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And be sure to listen to our “Farewell Dick Leitsch” episode that we recorded in part at Dick’s “going away” party, just weeks before his death on June 22, 2018.
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To learn more about Dick Leitch, please explore the resources, archival photos, and full episode transcript that follow below. Dick Leitsch reading an issue of Gay, New York City’s first gay newspaper, 1970. And I hope that by sharing this episode, in which Dick gets to tell some of his story in his own voice, he’ll forgive me for misjudging him, wherever he is-drinking cocktails, smoking cigarettes, and cruising handsome young men. So how do I reconcile the man I remembered as an accommodationist with the man I re-met when I listened to my 30-year-old interview with him? The heroic figure, the brash and seemingly fearless activist who challenged the old guard homophiles, organized one of the earliest public LGBTQ protests, and confronted New York City’s police department and political leaders over entrapment and discriminatory laws that put gay people in danger every time they entered a gay bar? By bringing you this MGH episode. Credit: Photo by Louis Liotta/ New York Post Archives/© NYP Holdings, Inc.
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Photo by Louis Liotta/ New York Post Archives. Dick Leitsch, president of the Mattachine Society of New York, at Mattachine’s office at 1133 Broadway off Madison Square Park, December 30, 1965. He was an out and proud sexual adventurer who wasn’t shy about saying that what got him into the movement in the early 1960s was his pursuit of sex with men, not the fight for gay rights. I think that my own discomfort with embracing the sexual liberation part of the movement, which I memorably encountered with Hal Call, definitely colored my view of Dick. I’d read about Dick in my research as one of the old guard, the pre-Stonewall “accommodationists” who were more focused on fitting in and getting along than trying to upend the apple cart.Īnd I brought my judgments, too (which I recorded in my post-interview notes and address in my introduction to this episode). When I first met Dick Leitsch in 1989, I had a lot of preconceived notions about the one-time president of the Mattachine Society of New York. Episode Notesįrom Eric Marcus: There’s a lot to be said for gaining 30 years of perspective. Dick Leitsch, president of the Mattachine Society of New York, speaks to the press about his group's Sip-In demonstration in protest of New York liquor laws that prevented serving gay customers, New York City, April 21, 1966.