



Just your average Monday night at the Stonewall Inn: A truculent drag queen battles a fold-out table and a bingo ball wheel; her assistant arranges the swag (porno, mainly); a game of pool amongst some pretty boys focuses more on each other than the game; and then there’s the clutch of regulars who can name the heroes fading in framed pictures in the backroom (and can tell you stories from when the backroom really was a backroom).

But there were a few people here on this chilly January night who came to honor the legacy of the bar President Obama named as a touch-stone of the American civil rights movement. Equality, the President said, “is the star that guides us still; just as it guided our forebears through Seneca Falls, and Selma, and Stonewall”—referring to the early hours of Saturday, June 28, 1969, when patrons decided enough was enough, and reacted en masse to a routine police raid to clear out deviants. Resistance attracted crowds in the streets of New York’s Greenwich village, escalating into violent protests that lasted for six days. It was a moment that galvanized the gay rights movement.

Those that spoke of the significance of President Obama’s words were emotional, overjoyed at having this historic place ranked in that lineage of struggles, in such an important speech.

“We’re not just a bar. We’re the Stonewall. It’s like owning Rosa Parks’s bus. We don’t own the movement, but we own the bus,” said Stacey Lentz, one of the bar’s owners, and an activist. “This is where it started, and to have that history acknowledged in the civil rights context, that’s the thing too. We’ve always said gay rights is civil rights, and I think he summed that up today perfectly.” She called President Obama’s speech “a huge, huge win for gay rights across the country.”

Also at the bar was Ike Holter, who has written a new play about the riots called “Hit The Wall”, which follows 13 unlikely characters who end up at the bar in 1969. Holter couldn’t believe the coincidence between his current work and the President’s speech and was the first one to arrive at the bar when it opened.

“I thought it was a beautiful speech,” he said, “And I thought it was important that he basically said that the gay rights movement was a civil rights movement, and it’s just as important as any movement that has come before it.”

“I was very proud of my President,” he said. Holter’s play will open off-Broadway at Barrow Street Theater, mere blocks from the Stonewall Inn, in early March.

Holter’s director, Eric Hoff, joined him at the bar for a few drinks. “The alliteration is nice for one thing. It’s a really poetic way of highlighting the kind of cascade of forward-thinking movement in this country,” he said. “I don’t think I expected him to be so explicit.”

“I was very emotional today watching the President deliver those words,” Hoff said.

Opera director Beth Greenberg rocked up just to be in the bar on an historic night: “To say in the same phrase: Seneca Falls, Selma Alabama, and Stonewall, just blew me away, legitimizing everything that we’ve striven for for the past 40 years in the gay rights movement. What can I say? Amazing.”

“I’m not a real flag-waver, but today’s a day to wave the flag,” she said. “We’re still trying to make a perfect union, and we will continue to try to make this union perfect, but it’s pretty darn good.”

“I found it so impressive,” said Jerry Holste, standing underneath the portraits of 1969 protesters in a room behind the bar. “I never thought in my lifetime I’d see Stonewall included in that list,” he said. “To see a President do this, it’s…”

He couldn’t find the words.