The L Weird

According to many women, the lesbian moment in the Bay Area has heteros acting very odd.

Diana Kapp

A slender, leggy lawyer who is long on looks, poise, and confidence, 33-year-old Hilary Ware was getting married, and—a midwesterner to the core—she was going for the whole something borrowed, something blue affair. She chose a strapless fitted bodice in silver-on-white shantung silk, which she could more than pull off. (Her shoes: Gucci stilettos.) Meanwhile, her partner, Wendy Kosanovich, 41, an attractive combination of demure southerner and quick-witted litigator, picked a flowy platinum skirt and camisole with matching silver Manolo Blahnik sandals peeking out beneath. The ceremony, before 125 of their closest friends and family, would take place in San Francisco's high-ceilinged, Craftsman-style First Unitarian Universalist Church; four flower children in Mary Janes and little navy suits would carry tiny wicker baskets filled with white rose petals.

Then, several weeks before the big day, an old friend called. After chatting for a while, the woman told Ware she had a question. Well, it was actually her husband's question, she added sheepishly, and stemmed purely from concern for their six-year-old daughter, Alexandra, whom they planned to bring to the wedding. "So, are you two going to kiss at the end?"

As Ware recounts the story ten months later, over cappuccinos at a downtown café near her Heller Ehrman office, she tosses her head in unfiltered annoyance. At the time, she had answered her friend politely, not revealing her irritation. (The upshot of her tactful answer: Hell yes.) She and Kosanovich went on to have the fairy-tale wedding they had envisioned, and the friend and her husband were all smiles. But now, for a moment, Ware vents. "Ugh, that made me cranky. I mean, come on, folks! Give me a fucking break." To Ware, this was a classic "clueless-straight-people moment," borrowing the term a sharp-tongued strategy consultant, Cynthia Dai, 37, had used just days before.

Don't be alarmed; Ware and Dai and their friends aren't curling their lip at all straight people here. Neither are the many other thirtysomething and fortysomething lesbians now mingling in ever higher, ever straighter echelons of Bay Area life. It's just that in the aftermath of a season of mainstream affirmations of lesbian romance (2,266 teary-eyed lesbian couples making their love official in the grand rotunda of City Hall), lesbian chic (the success of Showtime's L Word), lesbian authority (several of Gavin Newsom's top aides are gay women), and lesbian cachet (suddenly the gay card is Willy Wonka's golden ticket into many of the city's primo, diversity-starved private schools), upwardly mobile gay women have something to say about the heteros they deal with as they go to work in their wood-paneled offices and drop off their kids at their superselective preschools. And it's this: You sure know how to take the glamour out of the lesbian moment.

"It's a total pain in the ass," says Kaila Compton, a 40-year-old medical school graduate and Eureka Valley mom who's also

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