Tag Archive | "obituary"

John Lawrence Dies at 68

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John G. Lawrence, 68, whose last name became synonymous with one of the LGBT right’s movements most important legal victories–the Supreme Court’s 2003 ruling in Lawrence v. Texas–died November 20 from complications of a heart ailment.

The high court’s decision struck down a Texas law that made it a crime to engage in consensual homosexual sex. The ruling likewise invalidated similar laws in a dozen other states, among them the court’s own 1986 decision in Bowers v. Hardwick, in which justices had ruled 5-4 that nothing in the Constitution prevented states from criminalizing consensual sex between gay men, even in their own  homes.

That changed with the Lawrence decision, in which Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, writing for five justices, opined: “The petitioners are entitled to respect for their private lives.”

“The state,” he wrote in the 6-3 Lawrence opinion, “cannot demean their existence or control their destiny by making their private sexual conduct a crime.” Kennedy was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1988 by President Ronald Reagan.

On September 17, 1998, Harris County, Texas police responded to a false report of a “weapons disturbance” at Lawrence’s apartment. The deputy entered the unlocked apartment on the outskirts of Houston and said he witnessed Lawrence and Tyron Garner having sex. The two men were arrested for violating a Texas law that prohibited “deviate sexual intercourse with another individual of the same sex.” Lawrence and Garner were held overnight by police, and charged with violating Texas’s anti-sodomy “Homosexual Conduct” law. State courts rejected their constitutional challenges to the Texas law, relying on the earlier Supreme Court ruling in Bowers.

Mitchell Katine, a Houston lawyer who represented Lawrence, told the New York Times that his client “was upset about how he was treated, physically and personally, that night,” adding that, “when he was vindicated in the Supreme Court, he felt he got justice.”

Lawrence died at his Houston home. His death came to light when Katine, his lawyer in the case, tried to located Lawrence with an invitation to an event commemorating the landmark ruling.

Bisexual Screen Idol Dies

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NEW YORK, NY – Farley Granger, an openly bisexual 1950’s, screen idol died last week at the age of 85. Granger was the star of Rope and Strangers on a Train, both classics directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Granger died of natural causes, according to the New York medical examiner’s office.

Granger’s career sky rocked when, at 16-years old, he joined the drama club at North Hollywood High School and was discovered by a talent scout for Samuel Goldwyn and appeared in his first movie, The North Star, in 1943. He also appeared in television and on stage. He did leave acting long enough to serve in the navy in World War II.
After the war, he returned to Hollywood where he became a favorite in fan magazines. Photos in these magazines showed him with numerous Hollywood starlets, but Granger admitted that his only true romance was with Shelley Winters.

In 2007, Granger published his memoir, “Include Me Out” along with his partner Robert Calhoun. Granger wrote how, at the age of 21 while a navy recruit and a virgin, he had sex with a female prostitute. After finishing with her he then had sex with another male navy officer. “I lost my virginity twice in one night,” he wrote.

Celebration of Joe Bettes

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ORLANDO – On Friday, February 25, 2011, Joe Bettes passed away. Joe was a former Parliament House and Full Moon employee. Joe and his lover, Dennis McCormack also opened Friends Restaurant in Orlando. After selling Friends Restaurant, Joe and Dennis moved to Fort Lauderdale. In December 2010, Joe and Dennis moved back to Orlando.

On Saturday, March 19, 2011, there will be a Celebration of Joe’s Life from 7:00pm – 9:00pm in the Disco. We are looking for people to perform (volunteer) and/or donate items to raffle off. (This is not a memorial… it is a CELEBRATION)

The money raised will go to Dennis McCormack to help him pay for the funeral. Dennis and Joe have done a lot for the community. This is a call for the community to come together to take care of them.

Please contact Fred@parliamenthouse. com to participate and support Dennis and Joe.

Famed Preacher and Gay Advocate Rev. Peter J. Gomes dies

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Task Force, MCC and Harvard pay their respects

By ALEX VAUGHN

Photo: ‘Lost voice of the community, Rev. Peter J. Gomes Courtesy, http://epistleofjim.blogspot.com

The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force mourns the death of the Rev. Peter J. Gomes, an openly gay Harvard minister, theologian and author, who died on Monday at the age of 68 due to complications from a stroke. Tributes poured in from many who believed he was an Accidental Gay Activist. Gomes was born in Boston and raised in Plymouth. He received a bachelor’s degree from Bates College in Lewiston, Maine, and a divinity degree from Harvard. In 1979, Time magazine called him “one of the seven most distinguished preachers in America,” and in 1998 he was named Clergy of the Year by the organization Religion in American Life. Gomes described himself as a cultural conservative but stunned the Harvard community in 1991 when he said he was gay in response to harassment against gays on campus.

Rev. Rebecca Voelkel, Faith Work Director, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, paid tribute saying,

“In many Christian circles, when a person of faith passes, the pastor will speak of them by quoting Jesus, ‘well done, thou good and faithful servant.’ Sometimes this phrase is over used. But today, truer words were never spoken. Rev. Peter Gomes epitomized one who lived his life seeking to be a good and faithful servant — of the God he loved. “For those of us who are religious and affirm the dignity of all persons, including lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, Rev. Gomes was a light and a model. His passionate sermons, his incomparable work with the Scriptures and his visible love of God and God’s creation will be greatly missed.”

In a Statement by Rea Carey, Executive Director, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, she said, “In the passing of Rev. Peter Gomes, the world has lost a mind, a voice, an advocate, an artist of words rarely seen in this day and age. Rev. Gomes spoke eloquently and frequently in support of marriage equality in Massachusetts during that state’s fierce struggle to protect the right of same-sex couples to marry.”

She continued, “He came out as a gay man when it was scandalous for clergy of his position and caliber, of any caliber, to do so. And yet, he did so with a clarity and grace that provided theological shelter for many a young person struggling with their sexuality. At the time, he said, ‘I am a Christian who happens as well to be gay. … Those realities, which are irreconcilable to some, are reconciled in me by a loving God.’

Metropolitan Community Churches said in a statement, ‘The LGBT faith community, and all people of faith lost a powerful friend, ally and a voice for justice, in Rev. Peter Gomes, the gifted Pusey Minister of Memorial Church, the non-denominational center of Christian life at Harvard University.

Rev. Gomes was a popular teacher, mentor and sought after preacher, whose best seller, The Good Book; Reading the Bible with Mind and Heart, took on fundamentalism, and examined topics like slavery, anti-Semitism and homosexuality. His humor, accessibility in his writing, endeared him even to those who disagreed with him. Dr. Gomes came out in 1991 at Harvard, and devoted the last two decades of his life to countering the Biblical misunderstandings that undergird homophobia. He reached audiences that many of us are not able to reach, with poise and confidence.

Dr. Gomes scholarship, leadership, and support for students will be greatly missed at Harvard, in Cambridge. Marvin Bagwell, a lay leader in MCC and Harvard graduate offers this personal tribute:

“He was such a contradiction in terms, a black Baptist preacher from a prominent almost Boston Brahmin family. Instead of fire and brimstone, Peter preached about love and justice. His sermons were works of art, enchanting, jewel like in their clarity and always inspiring and uplifting. I was in denial about my sexual identity. I certainly did not know about “gaydar” at that time, but I was oddly drawn to Peter. I suspected but could not speak the words about him or about myself. In the early 1990′s Peter came out. His announcement made the national newspapers. I was out by then, but his announcement shook me out of my subway seat and made me immensely and tearfully proud. I immediately dashed off a letter to tell him he and his sermons had saved my life. Harvard was not an easy place to be black and gay. Peter called himself a conservative Christian. For the betterment of us all and for himself, he outgrew the conservative part. God bless Peter Gomes.”

Lois Kessinger passes

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WILTON MANORS – Lois Kessinger, mother of George Kessinger, founder of Georgie’s Alibi, died on Sunday, Jan. 23 in her home from cancer. Kessinger had been a community favorite since George originally opened the Club Caribbean Resort in the early 1980s. Lois, her husband George Sr. and other son Jim, worked at both the Club Caribbean and Georgie’s Alibi. A local memorial service is being planned for Kessinger for the near future.

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