Will & Grace included in Smithsonian LGBT exhibit

As part of an initiative by the Smithsonian Institution to add more historic LGBT artifacts to their collection, the museum has included items from the 1990s sitcom Will & Grace.

Will & Grace “used comedy to familiarize a mainstream audience with gay culture,” curator Dwight Blocker Bowers says of why the show was included. “It was daring and broke ground in the same way All in the Family did in the 1970s around issues of bigotry and tolerance.”

“Years ago, nobody would have bothered with this material,” Franklin Robinson Jr, archives specialist at the National Museum of American History, tells MSNBC. “But that was just a reflection of society. So 50 years from now, when LGBT civil rights will be something that we don’t even think about, people will ask, ‘Well, what was the big deal?’ And you can say, ‘Here it is.’ This is the primary materials from which history will be written. And if you don’t save it now, then it’s gone.”

The collection of Will & Grace items includes scripts, props and set décor. Doesn’t look like Jack’s Cher dolls made the cut, but find out what did by watching a virtual tour of the exhibit and a video discussion with its curators on MSNBC.

Keep Reading

Juicy Love Dion crying in Athena Dion's lap

How ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18 went off the rails

After a streak of strong flagship seasons, the MTV era saw its first real disappointment. What went wrong?
Juicy Love Dion with an up arrow behind her; Athena Dion with a down arrow behind her

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18, Episode 15 power ranking: Battle of the queens

Ten eliminated competitors returned for the LaLaPaRuZa, but who won?
Discord Addams and Jane Don't

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’ Season 18, Episode 15 recap: All Ru, all the time

This season’s LaLaPaRuZa is all about Mother
The cover of Work to Do by Jules Wernersbach; Jules Wernersbach

‘Work to Do’ shows just how dramatic a grocery store can get

Jules Wernersbach’s energetic novel delves into the intricacies of queer entrepreneurship, climate change—and class revolt
Advertisement