Podcast FAQ

making gay history podcast

by Prof. Freddie Ankunding V Published 3 years ago Updated 2 years ago
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When was rare cancer first seen in homosexuals?

“Rare Cancer Seen in 41 Homosexuals,” said the New York Times headline on July 3, 1981. It was the first time Eric Marcus read about what came to be known as AIDS. Nothing for me to worry …

Who was the feminist who wrote the manifesto called Lesbian Nation?

Sparks flew when radical lesbian feminist Jill Johnston sat down for an interview with Studs Terkel in 1973. Jill had just published a controversial manifesto called “Lesbian Nation,” which advocate…. 23 min.

Who is the cofounder of Olivia Records?

Olivia Records cofounder Meg Christian helped ignite the women’s music movement of the 1970s with lesbian classics like “Ode to a Gym Teacher.”. Meet Meg, in song and conversation, in our final …. 28 min. DEC 24, 2020. MGH & Studs Terkel: Leonard Matlovich.

What is the Making Gay History podcast?

The Making Gay History podcast mines Eric Marcus’s decades-old audio archive of rare interviews — conducted for his award-winning oral history of the LGBTQ civil rights movement — to create intimate, personal portraits of both known and long-forgotten champions, heroes, and witnesses to history.

Who is funding the Making Gay History Foundation?

Funding — Making Gay History is made possible with generous funding from the Jonathan Logan Family Foundation, which supports investigative journalism, the arts, and documentary film. Funding — The Calamus Foundation awards grants to charitable organizations for programs and activities that focus on services to the LGBT community ...

What is MGH in history?

Making Gay History (MGH) is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization that addresses the absence of substantive, in-depth LGBTQ-inclusive American history from the public discourse and the classroom by providing a window into that history through the stories of the people who helped a despised minority take its rightful place in society as full and equal citizens. In so doing, MGH aims to encourage connection, pride, and solidarity within the LGBTQ community and to provide an entry point for both allies and the general public to its largely hidden history.

Who is Will Coley?

Digital Strategist — Will Coley is an independent radio producer and digital media strategist, originally from North Carolina, now based in Queens, New York.

How much has the American Theatre raised?

By drawing upon the talents, resources, and generosity of the American theatre community, since 1988 they have raised more than $300 million for essential services for people with HIV/AIDS and other critical illnesses in all 50 states, Puerto Rico, and Washington, DC.

What was Sylvia's impact on the LGBT movement?

In a 2015 NBC News article “A Forgotten Latina Trailblazer,” reporter Raul Reyes gives a solid overview of Sylvia’s life and her impact on the LGBT civil rights movement in New York City, although he mistakenly states that the Stonewall uprising marked the start of the LGBT civil rights movement.

How old was Sylvia when she met history?

Sylvia was all of seventeen when she crossed paths with history at the Stonewall Inn on the night of June 28, 1969.

Who was the trans activist at Stonewall?

In our first episode you’ll meet Sylvia Rivera. She was an iconic trans activist who also happened to be at Stonewall in 1969, June 28, the night of the big uprising.

Who was Ray Rivera's interviewer?

Eric : Interview with Ray Rivera, Saturday, December 9, 1989, at 4:00 p.m. Location is the home of Ray Rivera in Tarrytown, New York. Interviewer is Eric Marcus. Tape 1, Side 1.

Who was the first person to make a film about homosexuality?

By 1919, Hirschfeld had met one of the loves of his life, Karl Giese , and had helped create the world’s first film dealing with homosexuality. Karl Giese and Magnus Hirschfeld, 1934.

What inspired Hirschfeld to become a sexologist?

When news of Oscar Wilde’s trial and imprisonment reached Germany, Hirschfeld was outraged. This was part of what inspired him to blaze a trail as a pioneering sexologist and gay rights champion. In 1897, when he was 29 years old, he founded the, uh….

When was Rainer Herrn speaking?

Dr. Rainer Herrn speaking at the Bebelplatz in Berlin, May 2010, on the 75th anniversary of HIrschfeld’s death. Credit: Ralf Dose. EM Narration: Hirschfeld’s fame as an expert turned to notoriety when he was drawn into Germany’s biggest gay scandal.

Was Hirschfeld gay?

Rainer Herrn: No. EM Narration: Hirschfeld was the expert on homosexuality—and he was a gay man. But as Ralf Dose, director of the Magnus Hirschfeld Society, says, only one of those things was a public matter. Ralf Dose: So he himself never came out in a way we would expect that, to say “I am…”.

Who composed the theme music for Making Gay History?

Our theme music was composed by Fritz Meyers. Making Gay History is a co-production of Pineapple Street Media, with assistance from the New York Public Library’s Manuscripts and Archives Division, which provided us with the Ernestine Eckstein archival tape, and the ONE Archives at the USC Libraries.

Who coined the phrase "gay is good"?

EM Narration: And a quick reminder that Frank Kameny was the founder of the Mattachine Society of Washington, DC, and a proud militant homosexual who coined the phrase “gay is good.”. He was the organizer of the 1965 protests that Ernestine marched in.

Who was the leader of the July 4th picket line?

Ernestine Eckstein was one of the first participants in the July 4th “Annual Reminders,” picket lines organized by homophile organizations—under the leadership of Frank Kameny —from 1965 to 1969 at Philadelphia’s Independence Hall.

Who interviewed Ernestine on MGH?

It was MGH’s executive producer Sara Burningham’s idea to renew the search, and she learned from Marcia Gallo’s exhaustive work documenting the Daughters of Bilitis that homophile power couple Barbara Gittings and Kay Lahusen had interviewed Ernestine at great length on tape in 1965.

What year did Eckstein picket?

You can see a glimpse of Eckstein picketing at 28:50 in “The Homosexuals,” a controversial CBS program from 1967 hosted by “60 Minutes” veteran correspondent Mike Wallace. You can see footage of the 1968 Annual Reminder in “The Second Largest Minority,” a short documentary by Lilli Vincenz, here.

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