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« Got Talent? | Main | Ashlee Back to SNL? »


August 16, 2005

Hendrix Played the Gay Card


Jimi Hendrix might have stayed in the Army. He might have been sent to Vietnam. Instead, he pretended he was gay.

And with that, he was discharged from the 101st Airborne in 1962, launching a musical career that would redefine the guitar, leave other rock heroes of the day speechless and culminate with his headlining performance of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at Woodstock in 1969.

Hendrix's subterfuge, contained in his military medical records, is revealed for the first time in Charles R. Cross' new biography, "Room Full of Mirrors." Publicly, Hendrix always claimed he was discharged after breaking his ankle on a parachute jump, but his medical records do not mention such an injury.

In regular visits to the base psychiatrist at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, in spring 1962, Hendrix complained that he was in love with one of his squad mates and that he had become addicted to masturbating, Cross writes. Finally, Capt. John Halbert recommended him for discharge, citing his "homosexual tendencies" -- four years before Arlo Guthrie suggested that path for avoiding military service in the protest song "Alice's Restaurant."


Posted by Lawren at August 16, 2005 08:24 AM | Trackbacks (0)

You Said

This was news about a week or so ago. As I read it, the reason was not in protest of the war (as some would logically believe). Rather, Hendrix wanted to focus on music. I wish I could remember where I read about this.

Says: Kevvy the Unnamed Source at August 16, 2005 02:42 PM

Well, considering the Gulf of Tonkin resolution occurred in Aug '64 and there was virtually no fighting prior to that, it would have been hard to protest against it in '62...

Says: The Seventh Son at August 16, 2005 04:27 PM

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