“There was an incident when I went on an actual date and he got very jealous, he was confused,” she says Picture: iStock.Įventually things came to a head. Monica is no stranger to Sydney’s Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras. The ’80s were tough (for straight women) - Wham, Elton John, for god’s sake.” I thought George was the most divine thing in my entire life and he was everything I wanted in a boy. “We were both like ‘hello cutie pie’, let’s go to the movies and dance, but I had horizontal shenanigans in mind and he, clearly, did not. He was different to other guys, he spoke to me like I was a person.” “I wasn’t sure if he was my boyfriend but I was the happiest I’d ever been. We would stay up all night talking about films and he was flirtatious with me at the movies he would put his arm around me. Ms Davidson has said he would prefer not to name the man. It was when she was at university, in her early 20s, that he walked into a class and before long she was smitten. I’d been going to parties with drag queens when I was six, but it happens - hormones are crazy.” ![]() “A gay man wasn’t a shiny unicorn I’d never seen before. “I’d been raised in a family with lots of gay men in it so I should have known better than anyone (not to fall in love with one),” Ms Davidson says. Monica Davidson has directed a documentary, Handbag, on the relationship between gay men and straight women.
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