May 30, 2009
-
An
openly gay teen was voted prom queen at Los Angeles' Fairfax
High School in a campaign that began as a stunt but ended
up spurring discussion on the campus about gender roles and
teen popularity.
Sergio Garcia, 18, was crowned queen Saturday night at the
Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.
"I feel invincible," Garcia said in his tiara and
charcoal-gray tuxedo.
A few days earlier,
he gave a speech that won over some cynics and led to an ovation
and his unlikely victory.
"At one time, prom may have been a big popularity contest
where the best-looking guy or girl were crowned king and queen.
Things have changed and it's no longer just about who has
the most friends or who wears the coolest clothes," Garcia
told a gymnasium full of seniors. "I'm not your typical
prom queen candidate. There's more to me than meets the eye."
Garcia assured the crowd he wouldn't wear a dress on prom
night.
"I will be wearing a suit," he said. "But don't
be fooled, deep down I am a queen."
The school, which sits at the end of the rows of chic shops
on Melrose Avenue and was once attended by members of the
Red Hot Chili Peppers, has long been a haven for students
who would be considered outcasts at many schools.
Garcia said he saw fliers advertising the prom and the election,
and they didn't specify that the queen must be a girl. He
thought the role would suit him better than prom king.
"I don't wish to be a girl," he told the Los Angeles
Times. "I just wish to be myself."
Senior class president Vanessa Lo said she and many other
students were initially against the idea but were won over
by Garcia's speech and became convinced he wasn't just an
attention-seeking clown.
"It just goes to show how open-minded our class is,"
Lo said.
Seventeen-year-old Unique Payne called the speech "great"
and said she voted for Garcia "because I support the
gay community."
Other students weren't as happy, and suggested many voted
for Garcia just to see the spectacle of two boys dancing together
at the prom.
"I'm not really happy about that," said 17-year-old
Juan Espinoza. "He should've run for prom king."