Buffy gay
The Beyond the Binary exhibition brings together the diverse perspectives of LGBTQ+ researchers, artists and group activists to generate space for self-representation in the museum.
Beyond the Binary researcher Mara Gold explores queer representation in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, a cult TV series for many people in the LGBTIAQ+ community.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer and queer voice
Willow and Tara
Buffy The Vampire Slayer’s witches Willow Rosenberg and Tara Maclay were, in the early 2000s, the first recurring homosexual woman couple on primetime TV. The network supported the storyline but issued strict guidelines on what could appear on screen. Their connection is developed sub-textually, using magic to stand in for lesbianism. This follows a long-established connection between witchcraft and queerness including the persecution of LGBTIQ+ people as witches.
Show creator Joss Whedon had always planned for either Willow or her optimal friend Xander to be gay, and in Season 3 Willow comments that the vampire version of herself is ‘kinda gay.’ Due to the network’s stance on exhibiting lesbian physical care, Tara and Willow don’t share a kiss until season 5’s ‘The Body’
I don’t think it’s any secret that Buffy is extremely popular among LGBTQ people. I couldn’t find any demographic statistics to advocate this up, but I feel it’s pretty self-evident. Just from having been in the fandom for over a decade, it has always felt prefer a more queer-dominated space than many other fandoms. Two of the biggest Buffy podcasts out there are helmed by two homosexual women and a gay man respectively. I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that you, reading this right now, are some manner of lgbtq+, and I venture I’d be right at least half the time. And I think this is for fine reason. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is, at its core, an intensely homosexual show.
Now, I don’t mean just in regards to the representation, but let’s get that out of the way. The early years had Larry and pretty heavy subtext with Faith. Then S4 hits, and we get Willow’s coming out and Tara’s introduction. S5 gives us their first on-screen smooch - the first lesbian kiss on the network. S6 gives us more overt sexual closeness between Willow and Tara, and S7 adds Kennedy and Andrew into the mix.
There are some ~problematic~ elements to the r
How Buffy the Vampire Slayer's Diverse Representation Holds Up In 2022
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was groundbreaking in its portrayal of complex female characters, as well as its portrayal of characters within the LGBTQ+ community. In 1999, when the show began exploring Willow Rosenberg's (Alyson Hannigan) sexuality and relationship with Tara Mclay (Amber Benson) in Buffy the Vampire Slayer season 4, there was not much LGBTQ+ representation in media- especially not in a show's main cast of characters. The show's writers received a lot of negative pushback from the networks at the time for depicting a lesbian relationship, but nonetheless continued to depict Tara and Willow's love. However, in the 23 years since Willow and Tara's relationship started, audiences own seen a plethora of homosexual characters on genre-based television shows like The Umbrella Academy, Steven Universe, and Doom Patrol. Audiences possess grown to understand stereotypes and tropes on tv and how they can harm the homosexual community, so does Buffy the Vampire Slayer feature any of these tropes or stereotypes?
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was released in 1997 and after seven seasons Buffy ended in 2003.
Carl Eden
An English Lit graduate with a love of movies and words, currently living and working in Manchester. I'm an aspiring 20-something film journalist far too involved in pop culture. Big on TV, books, coffee-abuse, The Smiths, Buffy, David Lynch and I consume a lot of Haribo. Follow @cedenuk or check out my blog http://somefilmsandstuff.com/
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After the recent discussion of homosexuality on Game of Thrones, it seemed fitting to look back at previous positive portrayals in past genre shows – primarily the lesbian connection between Willow and Tara on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
Buffy is widely remembered as one of the strongest television shows of the late 90s and early 00s, and its influence is still felt across the medium today. Critics and fans who know the show will go to great lengths to sing its praises.
Despite its silly name and concept, Buffy was always more than a usual genre show, with complex characters and fantastic exploit of metaphor. It was a show that pushed television boundaries and was always trying to act something new.
The relationship between Willow and Tara was one of the first homosexual