Troughman
Leeroy or Lee Leethal Elliott (born 1950) is an Australian underground celebrity famous for his role in the paraphilia of watersports in toilets at Sydney gay venues in the late 1970s through 2000s.
In 1978, at the age of 28, Leethal was exposed to watersports in New York through the Mineshaft bar.[1] Returning to Australia, Lee realised at the Signal Bar in Sydney how he could incorporate his newly discovered interest in watersports into the bar which lacked special facilities. He did this by using the shared urinal, or trough, common in Australian pubs and clubs. This habit resulted in the name Troughman being applied to Lee. Describing his sexual experience, Troughman began by crouching down and leaning against the urinal, before engaging in the signature activity he is most famous for, "it becomes easy to let myself go completely and, no longer kneeling or crouching, I lie right down in the urinal."[2] Troughman also engaged in other watersports, and recalls having used bandana code.[3]
According to Robert Reynolds by the early 2000s in the Sydney gay community "Troughman has become a cultural icon, an almost mythical figure," and that Troughman was particularly famous for his role in the Sydney Mardi Gras parties.[4] By 1996 Troughman had been mentioned in the mainstream media in relation to the Sleaze Ball.[5] An interview with Barry by Kerry Bashford appeared in Campaign magazine, accompanied by a photograph by Garrie Maguire. Sponge magazine, a small underground design magazine edited by Mark Sykes, also ran a story, again Maguire was commissioned to make the accompanying photograph, though it did not get printed, due to its literal interpretation of the subject. The photo was later seen in a Leather pride exhibition.
There is a sound archive of Barry being interviewed on GayWaves an important Gay Community radio program. where he spoke about his fetish and how he saw it as part of the gay sexual revolution of the 70s and 80s. Barry was active in the gay rights movement in Sydney. He was founding secretary of University of New South Wales Gay Liberation,a participant in the June 1978 street march from which grew the Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras and Co-Convenor of Gay Rights Lobby 1981-1984. Gay rights campaigning led to the decriminalisation of homosexual acts in New South Wales in 1984. Part of the myth of Troughman included persistent rumours of death.[6] Troughman's cultural impact entered into mainstream Australian culture, where by 2007, his practices could be referred to off-hand in relation to public urinals, and comprise part of contemporary Australian myth.[7]
The 1998 film Troughman directed by Kellie Henneberry was screened at the Philadelphia International Gay & Lesbian Film Festival in United States.[8]
Notes
- ↑ Charles, 65–8.
- ↑ Charles, 68–9.
- ↑ Reynolds, "Editors Comment," 72.
- ↑ Reynolds, "Editors Comment," 70.
- ↑ Greg Logan, "Dance Spells" Metro section, Sydney Morning Herald 4 October 1996, 4.
- ↑ Michael Donaldson, "Sleaze Preoccupies Sydneysiders," Sunday Star-Times, 4 October 1998, 15; Reynolds, "Editors Comment," 72.
- ↑ Doug Anderson, "Television," [Daily review] Sydney Morning Herald 28 September 2010, 21; Sam de Brito, "Standard Urinal Protocol," All men are liars (blog) Sydney Morning Herald (online) 27 February 2007 12:03 AM.
- ↑ British Film Institute, Film and Television database entry "Troughman 1998" http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/617533; Australian Film Commission, "Australian Films and Multimedia at Overseas Festivals", Australian Film Commission News, 175/76 August/September 1998, 4.
Bibliography
- Barry Charles, "Troughman," Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services 15 (3&4) July 2003: 65–74. doi:10.1300/J041v15n03_06
- Robert Reynolds, "Editor's Comment: Afternoon Tea with Troughman," in Barry Charles (author), "Troughman," Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services 15 (3&4) July 2003: 70–74. doi:10.1300/J041v15n03_06