Casa Susanna was a popular weekend destination in Jewett, New York in the United States,[1] for cross-dressing men and transgender women in the early 1960s. The bungalow camp was run by Susanna Valenti[2] and her wife Maria, who also ran a wig store in town.[1]
History
Maria purchased the 150 acre property in the mid 1950s; originally, the Valentis had dubbed it Chevalier D'Eon Resort.[3] They charged $25 for a weekend's stay, which included food, lodging, and lessons in makeup.
Hidden away in the rural Catskills, Casa Susanna provided much needed privacy to its guests, in a time when public cross-dressing was a criminal offense across most of America.[4] However, guests occasionally visited the town of Hunter to shop, where they were met by a range of reactions. Some were negative, but many locals saw them as reliable customers.[4] Casa Susanna was a haven for its guests to celebrate their "inner girl" without persecution, and acted as an important space within which guests were allowed to comfortably and happily participate in activities such as gardening and board games whilst expressing their gender identity or inner desire to cross-dress.[5]
Most guests at Casa Susanna were married, and considered themselves heterosexual men who enjoyed cross-dressing, but many others later identified as transgender and lived out their lives as women, including Virginia Prince and Susanna herself.[1]
Casa Susanna also offered photography, having appointed one of their guests, Andrea Susan, as their official photographer. In doing so, the Valentis avoided the possibility of sending the negatives to a professional developer who might later call the police, and allowed for affirming photographs of their guests to be taken as a souvenir and as a source of affirmation for their gender expression.
Andrea took many photographs of her fellow guests and developed them at home;[6] though Polaroid cameras were available at the time, Andrea used a film camera that required the use of negatives instead, and put the negatives in the possession of her photography mentor Dick, who had gifted her her photography equipment. However, when Dick later married, these negatives were thrown away, eventually making their way to a Manhattan flea market in the mid 2000s. There, they were found by Robert Swope, "a gentle punk rocker turned furniture dealer", who bought every photograph he could find and published them in a book with his partner Michel Hurst.[6] The release of the book Casa Susanna, fifty years after many of the photographs themselves were taken, led to many former attendees of Casa Susanna coming forward to share their experiences, allowing Casa Susanna to be documented.
Influence
The book Casa Susanna, based on a collection of photographs from the site, inspired the Tony-nominated play Casa Valentina by Harvey Fierstein.[7]
Casa Susanna, a documentary film by Sébastien Lifshitz, debuted at the 79th Venice International Film Festival.[8]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 "Google Maps". Retrieved April 22, 2019.
- ↑ Susanna Valenti (born Tito, a name which she went by for many years) immigrated to the United States from Latin America in the mid-1940s. She wrote numerous articles for Virginia Prince's Transvestia. Susanna's time and place of death are unknown: the last known mention of her was her contribution to the 100th issue of Transvestia in 1979.
- ↑ Zagria (February 1, 2012). "Susanna Valenti (192? - ?) translator, broadcaster, activist". A Gender Variance Who's Who. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
- 1 2 Blotcher, Jay (March 29, 2007). "Queens of the Catskills". Chronogram. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
- ↑ "Casa Susanna: Photographs From a 1950s Transvestite Hideaway". Time. April 14, 2014. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
- 1 2 Denny, Dallas (May 10, 2014). "The Historical Roots of Casa Valentina". Chrysalis Quarterly. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
- ↑ Evans, Suzy (May 17, 2014). "Tonys: Harvey Fierstein Talks 'Casa Valentina' Transvestites, Drag and the 'Sexually Normal' (Q&A)". Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on June 29, 2023.
- ↑ Jude Dry, "'Casa Susanna' Review: A Lost Chapter of Queer History Comes to Life". IndieWire, September 3, 2022.