Toronto Star

Writer wanted to make being gay visible

While his honesty made him something of an accidental activist, he also suffered because of it

- FRANCINE KOPUN

Gerald Hannon paid a high price for speaking truthfully. But he did not stand down and he did not regret it.

Where others would waffle, deny, obfuscate, Hannon, an award-winning writer and early gay rights activist who died May 9, was forthright, even when the result was personal calamity.

“He was a fearless, queer writer, who wrote without considerat­ion of repercussi­ons,” said Ed Jackson, a close friend who was with Hannon, 77, on the day he chose to end his life, five years after symptoms of a swiftmovin­g form of Parkinson’s disease first surfaced.

“That made him able to be more truthful, if not incredibly strategic, sometimes, in what he wrote.”

When asked, while he was teaching journalism part-time at Ryerson University (now known as Toronto Metropolit­an University) in 1995, whether he was a sex worker, Hannon answered that he was. He lost his teaching job.

Hannon had previously written sympatheti­cally about intergener­ational sex, in an article called Men Loving Boys Loving Men, published in 1977 in the Body Politic, a gay rights magazine. The article featured interviews with men who had sex with teenage boys. One of the men was a teacher who had relationsh­ips with his students.

The article raised a furor and Hannon’s name became linked to pedophilia.

“People used to think he was a pedophile. He was not,” said Jackson. “He saw an interestin­g aspect of sexuality. He wanted to look it in the face and see what he saw.”

Criminal charges were laid against the Body Politic and three officers of its publishing company following publicatio­n of the article. Despite years of legal wrangling, the charges failed to stick, but the controvers­y surroundin­g the article dogged Hannon throughout his life. It surfaced again during the Ryerson controvers­y and helped lead to his dismissal. Hannon later reached a financial settlement with the university. He did not return to his teaching job.

Hannon hid from none of it. The article remains on his website.

“It was a horrible experience for him — he was so in the eye of the storm,” said Jackson.

“But you know, he would never turn off his phone or change his phone number.”

Longtime friend and fellow writer David Hayes said Hannon had no sexual interest in boys, and stood staunchly by his work.

“He didn’t want to make excuses or backtrack on that article, which didn’t help him at the time.”

Hayes said Hannon was an exceptiona­l writer, affable and well-liked. Hannon won numerous awards writing for some of Canada’s best-known magazines, including Chatelaine. He was especially wellknown for his facility with personal profiles.

“Gerald was a real original. He would pitch stories only he could dream up and write,” said former editor Sarah Murdoch.

Hannon’s honesty made him something of an accidental gay rights activist — he wanted nothing hidden and fought to create a society where gay couples could hold hands in public without fear of violence, marry and have children, or frequent bathhouses and engage in anonymous sex if that’s what they wanted to do.

He also took deliberate action on the frontlines of what was then called the gay liberation movement, participat­ing in numerous demonstrat­ions, to spread acceptance for the truth he grew up having to hide from friends and family growing up in Marathon, Ont.

“It was not an encouragin­g place to be gay in the ’50s or ’60s,” said Jackson.

Hayes said Hannon was also, fun, affable, intelligen­t and well-liked.

By his own admission, Hannon did like to stir things up a little.

“What frequently constitute­s my courage is a mixture of obliviousn­ess and a desire to shock,” he wrote in an article in the Body Politic in 1975.

He said he wanted to make being gay visible, so people in the community no longer had to hide their orientatio­n as he did.

“I am too well acquainted with the 1,000 tiny compromise­s that it entails ever to endure it again,” he wrote.

Close friend Peter Kingston, 47, was with Hannon in Mexico in 2017 when the first mysterious symptoms of the illness surfaced. Hannon was suddenly seized with uncontroll­able fits of laughter. He had trouble smiling. The disease progressed rapidly, and by the end of 2021, he was unable to enjoy the things he loved, including music.

Hannon made the decision to end his own life using medical assistance, before losing control of his faculties, which his friends regarded as another act of courage. He donated his brain to scientific research.

His memoir, “Immoral, Indecent and Scurrilous: The Making of an Unrepentan­t Sex Radical,” will be published this summer by Cormorant Books. His friends hope to have a memorial for him at that time.

Hannon is survived by two brothers, with whom he was in close contact.

 ?? ?? Gerald Hannon won numerous awards writing for some of Canada’s best-known magazines.
Gerald Hannon won numerous awards writing for some of Canada’s best-known magazines.

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