Clearly, there is a part of me which is not fully British.
This picture of the gobby Labour MP, Stephen Pound, was taken at last night's Macmillan Cancer Support cabaret.
What is it with the British and drag acts? I just don't get it. Why is it funny to see a man dress up as a woman?
Don't get me wrong - I'm not upset, or angry, or bothered by it. I just don't understand why so many of us find it funny. Danny La Rue, Lily Savage, the lot of them. Why? I mean, why is it funny? What am I missing?
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Austin Barry
February 8th, 2008 10:06pmStephen, like you I am completely mystified, but men dressing as women has a long tradition in the UK, from panto, through kriegies in Colditz, through Les Dawson to Monty Python to Little Britain. My theory is that Englishmen are distressed by the melancholic fact that English women over, say, fifty begin to resemble men or are at least completely asexual, so this is the reductio ad absurdum of an uncomfortable fact i.e. it's awful, but perhaps we can accommodate it by laughing at it. The alternative theory is that we're all latent homosexuals, but if this is correct then by definition we wouldn't like men dressed-up as women. Unhappily, the tradition is likely to die out when we are all part of the Caliphate and pretending to be a woman by donning a burka will be somewhat pointless.
Ya Know...
February 9th, 2008 4:23amCan you say hooking point?
Lee Jakeman
February 9th, 2008 7:38amYou're not missing anything. The country is run by stupid people who, every now and then, reveal themselves to be - er - stupid people.
Jono Corfe
February 9th, 2008 10:06amStephen, you aren't alone. In my profession dealing with the general public, you aren't even allowed to notice those with a difference lest you're being ignorant and politically incorrect. Not that this matters a great deal when there is a plethora of characters out there. Transvestites, incontinent little people in wheelchairs, Zambian lesbians (which is just a wonderful thing to say, hear how it flows from the lips), six foot seven inch transgender persons, the list goes on. This is merely a short list of people I have thrown out of my bar which also includes the blind, the deaf, and the mentally handicapped. I'd like to say that I am not discriminating but in actuality I am in order to keep the peace. If a seven foot man in high heels, tights and a boob-tube wandered in, I'd be more impressed with my crossword.
Joshua
February 9th, 2008 4:20pmThis kind of role switching is common in many cultures. In Jewish tradition, at Purim, Jews frequently dress up in the costumes of their enemies and those who by tradition hate them. For many centuries, in England, masters not only dressed as servants but also performed the duties associated with them, and servants for their part dressed and acted as masters on one day every year (I think the first day of Christmas). The Navajo also often dress up as women when dancing at various winter ceremonials. If I remember correctly, men at one time dressed as women when performing mourning plays in Lebanon. I've long ago forgotten the reasons why (or at least the reasons put forward by sociologists and anthropologists). It's probably something to do with matters such as release of social tension and reminders of mutual responsibilities. As to the humour, I don't have a clue. I once spent three months investigating why people laugh, and I really was no wiser about the matter at the end of my studies.
Ron Combo
February 9th, 2008 10:59pmLooks like an ugly woman dressed up as a bloke to me.
Joshua
February 10th, 2008 11:30am"Looks like an ugly woman dressed up as a bloke to me." -- You are confusing him with Clare Short.
john moran
February 10th, 2008 1:38pmis this not an example of the'english disease'?
Al
February 11th, 2008 6:07amwell its perfectly understandable to not like drag.
But your line "Don't get me wrong - I'm not upset, or angry, or bothered by it. I just don't understand why so many of us find it funny
should read: I'm not upset, or angry, or bothered by it. I just want to use it to mock the labour party.