Gay tea dance

THANK YOU

Got Questions?

Get Ready to Party!

We’re so excited to announce the iconic, the incomparable Jon Ali will be this year’s Hamptons Tea Dance DJ!

NYC-based tastemaker Jon Ali is a longtime music journalist who has interviewed some of the best acts in music like Lady Gaga, Robyn, JoJo, Little Mix, Dua Lipa, Jazmine Sullivan and the Queen of Pop herself, Madonna. He’s notably known for his work in highlighting gender non-conforming musicians with his monthly playlists such as Queer Necessities and Press Play. Jon Ali is a celebrated, Glam Award-winning Top Club DJ and event producer in queer nightlife all around New York City with his various artist tributes and genre-bending dance nights.

Join us as we jam out to Jon Ali’s tunes at this year’s tea dance.

This year, the incredible Bella Noche will be hosting our drag story hour!

Bella Noche, New York’s premiere mermaid drag queen, lures onlookers in with her fantastical spark of paint, creativity and charisma. A staple of the Modern York City and Lengthy Island drag scenes, as well as a chief in LGBTQ+ community programs such as Drag Story Hour, Bella is a queen for all audiences who

Today, some LGBTQ millennials want more inclusive spaces that don’t involve alcohol or a gyrate floor, while others are bringing help queer nightlife as iconic queer spaces close in major cities. As a queer woman who loves to boogie until my meet sweats off but also enjoys a 10:30 PM bedtime, I’m at a crossroads on where I’m supposed to hang out.

Go in the Sunday tea dance, an almost-lost tradition LGBTQ people adapted as a time to relish each other’s business before going assist to work on Monday. On sdelayed afternoons and into the early evenings, revelers can appreciate a cocktail and a spin on the dance floor—usually to deep cuts of disco—and move to sleep at 10 without bringing their hangover to work the next day. Cezanne Alam, a 30-year-old married banking professional living in Brooklyn, went to his first tea dance several years ago and loved hanging out with people in person versus online, sidestepping photo filters and meeting people late at darkness.

“Being 30 years old, I grew up in the gay identity that’s predominantly very web, Internet-based [with] Grindr, Scruff, those types of applications to meet other gay men and not face-to-face interactions, which is very different from wha

Tea dance, often abreviated as just "tea", is a word for "happy hour" used among men and women in the gay group. Not necessarily just one hour.

The phrase can also be qualified by Kight" and "low" to qualify the moment of day it occurs. Low tea typically takes place earlier in the evening. High tea is later. And in some larger gay resorts, such as Fire Island, there is even mid-tea which takes place between the two.

On his way to the tea dance, Jason was very concerned that he would jog into the troll he slept with the night before.

Steven always drinks too much at elevated tea. His friends are tired of watching him puke in the harbor.

by River1 September 10, 2007

Get the Tea Dance mug.

A lgbtq+ who not only supports the American Republican party (i.e. a Log Cabin Republican, c.f.) but the radical Tea Party extremists, their candidates and policies, therein. Portmanteau of Tea Partier and Tea Dance, a mainly East Coast phenomenon of Male lover nightclub dances held in the belated afternoon, at teatime.

Aric: I fully sustain what the Governor has done to Public Employee Unions. Oh, and this is my, ahem, room-mate, Jared. We came to the costume party a

Pride News

Photo:The Tea Dance Est. 1966 – Fire Island & Pines Historical Society


The Raven Resort was a popular Gay destination in New Hope PA from 1979 to 2019
Their Sunday T-dances were legendary for a small town in PA.
Learn more about Gay History at Fresh Hope Celebrates History Archive
__________________________________________________________________

History of the Gay Tea Dances – These were events organized on Sunday afternoons in the homosexual community, originating in Recent York in the 1950s and 1960s.  The original dances included tea service. They were a place for singles to connect. The name alludes to traditional tea dances of the English countryside.

It was illegal through the mid-1960s for bars in New York to sell alcohol to people known to be gay, and New York City police would conduct raids on establishments catering to them. Hence, gay men in the area began to hold tea dances outside the city as an alternative venue for meetings. In New York, these generally took place on Fire Island, in Cherry Grove and the Pines, on Sunday afternoons. Serving tea rather than alcohol made them more acceptable and less law-defying. Because they were