This past weekend I attended a big Italian wedding in New York. I grew up on Long Island, in a family where big Italian weddings are a staple. This one had all the usual trappings: loud music, louder relatives, tons of food.
This one, however, had two grooms.
If you were just passing through the reception hall, you might not have noticed. The male-female ratio was a bit high, but not by much: most of the 140 guests were from the grooms' families. There was a "Nana" (Grandma) dressed in silver from head to toe: silver hair, silver dress, silver shoes. There were buxom aunts with too much makeup; uncles with big moustaches and perfectly slicked hair; excited mothers, proud fathers. Children ran about yanking at their bows and neckties, their Sunday clothes increasingly askew as the day progressed. A DJ kept prodding people to dance, and no one-not even the wait staff-batted an eye at the handful of same-sex couples swaying amidst the others.
At one point my partner leaned over to me and said, "This feels weird."
I knew what he meant. And it wasn't just the weirdness that accompanies all weddings: the gaudy pageantry; the forced intimacy with distant relatives and acquaintances; the cheesy running commentary from the DJ ("on this day, the most important day of their lives…"-ugh). It was the fact that, where we would normally be stealth attendees, we were suddenly the main event. This was not some newfangled "commitment ceremony"-it was a big, old-fashioned Italian wedding, with grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces, nephews, godparents, and so on.
Most gays have a strange relationship with weddings. We are stereotypically (and often in fact) connected with their planning and execution, as florists, designers, musicians, priests, and so on. But as guests we are typically outsiders. We gather to celebrate love in a world that doesn't want to hear about ours. We sit at tables with relatives and friends who may not know that we're gay and may not like it if they do. We are warned not to "spoil things" by "making a scene." So when the slow songs play, we dance with Nana. Like the guys on "Queer Eye," we help plan others' events and then retreat invisibly into the background. I've always found it rather cruel.
But not here. And that was weird…in a good way.
One of the grooms has been a friend of mine for 24 years. Bob and I attended high school together: Chaminade, an all-male Catholic prep school on Long Island. In every class we shared I sat behind him, not because of any particular bond between us, but because we sat alphabetically and his last name begins with "Cors".
Lunch was the only time we could choose our seating partners, and there we sat together again, along with about a half-dozen other guys over the course of our four years there. At least five of those guys have turned out to be gay (another is a Catholic priest whose sexual orientation I've never bothered to ask). Go ahead and joke about "gaydar," but somehow we found kindred spirits years before any of us dared to admit-to ourselves or others-our sexual orientation.
Had you told me then that decades later I would be attending the gay wedding of one of my lunch buddies, I would have prayed for you (I was very Catholic then; skepticism set in later). Had you added that I would be attending with my own male partner, I would have…well, I would have prayed for me. By then I was aware enough of my burgeoning gayness to fear it.
So it was particularly sweet for me, in the same week I received the invitation to our twenty-year high school reunion, to stand up with Bob's family and friends and witness his wedding to Joe. It felt good to say "Congratulations" to his Mom and Dad in the receiving line-the same Mom and Dad who posed for graduation pictures with us two decades earlier. It was delightful (though a sobering reminder of my age) to meet his younger sister's children, some of whom will soon be thinking about high school themselves.
Political battles are important and necessary. But the fight for marriage equality will ultimately be won only when our nanas and aunts and uncles and cousins and nieces and nephews see our marriages as the family-extending events that they are. Congratulations, Joe, Bob, and family.
6 Comments for “A Big (Gay) Italian Wedding”
posted by Harry on
These are the wonderful stories and experiences and private steps forward that play a role in shaping the public thought, if only one loud dance at a time 🙂
posted by Casey on
God, I needed to read that more than you’ll ever know. Just last week I was at one of my best friends’ wedding. It was a wonderful affair – her family is Indian and was damned sure that her marriage would be a celebration nobody who attended would ever forget. The mixing of cultures (his family is very white “All-American,” his father a pastor; her family had the phalanx of aunties and grannies who put all of us young girls to shame on the dance floor when they weren’t chatting en masse in a corner about God-knows-what), the welcome of all of the couples’ friends and far-flung relatives, the stories… I was struck by how marriage really does work the miracle of binding strangers into family… and I’ll confess, I felt a desperate isolation in the midst of it, a fear that there was no way I could ever experience the same thing in my own life. It hurt. Many of the guests know my orientation, but many did not, and I even if I’d been invited to bring a guest, I couldn’t have danced with her – it would have “made a scene” and I never would have forgiven myself for putting even the slightest shadow on my friends’ special day. So yes, I did stay in the corner, chatting with my other single friends, and I avoided the tossed bouquet like the plague – such things weren’t for me – and I felt certain they never would be. That darkness has haunted me all this week, try as I might to focus on my joy for my friends, until now, as I sit in another airport, I read your story… and start to imagine again that maybe it can work… maybe one day I will have my traditional wedding (with a twist). Thank you, and God bless you.
posted by John on
Hope all you loony toon gay conservatives were encouraged by the Republican debate!
posted by rami30 on
no comments
posted by B. Allen on
I attended my first two male groom wedding in the early 1980’s…in Omaha, Nebraska of all places. At the time I thought it was a bit silly, although I was a young gay man myself. How the times have changed and me along with them. This is a wonderful story and its about time we have such affirmation.
posted by Snark on
Nice article, sweet and all that. But the author uses the words ‘newfangled commitment ceremony.’ Gay people have had commitment ceremonies for decades, if not centuries (see ‘Same-Sex Unions in Pre-Modern Europe’) – there’s nothing newfangled about them. They were the only thing the law allowed for us, and still are in most states. It was an odd choice of words.