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LGBTQ culture in Australia

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LGBTQ culture in Australia encompasses the various arts and entertainment events in the country that have a focus on sexual diversity or include LGBTQ people in them.

Contents

The city with the largest LGBTQ community in Australia is Sydney, New South Wales. According to a 2013 Pew Research survey, 79% of Australians are accepting of homosexuality, ranking the country as the fifth most tolerant. [1] Sydney is renowned for its LGBTQ rights activism and the annual Gay and Lesbian Pride festival, making it one of the most LGBTQ-friendly cities both in Australia and globally. [2]

Cinema

Films

The 1998 film Head On , directed by Ana Kokkinos and starring Alex Dimitriades and Paul Capsis, is the film adaptation of the novel Loaded . [3]

Sophie Hyde during the 52 Tuesdays screening at the Sundance Film Festival. 52 Tuesdays Wins the World Cinema Dramatic Directing Award (12186023635).jpg
Sophie Hyde during the 52 Tuesdays screening at the Sundance Film Festival.

52 Tuesdays is a 2013 drama and personal growth film directed by Sophie Hyde. The film focuses on a teenage girl dealing with the gender transition of one of her parents. It was screened at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival, [4] where it was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize, and won the Best Director Award. Over the next year, it received numerous awards and critical acclaim worldwide. [5] [6]

Events

The Mardi Gras Film Festival is an Australian LGBTQ film festival held annually in Sydney, New South Wales, as part of Sydney's Mardi Gras celebrations for gays and lesbians. It is organised by Queer Screen Limited, a non-profit organisation, and is one of the largest queer film platforms in the world.

Sports

Players of the Sydney Convicts at the 2021 Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras. Sydney Mardi Gras 2021 (51011750986).jpg
Players of the Sydney Convicts at the 2021 Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras.

In 1982, the first LGBTQ football team, known as the ‘Adelaide Armpits’, started its first season in the city of Adelaide. This team continued to compete in various events in South Australia for a period of 30 years. [7]

The Sydney Convicts are the first gay and inclusive club in Rugby Australia. Founded in 2004, they compete in the Sydney Suburban Rugby Union (Subbies) championship under the umbrella of Woollahra Colleagues RFC, and are members of the NSW Rugby Union. They are also dedicated to promoting the fight against homophobia in sports and have been involved in a number of initiatives to bring about change. Together with their partners and sponsors, they have worked to increase awareness and conversation around the issue. Following the 2014 Bingham Cup in Sydney, they launched an inclusion and anti-homophobia framework specifically designed for sports in Australia. They also led the international ‘Out on The Fields’ survey, which investigated homophobia in sport, the first study of its kind globally. [8]

Days ahead of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, Australia's national team, the Socceroos, released a video calling for human rights reforms and the decriminalisation of LGBTQ relationships in the host country, highlighting concerns about the treatment of migrant workers and advocating for the freedom to love without restriction. This statement coincided with the anniversary of player Josh Cavallo's public announcement of his sexual orientation a year earlier. [9]

Literature

In 1990, Morris Gleitzman's award-winning novel and stage adaptation Two Weeks with the Queen was published, proving controversial and groundbreaking in its coverage of homosexuality and HIV/AIDS. [10]

In 1995, Christos Tsiolkas' novel Loaded was published. The work has subsequently been adapted into film and theatre, including into the 1998 film Head On . [3]

In 2015, youth literature in Australia underwent a shift in addressing LGBT issues. There was a growing recognition of the importance of broadly representing diversity in young people's lives. During this period, novels such as Becoming Kirrali Lewis, Cloudwish, The Flywheel and The Foretelling of Georgie Spider were published, that explored a range of experiences by both Australian and American authors. These stories dealt with issues such as sexual identity, race, disability and mental health. [11]

Butch is Not a Dirty Word is a biannual Australian magazine, the only magazine in the world dedicated specifically to butch lesbians and their supporters. [12]

Leisure and entertainment

Group of women at Tilley's in 2010. Tilley's for Wiki.JPG
Group of women at Tilley's in 2010.

Tilley's Devine Café Gallery, also called Tilley's, is a well-known café in the Canberra suburb of Lyneham, Australia. It was named after Matilda “Tilly” Devine, an English-born Australian gangster and madam from Sydney. When the café first opened in 1984, it was intended to be a women-only venue, and men could only enter if accompanied by women. It was especially popular with lesbian women, and quickly became an icon of Canberra's LGBT scene. [13]

Television

1970's

While homosexuality was illegal, Australian television shows involving main characters with gay storylines led the ratings. These shows include Prisoner, The Box, which featured the first bisexual kiss in television history, [14] and Number 96 , [14] [15] which featured a gay character, a transgender character and a gay kiss for the first time in television history.

Drag was mainstream in Australia earlier than in other parts of the world, with Sydney entertainer Carlotta playing a transgender character in Number 96. [14]

1980's and 1990's

In the documentary Outrageous: The Queer History of Australian TV, former Australian High Court Justice Michael Kirby says that the 1970s series Number 96 helped to soften some of the hysteria surrounding the AIDS crisis in the decades that followed by "showing that LGBTQ+ people were just like everyone else". However, as the AIDS epidemic spread and due to the reluctance of some Australian television executives, gay characters disappeared from television series in the country. [16]

Theatre

Loaded, the play based on the novel by Christos Tsiolkas, who personally, in collaboration with playwright Dan Giovannoni, was responsible for adapting it, opened in 2023. Directed by Stephen Nicolazzo and starring Danny Ball, the play has been praised for its emotional impact and its ability to address deep issues with gravity and vulnerability. [3]

Drag

Drag queen in a LGBT festival LGBT in Melbourne in 2010. 2010 Drag.JPG
Drag queen in a LGBT festival LGBT in Melbourne in 2010.

The Miss Gay and Miss Trans Australia International is an annual event held in Melbourne that promotes LGBTQ diversity. It is Australia's largest drag and trans beauty pageant. Winners participate in community and charity engagements, parade at prominent gay festivals and join the Australia Day parade to celebrate gender inclusion. The pageant takes place in February, providing opportunities to participate in subsequent events. [17]

Festivities

Attendees of the 2020 Mardi Gras during its pride parade. Mardi Gras (49911106332).jpg
Attendees of the 2020 Mardi Gras during its pride parade.

See Also

References

  1. "The Global Divide on Homosexuality". Pew Research Center. 2013-06-04. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  2. "The world's 11 most LGBTIQ+-friendly cities". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  3. 1 2 3 Rohan (2023-05-15). "Review: Loaded - Australian Pride Network" . Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  4. "Adelaide Film Festival Investment Fund Slate". Adelaide Film Festival. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  5. "AACTA AWARDS 2014: All the nominees". SBS What's On. 2014-12-03. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  6. Roures, Juan (2016-01-01). "Las mejores películas de temática LGTB del 2015: nominaciones a los I Premios Apolo de cine LGTB | dosmanzanas - La web de noticias LGTB" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  7. "Meet the Adelaide Armpits, the 'ratbag lesbian feminists' who were pioneers of Australian sport". ABC News. 2022-06-18. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  8. "Sydney Convicts: Who We Are". www.sydneyconvicts.org. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  9. infocielo, Redacción (2022-10-28). "Qatar 2022: Australia pide no sancionar las relaciones LGBTI". Infocielo (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  10. Austlit. "Morris Gleitzman". www.austlit.edu.au. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  11. Rohan (2016-01-28). "What young adult fiction looked like in 2015 - Australian Pride Network" . Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  12. Gander, Kashmira (4 July 2017). "Butch is Not a Dirty Word: 12 stunning portraits of women who are proud to be masculine". Independent UK. Retrieved 11 June 2025.
  13. "Tilley's rule supported". Canberra Times. 1984-03-15. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  14. 1 2 3 Mercado, Andrew (2019-07-15). "With Number 96, Australia brought queer people to TV decades before anyone else". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  15. Giles, Nigel. "Australia's First 'Adults Only' Soap". National Film and Sound Archive of Australia. Retrieved 11 June 2025.
  16. says, Rose (2023-02-06). "Mardi Gras Film Festival 2023 Review: Outrageous – The Queer History of Australian TV ★★★★". The Queer Review. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Ruiz, Sofe Ricardo Ruiz (2020-10-08). "Australia es un destino GAY FRIENDLY | Conoce todos los detalles". Vive, Estudia y Trabaja en Australia (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  18. "About Midsumma". Midsumma Festival. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  19. "About Us". springOUT: Canberra's Queer Cultural Festival. Archived from the original on 2011-11-16. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
  20. "Australian PM marches in Sydney WorldPride – DW – 03/05/2023". dw.com. Retrieved 2025-06-11.
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