberation March at which police and corporations are not welcome. Compton and Stonewall and all the other early protests were, after all, protests against police violence, specifically.

So I can’t think of anything better at all to celebrate this day, than to talk with you about NO STRAIGHT LINES: The Rise of Queer Comics.

In 2013, the wonderful artist Justin Hall curated a book called No Straight Lines: Four Decades of Queer Comics. It was absolutely compelling reading. As I said in my review, I couldn’t put it down.  And while Justin was working on it, he was speaking with a bunch of folks including force of nature Jennifer Camper. It occurred to her that she lives in a time of miracles – all the first wave Gay Comics artists were still alive and reachable and so she reached out and created the Queers and Comics events in 2015, 2017 and 2019, for which I never wrote up a report, bad on me, but I was there for one day and ran a panel! As Jennifer said at the first event, she wanted to create an archive by and about queer comic artists while we had the chance to talk with the folks who were there. The was a bit prescient because after the 2017 event at which Howard Kruse was keynote speaker, he passed away and we only have those panels on page and film left of him.

Honestly, one of the greatest honors of my life has been to be a speaker at these events, and meet the women who are the early lesbian comic artists, just as meeting some of the earliest Yuri manga artists has been so important to me.

Justin teamed up with director Vivian Kleinman to create this film that took that idea a step further. They focused on five pioneers of queer comics, and let them tell their stories for us to enjoy. Alison Bechdel (Fun Home), Jennifer Camper (Rude Girls and Dangerous Women), Howard Cruse (Gay Comix), Rupert Kinnard (B.B. And The Diva) and Mary Wings (Come Out Comix).  Their stories are glossed by younger queer artists who talk about the effect that art had on their lives and their works.

My wife and I rented the movie on the Tribeca Film Festival website. We both thought it a terrific watch. There were some touching moments, a few tear-jerkers and a lot of joy and laughter. Thinking back now on those moments that became so…historically important….its always fun to remember the people doing them are people. People you can be just like and do your own thing, too. ^_^

Tonight NO STRAIGHT LINES will be closing out the Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco, and I have to stop typing as I am absolutely awash with so many memories of these people and their work and our shared experiences. Keep an eye out for screenings near you on their website. As soon as this has a more general release streaming or on video, I’ll be sure to let you know.

For those of you who read Okazu…this is our history. You should know it. These people are our groundbreakers, you should know them. The fact that so many of them are still here and still telling their stories just highlights the point that we live in amazing times to be a fan of queer comics.

Ratings:

Overall – 10

Celebrate our Pride Month, support a queer comic artist today!

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