LETTERS From CAMP Rehoboth |
CAMP Stories |
by Rich Barnett |
Hats and High Heels
So I was at a Bastille Day Party the other night, wearing a necklace made from slices of baguette, pine cones, and sea shells. It was sort of primitive, sort of campy, sort of Cte d'Azur meets Rehoboth. I'd seriously thought about adding some cornichons and olives to the piece, but decided the oil might stain. Costumes weren't actually required, but the hosts always make an effort to wear something festive at their fetesthey were outfitted in berets and moustaches. Nibbling an aromatic cheese, I began chatting with a couple of Querelle wannabes about big theme parties and about how they seem to have all but disappeared in Rehoboth. When I first began visiting Rehoboth in the late 80s, theme parties were de rigueur. The social scene revolved around group house parties. Every Saturday night you could count on one or two. There were squirt gun parties, jungle parties, salsa and sauna parties, wild west parties, and just plain birthday parties. The whole scene reminded me of a big gay frat party. Lots of liquor. Lots of testosterone. Lots of fun. They were competitive, these parties. Groups vied to outdo each other by grabbing certain dates and times, by creating special cocktails, and by putting hunky shirtless guys behind the bar. CAMP's Steve Elkins recounted for me some of the theme parties he and Murray Archibald helped put on when they were young pups and part of a group rental house over on Christian Street. Their first one, in 1983 was a "Madras Party" where the driveway and backyard of the house was surrounded by a maze of 5 foot wide canvaspainted by Murray, of course, in a perfect Ralph Lauren-style madras pattern. Then came the "Aquamarine and Tangerine" party where they not only painted canvas for the outside in those colors, but also repainted several rooms in the house to fit the theme. Year three brought a "White" party. Today's Sundance had its beginnings too as a private theme party hosted by Steve and Murray. The CAMP Follies, you might not know, had its origin as a house party. In the mid-90s, a group of guys on Olive Avenuespearheaded by the late Paul Robinsonhad a backyard party with skits and awards. This gave way to the CAMP Rehoboth Follies where the winning troupe wins the "Paul Robinson Golden Barbie." Another memorable and long running theme party was the Hat Party, which started as a small private fete and evolved over the years into one of the first local AIDS fundraisers attracting upwards of 700 people in its halcyon days at the Strand night club. Old timers remember one particular hat party on Sussex Street in the late 80s. An especially large crowd turned out and there were gays out in the street in drag and outrageous hats. The hosts even hired the Jolley Trolley to make a special trip from the Blue Moon to the party. At the stroke of midnight, the police raided and shut it down. It was during the height of the anti-gay "Keep Rehoboth a Family Town" movement. The next morning, a brick shattered the front window. Attached was a bible. The next year, the party moved to the Blue Moon and then to the Strand. The hats grew with the party and guys began wearing small floats on their heads. Hosts recall one hat so large that its owner had to enter the upstairs ballroom via the freight entrance. Of course, he took home the $100 grand prize with his beach scene hat complete with sand, beach chairs, and Barbie dolls. There were always a few as towering Carmen Miranda fruit hats. One guy took it a step further and wore a carved watermelon on his head, full of fruit salad. I've heard tell about an annual summer earring and high heel party back in the 70s, hosted by a long-time Republican operative from Washington in his home over by Silver Lake. Now, I'm not gonna name names. You know how those old GOP boys are. Hush, hush. But, I will tell you that he served in the Eisenhower administration and organized Reagan's inauguration. Gay theme parties are nothing new. There's a book about Cherry Grove, Fire Island, and its history as America's first gay and lesbian town. Author Esther Newton documents a Grove social scene in the 1940s made up of small, private cocktail parties and big theatrical drag parties. Then in the 50s the parties tended more towards afternoon high-heel parties, hat parties, Hollywood parties, and opera parties. One of my favorites she described was a late afternoon "heavenly bodies" party where towards the end out of the ocean arose a muscular Neptune with beard and trident who was carried into the party by his minions. So why have theme parties fallen out of favor in Rehoboth? Most people I ask suggest its because group houses aren't the epicenter of gay life in Rehoboth anymore. We've got bars and restaurants, and guys who rented houses in the 80s and 90s have bought their own houses and don't want to subject their places to large unruly parties. Some equate the era of theme parties to freedom of expression and a young gay community flexing its creativity and its muscle. Still others suggest it's because the gay population of Rehoboth is graying and prefers to sip nice cocktails made from expensive liquor rather than some concoction mixed in a garbage can. Though I must confess to acquiring at The University a taste for drinks ladled out of garbage cans into plastic cups by cute fellas in Polo shirts, I'm not advocating a return of big theme parties. I like good liquor. But, I am advocating for bringing back more conviviality and more camp. It used to be that the sign of a good party was witty conversation and good looking men. Today, it's all about catered food and good looking appliances. Bring back the hats and high heels I say. Rich Barnett, an unabashed gay, liberal, tree-hugging, whiskey-drinking, Rehoboth cottage-owning story-teller, is working on a book and can be reached at Greenbarn@aol.com. |
LETTERS From CAMP Rehoboth, Vol. 17, No. 10 July 27, 2007 |