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Exploiting Ambiguity: Murder! (1930) and the Meanings of Cross-Dressing in Interwar Britain

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 14:08 authored by Chris O'Rourke
<p>The crime film Murder! (1930), directed by Alfred Hitchcock for British International Pictures, and based on the novel Enter Sir John (1929) by Clemence Dane and Helen Simpson, has long been cited in debates about the treatment of queer sexuality in Hitchcock’s films. Central to these debates is the character of Handel Fane and the depiction of his cross-dressed appearances as a theatre and circus performer, which many critics have understood as a coded reference to homosexuality. This article explores such critical interpretations by situating Murder! more firmly in its historical context. In particular, it examines Fane’s cross-dressed performances in relation to other cultural representations of men’s cross-dressing in interwar Britain. These include examples from other British and American films, stories in the popular press and the publicity surrounding the aerial performer and female impersonator Barbette (Vander Clyde). The article argues that Murder! reflects and exploits a broader fascination with gender ambiguity in British popular culture, and that it anticipates the more insistent vilification of queer men in the decades after the Second World War.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of British Cinema and Television

Volume

17

Issue

3

Pages/Article Number

289-312

Publisher

Edinburgh University Press

ISSN

1743-4521

eISSN

1755-1714

Date Submitted

2019-11-01

Date Accepted

2018-12-26

Date of First Publication

2020-06-30

Date of Final Publication

2020-07-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2019-10-07

ePrints ID

34729

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