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Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fashion. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 July 2013

July 3rd in Queer History

Events this day

2009 – Delaware, USA ban sexual orientation discrimination under the Delaware Code, but not gender identity 
2010 – Helsinki Pride, Finland - attacked by 3 men with smoke and gas bombs 

Born this day

Thelma Wood (1901 – – US
Sculptor 1970)

Andreas Burnier (1931 – 2002)  Dutch
Author

Jeronimo Saavedra (1936 –  ) Spanish
Politician 

Brigitte Fassbaender (1939 – ) German
Opera Singer

Peer Raben (1940 – 2007) German
Composer

Michael Brown (1951 – ) UK
Politician

Frans Bakker (1952 – ) Dutch
Singer

Tommy Sexton (1957 – 1993) Canadian
Openly gay television actor and comedian, who died of complications from AIDS. After his death, his colleague Greg Malone campaigned for HIV and AIDS education in Sexton's memory. His sister, filmmaker Mary Sexton, produced a documentary film about him, Tommy...A Family Portrait, in 2001.Along with Malone and their co-star Andy Jones, Sexton was a posthumous recipient of the Earle Grey Award, the lifetime achievement award of Canadian television's Gemini Awards, in 2002.
The Tommy Sexton Centre, a new assisted housing complex for people living with HIV and AIDS, was opened in St. John's in 2006.

Mathew Bose (1973 – ) UK
Actor / Model

Died this day

Arthur Warren (1974- 2000) US
Hate Crime Victim

Ivan Suchinski  ( ? - 2001) Belarusian
Club Owner / Hate Crime Victim

Nimrod Ping (1947 – 2006 ) UK
Architect / Politician






Sodomy in history, 



Sources:

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Gianni Versace, Fashion designer, entrepreneur

b. December 2, 1946
d. July 15, 1997

“In the past, people were born royal. Nowadays, royalty comes from what you do.”



With his larger-than-life designs and savvy business sense, Gianni Versace fused fashion and celebrity pop culture in unprecedented ways.

Versace’s career began as an apprentice in his mother’s tailor shop in Reggio Calabria, Italy. It was there that Versace learned about making clothes, transforming his mother’s lessons into his future fashion empire.

At the age of 25, Versace moved to Milan, Italy, where he designed collections for leading fashion houses. After six years, he launched his own label.

Versace oversaw the conceptualization of his label’s provocative campaigns and runway shows. He collaborated with American photographer Richard Avedon on Versace advertisements. He became the lead designer for Madonna, Jon Bon Jovi and Princess Diana, among others. Versace used his celebrity clients in print ads and on the runway, connecting haute couture to music, movies and media.

In 1988, Versace was named “the most innovative and creative designer in the world” by the jury of the Cutty Sark Award. In 1993, the Council of Fashion Designers of America honored him with the American Fashion Oscar.

Versace unabashedly embraced his sexuality, becoming one of Italy’s first public figures to come out. He worked closely with the Elton John AIDS Foundation and used his celebrity status to raise awareness.

On July 15, 1997, at the peak of his career, Versace was murdered outside his Miami home. His body was found by his partner of 15 years, Antonio D’Amico.

At Gianni's death, the House of Versace's estimated worth was $1 billion.

Bibliography


Articles




Books







Other Resources








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Wednesday, 28 November 2012

November 28th in Queer History


Born this day

Edward Hyde, 3rd Earl of Clarendon ( 1661 - 1723) US
Governor of  New York and New Jersey between 1701 and 1708, and is perhaps best known for  his cross-dressing while in office. Cornbury came to be regarded in the historical literature as a moral profligate, sunk in corruption: possibly the worst governor Britain ever imposed on an American colony. 

Cornbury is reported to have opened the 1702 New York Assembly clad in a hooped gown and an elaborate headdress and carrying a fan, imitative of the style of Queen Anne. When his choice of clothing was questioned, he replied, "You are all very stupid people not to see the propriety of it all. In this place and occasion, I represent a woman (the Queen), and in all respects I ought to represent her as faithfully as I can." 

Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632 – 1687) French
Italian-born French composer who spent most of his life working in the court of Louis XIV of France. He is considered the chief master of the French Baroque style.
He was known to be a libertine. Although his life is full of meteoric heights, his love affairs with men and women also brought him down in scandal several times at the great displeasure of Louis XIV.

Ernst Rohm (1887 – 1934) German
An officer in the Bavarian Army and later an early Nazi leader. He was a co-founder of the Sturmabteilung ("Storm Battalion"; SA), the Nazi Party militia, and later was its commander. In 1934, as part of the Night of the Long Knives, he was executed on Hitler's orders as a potential rival.
Röhm and other SA leaders such as his deputy Edmund Heines were more or less openly homosexual.(In 1931, the Münchener Post, a Social Democratic newspaper, obtained and published Röhm's letters to a friend in which Röhm discussed his sexual affairs with men).

Owen Dodson (1914 – 1983) US 
A poet, novelist, and playwright, he was one of the leading African American poets of his time, associated with the generation of black poets following the Harlem Renaissance. Dodson's poetry varied widely and covered a broad range of subjects, styles, and forms. He wrote at times, though rarely, in black dialect, and at others quoted and alluded to classical poetry and drama. He wrote about sexuality and about religion.

Anthony Edward Dyson (1928 –  2002) UK 
Literary critic, university lecturer, educational activist and pioneer gay rights campaigner, Dyson single-handedly took the initiative in forming the Homosexual Law Reform Society (HLRS) in May 1958.

Joke Swiebel (1941 – ) Dutch 
Politician, a former MEP (Member of the Europen Parliament) and founder of the LGBT Rights Intergroup.

Rita Mae Brown (1944 – ) US
Writer, best known for her first novel "Rubyfruit Jungle". Published in 1973, it dealt with lesbian themes in an explicit manner unusual for the time. Brown is also a mystery writer and screenwriter.

She is listed at number 74 in the book "The Gay 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential Gay Men and Lesbians, Past and Present".

Herbert Muschamp (1947 – 2007) US
Architectural Critic for The New York Times from 1992 ro 2004. He was openly gay, and the centrality of gay men in the cultural life of New York City was central to his writing. He continued to write until his death from lung cancer in Manhattan in 2007.

Gordon Marsden (1953 – )  UK 
British Labour Party politician who has been the Member of Parliament (MP) for Blackpool South since 1997. Marsden is openly gay and lives with his partner.

John Galliano (1960 – ) UK 
Fashion Designer

Thierry Paulin (1963 – 1989) French 
Serial Killer, active in the 1980's. Together with his lover, Jean-Thierry Mathurin. Together, they murdered and robbed a series of elderly women, using their gains to finance drugs and a lavish lifestyle.
He died of AIDS in 1989.

Erwin Mortier (1965 – )  Belgian 
Author, originally writing in Dutch.

Colman Domingo (1969 – )  US 
Actor, playwright and director.

Siri Hall Arnoy (1978 – ) Norwegian
Politician for the Socialist Left Party. She was elected to the Norwegian Parliament from Akershus in 2001, but was not re-elected in 2005. She then served in the position of deputy representative during the term 2005–2009.
Hall Arnøy is openly lesbian.

Jonny Staub (1979 – ) Canadian 
Radio and television personality. In 2001, at age 22, he was the youngest DJ in a major time slot in the Vancouver market.
Staub is one of Canada's first openly gay DJs in the Vancouver radio market.

Died this day

Jeffrey Dahmer   (1960 - 1994 ) US
Serial Killer and sex offender, Dahmer murdered 17 men and boys between 1978 and 1991, with the majority of the murders occurring between 1987 and 1991. His murders involved rape, dismemberment, necrophilia and cannibalism. On November 28, 1994, he was beaten to death by an inmate at the Columbia Correctional Institution, where he had been incarcerated.

Terry Lester (1950 - 2003 ) US
Actor, whose big break came when he joined CBS daytime soap The Young and the Restless in 1980. After leaving it in 1989, he worked on the soaps Santa Barbara for a year, and As the World Turns .

Lester kept his personal life under wraps, but a 2002 In Magazine LA article on former soap star Thom Bierdz claimed that Lester, along with Michael Corbett and Bierdz, made up a trio of gay actors who worked on The Young and the Restless in the 1980s.

Leroy F Aarons (1933 - 2004 ) US 
journalist, editor, author, playwright, founder of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association. In 2005 he was inducted into the NLGJA Hall of Fame.

Tony Holland (1940 - 2007 ) UK 
Television screenwriter best known as a writer and co-creator of the BBC soap opera EastEnders.
Holland entered into a civil partnership with Paul Wade in May 2007.

Sodomy laws in history, November 28

1951 —The Oklahoma Court of Appeals upholds a consensual sodomy conviction and refers to Washington Confidential as proof that homosexuality is overrunning the nation.

Thursday, 22 November 2012

November 22nd in Queer History

Born this day


Andre Gide (1869 – 1951), French. Author
French author and winner of the Nobel Prize in literature in 1947. Gide's career ranged from its beginnings in the symbolist movement, to the advent of anticolonialism between the two World Wars.
In 1893 and 1894, Gide traveled in Northern Africa, and it was there that he came to accept his attraction to boys.He befriended Oscar Wilde in Paris, and in 1895 Gide and Wilde met in Algiers. There, Wilde had the impression that he had introduced Gide to homosexuality, but, in fact, Gide had already discovered this on his own.


Benjamin Britten (1913 – 1976), UK. Composer.
English composer, conductor, and pianist, and probably the most important English composer of the twentieth century (certainly of opera). He first came to public attention with the a cappella choral work "A Boy Was Born" in 1934, and continued to produce important works for four decades. Having previously declined a knighthood, Britten accepted a life peerage in 1976 as Baron Britten, of Aldeburgh, a few months before his death.
He and his partner the tenor Sir Peter Pears, are one of the best known gay couples in music. Their two graves lie side by side in Aldeburgh.


James Gleeson (1915 –  2008), Australian. Artist, Poet, Author, Critic
Australia's foremost artist. He was also a poet, critic, writer and curator. He played a significant role in the Australian art scene, including serving on the board of the National Gallery of Australia. Gleeson's themes generally delved into the subconscious using literary, mythological or religious subject matter. He was particularly interested in Jung's archetypes of the collective unconscious.
Gleeson died in Sydney in 2008, aged 92. His life partner was Frank O'Keefe, who had died the previous year.

Nicholas Dante (1941 – 1991), US. Dancer, Author
American dancer and writer, best known for the musical A Chorus Line, which earned him the 1976 Tony Award and Drama Desk Award for Best Book of a Musical and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. The story of Paul, the homosexual Puerto Rican dancer whose early career consisted of working in a drag show, was based primarily on Dante himelf.

Peter Adair (1943 – 1996) US. Director / Artist
Filmmaker and artist, best known for his pioneering documentary, Word Is Out. The film, the first of its kind to present gays and lesbians in a positive light, was a critical hit nationwide. It was as much a vital part of his own coming out process as it was an attempt to show gays and lesbians in a very human and non-sensational manner.

Billy Jean King (1943 – ) US. Tennis
Life Magazine named Billie Jean King one of the "100 Most Important Americans of the 20th Century." A tennis champion and an outspoken advocate for gender equality in sports, King has become an icon and legend for her contributions to the advancement of women's sports.
An outspoken advocate against sexism in sports, King hoped "to use sports for social change." In 1973, King became the first woman to defeat a former male Wimbledon Champion in "The Battle of the Sexes." The Women's Tennis Association named King its first president that same year.
She was married for 22 years and struggled for a long time with her sexuality. Since coming out in 1988, she has helped further the visibility and inclusion of the GLBT community.

Art Sullivan (1950 – ), Belgian. Singer
Belgian singer.He was successful in many countries, including Belgium, France, Portugal and Germany.

Horse McDonald (1958 – ), UK. Singer, Musician
Scottish female singer-songwriter. She has a wide following in the United Kingdom, including many lesbian fans, has toured with Tina Turner and secured several record chart hits in Europe.

Christopher Ciccone (1960 –  ), US. Artist,Screenwriter, Director
Artist, film director, artistic director, dancer, best selling author, and interior and furniture designer. He is the younger brother of Madonna.

Stephen Hough (1961 – ), UK / Australian. Pianist, Composer, Author
British-born classical pianist, composer and writer.  Hough performs as a recitalist and chamber musician, and has appeared as a soloist with major orchestras around the world. In addition to his career as a performer, he is also a music teacher and a composes.

He joined the Roman Catholic Church when he was 19. He has written about his homosexuality and its relationship with both his music-making and his religion.

Rickard Engfors (1976 – ), Swedish. Drag Queen, Model, Entertainer
Swedish drag queen, model, and stylist.
His career began in 1996 as an artist in Swedish drag troupe After Dark and he was quickly appointed to "Christer Lindarws crown prince" and was also known as "Sweden's best looking girl". He has performed for royalty, won awards for his artistic efforts and shared the stage with many of Sweden's most beloved artists.
In 2004 the Swedish fashion house Panos Emporio chose Rickard as its house model for a swimwear range, which caused so much controversy that it was re-shot using a Greek model called Aleka

Yves Steinhauer (1976 – ), Canadian, Luxembourg. Singer
Lead singer for "Marilyn's Boys", the first openly gay boy band in Germany. Born in Luxembourg, he later lived in the US, and Canada, then Germany.

Lucian Dunareanu (1977 – ), Romanian. Activist, Editor
Romanian gay rights activist and the executive director of Be An Angel Romania, an LGBT rights organisation based in Cluj-Napoca.Dunareanu is the owner of the Toxice musical group, which is the first professional drag queen band in Romania

Alasdair Duncan (1982 –  ), Australian. Author, Journalist
Author and journalist, based in Brisbane on the east coast of Australia. He is a section editor at weekly music magazine Rave.


Pedro Marin (1961 – ) Spanish 
Singer / Actor / Presenter

Died this day

Friedrich Alfred Krupp (1854 - 1902), German. Businessman
German industrialist, of the Krupp steel manufacturering company, taking over the leadership of his father's company in 1887. He committed suicide in 1902, a week after the Social Democratic magazine Vorwärts claimed in an article that Friedrich Alfred Krupp was homosexual, and that he had a number of liaisons with local boys and men.

Rose Cleveland (1846 - 1918 ) US. First Lady
First Lady during the first of her brother, U.S. President Grover Cleveland's two administrations. She was the sister (not the wife) of President Cleveland. When her elder brother won the presidency, she became first lady and lived in the White House for two years.
When President Cleveland married Frances Folsom, Rose resigned and began a career in education. At age 44, she started a lesbian relationship with a wealthy widow, Evangeline Simpson, with explicitly erotic correspondence. However things cooled off when Evangeline married an Episcopal Bishop of Minnesota, Henry Benjamin Whipple. By 1910, he died and the two women rekindled their relationship and eventually moved to Bagni di Lucca, Italy to live there together.

Lorenz Hart (1895 - 1943), US. Lyricist
Lyricist half of the famed Broadway songwriting team Rodgers and Hart. He "had a remarkable talent for polysyllabic and internal rhymes", and his lyrics have often been praised for their wit and technical sophistication.
For years Hart was a bachelor and lived with his widowed mother. He suffered from alcoholism. He would sometimes disappear for weeks at a time on alcoholic binges. Hart died in New York City of pneumonia from exposure on November 22, 1943, after drinking heavily.

Sources


Sunday, 18 November 2012

November 18th in Queer History


Events this day in Queer History

1974 - The New Yorker published "Minor Heroism" by Allan Gurganis, its first gay-themed short story.

2003 - The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts rules that the state cannot bar same-sex couples from marrying and gives the legislature until June to rewrite the laws.

Born this day

Sir Edward Marsh (1872 – 1953), UK.

British polymath, translator, arts patron and civil servant. He was the sponsor of the Georgian school of poets and a friend to many poets, including Rupert Brooke and Siegfried Sassoon. In his career as a civil servant he worked as Private Secretary to a succession of Great Britain's most powerful ministers, particularly Winston Churchill. He was a discreet but influential figure within Britain's homosexual community.

Arthur Cecil Pigou (1877 – ) UK 
Economist 

Klaus Mann (1906 –  1949), German.   
German writer, the son of Thomas Mann. His most famous novel, Mephisto, was a thinly-disguised portrait of his former brother-in-law, the actor Gustaf Gründgens.
In early life, His homosexuality often made him the target of bigotry. Later, he moved to the United States, where he met his partner Thomas Quinn Curtiss.

Jackie Goldberg (1944 – ),  US.  
American politician and teacher, and a member of the Democratic Party. She is a former member of the California State Assembly. Goldberg is openly lesbian and was a founder member of the California Legislative LGBT Caucus. She married longtime partner Sharon Stricker in 2008.

Wolfgang Joop (1944 –  ), German.  
Fashion designer behind the now defunct JOOP! label of the 80s and 90s has recently made a critically acclaimed comeback with his Wunderkind line, founded together with his long-term boyfriend and former PR manager Edwin Lemberg.

Christian Siriano (1985 – ),  US.  
Fashion designer who first gained attention after winning the fourth season of American reality show Project Runway, becoming the series' youngest winner. Shortly after winning Runway, Siriano launched his fashion line, Christian Siriano, which as of 2010 has brought in revenue of over $1.2 million. Siriano is openly gay and lives in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City with longtime boyfriend, singer-songwriter Brad Walsh.

Died this day

Renee Vivien (1877 - 1909), UK.  
British poet who wrote in the French language. She took to heart all the mannerisms of Symbolism, as one of the last poets to claim allegiance to the school. She lived lavishly, as an open lesbian, and carried on a well-known affair with American heiress and writer Natalie Clifford Barney.

Marcel Proust (1871 - 1922), French.   
Novelist, critic, and essayist best known for his monumental À la recherche du temps perdu (In Search of Lost Time; earlier translated as Remembrance of Things Past).

Mauritz Stiller (1883 - 1928), Finnish.  
Film director Maurtiz Stiller's principal claim to fame is his discovery of an unknown actress, Greta Gustafsson, whom he renamed Greta Garbo. However, this flamboyant gay Svengali to a legendary lesbian star also deserves recognition as a key figure in forging a national cinema that was eventually to become notable for its progressive treatment of sexuality and desire

Mike Connolly (1914 - 1966),  US.  
Magazine reporter and primarily a Hollywood columnist. Connolly was also known for his 1937–38 crusade against prostitution in Champaign, Illinois, and later for his battle against communism in Hollywood. According to his biographer, Val Holley, these campaigns were attempts by Connolly, who was gay, to feel part of the mainstream. His sexual preference was not made public until thirty-seven years after his death.

Gia Carangi (1960 - 1986), US.  
Fashion model during the late 1970s and early 1980s, considered by some to be the first supermodel. Carangi and her "bi-try Bowie-mad" friends hung out in Philadelphia’s gay clubs and bars. She was beginning to settle into a lesbian identity, but did not want to take up "the accepted lesbian style".Since Carangi's death, she has been considered a lesbian supermodel and icon and is said to have epitomized "lesbian chic" more than a decade before the term was coined.

William John Christopher Vassall (1924 -1996),  UK.  
British civil servant who, under pressure of blackmail, spied for the Soviet Union. In 1952, he was posted to the staff of the Naval Attaché at the British embassy in Moscow. In 1954, he was invited to a party (arranged, unbeknown to him, by the KGB), where he was encouraged to become extremely drunk, and where he was photographed in a compromising position with several men. The KGB used these photographs to blackmail Vassall into working for them as a spy. In 1962 he was arrested and charged with spying, for which he served ten years.

Dr. Evelyn Hooker (  - 1996). US.
Psychologist, whose research provided some of the earliest evidence that homosexuality is not a psychological disease, notably with the 1957 paper"The Adjustment of the Male Overt Homosexual". Although not gay herself, and initially with little interest in studying homosexuality, she was challenged to do so by a student who by a student who asked her to study "people like him".

Her work became of fundamental importance. It exposed a false correlation between homosexuality and mental illness that had formed the basis of scientific classification of homosexuality as a disorder, by avoiding the use of a sample group that contained homosexual men with a history of treatment for mental illness. It is of critical importance in refuting cultural heterosexism because it shows that homosexuality is not developmentally inferior to heterosexuality. As homosexuality is not an illness, bias against it is irrational from a scientific point of view.

Paul Bowles (1910 - 1999), US.   
Expatriate composer, writer, and translator Paul Bowles liked to examine sexuality from a dispassionate perspective for its psychological suggestiveness. Bowles's literary reputation rests on his novels, but until he was thirty-five he showed more interest in musical composition and poetry.

Horst P Horst (1906 - 1999), German / US.  
Horst Paul Albert Bohrmann  who chose to be known as Horst P. Horst was a German-American fashion photographer. He and Valentine Lawford, a British diplomat, lived together as a couple from 1938 until Lawford's death in 1991. They adopted and raised a son, Richard J. Horst, together.

Ralph Pomeroy (1926 - 1999),  US. 

Poet, who at eighteen had already published poems in "Poetry", then pursued painting in Paris, and later worked as an editor, art critic, curator and exhibiting artist in New York City. Many years later, he was stabbed in the chest by a "fag basher", and also suffered a broken wrist while engaged in what a friend described as "S&M games with a trick."

Sodomy Laws in History, November 18


1910 — The South Dakota Supreme Court rules that the state’s "crime against nature" law outlaws fellatio.
1919 — A California appellate court upholds the sodomy conviction of a man and rejects his contention that his partner’s incestuous relationship with his brother should have been raised to impeach his credibility.
1925 — A California appellate court upholds the sodomy conviction of a man after photos and condoms found in his home were admitted into evidence against him.
1932 — A California appellate court rules that a trial judge need not visit the scene of the alleged act of sodomy.
1953 — The Illinois Supreme Court upholds a conviction for keeping a house of ill fame—a Gay bath house.






Saturday, 17 November 2012

November 17th in Queer History


Events this day in Queer History


1999 - Methodist minister Jimmy Creech was stripped of his clerical status for presiding over a same-sex holy union.

Born this day

Lord Arthur Somerset (1926 - 1851),  UK. 
Aristocrat / Major

Rock Hudson  (1985 - 1925), US.  
Actor

Daniel O’Donnell (1960 – ) US.  
Politician

RuPaul (1960 – ), US.  
Drag Queen, Singer, Actor, Model

Jose Villarrubia  (1961 – ) Spanish.  
Comic Book Artist

Rebecca Walker (1969 –  ), US. 
Author

Died this day

Audre Lorde (1934 - 1992), US.  
Author, Poet, Activist

James Woods III ( ??? - 1995), US
Co-author of "The Corporate Closet: The Professional Lives of Gay Men in America," died of complications from AIDS at age 32.

Kurt von Ruffin (1901 - 1996 ), German. 
Actor, Singer

Aaron Webster (1959 - 2001), Canadian.  
Hate Crime Victim

John Craxton (1918 / 1922 – 2009), UK. 
Painter


Sodomy laws in history, November 17

1715 — North Carolina adopts all laws of England, making the buggery statute operative.

1960 — A county bar association in Ohio files charges against an attorney for misrepresenting a client arrested for sodomy. The Ohio Supreme Court disbars the attorney and refuses to reinstate him in 1967.

1975 — The U.S. Supreme Court upholds the Tennessee "crime against nature" law.

1980 — The Rhode Island Supreme Court affirms that cunnilingus is a "crime against nature."

Sources:

Wikipedia
Today in Gay History, Blue Pride
On This Gay Day

Wednesday, 14 November 2012

November 14th in Queer History


Events in LGBT history:

2001, Egypt. 21 of those arrested on “The Queen Boat” in Cairo, convicted of “habitual practice of debauchery,” 1 for “contempt of religion,” & 1 for both. A 53rd man (a teenager) tried in juvenile court and sentenced to 3 years prison and 3 years probation

Vatican, 2006 – “Ministry to persons with a homosexual inclination” document issued by the Roman Catholic Church

Born this day

Adolf Brand (1874 – 1945),  German.   Author, Anarchist, Activist
German writer, individualist anarchist and pioneering campaigner for the acceptance of male bisexuality and homosexuality.

Eugene O’Brien (1880 – 1966),  US.  Actor
Silent film star and stage actor.

Aaron Copland (1900 – 1990),  US.   Composer,  Conductor
American composer,teacher, writer, and conductor,often referred to as "the Dean of American Composers". His best known works are the ballets Appalachian Spring, Billy the Kid, Rodeo and his Fanfare for the Common Man, and the Clarinet Concerto.


Louise Brooks (1906 – 1985 ) US 
Dancer / Model / Actress 


Albrecht Becker (1906 – 2002), German.  Actor,  Photographer, Production Designer
Production designer, photographer, and actor, who was imprisoned by the Nazi regime for the charge of homosexuality.

Joseph McCarthy 1908 - 1957 )  The red baiting homophobe was actually a closet gay. The number of American lives destroyed in the '50s by his "outing Communists" numbered in the tens of thousands in America.

Pierre Berge (1930 –  ),  French.   Businessman
French industrialist and patron. He is perhaps best known as the co-founder of Yves Saint Laurent Couture House and former partner of fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent.

Jack Smith (1932 –1989), US.  Actor, Playwright, Director, Photographer
American filmmaker, actor, and pioneer of underground cinema. He is generally acclaimed as a founding father of American performance art, and has been critically recognized as a master photographer, though his photographic works are rare and remain largely unknown.

Wendy Carlos (1939 -   ),  US.  Composer / Musician / Photographer
American composer and electronic musician. Carlos first came to notice in the late 1960s with recordings made on the Moog synthesizer. Born Walter Carlos, she underwent sex reassignment surgery in 1972 after living as a woman beginning in May 1968.

Tom Judson [Gus Mattox] (1960 –  ), US.  Actor, Porn, Composer
American musical theatre actor and composer, particularly for off-Broadway and Broadway plays, and a former porn actor.

Stefano Gabbana (1962 –  ),  Italian.  Fashion Designer
Co-founder of the Dolce & Gabbana fashion house.

Petra Rossner (1966 –  ), German.  Cyclist
German cyclist, who won the gold medal in 3 km pursuit track cycling at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. In the same event she won the 1991 World Championships and finished second in 1989.
Since 1996 she has been living in Leipzig with her partner Judith Arndt. In 2006 the couple announced that they want to adopt a child.

Svetlana Surganova (1968 – )  Russian  Musician / Singer / Poet
Russian rock musician, singer and poet. She was a founding member of the popular Russian rock band "Nochnye Snaipery" (Night Snipers), vocalling and playing violin. She and another member of Night Snipers are considered Russian lesbian icons: many of their songs hint of intimacy between women and are considered lesbian and feminist anthems of Russophone world.

Russell Tovey (1981 –   ),  UK.  Actor
English actor with numerous television, film and stage credits. Tovey is best known for playing the role of werewolf George Sands on BBC Three's supernatural drama Being Human

Saints' Day


St John of the Cross , Mystic, and composer of homoerotic mystical verse.

Died This Day

William Lygon, 7th Earl Beauchamp (1938 – 1872), UK.  Politician
British Liberal politician. He was Governor of New South Wales, a member of the Liberal administrations of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman and H. H. Asquith and leader of the Liberal Party in the House of Lords between 1924 and 1931. When political enemies threatened to make public his homosexuality he resigned from office to go into exile.

Adrian Lee Kellard  (1991 –  1959), US.  Artist
American artist known for his woodcuts and sculptures of religious and often homoerotic imagery.


Tony Richardson (1928 – 1991 ) UK 
Director / Producer – Born 5th June 

Humphrey Berkeley (1926– 1994) UK 
Politician  

Tom Villard (1953– 1994 ) US 
Actor

Peter Wildeblood  (1923– 1999) UK / Canadian 
Journalist / Author / Playwright / Activist  

Lateisha Green  (1985/6 – 2008 )  US Hate Crime Victim



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Thursday, 1 November 2012

1st November in Queer History


Events in LGBT History, 1st November: 

1971 – The Body Politic magazine first published (Canada)
1995 – Kings Cross Steelers, the world’s first gay rugby club, founded in Central Station bar Kings Cross, London . 
1999 - Nancy Katz became Illinois's first openly lesbian judge when she was sworn in as a Cook County associate judge.

Events in LGBT History, Unknown Dates in November: 


1989 – LGBT Youth Scotland founded 
2007 – Minneapolis Mayhem RFC founded in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA 
2008 – In Newsweekly (later New England Blade) newspaper ceases publication 
2008 – Queer Liberacion founded in Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas .


Born this day


Hannah Hoch ( 1889 – 1978 ) German 
Artist 

Max Adrian  ( 1903 – 1973) UK 
Actor / Singer

NA Diaman  ( 1936 – )  US 
Author / Artist 

Tom Waddell  ( 1937 – 1987 )  US 
Decathlete / Founder of the Gay Games

Bob Hattoy  ( 1950 – 2007  )  US 
Activist 

Tim Cook  ( 1960 –  )  US 
Businessman 

Adolfo Constanzo  ( 1962 – 1989 ) Mexican 
Serial Killer 

Sophie B Hawkins  ( 1967 – ) US 
Singer 


Saints' Day

The saints and martyrs of the Christian churches include numerous examples who could be described (in modern terminology) as LGBTQ. Some are officially recognized, some could be considered as saints by popular acclaim - and some have been martyred by the church, persecuted for their honesty in speaking the truth on sexuality and gender identity.

Died this day


Pierre Fitch  (1981 –  ) Canadian 
Porn / Producer 

And Those Who Died: 

Alfred Jarry  ( 1873 – 1907 )  French 
Author 

Elsa Maxwell  ( 1883 – 1963 ) US 
Author / Presenter / Columnist   

Aladar Marberger  ( 1947 – 1988 ) US 
Activist / Gallery Manager 

Florence Klotz  ( 1920 – 2006 ) US 
Costume Designer – Born 28th October 

Died On Unknown Dates in November: 


Lisbetha Olsdotter  ( ???? – 1679 )  Swedish 
Soldier

Griffith Vaughan Williams  ( 1940– 2010 ) UK Activist – Born 9th November  


Sodomy in history, Nov 1st: 


1890 — Mississippi adopts a new constitution which permits the exclusion of the public from trials of those accused of the "crime against nature."
1897 — The Illinois Supreme Court is the first to rule that fellatio constitutes the "crime against nature."
1937 — The Mississippi Supreme Court rules that cunnilingus does not violate the state’s "crime against nature" law.
1974 — The Massachusetts Supreme Court strikes down as unconstitutional the state’s unnatural and lascivious acts law. It says that the law can not be applied to private, non-commercial sexual activity between adults.




Sources:

Wednesday, 31 October 2012

October 31st in LGBT History


Events in LGBT History: 

2011 – First Out Cafe Bar, London, UK closes after 25 years trading .

Born this day

Natalie Clifford Barney (1876 –1972) US
Playwright, poet and novelist who lived as an expatriate in Paris. She was openly lesbian and began publishing love poems to women under her own name as early as 1900, considering scandal as "the best way of getting rid of nuisances" (meaning heterosexual attention from young males).

Napoleon Lapathiotis  (1888 –1944) Greek
Poet 

Ethel Waters (1896 – 1977) US
Singer / Actress 

Craig Rodwell (1940 – 1993) US
Activist

David Ogden Stiers (1942 – ) US
Actor / Musician

Bruce Bawer (1956 – ) US
Literary Critic / Author / Poet

Frank Bruni (1964 – ) US 
Food Critic

Inka Grings (1978 – ) German
Football

Adam Bouska ( 1983 – ) US
Photographer

Brent Corrigan (1986 – ) US
Model / Porn / Actor

Died this day


Eileen Gray (1878 - 1976) Irish 
Designer / Architect 


Georgi Partsalev (1925 -1989) Bulgarian
Actor

Marcel Carne (1906 - 1996) French
Director

Lee Calvin Yeomans (1938 - 2001) US
Playwright


Sodomy in history, October 31st

1923 — The Indiana Supreme Court rules that cunnilingus of a female under the age of 21 is outlawed by the state’s sodomy law. The Court considers cunnilingus to be a form of masturbation as described in the law.
1955 — The South Carolina Supreme Court rules that cunnilingus does not violate the state’s "buggery" law.
1955 — The "Boys of Boise" affair begins. Starting with the arrest of four men for sexual relations with male teenagers who are prostitutes, it is blown into a situation in which Boise is called a mecca where Gay men can find boys. Begun by a group of right-wing politicians to shake the moderate political establishment, the issue is inflamed by the Idaho Daily Statesman and Time magazine. As a result of the hysteria, a city councilman is defeated for reelection and a West Point cadet from Idaho is dismissed. A 1965 investigation reveals the incident to be based on outright lies.
1956 — A California appellate court bans questions in an oral copulation case as to the defendant’s sexual orientation.
1974 — A federal court upholds the constitutionality of the Florida sodomy law.
1980 — A California appellate court upholds the conviction of a man for masturbating in the presence of an undercover police officer in a public restroom over the contention that, since the officer did not appear to be offended, he should be acquitted. 





Sources:

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

October 24th in LGBT History


Events in LGBT History: 


Born this day

Caroline Spurgeon ( 1869 -1942) UK

Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author


Moss Hart (1904 – 1961) American
Playwright and theatre director, best known for his interpretations of musical theater on Broadway. Married and a father, but known by his friends to have been gay.

Neal Blewett (1933 – ) Australian
Politician

Ronnie Kray ( 1933 – 1995), Reggie Kray ( 1933 – 200) UK
Crime Bosses

Paula Gunn Allen (1934 – 2008) US
Poet / Literary Critic / Lesbian activist / Author

Mathilde Santing ( 1958 – ) Dutch
Singer

BD Wong (1960 –) US
Singer / Dancer / Actor

Emma Donoghue (1969 –) Irish  Playwright / Author / Historian

Bryan Michael Egnew ( 1970 – 2011) US
Mormon, who served an LDS mission, studied at BYU, married and had children in accordance with Mormon teaching. But after coming out to his wife, she left him, taking the children with her, and outed him to the church authorities, resulting in excommunication. He then committed suicide at his home on September 10, 2011.

Raul Esparza (1970 –  )
US Actor

Zac Posen (1980 – )
US Fashion Designer

Tila Tequila (1981 – )
US Model / Singer


Erica Wheeler ???? –  ) US 
Singer / Songwriter 

Died this day

Jerome Duquesnoy II  (1612 - 1664 ) Flemish 
Sculptor executed for sodomy

Caroline Spurgeon ( 1869 -1942) UK
Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author

John Sex (1956 - 1990)US
Entertainer / Performance Artist

Harry Hay (1912 - 2002 ) UK / US
Activist


Sodomy in history, 
October 24th

1901 — The Illinois Supreme Court refuses to overrule its 1897 decision that fellatio violates the state’s sodomy law.
1912 — The Arizona Supreme Court rules that fellatio is not outlawed by the term "crime against nature."
1921 — The Arkansas Supreme Court upholds the state’s sodomy against a vagueness challenge.
1945 — The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals rules that the sodomy law is not so broad as to cover kissing or shaking hands.
1956 — The Florida Supreme Court overturns a sodomy conviction because the defendant was found guilty by a judge before he had rested his case.


Sources:

Calendar of Sodomy, October




1869 – Caroline Spurgeon ( – ) UK Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author – Died 24th October 1942 



And Those Who Died: 
1664 – Jerome Duquesnoy II – Belgian [brother of Sculptor Francois Duquesnoy] – Born 1612 
1942 – Caroline Spurgeon – UK Literary Critic / Lecturer / Author – Died 24th October 1869 
1971 – George Dyer – UK Burglar / Lover of Francis Bacon – Born 1934 
1990 – John Sex – US Entertainer / Performance Artist – Born 8th April 1956 
2002 – Harry Hay – UK / US Activist – Born 7th April 

1912 Events in LGBT History: 1998 – Washington Renegades RFC founded in Washington D.C., USA . Posted by Alex at 00:01 No comments: Labels: