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Issan Dorsey
most remembered for establishing the Maitri Hospice at HSZC for students and friends dying of AIDS during the spread of the epidemic in the 1980sāthe first Buddhist hospice of its kind in the United -
Elmer Batters
November 24, 1919 ā June 25, 1997) was a pioneer fetish photographer who specialized in capturing artful images of women with an emphasis on stockings, legs, and feet. He was ahead of his time in popularizing -
Kyoshi
Kyoshi is a character from The Legend of Korra. She is bisexual because she is described as unable to effect progress towards acceptance of same-sex relationships because the Earth Kingdom is the "slowest to -
Jeanne Manford
Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG), for which she was posthumously awarded the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal. Born Jeanne Sobelson in Flushing, Queens in 1920, the third of five daughters of Sadie, a -
Same-sex attraction
attraction to members of the same sex. The term "same-sex attraction" is most frequently used when the term "gay" or "homosexual" is deemed to be inappropriate for some reason. The term "same sex attraction -
List of Transgender people who are in the Entertainment industry
own culture and voice, and this is what many trans artists aim to share" [1]. Lisa Jackson, of Girl Friday, began her singing career imitating Blondie and singing in Manhattan nightclubs. The band's latest -
Hollywood Montrose
Hollywood Montrose is a fictional character played by Meshach Taylor in the 1987 romantic comedy film Mannequin. Hollywood works at a Philadelphia department store called Prince& Company overseeing the care of mannequins, including the one -
Michael Chabon
is of Jewish descent. Chabon has said he knew he wanted to be a writer when, at the age of ten, he wrote his first short story for a class assignment. Featuring Sherlock Holmes, the -
1981 Toronto bathhouse raids
LGBT Rights Laws around the world -
Flatman (comics)
pages of the Avengers West Coast in 1989. Flatman is a member and second-in-command of the Great Lakes Avengers, an unauthorized division of the regular Avengers superhero group. The GLA watches over the -
Gender Bender
do not consider themselves "gender benders". Genderbending may be political, stemming from the early identity politics movements of the 1960s and 1970s, a guiding principle of which is the idea that the personal is political -
Magnus Hirschfeld
Munich, Heidelberg, and Berlin. In 1892 he earned his doctoral degree. After his studies, he traveled through the United States for eight months, visiting the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, and living from the -
Same-sex marriage in Aruba
in the Kingdom (also from the European and Caribbean parts of The Netherlands) must be accepted by the other countries as a result of article 40 of the Charter for the Kingdom of the Netherlands -
Billy doll
Billy is a doll introduced in 1997. Billy was created by artist John McKitterick and marketed in the United States by London-based Totem International as "the first out and proud gay doll" although that -
The Loud House
reported in the news as being historic and caused a ratings surge. In May 2017, the characters of Lincoln Loud and Clyde McBride were featured on the front cover of Variety as an example of -
The L Word
The L Word is an American co-production television drama series portraying the lives of a group of lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people and their friends, family and lovers in the trendy Greater Los Angeles -
The Todd
Template:Infobox character Dr. Todd "The Todd" Quinlan, M.D., is a fictional character in the comedy-drama Scrubs played by Robert Maschio. -
The Fosters
Peter Paige and Bradley Bredeweg which first premiered in the United States on June 3, 2013 on the Freeform (previously named ABC Family) television network. It follows the lives of the Foster family led by -
The Village Voice
It is also distributed throughout the United States on a pay basis. It was the first of the urban tabloid-format newspapers that came to be known as alternative weeklies, and as such, is the -
The Society for Human Rights
and his work with the Scientific-Humanitarian Committee. It was the first recognized gay rights organization in the United States, having received a charter from the state of Illinois, and produced the first American publication -
The Castro, San Francisco, California
The Castro District, better known as The Castro, is a neighborhood within Eureka Valley in San Francisco, California. The Castro is one of the United States' first gay neighborhoods, and it is currently the largest -
The Advocate
and transgender (LGBT) people. The magazine, established in 1967, is the oldest and largest LGBT publication in the United States and the only surviving one of its kind that was founded before the 1969 Stonewall -
The 519 Church St. Community Centre
community centre located at 519 Church St. in the Church and Wellesley neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The 519 serves both its local neighbourhood and the broader gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender communities in the -
The Bisexual Option
By Fritz Klein, MD, first published in 1978, with a second edition printed in 1993, it was the first psychological publication specifically devoted to bisexuality. Chapter 1. The Threat -
The Grotesque (film)
Template:Infobox Film The Grotesque is a 1995 British film by John-Paul Davidson, adapted from the 1989 novel by Patrick McGrath. It stars Alan Bates, Lena Headey, Theresa Russell and Sting. Academy Award-winning
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His Dark Materials
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A resource for facts on Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials series and its movie adaptation that anyone can edit. His Dark Materials is a trilogy of novels by Philip Pullman. The series consists of three novels, Northern Lights (released as The…