Mash gay

One Of The Most Groundbreaking MASH Episodes Almost Ended

Gay television historian Stephen Tropiano notes the continued relevance of "George" because it "expos [es] the ignorance behind the discrimination of homosexuals in the military". Sitcom star and voice of animated characters, 66, reveals he's gay. In a recent interview, the Emmy-nominated actor, 66, told the Oklahoma City blog gossip-boy.

George (M*A*S*H)

The first time M*A*S*H featured a gay character, which was groundbreaking at the time for television during the s TV censorship era. Yet few of its episodes are as casually groundbreaking as "George," a second-season outing that sees surgeons Hawkeye Alan Alda and Trapper Wayne Rogers try to help a gay army man avoid homophobia within the ranks of the U. In the case of "George," the episode was almost even bolder than the version that aired, but in the end, it got stuck with a studio-approved ending that at once undermines and streamlines its sensitive subject matter.

That groundbreaking gay episode of 'MASH' was almost even

On this episode of M*A*S*H, the secret is out about Private Weston. And now that the private’s gone public, the camp’s in an uproar about whether to tur. Written by John W. Hawkeye and Trapper "persuade" Frank not to request a dishonorable discharge for a wounded homosexual soldier.


"M*A*S*H" George (TV Episode 1974)

Former ‘M*A*S*H’ star says he is gay

But, as a new retrospective piece from SlashFilm reminds us, M*A*S*H was always a show with a “radically compassionate ethos,” and this quote-unquote “gay” episode was indicative of that. .
Former ‘M*A*S*H’ star says he is gay

George (TV series episode)

David Ogden Stiers, the actor who is best known for playing Major Charles Winchester on TV’s “M*A*S*H,” has come out. .

M*A*S*H’s Revolutionary Gay Episode

George was the 22nd episode of Season 2 of the CBS-TV series M*A*S*H and the 46th episode of the overall series. Written by John W. Reiger and Gary Markowitz and directed by Gene Reynolds, it first aired on February 16, Hawkeye and Trapper "persuade" Frank not to request a dishonorable discharge for a wounded homosexual soldier. During an O.R. session, Trapper does his best Frank Sinatra. .
mash gay

"M*A*S*H" George (TV Episode 1974)

Decades before it became a hot-button political topic, the classic sitcom explored the subject of gay men serving in the military. .

'M*A*S*H' Star David Ogden Stiers Reveals He's Gay

In the twilight of his career, "M*A*S*H" actor David Ogden Stiers is finally coming out, saying he's no longer afraid to be gay. .