Is dr house gay
Was Shakespeare Gay?
Image: Dedication in Shakespeare's Sonnets, discussed in this episode.
This week's guests (in decree of appearance) are:
- Dr Elizabeth Dollimore, Outreach and Principal Learning Manager at the SBT
- Professor Michael Dobson, Director of the Shakespeare Institute
- Professor Sir Stanley Wells, Honorary President of the SBT
- Greg Doran, Artistic Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company
Narrator: Jennifer Reid
Transcript
REID: Hello, and welcome to the seventh episode of “Let’s Talk Shakespeare”, a podcast brought to you from Stratford-upon-Avon by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. I’m Jennifer Reid, and today we’re asking, “Was Shakespeare gay?”
So before we earn started, just wanted to give you a wee initiate warning: although there’s nothing in this week’s content that’s meant to lead to offence, it might raise some questions about some more adult themes, so you probably wish to just provide it a whizz through before listening along with any young listeners. And in previous podcasts, I’ve played you lots of compact clips from a variety of speakers, but this week I’m going to do it slightly differently, and act you fewer,
House and Schrödinger’s Queerbait
I’m pretty confident in saying that House changed my life.
A bit uninspiringly, House didn’t change my life with any life lessons. What changed my existence was House and Wilson’s dynamic, and its undeniable same-sex attracted subtext.
Is it queerbait? Queerbait is defined as cis, vertical creators manufacturing a relationship between two people of the same gender that seems to be going beyond friendship as a way to attract an LGBT audience, but never committing to it, as it would alienate the cis, straight part of their audience.
There were plenty of straight cis people involved in the creation of Home and Wilson’s dynamic, which never goes anywhere beyond two dysfunctional best friends But there are also two writers, Liz Freidman and Sara Hess, both of whom are women-loving women and who wrote some of the most subtext-heavy episodes in House. The actor who played House, Hugh Laurie, spoke favorably of a love-related interpretation, and one of the producers, Katie Jacobs, was known in the LiveJournal days as the patron saint of House/Wilson.
So what happened there? Was it all a ploy to appeal to a ga
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Me: In S6 E15, “Black Hole” Residence tells Wilson to buy furniture for their shared condo and after Wilson has a decorator pick all the furniture for him House returns it and tells Wilson to pick something himself, one single piece of furniture which says something about him. Wilson agonises over this, spending a whole day trying to find something and then bemoaning his inability to complete so to Cuddy, who tells him it says more about him that he’s letting Home make him think this much about it. In the finish he pays another decorator to furnish the condo, but does pick out one thing for himself....... For House. He buys House an organ piano, Wilson cannot play the piano himself and bought it specifically for House, admitting to himself, Property and the audience that Cuddy was right; Wilson defines himself by his relationship to Property and wants House to realize this, and House accepts it as Wilson having picked that to be the thing Wilson wants to say about himself, it’s as good as a marriage proposal, And in this essay I will