Controversy and Resilience in the Theater

WSB-TV footage covering the Fulton County Commission's refusal to allow Atlanta Arts Alliance funding for a production of The Boys in the Band in 1970. Courtesy of Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection, WSB-TV newsfilm collection.



The emergence of queer theater in Georgia was not without controversy. When the famed play The Boys in the Band was staged in the Black Box Theater at the Atlanta Memorial Arts Center in March 1970, the Fulton County Commission threatened to cut public funding from the Atlanta Arts Alliance due to the play’s “filthy” content. Nevertheless, the play continued its two-week run and would be staged again at Buckhead’s Academy Theatre in 1976. While the commercial theater industry in Georgia negotiated the allowance of queer content, LGBTQ+ productions were simultaneously being staged outside of public theaters. Actor and director Howard Brunner staged plays with queer themes in gay bars like Sweet Gum Head and Magic Garden. When 7 Stages Theatre opened in 1979, director Del Hamilton announced the theater’s aim to produce work by Atlanta writers that commercial theater companies might overlook, and 7 Stages has since been a ready home for major queer productions. Topher Payne, the playwright behind 2013’s Angry Fags, said that “7 Stages is the sort of theater that is unafraid to put Angry Fags on a marquee” and “start a tough conversation in an unexpected way.”