The Guardian (USA)

‘Grandfathe­r of Goth’: fans campaign for US stamp honoring Edward Gorey

- Alice Hutton

Acampaign has been launched to recognize American queer artist Edward Gorey, whose “sinister whimsy” drawings inspired everyone from the novelist Lemony Snicket to film director Tim Burton, with a US postage stamp on his 100th birthday in 2025.

“Eccentric” isn’t strong enough to describe the writer, illustrato­r, puppeteer and theatre designer known to some as the “Grandfathe­r of Goth”.

The late ballet fanatic stalked 1960s and 70s New York in ripped jeans, raccoon fur coat, costume jewelry and an Edwardian beard, and kept a mummified head stored in a closet.

He illustrate­d hundreds of books for authors like Samuel Beckett, TS Eliot and HG Wells as well as an emerging Andy Warhol, and won two Tony awards for his 1977 Broadway revival of Dracula.

Gorey created more than 100 tiny books filled with morbid, camp, Victorian-style crosshatch etchings, including The Glorious Nosebleed, The Fatal Lozenge and The Gashlycrum­b Tinies, which dispatched children in rhyming couplets (beginning “A is for Amy who fell down the stairs” and ending “Z is for Zillah who drank too much gin”). He died surrounded by 25,000 books, leaving his fortune to animal charities in honour of his six cats.

“Goreyphile­s” include film-makers Wes Anderson and Monty Python, fashion designer Anna Sui, Snicket creator Daniel Handler and Coraline author Neil Gaiman. His most obvious “fan”, Burton, remains mute, although the set designer for The Corpse Bride and Nightmare Before Christmas reportedly confirmed the influence.

Yet, he’s not a household name.

“He’s that oxymoron: a mainstream cult,” said Mark Dery, author of a Gorey biography, Born to Be Posthumous.

“The people making culture are influenced by Gorey but … the ordinary folks who dine on a steady diet of Hollywood blockbuste­rs and Marvel franchises might not be aware that they know Gorey without knowing him.”

The Edward Gorey House, a museum opened in his 200-year-old house in Yarmouth Port, Cape Cod, Massachuse­tts, after he died in 2000 aged 75, hopes to change that.

Last month they organised a letterwrit­ing campaign to the US Postal Service, with Gorey now reaching “committee stage” for considerat­ion as a celebrity stamp.

Past examples include author James Baldwin, astronaut Sally Ride, and this year, the Native and African American sculptor Edmonia Lewis. Why has recognitio­n taken so long? Dery said: “To my mind, what made him inimitable to becoming a mass phenomenon … and taking his place in the pantheon of US culture … is his profound queerness.”

Gorey famously rejected classifica­tion: a gothic writer who wasn’t goth, a children’s author who didn’t write for children, a graphic novel genre founder who insisted he wrote “Victorian novels all scrunched up”.

Whether he identified as LGBT+ is a fierce debate between those who consider him a workaholic more interested in cats, and others, like Fun Home author Alison Bechdel, who revere his work’s iconic queerness, regardless of his personal preference.

In 1980 Gorey told Boston magazine “I suppose I’m gay”, but said that he didn’t like the label, was “undersexed” and “a person before I am anything else.”

(Ironically, this led to him being labelled as asexual or non-binary.)

“He was a man of mystery,” said Kevin Shortsleev­e, associate professor of children’s literature at Christophe­r Newport University, Virginia, who considers Gorey on a par with Maurice Sendak, a contempora­ry Goreyphile who wrote the world-famous Where the Wild Things Are.

“He left ambiguity, unfinished endings, essentiall­y ‘white space’, in his work and life … letting people read between the lines and fill in themselves.”

Born in Chicago in 1925, the hardcore anglophile drew on 19th century, acid-tongued, LGBT+ British satirists and “literary nonsense” writers including Oscar Wilde, Lewis Carroll, Edward Lear, cautionary tales, Penny Dreadful comics and woodcut drawings.

He graduated from Harvard in 1950, allegedly a member of its “gay undergroun­d” along with his roommate, the poet Frank O’Hara, during the rise of McCarthyis­m when LGBT+ communitie­s were considered the “lavender menace”.

Prof Shortsleev­e credits the lack of mainstream success partly to that “conservati­ve, pre-Stonewall era”, with “sanitised” literature and LGBT+ figures living “flamboyant”, coded lives hidden in plain sight.

The Curious Sofa didn’t help.

Billed on the cover as “pornograph­ic’” yet containing no nudity, with “action” taking place in furtive glances and innuendo, the 1961 book was eagerly stocked by children’s bookstores wanting to repeat the success of Wuggly Ump – but was quickly removed.

“People were afraid of him,” said Shortsleev­e.

“His transgress­ive work marks a huge leap in nonsense, modernist and postmodern­ist literature that went unrecognis­ed. When I ask 30 students who he is, one person raises their hand. For those who know, his impact is incalculab­le.”

A fanbase he may have embraced is the death positive movement.

In 2018 The Death Salon hosted a Gorey party in Mount Auburn cemetery, in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, featuring funeral directors and a “haute macabre” dress code. The $225 tickets sold out in 24 hours.

Megan Rosenbloom, Death Salon’s director, hailed Gorey’s gallows humour in the face of “western death denial”, adding: “I get the same fuzzy feeling from Gorey as others do from Winnie the Pooh.”

According to legend, Gorey quit New York for the Cape “in protest” when ballet director George Balanchine, whose performanc­es he never missed, died in 1983.

Though he didn’t immediatel­y occupy the derelict house he bought, to avoid displacing the raccoons until they were “ready.”

His increasing interest in animal welfare led him to sell his fur coats, which still appear at auctions.

New York Studio School art historian Karen Wilkin, who befriended him as a ballet student, recalls rooms “verging on hoarding … suffering from fleas”, with Gorey “a cultural encycloped­ia” obsessivel­y watching Japanese silent films or Buffy the Vampire Slayer, while sewing puppets now fetching thousands.

“I can hear his sighs,” she said of the stamp campaign, “like: ‘Why are they doing this?’. Secretly, he would have liked it.”

One man who would buy many stamps is Ken Morton, son of Gorey’s cousin Skee, immortalis­ed in The Deranged Cousins (Sotheby’s is selling a first edition for $1,100), and the only child whose relationsh­ip with Gorey didn’t involve murder by ink.

“I had no idea of his … fame when I was growing up”, said Morton, who remembers “Uncle Ted” in jean shorts doing jigsaws.

“It was after his death that I learned just how big a deal he was, globally. He may actually be incomparab­le.”

At Gorey’s house, between “dead” puppets flung under carpets purged of fleas (“G is for Gregory smothered under a rug”), a quote on the wall says: “Life is intrinsica­lly, well, boring and dangerous at the same time. At any given moment the floor may open up. Of course, it almost ever does; that’s what makes it so boring.”

 ?? Photograph: Jack Mitchell/Getty Images ?? Edward Gorey on the set he designed for the Broadway production of Dracula, for which he won a Tony award for best costume design.
Photograph: Jack Mitchell/Getty Images Edward Gorey on the set he designed for the Broadway production of Dracula, for which he won a Tony award for best costume design.
 ?? ?? Gorey illustrate­d TS Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats, on which the musical Cats was based. Photograph: LA Heusinkvel­d/Alamy
Gorey illustrate­d TS Eliot’s Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats, on which the musical Cats was based. Photograph: LA Heusinkvel­d/Alamy

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