OK, this was just sillyness from my side, I misunderstood what a Queue is!
Most importantly a queue is not iterable so one cannot do "for el in somequeue".
(My mistake was to think that the queue proxy is not iterable because it is the proxy. However the proxy works fine in place of the actual queue if put/get are used)
Also, a (FIFO) queue cannot be closed and does not have a natural "end" which I found annoying because it means one has to send around special "end of queue" entries but not too many of them to not unintentionally block the queue.
So the bottom line is: to share the queue I create a multiprocessing.Manager().Queue() and pass that around, then I use put/get to write/read the queue in different processes and I send some special entry to the reader to indicate end of job.
That a queue cannot get closed and the consumer get an "end of queue" condition is really annoying though, especially when there is an error situation: if a queue is consumed by k consumers, then the writer has to know k and send k end of job indicators and the k consumers all have to be well behaved to retrieve those and shut down. If there is any error, all this cannot be guaranteed any more and e.g. a consumer may lock or timeout waiting for the end of job indicator that will never arrive.