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The Pro-Gay Voice of a Former NFL Player
Former NFL Player Frank Jackson talks
about his gay son, Texas conservatism and what would happen if Vince
Young was gay
Discuss This Story
By
Cyd Zeigler jr.
Ousports.com
Coming
out to your parents is never easy. Even if they were card-carrying
hippies and dabbled with the same sex themselves, the great fear of
their unknown reaction can be intimidating.
But when your dad
grew up in Texas, served in the Army, and is a former pro football
standout, the thought of telling him that you sleep with men could
be overwhelming.
That's what Erik
Jackson went through 15 years ago. Erik is the son of Frank Jackson,
a former running back and flanker who played for the Dallas Texans
(who became the Kansas City Chiefs) from 1961 to 1965 before being
picked in the expansion draft by the Miami Dolphins in 1966.
"Certainly, it had
crossed my mind that this man who had spent his life in athletics,
in the most extreme of macho environments, may have some
difficulties with this," Erik says.
Erik had passed
pretty well for straight all his life. While he didn't take to
football, he was a track-and-field star, running the 100-meter,
200-meter and 400-meter spints, setting a school record in the
former that he still holds to this day. He had a girlfriend through
much of high school, right up until he headed West for USC. He was
class president. All of this in Plano, Texas, meant he was straight,
no question.
So, when he finally
told his father that he was gay – over the phone the evening after
his mother had guessed his lingering secret – he waited for the
great unknown: the reaction of this former pro athlete.
"Without missing a
beat, [my dad] said, 'Look, I'm going to love you no matter what. It
may take a little time getting used to, but it doesn't change the
way I feel about you,'" Erik recalls. "It was the dream scenario."
Frank Jackson isn't
your ordinary former pro football player. On the football field,
Frank was a force to be reckoned with. He came out of SMU and three
years later scored nine touchdowns in back-to-back seasons (and that
was in only 14 games). He scored four touchdowns in a game twice,
once in his rookie year against the Denver Broncos and once in 1964
against San Diego, in which he scored all four through the air
(while this was in the AFL, the NFL record is five touchdown
receptions in a game).
While he was a
student of the game, Frank was also a student of life. Upon leaving
pro football, he stayed in Miami and graduated from the University of
Miami Law School,
becoming a defense attorney. He moved back to Texas but started
reading The New York Times instead of the Dallas Morning News for a
perspective beyond the Texas that had shaped his values most of his
life.
"I tried to broaden
my horizons and overcome the prejudices that you are taught when you
come out of the womb in the South," Frank says. "I came to the
conclusion that life doesn't just consist of racism and fundamental
Christianity. There's a lot more to life than that."
As he read, his
horizons opened up past his stint in the Army, past his years in pro
football, and he started to question the uber-religious upbringing
that had lingered with him since his childhood. In the 1980s, he
says, he went from fiscal conservative and legal liberal to
"hard-core, left-wing liberal, more on the revolutionary scale."
So it was almost
painful for him to hear that the son he loved so much had been timid
about sharing part of his life with him. While he says there was a
selfish part of him that realized he would probably not have
grandchildren from Erik, the compassionate man in him loved his son
and came quickly to accept the new lifestyle that Erik was opening
him up to.
"Erik was very
apprehensive and very concerned about our reaction," Frank says.
"And of course, my heart broke, because we've never given him any
cause to believe we've been anything but supportive in anything he's
done. But, I know why he was apprehensive, because he grew up in
East Texas, which is a very conservative, Right Wing area."
"He
is a champion of rights. He is somebody who innately
understands that every human being is entitled to every
right that every other human being has."
- Erik Jackson
Frank's son |
It was in that
conservative Texas of the '50s and '60s where Frank came of age. On
the path of a football career, Jackson played all the games that the
big boys played.
"The world of
professional athletics is just a different world," Frank says. "It's
very similar to the military. You have to prove your 'manliness' on
a daily basis. Those types of attitudes really infect you. You have
to try to overcome them."
He says he put up
the same walls that the other players did and made the same crude
jokes – sometimes racist or homophobic in nature – that they did.
But, that was part of playing the game of football off the field.
Despite the
machismo of the football locker room, Frank has an interesting take
on what it might have been like to be openly gay in pro football of
the 1960s.
"Had we suspected
someone was gay, I really don't think we would have made any big
issue of it," Frank says. "I think it would have been an anomaly in
sports, but I don't think there would have been any ostracizing the
person, if they were a good football player."
He remembers a
couple men who ran counter to the whole machismo aura of a football
player, most notably Hall of Famer
Ron Mix of the San Diego Chargers. He remembers Mix as a gentle
giant, almost effeminate at times, but a total brute on the football
field. Not too much was said of Mix's gentle demeanor, Frank
remembers, in large part because he'd tear you apart on the field.
"I know a lot of
players I played with would have been very protective of any gay
player who would have the courage to come out and face the problems
they may have had to face," Jackson says. "I think there would have
been a reaction very different from what most people would have
assumed."
He says that this
is all predicated on how the player would have handled his
sexuality. If he was overly demonstrative with his sexuality, then
that could change things. But, according to Frank, if he was just
one of the guys who happened to sleep with other guys, there
wouldn't have been a problem from the other players.
He does admit,
however, that a strong negative reaction very well may have come
from the owners or management.
"In those days,
there may have been some reaction in ownership, especially our
ownership, Lamar Hunt and that crew. They were to the right of
Attila the Hun. There may have been some reaction on that level.
They may have just forced a gay player out of the game."
Just as he thinks
the potential reaction of players then has been misrepresented, he
thinks football players today are much more ready for a gay teammate
than some of them may want to let on. And the lawyer in him says
that, if a player was fired from the team for being gay, "he could
own a piece of the team if that happened."
Of course, Frank
admits, the reaction depends in large part on the quality of athlete
you're dealing with.
"It all depends on
how good of a player he is. If Vince Young was to admit he was gay
tomorrow, I don't think anyone would turn him down as a professional
quarterback."
Though
he finished his pro football career almost 40 years ago, he stays in the
game, so to speak. He goes to Kansas City every year for a reunion
party that Hunt throws during a home-game weekend. He says that he
isn't sure if any of his former teammates know that his son is gay,
because it just doesn't come up. He has been practicing law for over
30 years, is a celebrated defense attorney, and lives in Plano,
Texas, with his wife, Mary Nell.
Erik is now 38 and
lives in New York City with his partner, Joshua Rosenzweig.
Rosenzweig is
director,
corporate communications & public relations, for here! Networks,
America's first gay television network.
"Both my father and
mother instantly took to Josh and treated him as they treated my
brother's girlfriends and wives," Erik says.
Erik most recently co-wrote a musical featuring
songs from Neil Sedaka, titled,
"Breaking Up is Hard
to Do."
The musical opened January 12 in Miami.
Frank and Erik's relationship is now
more solid than ever. Frank says he is so happy that his son has
found a loving relationship.
"My father defies
expectation," Erik says. "He's this pro football player and yet
he'll sit on the couch with his arm around my boyfriend."
Frank says it's Erik's doing – he's
just so easy to love.
"If the world, gay
or not gay, was populated with people like Erik Jackson," says the
proud papa, "boy, it would be a pleasant place to live."
It certainly seems
like a few Frank Jacksons thrown into the mix wouldn't exactly hurt,
either.
February 1, 2006 |