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Issue 49 2009
Lily: Sold Out!
The Queer Feminism of Lily Tomlin
By JENNIFER REED
[1] Lily Tomlin was perhaps at
the peak of her mainstream fame and popularity in the 1970s and 80s. Her body
of work at that time includes live performance, television, sound recording,
and film. Prominent in all of these, her public persona was shaped mostly in
the latter three arenas, what we now call 'old media.' This persona was a
product of what Philip Auslander calls the "mediatized" culture of that
historical moment (1999, 5). That is, as a widely recognized media presence,
Tomlin had the cultural influence to make meaning in dominant culture.
[2] Most well known as a
television star, Tomlin became a familiar and well-loved personality at the
cultural moment when television was at the height of its influence. According
to Auslander, "the televisual has become an intrinsic and determining element
of our cultural formation," (1999, 2) particularly in the last half of the twentieth
century. Her television career took off through Laugh-In, on which she
debuted in December 1969, then as a guest on other talk and variety shows, and
finally on six television specials of her own produced with her partner Jane
Wagner: The Lily Tomlin Show (1973), Lily (1973), Lily
(1974), Lily Tomlin (1975), Lily: Sold Out! (1981), and Lily
For President? (1982).
[3] During this period Tomlin
was celebrated in the national press as both a comic genius and something of a
national treasure. In 1977 she was the subject of Time Magazine's Cover
Story, and long profiles in Newsweek, Rolling Stone (1974), Playboy(1976),
People (1976, 1977), to name only a few of the magazines that described
her in fascinated terms. A typical description of her work in the June 1977
issue of Vogue reads,
Lily's messages
come from Inner Space and catch us on the perfect edge where laughter topples
over into self-recognition, pulling us back just before we might plunge into
despair (Robinson, 186).
And in a March 1977 profile in Newsweek describes audience
reaction to her:
To
put it simply, they love her. Barbra Streisand is that increasingly ambiguous
thing, a superstar, but Lily Tomlin, at 37, is a culture heroine,
something very rare for a woman in this society (Kroll, 63) .
She was also clearly recognized in
the many profiles done on her in 1977 as a very important multi-media
personality. Another typical example in Flightime, July 1977:
Nobody
can deny her drawing power, her ability to get people out to
the theater, out to a movie, or even more amazingly, to switch television
channels (Buckley, 9).
[4] This level of popular
appeal, distinctive in its nearly universal affection and admiration for her
work in all media, allowed her to create the work that she wanted to create on
her own terms. Probably the least mass mediated endeavor at this time was the
play written by Jane Wagner, Appearing Nitely (1977); it was made into
an HBO special the following year, as well as a sound recording, Lily Tomlin
On Stage (1978). During the same period, she made three other sound
recordings, This Is A Recording (1971), And That's The Truth
(1972), and Modern Scream (1975). She also made several films at this
time. Nashville (1975) her first, garnered her an Oscar nomination.
She went on to make The Late Show (1977), Moment by Moment
(1978), Nine to Five (1980), The
Incredible Shrinking Woman(1981),
and All of Me (1984). Tomlin has gone on to make many other films and
television appearances, and gained her most significant critical notoriety with
the Broadway playThe Search
for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, written by her partner Jane
Wagner. The play ran in New York in 1985-86, then across the country for over
four years; as it continued to be widely and deeply lauded, became a
best-selling hard cover book, and a 1991 film.
[5] I focus on this period of
the mid-1970s to early 1980s because Tomlin was at the height of her own
influence in popular media, at the same time that feminist politics, with
which she was identified, was at a high point in terms of media focus.
Coinciding with that, feminist theoretical moves happening in the academy were
shifting feminist debates to encourage a more manifold notion of the concept
'women,' through a more thorough integration of race, class and sexuality, and
the closer examination of the construction of the concept 'women' itself. In
this essay, I read Tomlin's 1981 television special, Lily: Sold Out!
within this framework, and through a lens of feminist queer theory. Through
works like Lily: Sold Out!,
Tomlin was able to produce uniquely feminist queer meaning in mass media that
denaturalized and thus worked to undermine the very categories of heterogender.
[6] The most obvious subject of
Lily: Sold Out! is an examination of the place of live performance in a
"mediatized" culture. It enacts the lively—and still alive—debate
about the place of theater and live performance in a mass mediated society.
Narratively, it is about Tomlin, the performer, reluctantly taking what she
calls her "sensitive and moving piece on womanhood" The Seven Ages of Woman,
(a show which does not exist seriously outside of this television show) to open
in Las Vegas. Thematically, then it is about the conflict over art vs.
commerce, with Lily worried about "selling out." She positions herself as an
artist, committed to larger social issues, most especially feminism, who is
battling the seduction of fame and fortune.
[7] Although this show aired
decades ago, it is instructive to look at today not only as important cultural
history, but also as a particular feminist strategy of intervention into
dominant culture. Tomlin's take on, and taking apart of, heterogender was a
radical cultural move by a mainstream personality. Yet it tends not to be
recognized as a radical intervention—in part—because as a woman,
she is not read as queer the way that male performers like Jack Benny, Paul
Lynde, or Tony Randall have been. And her queerness was also much more explicitly
politicized through feminism, in a way that was unique to her as a performer at
this time. The radical implications of her presence were also easy to ignore
by viewers who might find them threatening because of her accessibility as a
popular performer. This polysemic possibility found in her work is the basis
of her popularity in broadcast television and, her appeal to feminists and
lesbians at the time, as well as the queer reading possible now.
[8] Lily Tomlin became known
as a socially conscious comedian soon after she established national fame. The
characters she performs generally offer a critique of oppressive social
institutions: most often the gender system, through characters like Mrs.
Beasley, Susie Sorority, and later the many explicitly feminist characters like
Lynn, Edie, and Marge of The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the
Universe. She also challenges the class system, through characters like
Tess and later Trudy, both "bag ladies;" racial oppression most famously
through Opal, in a skit with Richard Pryor; ableism through her character
Crystal the Terrible Tumbleweed, and ageism through Sister Boogie Woman. On
one level the feminist work she did with her characters was relatively
straightforward, or as straightforward as satire is: it is easy to see the
feminist ideology in her work. Others have written about the importance of
Tomlin's feminist comedy. Suzanne Lavin, in her book, Women Solo
Performers: Phyllis Diller, Lily Tomlin and Roseanne, makes the point that
many of her characters, like Mrs. Beasley and Susie Sorority, perform the pain
and constriction of traditional femininity and thus foreground the price of
male-dominance.
[9] Outside of her
performances, Tomlin has been a public face for feminist organizations like the
National Organization for Women and The Women's Building in Los Angeles; she
campaigned for Bella Abzug and the ERA, self-identified as a feminist in
interviews, and in 1972, famously walked off the Dick Cavett Show when
fellow guest Chad Everett referred to his wife as being among his most prized
possessions.
Theorizing Gender
[10] Tomlin's work took part in
the emerging feminist discourse beginning in the late 1970s and early 1980s
that produced crucial theorizing that worked to dismantle the universal
subject, women. And 1981, the yearLily:
Sold Out! aired, was a watershed year. Audre Lorde gave the keynote
address at the National Women's Studies association Conference, called, "The
Uses of Anger: Women Responding to Racism." Angela Davis wrote Women, Race,
and Class, and Gloria Anzaldœa and Cherrie Moraga released This Bridge
Called My Back, the first collection of feminist writing by US women of
color.[i] These and other key texts worked to
expose the "contingent foundations," of the category "women" as Judith Butler
might say, for US-based, 'color-blind' straight-defined feminism. Taken
together, these texts are a small, yet representative set of examples of the
thinking that shifted the discourse and political movement that worked to
destabilize the category "women," into multiple and contradictory meanings.
Tomlin's contribution to a larger theoretical movement by feminists of color,
lesbian feminists, and others of this time recognized that feminism was
building its politics on the necessarily exclusive category "women." Her
performance was part of the larger shifting discourse that worked to "render it
as a site of permanent political contest," (Butler, 8) rather than a stable
signifier of a thing already known. In Lily: Sold Out!, as in so much
of her other character work Tomlin performs insistently the many differences
among women.
[11] At the same time, and
certainly not separate from this de-universalizing movement, feminist
poststructuralism was making clear just how complex the construction of gender
is. As Wendy Brown writes:
Within
Western feminist theory, poststructuralist insights were the
final blow to the project of transforming, emancipating, or eliminating
gender in a revolutionary mode. . . .
The point is not
that poststructuralism undermines the project of transforming gender
but that it illuminates the impossibility of seizing the conditions of
making gender as well as the impossibility of escaping gender (111).
These are the insights that made
calls for "women's liberation" seem hopelessly naïve in their overarching
grand-narrativizing. Feminism could no longer talk about men and women as
easily distinct social categories, of men as "the oppressors," of any power
structure depending on a simple us/them dichotomy, or of any more pure place
outside of the social relations of gender. And these are the insights Tomlin
performs as she positions herself as both inside and critical of mass media,
celebrity, and systems of heterogender.
Queer Lily
[12] Less public than Tomlin's
feminism, yet still widely known, was her sexual identity. It was rumored but
not explicitly spoken in mainstream media that Tomlin was a lesbian and that
Jane Wagner, her creative collaborator, was her partner in life as well.
Tomlin herself was not closeted, necessarily, but neither was she out in the
way that later television celebrities such as Ellen DeGeneres or Rosie
O'Donnell are out. For example, in 1976, she did a long interview for The
Advocate with Vito Russo, most well known for his book on the history of
gay and lesbian images in film, The Celluloid Closet (which was made
into a documentary in 1993, with fundraising and narration done by Tomlin).
The interview covering a couple of
days over several outings and conversational in structure, clearly shows them
as friends. At one point Tomlin says,
"Listen, Vito, this is for The
Advocate. It's going to look funny if we don't discuss the gay issue."
Vito says, "Yeah."
Lily: Well,
what did Bette Midler say about it?
Vito: She said that
it's okay to be anything you want as long as you don't let your dog shit on the
street.
Lily: Oh,
see? Bette is wittier than I am.
Vito: Yeah, she
is.
Lily: Fuck
you, you commie queer.
If not a "coming out," this signals
clear ease and identification with and as a gay person. It avoids the
confession and the explanation. It refuses to participate in the compulsory
binaristic categorization that keeps the entire heteronormative system in
place. It operates along a similar strategy raised by Judith Butler in
"Imitation and Gender Insubordination," in which she poses these questions:
The
discourse of 'coming out' has clearly served its purposes, but what are
its risks? . . . Is the 'subject' who is 'out' free of its subjection and finally
in the clear? Or could it be that the subjection that subjectivates the
gay or lesbian subject in some ways continues to oppress, or oppresses
most insidiously, once 'outness' is claimed? (308-09).
That is, coming out has obvious
useful political purposes, but interrogating coming out, questioning the binary
categories themselves, is also at least as politically useful. As Butler goes
on:
If
it is already true that 'lesbians' and 'gay men' have been traditionally designated
as impossible identities, errors of classification, unnatural disasters
within juridico-medical discourses, or, what perhaps amounts to the
same, the very paradigm of what calls to be classified, regulated, or controlled,
then perhaps these sites of disruption, error, confusion, and trouble
can be the very rallying points for a certain resistance to classification
and to identity as such (309-310).
By not being categorically "out"
Tomlin had a lot of room to play with the categories themselves. Whatever
Tomlin's motivations for not announcing her sexuality in a public forum, the
result was queerly productive.
[13] Another example comes from
a riff on her 1975 record,Modern
Scream. This record is thematically similar to Lily: Sold Out! in
that it focuses on the meanings made in a mass mediated society and on
questions about selling out to the mainstream. It also relies on the
character, Lily Tomlin, both celebrity and our familiar, as the anchor to
showcase nine of her characters, all in the context of Lily Tomlin being
interviewed by a reporter (who is also played by Lily Tomlin).
[14] What is most remarkable on
this album is the queer content raised by the interviewer asking Lily about her
"frank film about heterosexuality." She goes on, "Did it seem strange to you,
seeing yourself make love to a man on the big screen?"
Lily: Well,
I did a lot of research. And by the time we began shooting I was used to it. I've
seen these women all my life, so I know how they walk, I know how they talk.
Course, I did interview some psychiatrists, but they don't have the
answers.
Interviewer: No,
I don't suppose anyone does, really.
Lily: Course,
I got a lot of flak from straight liberation groups. Some thought I
went too far, some not far enough.
Interviewer: Well,
you have your radical element in every group.
Lily: And
my family said, 'How could you do such a thing?' People just don't
understand, you don't have to be one to play one.
Interviewer: I
guess people are pretty amazed that a woman who looks like you do can
play a heterosexual so realistically and still be perfectly normal. The
voice you use for the part, don't you...
The record then cuts to Mrs.
Beasley advertising laundry detergent.
[15] Taken together, these
public winks suggest a queer feminism that challenges the inevitability of
heteronormativity. Tomlin does not have to be "out" as a lesbian for this to work
as queer. In fact, it is much funnier and more effective with her as a liminal
sexual subject. By not speaking "as a lesbian," in a mainstream context, this
is hilarious and not heavy-handed. It is provocative and not prescriptive. It
is questioning and not categorical. It is what makes it queer. Reading
Tomlin's work through a queer feminist lens permits one to see more than simply
a straightforward challenge to male dominance, but more of a subversive
disturbance to the foundations of heterogender and heteronormativity itself.
[16] Heteronormativity refers
to all of the ways that the social is based on an assumption of heterosexuality.
It is a powerful organizing force that depends on erasing, denigrating, or
repressing that which does not fit into its terms. Samuel Chambers has
elaborated the concept this way:
Heteronormativity
means, quite simply, that heterosexuality is the norm in
culture, in society, in politics... The importance of the concept is that it
centers on the operation of the norm. Heteronormativity emphasizes the extent
to which everyone, straight or queer, will be judged, measured, probed
and evaluated from the perspective of the heterosexual norm. It means
that everyone and everything is judged from the perspective of straight
(178).
Tomlin's work queers heterogender
from a feminist perspective and thus undermines heteronormativity. Queer,
according to Alexander Doty, "is a quality related to any expression that can
be marked as contra-, non, or anti-straight" (xv). He goes on to say that
queer "suggest[s] a range of nonstraight expression in, or in response to, mass
culture. This range includes specifically gay, lesbian, and bisexual
expressions; but it also includes all other potential (and potentially
unclassifiable) nonstraight positions" (xvi). Tomlin's work is queered when we
read her "anti-straight" feminist challenge to heterogender in her mimicry,
parody of, and distance from masculinity and femininity, both in her
performances and in the extra textual rumors and hints that she is a lesbian.
[17] In any case, even if one
does not know about the rumors, Tomlin does not fit into traditional
femininity. There is no man she is attached to. There is no pretense that
there is a man, or will be a man. In her most public face, she is a woman
alone, with no ties to a nuclear family arrangement and no desire to create
that. There is no place to put Tomlin within a heteronormative economy.
[18] Additionally, of course,
she is a woman who is funny, which is decidedly unladylike. It is simply a
truism that the field of comedy was then, and continues to be, dominated by
men. Many have commented on the fact that women just aren't that funny, or are
not allowed to be funny, or that funny women just don't play in a
male-dominated context. I think Jerry Seinfeld sums it up well when he says,
"To laugh is to be dominated," (Auslander, 1992, 128). Seinfeld isn't talking
about gender dynamics necessarily, but that is the essence of the gender issue
and comedy. Taken together, all of this makes Tomlin unclassifiable within
"mass culture," the very place from which she operates (the reading from within
mass culture is central to Doty's definition of queer).
[19] So, from this queer
feminist position, as a participant in dominant, mass-mediated culture,
Tomlin's work is very much in what Auslander calls the "postmodern resistant
mode: [she] seeks to contest the meanings made available by hegemonic
discourse, from within the terms of that very discourse" (1992, 165). It is
based on a recognition that there is no purer, better place outside of the
social structures we all occupy. This is perhaps one of the definitive
concepts of the postmodern in relation to cultural politics, and explains why
mass media helps produce those politics. Tomlin is a "critical artist in
postmodern culture" in that she "exposes the processes of cultural control" and
thereby "emphasizes the traces of nonhegemonic discourses within the dominant
without claiming to transcend its terms" (24).
[20] The combination of her
position as well-known and well-loved comedian firmly embedded in a mediatized
culture with the unsubstantiated but widely assumed knowledge of her sexuality
allowed Tomlin to make significant interventions into the representation of
gender in mass media. Placing herself as a sort of liminal figure in
relationship to mass media and celebrity culture, as well as categories of
sexuality and gender, she offers no easy condemnation or simple celebration of
any of these categories.
Lily: Sold Out!
[21] The television special, Lily:
Sold Out! is a particularly sharp example of the work in which Tomlin focused
on ambivalence and liminality. It opens with the familiar character Ernestine
talking to fellow operator, Fenecia, saying she is trying to put a call through
"to that Tomlin woman, from her agent.... Tomlin's gone highbrow on us again....
Oh, she is at some artsy New York Theater doing that dreary Seven Ages of
Woman...give me a break."
[22] Cut to Lily Tomlin on the
stage thanking a live audience in her (now) trademark empty stage, grey top and
black slacks. She goes backstage, exhausted, excited, to a large crew who
greet her enthusiastically, fawning over the depth and meaning of her
performance. One woman techie says, "The Seven Ages of Woman was sheer
poetry." Then the call from her agent comes through, and she says that oh no,
she could not possibly do Las Vegas.
Who
called? Caesar's Palace? I'd have to do Seven Ages of Woman, Arthur.
It's what I believe in right now. If I did something else right now it would just
be for the money. And I don't think I could live with myself if I did something
just for the money. How much? Is that per week?
Cut to her speeding through the
desert in a Cadillac. The comparison set up there—between the purity of
"real" theater and the crass commercialism of Las Vegas—is one of the
basic satirical underpinnings of the show. The joke first is on the sincerity
that the character, Lily Tomlin, (played by the actor Lily Tomlin)
"concerned woman," political artist, expresses throughout about the categorical
difference between theater and Las Vegas. Theater, in this debate, is seen as
transcending the commercial. It is high art, meant to elevate us
intellectually and politically, to raise consciousness. Las Vegas stands in
here for mediatized culture. Although it is live as well, it is the kind of
mediatized performance that mimics film and television in its use of
larger-than-life specatacle. And the difference is about the possibility of
creating "real" meaning vs. the dreck of mere entertainment. The assumption is
that political or intellectual meaning cannot be made in such a commercial
context. The fact that she is using a television show for social commentary is
only the most obvious way she is blurring the lines. By doing so, Tomlin
performs the conundrum of finding liberation outside of oppressive social
institutions that Auslander describes here:
Because
postmodern political art cannot place itself outside the
object of its own critique, it also cannot claim to depict 'alternative'
social visions. Because postmodern political art must
position itself within postmodern culture, it must use the same
representational means as other cultural expression yet remain
permanently suspicious of them, (1992, 23).
[23] While the show pokes fun
of the idea of a stark contrast between art and commerce, at the same time it
takes the question of politics and popular culture seriously. Like Tomlin's
other work, it operates from the assumption that although there is no 'other
place,' or clear alternative, what passes as 'normal' life in America is ridiculous
in its oppressive force. And within the terms it sets up, it offers a feminist
critique of dominant culture and more interestingly, a feminist queer
subversion of heterogender.
[24] As Lily struggles to cope
with the unfamiliar and crass environment of Las Vegas, she encounters many
opportunities to position herself as a feminist in a hostile land. And she
does this in a variety of ways all from the ambivalent position of one who is
part of and implicated in dominant culture as well. For example, one thread of
the show: In the preparation of her show, The Seven Ages of Woman, as
Lenny, the PR guy introduces Lily to ultra-luxurious room at Caesar's, he tells
her,
This
is not me speakin', OK? They're concerned. I mean they're concerned
that you soft-pedal whatever crazy cause you're into. You
know, the feministic, the hallustic, the ERA, bad water, whatever.
You know what I'm talkin' about. You're a smart girl. They
want more pizzazz, less politics, OK?
[25] He then introduces her to
a successful Las Vegas comic, saying, "This is history. Two funny-bones
meeting each other for the first time. Lily Tomlin. Mickey Gold." Mickey
Gold, supposedly helping her with her pizzazz, bombards her with an endless
stream of canned jokes. For instance he says, "I gotta one-liner. Never
fails. I could have had any gal, in your case guy, I pleased. Unfortunately,
I never pleased any of them." As she tries to be polite, but is clearly not
amused, her host, the PR guy Lenny, says, "She is into character
stuff—with a message." The comic says, predictably, "Why don't you save
the messages for Western Union?"
[26] This bit allows Tomlin to
make a feminist point that her humor is different from, and presumably better
than, mainstream male-dominated humor. The contrast is clear and jarring. Yet
Tomlin is not positioning herself completely outside of this business. The
point is made as part of an ongoing struggle within Tomlin herself, so it is
not set up as a definitive feminist victory over the insensitive representative
of patriarchy. The categories between inside and outside are productively
blurred here. So, to go back to Auslander, we are "permanently suspicious" of
the means of representation, but still employing them.
The Seven Ages of Woman
and Universal Womanhood
[27] Later, in her rehearsal for The Seven Ages of
Woman, Lily is in tights doing interpretive dance and everyone wants her to
go for a laugh and create an extravaganza. A tech guy brings in a large "L" to
put her name in lights. She says she doesn't want her name in lights. She
says, "If I'm gonna have my name in lights, I want it to say 'woman.' Just
woman. And I'm proud to be one."
[28] A large part of what
Tomlin is satirizing here with the title and theme of this show within a show
is the universalzing impulse that shaped much of the well-known feminist art
and thinking of the time. The satire is clearly not from an anti-feminist
position, but from an insider's critique of that familiar yet increasingly questioned
universalized conception of the category 'women,' by feminists.
[29] Tomlin's implied
questioning of Lily's, The Seven Ages of Woman is part of the emerging
discourse challenging that monolith: women. It is a feminist critique of this
unquestioned, unified category, as a conceptual dead-end. The humor here is in
how clearly the entire totalizing enterprise of trying to capture "women's"
essential experience is shown to be a meaningless and even insulting exercise.
The very effort is a mockery of actual women's lives—the variety of which
Tomlin performs in other parts of this show, and in her other work. Further,
the very fact of a feminist spoof is part of the feminist re-conceptualization
of power. It recognizes and produces the realization of "the impossibility of
escaping gender," in the words of Brown.
[30] When her show, The
Seven Ages of Woman, is unveiled, Lily has gone totally Las Vegas. She
lands on the stage in a giant egg and emerges from it in a flashy, revealing
costume complete with headdress and dances around the stage with all male
troop. She is totally 'woman' here, and that alone is funny, given not only
the context of the show but Tomlin's public persona as a feminist, and
rumored-to-be lesbian. It is this mass-mediated position that facilitates a
reading of Tomlin's major strategy as taking apart the universal woman here
through a queer feminist address. As Doty argues, the pleasure in a queer
reading comes in part from the text, yet is always made more powerful by the
"extra-textual behind-the-scenes gossip" (9) about the sexuality of the
performer.
[31] In the next bit Lily says
to her Las Vegas audience,
While
we're having fun, let's not forget about war. The war between men
and women. The battle of the sexes. Yes. I am talking about it. Someone
much smarter than I once said, "War is hell," and I think anyone
who ever registered a pattern at Tiffany's knows just what I'm
talking about.
And then she dons a bridal
veil—with her tiny little costume—and taps "Here Comes the Bride"
with "The Lily Tomlin Dancers." It ends with her being shot out of a cannon
into the audience. She stands up out of the smoke in a new evening gown
singing seductively to the audience as 'woman,' and breaks into one-liners.
She says,
People
always say to me, 'Lily, when are you gonna settle down and get
married?' And I say to them, 'Listen, I could have had any gal, or in my
case guy, I pleased. Unfortunately, I never pleased any of them.'
She goes on in her vampy style,
"I'd like to sing a song about the kind of guy we all meet at least once." And
she launches into "The Man Who Got Away." Then she runs up into the band and
grabs a horn, then a banjo, then a trombone, and then the drums, and plays them
all madly. It is an abrupt shift out of 'woman,' as she grabs agency usually
reserved for men. This is merely the last shift in a riff that has seen her
move through several gender performances mimicking heterogender in a mocking
way that denaturalizes it—again, made possible in part by Tomlin's
position in popular culture.
[32] Lily's bursting out of
the egg to launch the Las Vegas spectacle she seemed to want to resist, already
puts this performance at a remove. We know it is not "her." As she moves to
talking about registering at Tiffany's in the context of the battle of the
sexes, and donning a wedding veil, thus alluding to her own bridal experience,
she foregrounds the very put-on of that identity. Sauntering into the audience
singing and then telling the Mickey Gold joke, her verbatim repetition of the
way he told her the joke again foregrounds the put-on, and distances her
relationship to heterosexuality, thus denaturalizing it. It is clearly not
"natural" for her to say she could marry 'any guy I pleased.'
[33] As she moves into her
lounge singer persona and on to her rendition of "The Man Who Got
Away"—the "song about the guy we all meet at least once"—implying a
fake address to all women, from a common experience "we" all share, she continues
with a parody of heterogender based on a mimicry of 'woman.' Elin Diamond
explains in "Mimesis, Mimicry, and the True-Real," that mimicry is a useful
feminist performative tool. She writes that "the sign-referent model of
mimesis can become excessive to itself, spilling into a mimicry that undermines
the referent's authority" (62). Mimicry is the denaturalizing critical
distance between some version of a "real" imitation—mimesis—and its
exaggeration. Diamond goes on:
Mimicry
can function...as an alienation-effect, framing the gender behavior
dictated by patriarchal models as a means of 'recovering the place
of her [the performer's] exploitation' (66).
[34] The mimicry of the Las
Vegas lounge singer is not making fun of the Las Vegas lounge singer herself,
but the absurd and exaggerated gender requirements imposed on women in dominant
culture generally, and Las Vegas, more so. One could say that to mimic a Las
Vegas lounge singer is to go for a pretty easy laugh, and on one level it works
that way. But the queered feminist critique is the deeper level it works on.
It is possible to enjoy that joke on more than one level, which is why it can
be on television.
Kinging: Tommy Velour
[35] Interestingly, the
critique of gender through the character of the Las Vegas lounge singer has
another incarnation in this show, in the persona of Tommy Velour, also played
by Tomlin. Tommy Velour has a presence throughout the show, with his name on
the marquee as Tomlin first arrives in Las Vegas, and then with billboard
posters for his show constantly appearing in the background. He is the Las Vegas star, a fixture, a Wayne Newton figure. A
centerpiece of Lily: Sold Out!, and within the terms of the show, of
Lily Tomlin's acclimatization to Las Vegas, is to visit Tommy Velour's show.
[36] Tommy Velour appears
onstage moustached, in a sequined jacket, holding a cigarette and sporting a
confident manly swagger. The camera moves from Lily Tomlin, sitting in her
booth, horrified, looking out of place, not quite dressed for a lounge and very
uncomfortable, to a booth with Ernestine and Liberace, seemingly on a date, as
they are quite affectionate with each other. As Tommy Velour holds court and half
sings, half talks to the audience, Lily is caught trying to escape the lounge.
The spotlight catches her and Tommy says, "Come on give us one of those:
'snort, snort, snort'." Cut to Ernestine, who says in a brilliant intertextual
moment, "That just steams me."
[37] When Tommy comes to the
end of his show, he jumps onto a giant cake as part of the spectacular climax.
Sweat drips off him, he rips off his tie to show a big patch of chest hair,
(perhaps an homage to Tom Jones?) as he dramatically, exhaustedly finishes his
last song. He is spent.
[38] This performance of
masculinity fits well the description coined by Judith Halberstam in the late
1990s—"kinging." Kinging refers to a theatrical impersonation of
masculinity, usually a parody of masculinity. In Halberstam's words, kinging
often "exposes the dated look of latter day sex gods (Tom Jones, Elvis Presley,
Donny Osmond) and emphasizes the prosthetic nature of male sexual appeal by
using overstuffed crotches, chest rugs, and wigs," (2001, 433). That is an apt
description of Tommy Velour, who predates kinging by at least a decade. As
Halberstam describes it, kinging developed within lesbian spaces mostly in the
1990s.
[39] To this day, kinging has
not filtered much into mainstream representation and remains relatively
isolated in lesbian clubs. It certainly has not taken on the mainstream life
that the drag queen has in so much camp performance. The campy drag queen has
a long and noble tradition in many mainstream venues, both live performances
and mass media of all kinds. And it, again in the words of Halberstam (who
gives due credit to Esther Newton) "describes the discontinuities between
gender and sex or appearance and reality but refuses to allow this
discontinuity to represent dysfunction. In drag performance, rather,
incongruence becomes the site of gender creativity," (1998, 236).
[40] One of the major reasons
that drag performance has almost always been the exaggerated performance of
femininity, not masculinity, according to Halberstam is that masculinity is not
generally seen as performed. It is understood to just be: to be natural. She
writes, "Indeed, current representations of masculinity in white men
unfailingly depend on a relatively stable notion of the realness and the
naturalness of both the male body and its signifying effects... masculinity 'just
is,' whereas femininity reeks of the artificial," (1998, 234). This is, of
course, one of the central mechanisms of male dominance. Within these
normative terms, masculinity is untouchable; it is the reference point for humanity.
In the succinct words of Simone de Beauvoir,
The
terms masculine and feminine are used symmetrically only as
a matter of form, as on legal papers. In actuality the relation of
the two sexes is not quite like that of two electrical poles, for man
represents both the positive and the neutral, as is indicated by
the common usage of man to designate
human beings in general, whereas
woman represents only the negative, defined by limiting criteria,
without reciprocity, (xv).
Femininity is gender, and while it
can be the site of gender play and thus a way to denaturalize all gender, as
Newton and Butler have demonstrated; the self-conscious performance of
femininity by men has also been a way to point not only to the absurdities of
gender, but it can also be performed in a way to look at women themselves as
absurd. This points to the second major reason—an extension of the
first—that there is no well-established tradition of kinging in
mainstream representation. It is a very different matter to laugh at
masculinity in a male-dominated society than to laugh at femininity. Thus it
follows that such a society would not have allowed much of a space for camp
humor aimed at the excesses of masculinity, whether performed by mainstream
artists or lesbian performance artists.
[41] Whether or not the drag
kings of the mid 1990s were inspired by Lily Tomlin's Tommy Velour, it is clear
is that in 1981 on broadcast television Tomlin pointed to the excesses of
heteromasculinity and thus undercut apparent male transparency for those
inclined to read it that way. Tommy Velour is a classic drag king performance,
down to the inflexible way Tomlin holds her body to embody masculinity. Drag
kings performing today are very conscious of the ways they cannot move their
bodies onstage. Halberstam quotes Maureen Fischer who performs Mo B. Dick.
She says, "Usually I move around a lot, but as a man I am much more rigid, and
I hold my body a certain way, and it's much stiffer in the torso, and there's
no wiggle in the hips" (1998, 259). Halberstam elaborates, "Whereas the drag
queen expands and becomes flamboyant, the drag king learns to convey volumes in
a shrug or a raised eyebrow," (1998, 259). Tommy Velour can work the
eyebrows.
[42] The character Tommy Velour
denaturalizes gender in a particularly feminist way. It is not just gender,
but this overconfident, outdated masculinity that is shown to be laughable.
The parody of masculinity points at the arrogance of male dominance, through
denaturalizing it. It works on broadcast television, in part, because it is
Lily Tomlin, the woman who does the funny kid Edith Ann, and everybody's
favorite telephone operator, Ernestine. It works on a deeper level for viewers
who are tuned in to the possibility—or hope—that Tomlin is a
lesbian, and certainly a feminist. This knowledge queers the performance of
Tommy Velour; showing Liberace in a booth with Ernestine on a date adds to the
queer atmosphere as well. A flamboyantly gay man for the whole family, Liberace
occupies that classic queer position in dominant culture that can exist only if
no one names it.
[43] Lily: Sold Out!
ends with Lily sitting on her couch surrounded by her friends, many of whom are
in the show, watching the show on television. As the show ends, and everyone
in the room claps, the phone rings. Lily answers it and it is Arthur, her
agent. It seems that from seeing the special there has been an offer from
Caesar's Palace. Lily asks, "How much? Is that per week?" We are left in a loop
of televisual reality with no clear markers of what is "real" and what is made
up, or where the lines of reality begin and end.
[44] This open non-ending
leaves us with the palpable uncertainty as to who this Lily Tomlin is. Thus
the most obvious question dangles there, begging for an answer, yet there can
be no straightforward answer. What Tomlin makes clear is that getting to the
"real" story here: about Tomlin herself, about just how much she has sold out,
or is out, does not get us to "real" knowledge, wisdom, or clarity.
Understanding through categorical imperatives gives us a false sense of mastery
that Tomlin will not settle for. Her insistent play with those categories of
gender and sexuality, and of the relationship between art and commercialism and
politics through her persona, points not to a facile relationship to any of
that, but to a serious understanding that for subjects in a late capitalist
mediatized world, there is no way out. Tomlin offers no false escape route,
and no prescriptions. But by unsettling categories and questions, she works to
complicate notions of identity, multiply points of identification, and create
new positions of subjectivity that were then, and continue to be, a rare find
in mass media.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.
Thanks so much
to Liz Philipose for early conversations and support on this article; and to
Mimi Hotchkiss for excellent editing help.
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Contributor’s Note:
JENNIFER REED teaches Women's Studies at California
State University Long Beach and writes about gender and sexuality in mass
media.
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Copyright
©2008
Ann Kibbey.
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