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By Jeremy Kinser and Karen Ocamb
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Carol Channing performs "Before
the Parade Passes By" from Jerry
Herman's Hello, Dolly! as the names of those lost to
AIDS are scrolled on the
large screen behind her at last year's Ribbon of Hope
Awards on Worlds
AIDS Day, Dec. 1, 2005.
photo credit: Craig Matthews |
Anyone who has ever seen Carol Channing kick up her heels
in her friend Jerry Herman’s Hello Dolly!, or belt
out a tune with her favorite singing group, the San Francisco
Gay Men’s Chorus, or deliver an over-the-top performance
at any one of a hundred AIDS benefits would find it exceedingly
hard to imagine that the 85 year old Broadway legend has
an anti-gay sinew in her slender body.
But that’s the
impression left by an interview with the Ohio-based Gay People’s
Chronicle, now circulating on the Internet. The Nov. 10 story
by Kaizaad Kotwal titled “You
know what the Bible says: Broadway legend Carol Channing
shares some startling views about her gay fans” implies
that, despite her long pro-gay history, Channing privately
judges gays by anti-gay biblical standards. Kotwal published
the transcript of his interview to substantiate the contention.
Surprised by the allegation, IN Los Angeles magazine secured
an interview with Channing and asked her directly about the
charge.
IN: The reporter said that he asked you “You seem
to have a very large gay following. Have you ever thought
about why?” And you supposedly said “I don't
think about them. I'm grateful that they seem to like me.
They're terribly loyal to me. But I'm knee-deep in the Bible
and you know what it says about that.” Could you clarify
that please? Do you remember what you said?
Channing: I never said that! I've never read anything in
the Bible about being gay or at least I haven't read that
part. But, it is true that I don't think about them in that
way. They are gay. Who cares? The Bible says “Love
thy neighbor as thyself.” I don't recognize differences
except their goodness and artistic abilities, which I always
admire.
IN: So what DO you think of gay people?
Channing: Again. I don't think about them as gay. They're
people, period.
IN: The reporter supposedly said “I read that you
have fought for gay rights. Do you think that the things
gay people are fighting for are important?” And you
supposedly said “I don't think about it. If they can't
take care of their own problems, why should I bother? It's
not my problem.”
Channing: I didn't say it like that. I'm angry that I have
to even answer questions like these and I shouldn't have
to. I think my record speaks for itself. I've always been
supportive to the gay community and I have found they are
capable of taking care of themselves. I told him, that not
being gay, it hasn't been a problem I've had to live with
myself.
Channing expressed a similar sentiment in an interview
last March with the gay Canadian magazine, Xtra. Though her
autobiography, Just Lucky I Guess, lists numerous gay icons
with whom she worked, from Noel Coward and Cole Porter to
Rock Hudson, Xtra writes that Channing knew little of their
private lives. "That's none of my business. It's never
been a problem to me. I never asked them. I don't share my
private marital relations with them," Channing told
the magazine, adding about her gay devotees. "I never
stop being grateful for them. Truly, I feel they know who's
funny and who's not. They're the most wonderful people to
play to, because they truly appreciate everything."
IN also noted some apparent discrepancies in Kotwal’s
report. For instance, though he writes that he published
the entire transcript of the interview “after a 35
minute chat,” the published interview times out at
around four minutes. Additionally, Gay People Chronicle publisher
Martha J. Pontoni confirmed to IN that Kotwal did not record
the interview, from which an accurate transcript could be
transcribed, but instead took “copious notes.”
Pontoni also said that (as Kotwal reported in his story),
Kotwal approached the interview as a Channing “fan.” But
Channing told IN, “The interview started out very badly.
He seemed to have an anger towards me from the very start.
I couldn't figure out where it was coming from.”
Pontoni vigorously defended Kotwal, a professor at Ohio
State University whose “integrity is above question.” Channing “misspoke,” Pontoni
said. “It’s our position that she said what she
said” and the paper stands by Kotwal.
(This story was adapted from a much longer story that includes
the interview with Channing that will appear in the next
issue of IN Los Angeles magazine due out Nov. 28.)
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