Whisper Magazine
by Susan Stryker, Director, GLBT Historical Society
The simple fact of sexual and gender diversity has provided grist for
exploitative popular publications since the beginnings of mass media.
Although magazines like Whisper cast issues of sexual diversity
in a lurid light, they often provide truly illuminating insights into
how our
grandparents' generation thought about such things as homosexuality,
cross-dressing, transgender identity, and fetishism.
The May 1949 issue of Whisper featured here tries to entice
readers by asking, in a bold headline, IS THERE A THIRD SEX?" Although
the story is sandwiched between a risque semi-nude centerfold of an
"Oriental Beauty" and a feature on why men should try to control their
impulses to harass women, "Is There a Third Sex?" is chock full of
historically interesting content.
It includes a photo of Tommy Lee, billed in the article as a "Manhattan
night-club female impersonator," who will show up a few years later as
the male-to-female transsexual whose transformation is documented in Ed
Wood's famously bad 1953 film Glen or Glenda?
Another photo is of Barbara (formerly Edward) Richards, who made
headlines in 1940s Los Angeles by claiming to be slowly turning into a
woman. Based on this story, Richards was later able to achieve a legal
change of gender and gain access to crude medical conversion procedures.
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