Evan Darling Revs His Engine
"Evan Darling" sounds like the fake name of a gay porn star.
But there really is an Evan Darling—and the gearshift knobs he grabs and
cockpits he enters are not porn double entendres. Evan Darling is a race
car driver, and if life works out as he hopes, he will soon turn on his
mean machine at a track near you.
In
the entire world of motor sports there are only two active, openly gay
racers: Darling, and Canadian stock car racer Billy Innes. You could throw
in an endurance driver who is tacitly out but never says the G-word, and a
retired racer who is semi-out, but the universe of gay drivers would still
equal the number of wheels on Darling’s Acura Integra.
Darling’s path to Sports Car Club of America Southeast Division
champion began in Andover, Mass., a place far removed from raceway pits.
Yet even as a baby, Evan loved cars. He liked playing with his Matchbox
toys so much that he cried whenever he had to stop. He liked speed, too,
and as soon as he could, he raced BMX bicycles and motorcycles.
But as red-blooded-American-male as his story sounds, Darling harbored
a secret. "When all my friends were looking at boobies, I noticed the
husbands," he recalls. He came out to himself at 13, then to his
parents five years later. They did not take the news well. (His father, an
attorney, later represented military veterans in their fight against gay
advocacy groups for control of Boston’s St. Patrick’s Day parade.)
His parents also disapproved of his racing, so beginning in his late
teens, Darling was on his own. He moved to Florida and built a successful
landscaping business, but his need for speed never eased. He started road
racing in 1994, and won numerous divisional titles in both sprint and
endurance events. Four years ago, he made a difficult decision: He sold
his company to pursue driving full time.
"There are two kinds of drivers," Darling says. "Some
people worry about crashing. Others think about being the fastest one
through the corner. They’re missing the part of the brain that says ‘Stop!’
They go for everything, every millisecond of every race." He places
himself in that risk-taking category.
A good driver, he says, needs several attributes, including reflexes
and instantaneous decision-making. "Things come at you beyond quick.
You’re a zero or a hero in an instant." Endurance is important,
too. A race car’s interior can surpass 130 degrees, and endurance races
last up to 24 hours.
Those qualities have nothing to do with being gay or straight. But like
all human beings, Darling has a sexual orientation. Two years ago in
Atlanta, while Darling was standing in the winner’s circle after a race,
the man he was dating rewarded him with a big kiss.
"Everyone kind of looked at me," Darling remembers. It was a
surprise to him—but a pleasant one. He heard nothing derogatory, and
soon realized the world—and his own wheels—continued to spin without
incident.
When he began a search for national sponsors, he decided to address his
sexuality head-on. He identified himself as a gay race car driver,
marketing himself as someone who wants to be visible and make a
difference.
"I had a hard time growing up," Darling says. "My
parents sent me to a psychiatrist to ‘change’—unsuccessfully, of
course. Like a lot of gay kids, I considered suicide. I don’t wish those
kinds of things on anyone.
"I want to be out there, and show myself as a success. I’m not a
screaming queen, but sometimes those are the only gay people teenagers
see. I’m just a normal person who happens to be a race car driver. I
want people to see that."
So far, sponsors have not sideswiped each other in a rush to put decals
on his car. Big sponsors, Darling believes, worry about losing their
customer base. "They’ll buy ads in the Advocate and market
themselves to gay consumers," he says. "But they shy away from
sponsoring a racer in the straight world, where everyone can see what they’re
doing."
Darling has one sponsor: Georgie’s Alibi, a Fort Lauderdale gay bar.
But that’s local, and to succeed at the next level, he needs the big
bucks a national sponsor can provide. He is convinced those sponsors
exist; a few are already in contact with him. "I know there are
companies that want to see a gay professional athlete succeed, and want to
be seen as diverse and inclusive by everyone," he says. He invites
interested sponsors to contact him via www.edarlingenterprises.com
or at zracre@aol.com.
While he waits, Evan Darling climbs into his cockpit, grabs his
gearshift, and thrusts—all the way to the winner’s circle.
Dan Woog is a journalist, educator, soccer coach, gay activist, and
author of the "Jocks" series of books on gay male athletes.
Visit his website at www.danwoog.com. He can be reached at