To speak about Billie Wilder's
Some Like It Hot (1959) as a queer film is not just to attribute
to this tremendously droll film an avant-la-lettre status that threatens
to burden it down with the freight of a sometimes dully stifling
critical apparatus; it also serves to mark it off as somehow profoundly
different from the general texture of Wilder's filmmaking. If Wilder
was interested in making a film that could in any measure contribute
to revising Hollywood's by then rather dismal and to judge by another
1959 film like Joseph L.. Mankiewicz's incoherent Suddenly Last
Summer, hysterical account of homosexuality it is an effort
that seems to have been lost on the community of queer scholarship.
Certainly, Wilder was probably
not specifically interested in contributing to what we would today
call "gay" or "queer" rights: there is, at least, no evidence to
this effect in the biographical material available on him or on
the making of the film. What is more likely the case is that Wilder,
interested in, of course, making a successful film, hit on the idea
using a narrative of cross-dressing and gender ambiguity as a successful
cinematographic ploy. As I will argue in this essay, this ploy results
in a very serious contribution to queer studies. Even though Wilder
may not have come at the film from a queer perspective, he unquestionable
did from a transgressive one, one that invested heavily in the mutability
of identity (in this case, gender identity), always a refreshing
American option for a Jew weighted down by the inherited and grimly
enforced identities of the Old Country. In effect, this essay will
suggest the continuity of the sort of insouciant, jolly transgressiveness
of Wilder's film and the eventually seriously theorized investment
in the emergence of queer studies in which Jews have played such
a prominent role. It is not so much that Jewish intellectual life
has any particular investment in queer culture or queer studies
(pace the image of the Jew as the feminine passive Other that Daniel
Boyarin analyzes; see below). Rather, it is the consequence of the
enormous impact of Jewish intellectuals in post-war U.S. culture
and a natural tendency to tread waters that the staid (heterosexist)
WASP establishment had tended to shy away from.
Wilder is not even listed in
the index of directors in Images in the Dark; An Encyclopedia
of Gay and Lesbian Film and Video, and the film is only included
under the heading of Marilyn Monroe as a gay icon (cf. Dyer on "Monroe
and Sexuality" 19-66). Yet, I will insist here that Some Like
It Hot is advantageously read as a queer film text, not in an
agenda sense of the word, but as a project that, whatever its motivating
force may have been, whatever its organizing principles may be,
ends up addressing issues that, forty years later are pertinent
to queer scholarship. In order to do this, one must go against the
current of propositions that appeal to a principle of farce, such
that none of what really happens in the film has any real social
implications: it's just there to be funny, and part of the fun derives
from the off-the-wall implausibility of the whole undertaking in
the first place: that two men with no experience in gender-bending
or cross-dressing could successfully impersonate women, not only
in order to escape from the Mob and to blend into an all-girl orchestra,
but that one of them could, so to speak, at the same time re-impersonate
a man in order to win Marilyn Monroe, while the other could win
and retain the attentions of a rambunctious playboy first as a woman
and then as a revealed man. Nothing in the horizons of knowledge
of American culture, and certainly much less in the homophobia of
the film industry, could provide the basis for such propositions,
and, therefore, one simply must assume that any purposeful meaning
of what happens in the film must be dissolved away by seeing it
as silly farce.
But, of course, farce is a serious
matter (see Pavis's entry, especially the third category on "The
Triumph of the Body"). Farce allows for the contradictions of the
social text to become manifest in such a way that the lived human
experience displayed by farce is what our reality would be like
if those contradictions were not negated, repressed, or in some
other way controlled which is precisely what happens so that the
inconveniences of such deviations from the social norms involved
do not become manifest. Farce derives its efficacy as one form of
the return of the repressed, and the function of farce as a dramatic
genre is arguably that it ensures the repressed returns as a cultural
production that can be bracketed off of whatever is considered actual
reality, where such a return could indeed be quite messy. Farce,
therefore, is a psychosocial necessity as a form of mediated containment
of what cannot be accommodated by social conventions. In this it
is a genre that is parallel or perhaps a subcategory of comedy.
However, where we expect in comedy for social equilibrium as fictional
and arbitrary as it may be to become reestablished so that life
may proceed, or continue to appear to proceed, in an orderly fashion,
farce has no expectation of restoring such an equilibrium. Rather,
instead, it may up the stakes such that an even greater disruption
of the social text begins to emerge. This is precisely what occurs
at the end of Some Like It Hot with the unresolved implication
of Joe E. Brown's famous line delivered in relation to Jack Lemmon's
confession that he is a man, virtually a motif of contemporary gay
culture, that "Well, no one's perfect."
I will assume that it is not
necessary to rehearse the details of Wilder's film. Suffice it to
say that, as an example of cross-dressing in a film text, Some
Like It Hot is really quite unique in deriving from such a potentially
stereotyped enactment a trove of implications for gender identity
in American culture that is quite unparalleled in any film contemporary
to it or any film since made based on a similar proposition: the
use of cross-dressing as a masquerade of survival during whose circumstantial
utilization a series of identity transformations begins to take
place that take the plot toward really quite surprising implications.
Part of the hilarious nature of the film is the incorporation of
a degree of Jewish vaudeville references and allusions that allow
for one to view the film on one level as one set-up after another,
between a straight man, the Tony Curtis, born Bernard Schwartz/Joe/Josephine
character (I will have more to say in a moment regarding the dual
significance here of the phrase "straight man"), and his fall guy,
the Jack Lemmon/Jerry/Geraldine-Daphne character. While there is
a vague plot line to the film the efforts by two minor musicians
to escape from Spats Colombo's men, whom they have accidently seen
carrying out the St. Valentine's Day massacre in Chicago the principal
texture is a series of narrative nuclei whose farcical logic derives
from the ploy of masquerade through cross-dressing. As my colleague
Jack Kugelmass has observed, quite felicitously, Some Like It
Hot manifests the Jewish appreciation of the low as a kind of
Jewish version of "épater le bourgeois" as it if were "épater
les goyim."
By the same token, it should
be unnecessary here to rehearse in detail the now basically accepted
principle in gender studies that 1) gender is a social construction
that depends on a conventionally accepted correlation between presumed
binary primary sexual characteristics (female vs. male genitals),
secondary sexual characteristics (other nonreconstructed and nonreconstituted
bodily manifestations that are controlled by hormones linked to
the genitals), and tertiary sexual characteristics (clothes, adornments,
and cosmetics that are distributed along a binary axis understood
to correlate with the presumed biological sexual binary); 2) sexual
identity is equally a conventional construct that extrapolates a
series of behaviors, attitudes, deportment, and comportment considered
to reinforce, as a performative enactment, the accepted, normalized
binary of male vs. female; 3) because constructive, normative, and
conventional, sexual assignment and gender identity are perpetually
undergoing elaboration and manifestation, are fundamentally precarious
and require strategies of overdetermination in order to be convincing
or "authentic," are constantly subject to external vigilance and
self-correction in order to remain convincing or authentic, and
are thus more a question of a reality effect than they are essential
characteristics; which 4) exposes individuals to unremitting anxiety
as to the efficacy of the extent to which they are able to comply
with the overwhelming, unrelenting demands of the sex and gender
edifice; finally, 5) inability to conform to the demands of the
sex and gender edifice, whether through physical handicap, insufficient
socialization vis-à-vis the conventions of the edifice, social
discontentment, or as a deliberate project of gender nonconformity,
results in the sorts of deviations that get loosely bundled together
under the rubric of the queer, whether the term is deployed as a
pejorative epithet, as a badge of courage, or as theoretically principled
interpretation. It is against this Butlerian constellation of principles
that I wish to discuss the vaudevillesque sketches that are far
more the substance of Some Like It Hot than any coherent
or interesting plot regarding evasion of the Mafia.
When Joe and Jerry find themselves
compelled to cross-dress as Josephine and Daphne, they find, as
does the spectator (although perhaps not always in equal measure),
that they have undertaken to situate themselves in a circumstance
that, while perhaps not as mortally dangerous as their having happened
to be in the garage where the St. Valentine's Day massacre takes
place, is no less a terrain of perpetual menace as much for the
risks involved in assuming the social position of an exposed subalternity
as for the consequences of failing to sustain the affiliation that
they have assumed. Although the two dangers again coincide when
Spats and his henchmen show up in Florida for a mafia meeting billed
as Friends of the Italian Opera, the sustained risk Josephine and
Daphne face is to be discovered not to be women.
This risk is multifaceted. In
general terms, the consequences of being discovered would be humiliation
and discredit. Cross-dressing to the degree of attempting to achieve
total masquerade is, in a society that abides by strict adherence
to the gender binary, a very serious business (as opposed to drag,
which is a sort of metacommentary on the construction of gender
in which part of the metacommentary is to sign the fact that gender
transgression is taking place). Were Some Like It Hot a tragedy
rather than a comedy, the consequences of being found out would
add gay-bashing and even death to the initial phase of humiliation.
However, since it is a comedy, embarrassment would likely be the
extent of the price paid. Nevertheless, even in the context of comedy,
it would not do well to underestimate the potential cost of cross-dressing,
especially when it involves male-to-female masquerade: as in the
case of being gay in general, at least when gay is understood to
mean adhering to traits conventionally understood to belong to the
realm of the feminine, with a concomitant loss of traits conventionally
understood to belong to the realm of the masculine. For a man to
assume the feminine is an outrageously inexplicable investment in
the devalued and the demeaned, a deliberate purchase of inferior
social stock: illicit gender transgression is compounded by the
incomprehension of why one would want to be a woman (which, conversely,
means that female-to-male cross-dressing is, while still an act
of illicit gender transgression, still more "reasonable," since
to want to be a man is understandable). When Daphne gets pinched
on the elevator, Josephine responds to her outrage with the wry,
"Welcome to how the other half lives."
An accompanying risk of being
found out is the frustration of the subplots of the respective sexual
desire or, better, personal agenda grounded in sexual desire that
Josephine as Joe and Daphne as Jerry come to pursue. In an act of
additional cross-dressing, Joe as Junior undertakes the sexual conquest
of Sugar Cane (Marilyn Monroe), while Daphne, still as Daphne but
inwardly contemplating being able to revert to Jerry, perceives
the advantages of acquiescing to the advances of Osgood Fielding
III (Joe E. Brown). Both of these projects involve considerable
gender trouble and deserve commentary in some detail (writing in
a pretheoretical mode, French must settle for the concept of androgyny
to explain the gender distruptions of the film).
Joe's project is complex one.
It does not merely involve reverting to his identity as Joe the
saxophone player, but rather requires the construction of a new
masculine identity: thus male-to-female-to-male cross-dressing is
involved in his case, and it is the theater-of-the-ridiculous complications
of the quick changes that are involved here that raise the relatively
simple vaudeville base of the guffaw that elementary cross-dressing
might provoke to the high theatricality Joe engages in (see "Female
Impersonators" passim). Joe is shown from the outset to be
pretty much of a cad in his relations with the receptionist at the
Sig Poliakoff booking agency, and while both he and Jerry are attracted
to Sugar Cane, Joe is the one who first comes up with a plan to
become her sixth or seventh saxophone-playing beau, although in
a new disguise.
Joe's new disguise is that of
Junior, scion of the Shell Oil Company fortune. What is particularly
interesting about this disguise, at least viewing the film from
the perspective of current Hollywood gossip, is that Joe appears
to use as his model Cary Grant's upper-crust roles. Not only is
his whole look and manner Cary Grant, but he even adopts the slightly
faggy lisp that was part of the Cary Grant persona. Moreover, and
this is where things begin to become quite fascinating, Joe as Junior
pretends to be a man with a sexual problem. As a subroutine, he
describes loosing his fiancee because of a misstep on the edge of
the Grand Canyon and of becoming frigid as a result of the shock
of her death. The choice here of words is a malapropism that Sugar
does not catch: frigid is not an adjective that can be applied to
men impotent, perhaps, but not frigid. Perhaps impotent would have
been too phallic a word for a 1959 film, and perhaps frigid is as
good a euphemism as ever to describe a circumstance that, within
the confines of the patriarchy, simply does not occur to real men.
Indeed, on a second level of meaning, frigid appears to be being
used here as a euphemism for gay: Junior has turned gay because
of the shock of his fiancee's death. Or, at the very least, a man
who is unable to function sexually is necessarily, inevitably construed
as gay.
Marilyn Monroe's major appearance
in the film (along with the conversation with Josephine in the rest
room of the sleeper car, in which she explains to her, as she chips
away at the ice to make cocktails, the bad luck she has had with
saxophone players) is to "defrigidify" Junior, to make a man of
him once again, both in the sense of arousing Junior sexually and
in the sense of allowing Joe to be the man with Sugar that he cannot
be with her as Josephine. Monroe does a veritable parody of Monroe
in this long sequence of the film (Haskell notes that she is as
much in drag as Curtis and Lemmon are [257]). If one has always
had the impression that Monroe's acting was always a parody of heterosexism,
it is never more obvious than here, as Sugar enacts one of the fundamental
axioms of compulsory heterosexism: all a man needs to arouse him
sexually is a real woman, and its corollary: the degree to which
a woman is able to perform as a real woman, she will be able to
make a man perform as a real man (such an ideology also, of course,
holds the converse to be true, bringing fearful symmetry to the
fearsome binary). Some Like It Hot is only listed in Raymond
Murray's Images in the Dark under Marilyn Monroe, in the
section devoted to gay icons (269).
Monroe was a gay icon, I would
propose, less for the embodiment of the hyperfeminine that is a
component of one dimension of gay culture. Rather, Monroe's ability
to enact in a highly overdetermined manner the Hollywood pin-up
version of female heterosexuality has always lent itself to the
parodic reading I am interested in underscoring here. A parody of
heterosexism not only highlights the way in which sexuality is a
construct based on a series of semiotic conventions or, alternatively,
on a series of heavily freighted fetishes. It also demonstrates
by implication the virtual impossibility of anyone other than a
Marilyn Monroe of coming even close to attaining the demands of
the heterosexist narrative: Monroe is a feminine sexual ideal precisely
because it is so unlikely that the vast majority of women could
even begin to touch her.
However, this raises another
iconic function attributable to Monroe: the absurdity of a model
of ideal femininity that is so exaggeratedly overdetermined that
it begins to insinuate a deconstruction of that which it proposes
to model. It is at this point that Monroe as a figure of the queer
enters in. The fancifulness, as far as sexual identity and gender
roles go, becomes evident as Sugar begins her seduction of Junior.
As Joe pretends to fail to respond to her initial attempts, Sugar
intensifies the caliber of her seductive moves. This is all very
fanciful in terms of what the Hayes Code was going to permit as
a reasonable program of erotic seduction, because the idea that
Junior and Sugar are going to proceed fully clothed and with no
other erotic acts than intensive, but yet still rather quite prim,
mouth kissing simply stretches the imagination as to what is likely
to be effective in arousing Junior. If the absurdity of the limits
on the representation of erotic arousal are made evident here, so
too is banal conventionality of feminine seduction which the film
is spoofing. There is another point to be made as well: both Sugar
and Joe are acting parts in a drama within a drama, and in Joe's
case it is a double enactment. Not only is Joe pretending to be
Junior, but as Junior he is pretending to be frigid in order to
increase Sugar's ardor, obliging her to do what heterosexism tells
her she must do with a man. Sugar, in turn, is willing to abide
by the rules of the heterosexist seduction (her very name, of course,
is a metaphor for female sexuality), because she sees in Junior
the opportunity to break out of her grim cycle of caddish saxophone
players. At the end of the film, as Sugar and Junior disappear in
an erotic clutch below camera level in the stern of Osgood's speedboat,
Sugar continues to play her role as seductive woman (although, in
good romantic Hollywood style, she appears to have begun to love
Junior, so it's all okay), while Junior continues to enact his part
as the reconstitutedly masculine millionaire.
As interesting as all of this
is, and as well acted as it is for its potential for hilarious absurdity
regarding the patterns of heterosexuality, Jerry's gender enactments
are particularly complicated and cross over from being absurd to
directly threatening to the imperatives of compulsory heterosexuality.
In the first place, Jerry plays second fiddle (literally, bass)
to Joe's caddishness, which extends to the power relations that
exist between them as fellow professionals, buddies, and roommates.
If Jerry is always passive (i.e., "feminine") with respect to Joe's
schemes and, indeed, he could be taken to be less than paradigmatically
masculine in any conventional sense he is also the one who most
takes seriously their cross-dressing. At first, he is worried that
Joe's scheme will not work ("We're not going to get away with it"),
and he complains about the problems of attempting to enact the female
body, to which Joe responds insouciantly, "It's a whole different
sex," precisely as they are about to embark on an adventure in which
sexual difference, the dominant identity binary, comes to be called
so much into question. But Jerry begins to get the hang of it, and
rather than using the feminine form of his name to which they have
agreed, Geraldine, in a gesture of sublime inspiration, he identifies
himself as Daphne, thereby evoking one of the most feminine names
of the classical repertoire, that of the nymph who was changed into
a laurel tree to escape from Apollo's amorous pursuit. As Daphne,
Jerry is both the most successful of the pair as a woman and the
one who is most taken with suddenly being thrown in with a train
car full of women. Evoking the image of a child being locked in
a candy store, Jerry is suddenly awakened to a sexual frenzy by
Sugar, although when all of the other women begin to pile into his
berth in the belief that a girls' party is in progress, his ardor
is considerably dampened. But later, it is Daphne who will be pinched
in the elevator, a sort of definitive confirmation of the successful
assimilation of female identity.
Making good on her name, Daphne
begins to be pursued by Apollo in the person of Osgood Fielding
III. As elsewhere throughout the film, the various sequences concerning
the relationship between Daphne and Osgood are built around vaudeville
routines regarding the pursuit of the reluctant woman by the persistent
man, with Osgood's repeated "Wows" an index of the effect Daphne
has on him. If Daphne at first sees in the wealthy Osgood's ardor
a ticket out of penury and, incidentally, an escape from her impersonation
as a woman (Jerry intends to wed Osgood, and then demand an annulment
and a cash settlement in exchange for not revealing to his mother
that he has married a man), her compliance with the narrative of
compulsory heterosexuality that Osgood imposes on her holds her
firmly within the realm of conventional femininity, and the camera
moves back and forth between the sequence of Junior's thawing under
the pressure of Sugar's lips and Daphne dancing the tango in Osgood's
arms. Although they have gone to a night spot featuring what Osgood
describes as a hot Cuban band, it is actually the tango that they
dance, the Argentine dance built around a woman's compliance with
the erotic moves of the man: more than any other conventionally
heterosexual dance, the tango involves a highly charged sensuality,
albeit greatly attenuated in the Fred Astaire/Arthur Murray versions
that become popular in the United States. An important aside: as
much as the tango is now associated with compulsory heterosexuality,
in its origins it was danced by two men, and the homoerotic implications
of this fact resurface in recent films on the tango by Carlos Saura
and Sally Potter. The fact that, after all, the tango is danced
by two men (only if only one of them knows that this is so), in
Some Like It Hot is not inconsequential if one knows it is
the tango they are dancing, and what the homosocial origins of the
tango are.
However, where the relationship
between Daphne and Osgood becomes serious gender trouble is in the
famous ending of the film, an ending that is constructed to be maximally
funny, so much so that the way in which it raises the ante of gender
transgression easily gets lost. As Junior and Sugar continue their
reaffirmations of the former's newfound erotic potential, safely
out of sight in the stern of the speed boat (where one hopes, for
the good of Junior's [not Joe's] sexual history, Sugar has quickly
gotten beyond kissing), Osgood presses the point of marriage, having
gone so far as to enlist his mother's approval. Daphne, sensing
disaster, despite the scheme originally motivating her to accept
Osgood's attentions, begins to bring forth the litany of reservations
that culminate in her pulling off her wig and confessing that she
is a man. Osgood's famous reply, "Nobody's perfect" can still bring
down the house, but precisely in doing so, it overlooks the implications
of his having accepted this important detail, and the film does
well to stop there, since there is no way a Hollywood film made
in 1959 could even begin, not with the most fulsome incorporation
of the rich vein of innuendos of vaudeville and not with the highest
degree of comedic perfection, to consider the implications of one
man agreeing to wed another. Lieberfeld notes this when he says
"In the end, Jerry's identity and his relationship with Osgood are
left dangling outside either social or narrative convention. In
Judith Butler's formulation, the two characters remain outside the
matrix of culturally intelligible gender identities" (133; Lieberfeld,
however, does not detail the queer implications of this exclusion).
The fact that Daphne is a man
is an important detail, since gender identity is always of the highest
order for the heterosexist patriarchy, and no amount of good-fun
laughs can dispense with this crucial fact. To realize this is to
understand how the cross-dressing in Some Like It Hot is
far more than just funny: gender impersonation involves a serious
defiance of the imperatives of the heterosexist patriarchy, and
no amount of joking can dispel the consequences that such a transgression
can have. Daphne's decision not to go through with her scheme to
extort money from Osgood would seem to be a realization that escaping
from the Mob which is, after all, a homosocial society of men bound
by their guns is one thing, but going all the way with gender transgression
is quite something else again. When Jerry first explains her plan
to Joe, the latter ask "And what will you do on your honeymoon."
The response Jerry gives, a typical example of vaudeville méprise,
is to say that the two are not in agreement as to where they want
to spend their honeymoon.
This is most definitely not
the information Joe is getting at, and as funny as the misunderstanding
is, it foreshadows what the film, in the end, cannot resolve: the
fact that, while same-sex marriage for Jerry has become too dangerous
a proposition even as the culminating enactment of femininity, Daphne
as bride, Osgood is totally unconcerned that is, he is totally willing
to accept the proposition of same-sex marriage: after all, he has
been through a half-dozen female wives, and perhaps he is ready
for something different. Cardullo's analysis of what he calls the
"dream structure" of Some Like It Hot has the force of denying
the implications of Osgood's position. Cardullo would have us understand
that female impersonation has been a good thing for Joe and Jerry,
allowing them to revise their masculinity, get in touch with their
feminine side, to see the woman's point of view, that sort of thing
(which Tony Curtis underscores in his statements in The Celluloid
Closet about the role he played and the great fun he had, how
masculine and feminine are relative concepts, including his work
on Josephine's pouty or bee-stung "Eve Arden" lips). All of this
may be true: one certainly expects that, when Joe reveals to Sugar
that he is really a saxophonist, it is with the conviction that
he will be a different man to her than his predecessors: "Transvestism
is used in the service of [the fulfillment of a desire for better
social relationships between members of the opposite sex], not to
make a point about latent tendencies [I assume here, Cardullo means
latent homosexual tendencies] in Jerry and Joe."
That may be true. From Jerry
and Joe's point of view, Some Like It Hot is not a gay film,
as much as it is a queer film, for no other reasons than it promotes
a contemplation of the workings of the narrative of compulsory heterosexuality
and its fundamental investment in the line drawn in the sand by
the gender binary. But I repeat, it is not a gay film from Jerry
and Joe's point of view. So, what about from Osgood's point
of view? After all, he has the final line in the film, and the last
laugh he has cannot totally cover over the fact that not Jerry/Daphne,
not the film as a discourse about sexual relationships, and certainly
not any straight viewer has any response to give to his affirmation
that it does not matter that he will be marrying another man.
What, then, is one to do with
Osgood's closing, and ringing, affirmation? Certainly, it does not
mean that Billy Wilder produced the first commercial gay film in
American cultural history, which is why I agree with Lieberfeld
that there is nothing liberating about Wilder's ending (133). But
what it does mean is that, whether it was his intention or not,
Wilder, by relying on a comedic routine of female impersonation,
has introduced into Some Like It Hot an element of gender
queering that is irreducible to a standard romantic denouement.
Since this is a comedy that spoofs romantic commonplaces, perhaps
a romantic resolution is not necessarily to be expected. Yet there
is equally no other way for the film to dissolve, or to imply a
dissolution for, the closing proposition uttered by Osgood. The
trappings of female impersonation have been abandoned, including
Junior's abandonment of his secondary impersonation, but the consequences
of that impersonation, at least for Daphne, remain very much in
place. Once again, Jerry is the fall guy, and Joe's disappearance
from view in the arms of Sugar, leaves Jerry holding the bag very
much so once again. But the bag this time carries all the weight
of the heterosexist gender system, which is certainly likely to
have greater consequences than to be left coatless in the February
snows of Chicago or to be pursued by the Mob.
Much of Wilder's humor derives
from the Jewish vaudeville tradition, and it is possible to view
the film as one such sketch after another (the Jewish dimensions
of the film are discussed briefly by Sikov 415-16). This tradition,
like music-hall variety in general, is characterized by the license
to slip below, often way below, the horizon of bourgeois decency.
One realm in which this is evident is in humorous routines built
on sexual allusion, and within this realm, routines that make reference
to sexual deviation, to a form of erotic farce in which that which
is repressed by the taboos of polite society, committed as it is
to enforcing a highly specified version of compulsory heterosexuality,
may regularly emerge as the content of the comedic text displayed
to the audience. This sort of vaudeville farce, unlike high comedy,
as I have suggested before as a characteristic of farce in general,
does not seek to reestablish social order, and the embarrassment
of vaudeville for those who subscribe to the taboos, as much as
it is the guffaw of those who have little need for, and indeed seek
to resist, the strictures of decency, is that the "ta boom" that
punctuates the routine and marks the punch line deliberately leaves
the micronarrative suspended in the contravention of sexual decency
or legitimacy that it proposes, and it is in this sense that the
essential substance of the sexual jokes and innuendos of vaudeville
depend on the queering of patriarchal heterosexism (concerning the
vulgarity of vaudeville, see Cohen).
The fact that subaltern cultures
in general are customarily viewed as lying on the fringes of social
decency also raises the question as to what extent they also propose
an inherent or implicit queering of the heterosexist patriarchy.
Daniel Boyarin has examined in detail the "invention of the Jewish
man" as someone/something less that fully masculine, in as much
as Western notions of aggressive masculinity are grounded in ideologies
of Christianity triumphant, while Judaism (and other cultures/religions
as well, it must be noted) have assigned to them aspects of the
feminine passive (i.e., fag, pervert, queer) Other. Numerous Jewish
lesbigay writers have alluded to the double helix of Jewish marginality
and queer marginality. As Evelyn Torton Beck says in the introduction
to her anthology Nice Jewish Girls; A Lesbian Anthology:
I am a Jewish lesbian. The
truth is that it is extremely difficult to identify onself as
a Jew outside the long shadow of anti-Semitism. It is like trying
to imagine what it would feel like to be a lesbian in a non-homophobic
world. (Nice Jewish Girls xxix)
Lev Raphael, who also quotes
Beck, says at the end of the introduction of his his collection
of autobiograpnical writings, Journeys & Arrivals; On Being
Gay and Jewish:
Coming out as a Jew ultimately
made it possible for me to come out as a gay man and then work
at uniting the two identies. . . .
It was almost twenty years
ago that I started exploring my Jewish past and wondering about
a Jewish future. That search has been inevitably interwoven
with coming out and finding love. In that dual journey, writing
has been both a catalyst and a laboratory for change. (31)
Some Like It Hot, following
this train of cultural affiliations, is, thus, doubly marked as
Jewish. It is Jewish in the filmic elaboration of vaudeville routines
of the sort that old Borscht-Belt performers like Jack Benny and
Milton Berle had already taken, first, into their radio performances
and, then, into their television work, and one is confident that
it would be relatively easy to enumerate a long line of films in
which vaudeville routines are the basis of the narrative line: after
all, this is what George Burns was doing right up to the very end
of his career not so many years ago: The Sunshine Boys (1975)
is both vaudeville and metavaudeville. However, so much of vaudeville
material that is taken out of the old music halls to do service
in radio, television, and the movies must necessarily lose its commitment
to the realm of sexual innuendo. Wilder's film appears to be the
relatively innocent utilization of female impersonation, in the
sense that it is a disguise for self-protection and not an affirmation
of deviant sexual behavior. Yet, this presumedly innocent utilization
of drag unleashes semiotic processes that Joe and Jerry are unable
adequately to contain, and in the process, that the film is unable
adequately to diffuse.
One has no way of knowing to
what extent Wilder was conscious of this fact, whether he expected
the overlay of The End to serve as an equivalent of the "ta boom"
punctuating the line delivered by Joe E. Brown now serving as straight
man while nevertheless delivering the queerest line of the film,
and it is probable that he assumed that its humor would be completely
innocuous, given how the general sense of the film comfortably asserts
heterosexuality and even reinforces it in the character of Joe and
his relationship with Sugar. But the processes of meaning are never
so reassuringly clean. In the process of elaborating for comedy
purposes the aspects of Joe's and Jerry's masquerade in drag, Wilder
releases one hilarious depth charge after another against the foundations
of the heterosexist edifice. In the end, too many transgressive
questions have been raised that are left unanswered: why, indeed,
would a guy want to marry a guy?
References