Famous gay lesbian or bisexual people
This is a partial list of confirmed and debated famous lesbian, bisexual, or gay people. The historical concept and
definition of sexual orientation has changed greatly over
time— the word "gay" wasn't used to describe sexual orientation until the mid 20th century. See homosexuality and bisexuality for more about the primary (and by far the most controversial)
distinguishing criterion of "lesbigay" people.
Some historical figures on this list wouldn't be considered "lesbigay" by today's standards, but they are included here
because they were known to have had same-sex relationships. But even by today's standards, a relationship or two doesn't
necessarily mean one is bisexual. Many people who identify as gay or lesbian have had different-gender relationships in their
youth, and many who identify as heterosexual have experimented with
same-sex relationships. Due to social norms that have remained consistent throughout history, little information about such matters when discussing historical figures is available; therefore, only
educated guesses can be made, based on limited evidence.
Controversy
It is important to note that the sexual orientation of famous individuals is often fodder for tabloid press. As such, it is often subject to rumor simply because of a tabloid article. Some stars, especially those about whom rumors most often circulate, wish to maintain a public
image of heterosexuality—perhaps believing that assertions to the contrary would negatively affect their
profitability—and are vigorous in their legal pursuit of those who would question their heterosexuality. An excellent
example of this is actor Tom Cruise, who has been involved in at least three
such lawsuits. In 1998, he successfully sued a British tabloid that alleged that his marriage to Nicole Kidman was a sham designed to cover up his homosexuality. He obtained a
default judgment against a gay porn actor (Chad Slater, aka "Kyle Bradford") who had
given an interview to a tabloid newspaper in which he claimed he had a sexual
relationship with Tom Cruise, and he sued Michael Davis, a magazine publisher, who alleged that he had photographs that would prove Tom Cruise was homosexual: this suit was dropped in
exchange for a public statement by Davis that Tom Cruise was heterosexual. Because of the threat of litigation, it is considered prudent not to assert the homosexuality or bisexuality of a celebrity unless
the celebrity has personally publicly asserted it. Some homosexual groups (e.g., Outrage!), have followed a policy of
outing public figures regularly for political purposes, usually only if that person is publicly anti-gay. However, such a policy is generally
condemned within the lesbian and gay community as an infringement on a person's right to privacy, because of concerns about their family, their
right to cope with their own sexuality on their own terms, or the risk of discrimination or loss of reputation.
Note that several of the people on this list were prosecuted for their behaviour under existing "sodomy laws".
BambooWebns: Edit this list with caution, because misidentifying the sexual identity of living individuals can lead to a
charge of libel. It has not been tested whether BambooWeb's sponsor, Bomis, is liable for
libel in the BambooWeb. Furthermore, categorization of historical figures no longer alive to define their own sexual orientation
often leads to pointless debate. Recognize that just as adding non-gay people to this list would be wrong, removing gay people
from this list is also wrong. You should justify additions or removals on the list's talk page: providing written sources would
be best. The most convincing evidence about living persons would be a self-description by that individual.
A B C D E F G H I
J K L M N O P Q R
S T U V W X Y Z Persons of debated lesbian, gay, or bisexual
orientation
Persons of confirmed homosexual or bisexual orientation
The following list includes those people who have confirmed their homosexual or bisexual orientation or whose homosexual or
bisexual orientation is not debated.
A
- Louise Abbéma, French
painter, relationship with Sarah Bernhardt
- Berenice Abbott, U.S. photographer
- Roberta Achtenberg, US Politician
- Jean Acker, American Actress
- Valentine Ackland,
British writer
- Mercedes de Acosta, American poet, playwright and costume
designer
- Sir Harold Acton,
British art writer, aesthete
- Jane Addams, American social reformer
- Edward Albee, American Playwright (Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?)
- Alexander the Great, Macedonian King and conquerer of Eurasia, bisexual
- Pavel Sergeevich Alexandrov, Russian
mathematician
- Francesco Algarotti, academic
- Waheed Alli, Baron Alli, UK TV industry
executive and life member of the House of Lords
- Néstor Almendros,
Spanish Academy Award-winning cinematographer
- Pedro Almodóvar Spanish director, Oscar winner
- Chad Allen, American actor
- Peter Allen, Australian entertainer, Aldrich, Robert and Wotherspoon,
Gary (Eds.) (2001).
- Ted Allen, food and wine guru on Queer Eye
- Marc Almond, British singer
- Dennis Altman, Australian
writer, educator, gay activist
- Scott Amedure, victim in the "Jenny Jones murder"
- Alejandro Amenábar, Spanish filmmaker
- Dawn Marie Anderson, bi-sexual American porn actress known as Nina
Cherry
- Enza Anderson, Canadian drag queen and political gadfly
- Ruth Anderson, composer
- Jerzy Andrzejewski, Polish writer
- Kenneth Anger, American filmaker
- Steve Antin, American actor
- Antinous, Lover of powerful Roman military commander and emperor Hadrian
- Gloria E. Anzaldua, Famous Chicana Lesbian Writer
- Louis Aragon, French poet, bisexual - documented in Ruth Brandon's
"Surreal Lives"
- Gregg Araki, director of Doom Generation and The Living End
- Denys Arcand, director of "The Barbarian Invasions" (Les invasions barbares)
- Reinaldo Arenas, Cuban poet, author of "Before Night Falls"
(Antes que anochezca)
- Aristomenes, Ancient Greek
military commander
- Joan Armatrading, singer-songwriter
- Neil Armfield, Australian
theatre director
- Billie Joe Armstrong, songwriter, frontman of the
American band Green Day, stated he was bisexual in an interview in The Advocate,
January 24, 1995.
- Alexis Arquette, American actor
- Claudio Arrau, Chilean pianist
- John Ashbery, American poet
- Kaitlyn Ashley, bi-sexual American porn actress
- Othniel Askew, American assassin
- Sir Frederick Ashton, British choreographer
- Asophicus, Lover of Epaminondas
- Kutlug Ataman, Turkish artist
- W. H. Auden, British poet
- Kevin Aviance, dance music singer
B
- Francis Bacon, British painter
- Francis Bacon, British philosopher and scientist
- Joan Baez, American singer, bisexual
- Paul Bailey, British author
- Josephine Baker, Singer, actress, French resistance member during
WWII, bisexual
- James Baldwin, American author
- Tammy Baldwin - member of the United States House of
Representatives (D - Wisconsin)
- Alan Ball, writer (American Beauty, "Six Feet Under")
- Tallulah Bankhead, Actress
- Samuel Barber, U.S. composer
- Jillian Barberie, tv hostess, actress, bisexual
- Clive Barker, Author, director, artist, known primarily for his work in
the horror genre
- Djuna Barnes, Novelist, bisexual
- Fred Barnes (Frederick Jester Barnes), Musical Hall singer.
- Tim Barnett, New Zealand member of parliament
- Jean Barraqué, French composer
- José Luis Barry, Cuban
pianist and singer famous on Puerto Rican television and newspapers; came out
as gay on one of his El Vocero columns
- Michael Barrymore, British comedian
- Drew Barrymore, actress, bisexual
- Roland Barthes, French literary theorist
- Paul Bartel, American
filmaker
- Katharine Lee Bates, writer of "America the Beautiful" [1]
(http://www.lesgo.com/articles/america.html)
- Terry Baum, American playwright and congressional candidate
- Billy Bean, former major league baseball player
- Amanda Bearse, American actor ("Married...with Children"), director
- Cecil Beaton, British photographer, Tony Award-winning set designer and Academy
Award-winning costume designer
- Maria Beatty, American filmmaker
- Simone de Beauvoir, French philosopher and novelist,
bisexual
- Alison Bechdel, American cartoonist (Dykes to Watch Out
For)
- Brendan Behan, Irish writer
- Andy Bell, British singer
- Chester Bennington, songwriter, singer in the American band
Linkin Park, bisexual
- A C Benson, UK writer of the words 'Land of Hope and Glory'; 2 of his
brothers (all were sons of the Archbishop of Canterbury) were also gay
- Gladys Bentley, American
blues singer
- Christopher Bernau, stage actor known for his Shakespeare roles, as well as roles on soap operas (Alan Spaulding on The Guiding Light)
- Sandra Bernhard, American comedian, singer, author and actor,
bisexual
- Sarah Bernhardt, French actress
- Leonard Bernstein, U.S. composer and conductor, bisexual,
Aldrich, Robert and Wotherspoon, Gary (Eds.) (2001).
- Sarah Bettens, leading vocal of K's Choice
- Ole von Beust, mayor of Hamburg
- James Bidgood, US photographer and filmmaker (Pink Narcissus)
- Thom Bierdz, soap opera actor most famous for his role on The Young and the Restless
- Elizabeth Birch, former head of Human Rights Campaign, longtime partner of Hillary Rosen (see
below)
- Jón Þor (Jónsi) Birgisson, singer and guitarist of Icelandic band Sigur Rós
- Marie-Claire Blais, Quebec novelist
- Ross Bleckner, American artist
- Neil Blewett, Australian Labor
politician 1977-94; Minister for Health 1983-91; High Commissioner to the United Kingdom 1995-98
- Marc Blitzstein, American theater composer
- Anthony Blunt, British art-historian and traitor
- Sir Dirk Bogarde, British actor
- Chastity Bono, American activist, lesbian, daughter of Cher and Sonny Bono
- Josep Borrell Fontelles, Europarlamentary from
the PSOE (an Spanish marxist party)
- Sandro Botticelli, Italian painter
- Michel Marc Bouchard, Canadian playwright (Les feluettes)
- Jane Bowles, American author, married to Paul Bowles
- Paul Bowles, American expatriate author and once composer, married to
Jane Bowles, Aldrich, Robert and Wotherspoon, Gary (Eds.) (2001).
- Karin Boye, Swedish poet and novelist
- E. E. Bradford, Uranian poet
- Ben Bradshaw, British politician
- Wilfrid Brambell, British actor (Steptoe & Son)
- Scott Brison, Canadian member of Parliament and Minister of Public
Works and Government Services
- Benjamin Britten, British composer, Aldrich, Robert and
Wotherspoon, Gary (Eds.) (2001).
- David Brock, American journalist and author.
- Nicole Brossard, Quebec
poet and novelist
- Bob Brown, Australian senator
- Lady Bunny, drag performer
- Guy Burgess, Spy
- Glenn Burke, American baseball
player
- William S. Burroughs, American Beat author (Naked Lunch, Junky)
- Dan Butler, American actor
- Judith Butler
- Samuel Butler, UK novelist 'Erewhon'
C
- John Cage, highly influential American composer of aleatoric music and partner of Merce Cunningham
- Caligula, Roman
emperor
- Andrew Calimach, American author of Romanian extraction
- Simon Callow, British Actor
- Jean Jacques Régis de
Cambacérès, French lawyer and statesman, author of the Code Napoléon
- Rhona Cameron, British Comedienne, TV Presenter
- Caphisodorus, Lover of
Epaminondas who died with him in battle
- Truman Capote, American author
- Claudia Card, academic
- Edward Carpenter, poet
- Chris Carter, New Zealand Minister of
Conservation, Minister of Local Government and Minister for Ethnic Affairs
- Nell Carter, actress/singer (star of Gimme a Break)
- Giacomo Casanova, seducer
- Roger Casement, Irish patriot
- Michael Cashman, British actor and politician
- Maggie Cassella, Canadian comedian
- Luis Cernuda, Spanish playwright
- Graham Chapman, British comedian
- Tracy Chapman, singer/songwriter
- Richard Chamberlain, American actor
- Mary Cheney, daughter of U.S. vice-president Dick Cheney
- Leslie Cheung, Hong Kong singer/actor
- Margaret Cho, American comedian, bisexual
- Wayson Choy, Canadian
novelist
- Ralph Chubb, British poet, artist, printer, and prophet
- Cimon, Ancient Greek military commander, aristocrat, and philanthropist
- David Cicilline, American politician; Mayor of Providence, Rhode
Island
- James
Clark, British ambassador to Luxembourg
- Montgomery Clift, American actor
- Kate Clinton, American comedian
- James Coco, American actor
- Jean Cocteau, French director and artist, lover of Jean Marais
- Roy Cohn, associate of U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy
- Colette French novelist, music hall performer, bisexual
- Cyril Collard, French
writer, director (Les Nuits Fauves), bisexual
- Dennis Cooper, US novelist, poet, and critic
- Aaron Copland, American composer, documented in Howard Pollack's biography,
Aaron Copland: The Life and Work of an Uncommon Man
- John Corigliano, American composer
- Noel Coward, British writer
- Henry Cowell, highly influential American composer
- Darby Crash, lead singer of American punk band The Germs
- Gavin Crawford, Canadian
television comic
- Rene Crevel, French surrealist
author
- Quentin Crisp, British actor, author, and wit
- Rodney Croome, Australia gay activist
- Aleister Crowley, occultist
- Howard Cruse, American underground cartoonist
- Wilson Cruz, American actor and activist
- Alan Cumming, British actor
- Andrew Cunanan, American spree killer, murdered Gianni Versace
- Merce Cunningham, choreographer and partner of John Cage
- John Curry, British figure skater, 1976 Winter Olympics gold medalist
- Catie Curtis, American singer-songwriter
D
- Jeffrey Dahmer, American serial killer and cannibal
- Dan Dailey, American actor and dancer
- Dave Davies, British rock musician, see http://www.davedavies.com
- Libby Davies, Canadian member of parliament
- Peter Maxwell Davies, British composer
- Jeanine Deckers, Belgian nun and singer-songwriter
- Ellen DeGeneres, writer, comedian and actor
- Diane Dimassa, cartoonist and author, HotHead Paisan, Homicidal
Lesbian Terrorist
- Divine, actor (in many of John Waters' films)
- Dreuxilla Divine, transvestite
- Bertrand Delanoë, mayor of Paris
- Samuel Delany, science fiction author
- Lea DeLaria, American comedian, jazz singer, author
- Portia de Rossi, actress
- Andy Dick, American actor and comedian, bisexual
- Marlene Dietrich, actress, bisexual
- Ani DiFranco, American folk singer, bisexual
- Elio Di Rupo, Belgian politician
- Roman Dmowski, Polish politician, black mailed by the Okhranka, Imperial Russia's
secret police
- Candas Dorsey, Canadian science fiction author
- Joseph Doucé, psychologist and Baptist minister, founder of the International Lesbian and Gay
Association
- Brian Dowling, 2001 British
Big Brother winner
- Lord Alfred Douglas, son of John Sholto Douglas, 8th Marquess of Queensberry and partner of Oscar Wilde.
- Kyan Douglas, grooming guru on Queer Eye for the Straight Guy
- Diane Duane, author, bisexual
- Marcel Duchamp, artist, inventor of the found object
- Don Dunstan, Australian Labor politician, Premier of South Australia;
married twice; bisexual
E
- Hilton Edwards, actor, co-founder of Dublin's Gate Theatre, partner
of Micheál MacLiammoir
- Denholm Elliott, actor, bisexual
- Ruth
Ellis, lesbian matriarch and only known African-American centenarian lesbian
- Epaminondas, Thebian military commander and statesmen
- Brian Epstein, British, manager of The Beatles
- Melissa Etheridge, American singer, lesbian, musician,
composer
- Uzi Even, first openly gay member of
the Israeli Knesset
- Kenny Everett, British DJ and comic
- Rupert Everett, British actor, gay
F
- Richard Fairbrass,
British singer, "Right Said Fred", bisexual
- Justin Fashanu, British Footballer
- Rainer Werner Fassbinder, German movie
director
- Ferdinand I of Bulgaria, former Tsar of
Bulgaria
- Harvey Fierstein, American actor, playwright (Torch Song Trilogy)
- Thom Filicia, home design guru on Queer Eye for the Straight Guy
- Timothy Findley, Canadian novelist and playwright
- E. M. Forster, British author
- Jackie Forster, TV news presenter/journalist and Minorities Research Group member
- Pim Fortuyn, assassinated Dutch politician
- Per-Kristian Foss, Finance Minister of Norway
- Jen Foster, American
singer/songwriter
- Michel Foucault, French scholar, partnered with Daniel Defert from 1963 till his death, Aldrich, Robert and Wotherspoon, Gary
(Eds.) (2001). Also dated Jean Barraque.
- Jorja Fox, actress (CSI)
- Samantha Fox, British model and one time pop singer
- Virgil Fox, American organist
- Simon Fowler, British vocalist for rock band Ocean Colour Scene
- Barney Frank (D, MA), US Representative
- Donald Friend, Australian
artist
- Stephen Fry, British actor, comedian, and novelist
- Mac Foster, austin texas
G
- John Wayne Gacy, American serial killer, convicted of the rape
and murder of thirty-three men
- Greta Garbo, actress
- Federico García Lorca, Spanish poet and playwright,
martyred in the Spanish Civil War
- Jonas Gardell, Swedish artist and "riksbög".
- Stephen Gately, Irish singer and ex member of the boyband Boyzone
- David Geffen, music producer and record executive, gay
- Jean Genet, French writer
- Kitty Genovese, crime victim [2] (http://www.mountainpridemedia.org/oitm/issues/2004/04apr2004/editorial.htm)
- Chrissy Gephardt, daughter of US Congressman
and 2004 presidential candidate Richard A. "Dick" Gephardt
- Boy George, British musician
- Ashlyn Gere, bi-sexual American porn actress
- David Gerrold, science fiction writer, inventor of Tribbles
- André Gide, French novelist and Nobel Laureate
- Sir John Gielgud OM CH, Theatre and film actor
- Uzma Gillani, Pakistani
actress
- Candace Gingrich, activist, half-sister of former U.S. Speaker
of the House Newt Gingrich
- Allen Ginsberg, Beat poet ("Howl")
- Chyna Girl, drag performer and
model (BACARDI's Tom, Dick and Harry ad campaign)
- Neil Giuliano, Tempe, Arizona mayor, declared himself homosexual in public
- Luis Gonzalo, Argentine
illustrator and designer
- Brian Greig, Australian
senator
- Julie Goodyear, UK television actress (Coronation Street)
- Michael Guest, US ambassador to Romania. Appointed by President Bush in 2001. He resides at the ambassador's residence in Bucharest with his partner Alex Nevarez, who was
publicly acknowledged by former Secretary of State Colin Powell at his
swearing in.
- Sir Alec Guinness, bisexual actor who was arrested while cottaging in 1948, in the 50's he converted to
Catholicism
- Gorgidas, Theban military leader of the Sacred band of elite
troops of paired gay lovers.
- Juan Goytisolo, Spanish writer
- Judy Grahn, American poet
- Gustaf Gründgens, German actor and stage director
H
- Hadrian, Powerful Roman military commander and emperor
- Leisha Hailey, American musician and actress
- William Haines, American actor
- Rob Halford, British singer (Judas Priest)
- Radclyffe Hall, British lesbian, author of "The Well of
Loneliness"
- Marc Hall, Canadian student and activist
- Vincent Hanley, Irish
radio DJ who died of an AIDS-related illness
- George Frideric Handel, German-British
composer
- G. H. Hardy, British mathematician
- Lou Harrison, American composer
- Randy Harrison, American actor (Queer As Folk)
- Deborah Harry, singer in the group Blondie, bisexual American singer
- Lorenz Hart, Broadway lyricist, who penned his work with Richard Rodgers
- Nina Hartley, bi-sexual American porn actress
- Richard Hatch, Survivor winner
- Sophie B. Hawkins, musician, bisexual
- Nigel Hawthorne, British actor
- George Hartree, British actor, who took the name of Charles
Hawtrey, (not to be confused with Sir Charles Hawtrey, the victorian actor)
- Harry Hay, American gay
rights activist, founder of the Mattachine Society
- Bruce Hayes, American gold
medalist uring the 1984 Summer Olympics in swimming
- Todd Haynes, director
- Michael Hendricks, Canadian gay rights activist, half of
first couple to legally marry in Quebec
- Sighsten Herrgård, designer, trendsetter. Became the face
of AIDS in Sweden.
- Alan Hollinghurst, British author (The Swimming Pool
Library)
- John Holmes, American porn actor, bisexual
- James Hormel, former US ambassador to Luxembourg.
Appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1999.
- A. E. Housman, British poet
- Frankie Howerd, British actor
- Rock Hudson, American actor
- Tanya Huff, Canadian author
- Michael Huffington, American politician, bisexual
- Jerry Hunt, American composer from Texas
I
J
- Tony Jackson, American pianist and composer
- Max Jacob, poet
- Tove Jansson, author of the Moomin books
- Michel Jasmin,
French-Canadian daytime television talk show host, homosexual
- Michael Jeter, American actor, "Mr. Noodle's brother Mr. Noodle" of Sesame Street
- Joan Jett, musician
- Sarah Orne Jewett, American author
- Edmund John, Uranian poet
- Sir Elton John, British singer, musician, composer
- Jeffrey John, Church of England priest
- Jasper Johns, artist
- Holly Johnson, British lead singer for Frankie Goes to Hollywood
- Philip Johnson, American architect
- Angelina Jolie, American actress, bisexual
- Janis Joplin, American singer
- Juan Gabriel, Mexican singer
- Mychal F. Judge, Franciscan priest, WTC terrorism victim
K
- Gorden Kaye, British actor
- Johan Kenkhuis, Dutch
Olympic swimmer
- Hape Kerkeling, German
comedian
- John Maynard Keynes, British economist
- Bernard King, Australian TV
personality, celebrity chef
- Billie Jean King, tennis player, bisexual
- Andrew Kinlochan, member of boy band Phixx
- The Hon. Justice Michael Kirby,
Justice of the High Court of Australia
- James Kirkwood, American playwright (A Chorus Line)
- Steve Kmetko, U.S.
entertainment journalist
- Jim Kolbe, member of the United States House of
Representatives (R-Arizona)
- Andrey Nikolaevich Kolmogorov,
Russian mathematician
- David Kopay, American football player, outed self in autobiography
- Ronnie Kray, One half of the
Kray twins
- Carson Kressley, style guru on Queer Eye for the Straight Guy
- Elvira Kurt, Canadian
comedian
- Tony Kushner, playwright (Angels in America)
L
- Elaine Lancaster,
American drag performer
- Nathan Lane, American actor and singer
- k.d. lang, Canadian country and blues singer, musician, lesbian
- Laurier L. LaPierre, Canadian broadcaster and Senator
- Charles Laughton, British actor, bisexual
- Chris Lea, former leader of the Green Party of Canada, first openly gay party leader in Canada
- René Leboeuf, Canadian gay rights activist, half of first couple to
legally marry in Quebec
- Mark Leduc, Canadian Olympic medalist/boxing, 1992
- Sook-Yin Lee, Canadian TV personality, former MuchMusic VJ, bisexual
- Annie Leibowitz, American photographer
- Robert Lepage, Canadian playwright, actor and film director
- Hedda Lettuce, drag performer
- Mark Levengod, Swedish TV host
- José Lezama Lima, Cuban poet
- Jesse Liberty, American writer. Bisexual
- Liberace, American musician
- Little Richard, American singer and musician, bisexual, has also
denounced homosexuality and bisexuality
- Kristanna Loken, actress, model, bisexual
- Audre Lorde, poet, author
- Lance Loud, gay son on reality television show An American
Family
- Greg Louganis, U.S Olympic high-diver
- Matt Lucas, British comedian
- Ernst Ludwig, Grand Duke of
Hesse and The Rhine
- Paul Lynde, American actor and comedian
M
- Ann-Marie MacDonald, Canadian author and playwright
- Ashley MacIsaac, Canadian fiddler from Cape Breton
- Mary MacLane, Edwardian-era writer
- Micheál MacLiammoir actor and co-founder of Dublin's
Gate Theatre
- Peter Mandelson, Britain's EU commissioner
- Irshad Manji, Canadian journalist, author, and "Muslim Refusenik".
- Thomas Mann, German author
- Erika Mann, cabaret producer, actress
- Robert Mapplethorpe, American artist, photographer
- Jean Marais, French actor, lover of Jean Cocteau
- Josie Maran, US model, bisexual
- Christopher Marlowe, Elizabethan playwright
- David Marsden, Canadian radio broadcaster and music promoter
- Holly Matcalf, gold medal
winner in rowing during the 1984 Summer Olympics
- Johnny Mathis, Singer
- William Somerset Maugham, British writer and
dramatist
- Armistead Maupin, American writer (Tales of the City)
- Amelie Mauresmo, French tennis player, lesbian
- Steve May, Arizona state legislator
and Army reservist
- Roddy McDowall, U.S. actor and photographer
- James McGreevey, U.S. politician and former governor of New Jersey, resigned in November 2004 after admitting having an extramarital affair
with a man
- Sir Ian McKellen, British actor (X-Men, The Lord of the Rings), gay
rights campaigner
- Margaret Mead, anthropologist
- Joe Meek, British record producer
- Meleager (general), Greek military commander
- Réal Ménard, Canadian member of parliament
- Gian Carlo Menotti, U.S. composer
- Kitty Meow, International circuit
party Icon
- Rick Mercer, Canadian
television comedian
- Freddie Mercury, British musician (Queen)
- Metrobius
- George Michael, British singer (Wham)
- Tammy Lynn Michaels, U.S. actress, partner of Melissa
Etheridge
- Michelangelo Buonarroti, Italian Renaissance artist
- Harvey Milk, American politician
- Scott Mills, British Radio DJ
- Sal Mineo, American actor
- Frank McGuinness, Irish playwright
- Yukio Mishima, Japanese author
- Isaac Mizrahi, Fashion designer, television show host, gay
- Albert Mol, Dutch actor
- Tyria Moore, love partner of serial killer Aileen Wuornos
- Cherrie Moraga, author on
lesbian Hispanic themes
- Richard Morel, singer, music producer
- Jon Moss, British musician
- Megan Mullally, US actress, bisexual
- Murathan Mungan, Turkish author, playwright and poet
- Glen Murray, former mayor of Winnipeg, Manitoba
- Boris Moiseev, Russian
singer
N
- Kathy Najimy, US actress, bisexual
- Martina Navratilova, tennis champion, lesbian
- Alla Nazimova (1879-1945), actress
- Me'shell Ndegeocello, singer and guitarist,
bisexual
- Émile Nelligan, Canadian poet
- Rob Newton, British athlete
- John Gambril Nicholson, Uranian poet
- Simon Niemiec, LGBT
activist
- Vaslav Nijinsky, ballet dancer
- Anaïs Nin, French author, bisexual
- Cynthia Nixon, US actress (bisexual?)
- Klaus Nomi, German singer, probably the first celebrity to die of AIDS (1983)
- Peter North, porn star (primarily heterosexual, but starred in 5 gay porn
movies in the early 1980s)
- David Norris, Irish senator, James Joyce scholar [3] (http://www.iol.ie/~atticirl/norris.htm)
- Graham Norton, Irish actor, comedian, chat show host
- Rudolf Nureyev, ballet dancer
O
- Sinéad O'Connor, Irish singer, bisexual (Ryan Confidential,
broadcast on RTÉ 1 on May 29, 2003)
- Daniel O'Donnell, American politician, brother of Rosie
O'Donnell
- Rosie O'Donnell, American comedian, lesbian
- Eoin O'Duffy, Irish police commissioner, leader of the 'Blueshirts'
and aide to Michael Collins (Irish
leader)
- Andrew Olexander, Australian politician, current member of the Victorian Legislative Council
- Pauline Oliveros, composer
- Laurence Olivier, British actor, bisexual
- Brian Orser, Canadian silver
medalist at both the 1984 Winter Olympics and the 1988 Winter Olympics
- Joe Orton, British playwright
- François Ozon, French writer and film director
P
- Brian Paddick, UK Police Commander and nephew of Hugh Paddick
- Hugh Paddick, British actor
- Paetz, Archbishop of Poznan
- Camille Paglia, American author and social critic, bisexual
- Peter Paige, American actor ("Queer as Folk")
- David Paisley, British actor
- Pai Hsien-yung, Taiwanese writer
- Chuck Palahniuk, American writer, notably of Fight Club
- Antonia Pantojas, Puerto Rican educator, lesbian
- Antonio Pantojas, Puerto Rican actor, homosexual
- Pier Paolo Pasolini, Italian director and writer
- Alex Parks, winner of Fame Academy, British singer/songwriter
- Annise Parker, Controller,
City of Houston
- Matthew Parris, British journalist and former politician
- Harry Partch, American composer and just intonation instrument inventor
- Peter Pears, English singer
- Patrick Pearse, Irish patriot and leader of the 1916 Easter Rising,
whose poetry is littered with homoerotic imagery
- Queen Pen, bisexual rap singer
- Anthony Perkins, American actor
- Linda Perry, singer
- Philip II of France
- Philippe, duke of Orléans under Louis XIV
- David Hyde Pierce, American actor
- Pink rap singer, bisexual
- Doug Pinnick American singer
and musician ("King's X")
- Danny Pintauro, American actor ("Who's the Boss?")
- Miguel Piñero, Puerto Rican playwright, bisexual
- Plato
- Carole Pope, Canadian rock
singer
- Cole Porter, American Composer and lyricist
- Michael Portillo, former UK Defence Secretary and defeated
leadership candidate
- Francis Poulenc, French composer, openly gay from his first
serious relationship, that with painter Richard Chanelaire to whom he wrote, "You have changed my life, you are the sunshine of my thirty years,
a reason for living and working." He also said, "You know that I am as sincere in my faith, without any messianic screamings, as
I am in my Parisian sexuality." (Who's Who, 2001)
R
- Gilles de Rais, French
nobleman and serial killer
- Robert Rauschenberg, American artist
- Øyvind Rauset, (Who's Who,
2001)
- Charlie Ray, American
Entrepenuer, Writer
- Nicholas Ray, American film director, bisexual
- John Rechy, American author
- Robert Reed, actor
- George Reinholt, soap opera actor (Steve Frame on Another World)
- Rio Reiser, German musician ("Ton Steine Scherben"), bisexual
- James Harry Reyos,
confessed murderer, stated he was gay on the A&E television channel
- Richard I the Lion Heart
- Christopher Rice, American author (son of Anne Rice)
- Adrienne Rich, American poet and critic
- Bill Richardson, Canadian writer and radio broadcaster
- Herb Ritts, American fashion photographer
- Ian Roberts, Australian Rugby League player
- Gene Robinson, American Episcopal bishop of New Hampshire
- Svend Robinson, former Canadian member of parliament
- Tom Robinson, British rock musician
- Roche-sur-Yon, French prince and King of Poland
- Jai Rodriguez, "culture guru" on Queer Eye
- Ernst Röhm, leader of the Nazi
SA
- Cesar Romero, actor
- Ned Rorem, composer, Aldrich, Robert and Wotherspoon, Gary (Eds.) (2001)
- Hilary Rosen, former CEO of the RIAA, longtime partner of Elizabeth Birch (see above)
- Jane Rule, Canadian author
- RuPaul, AKA RuPaul Andre Charles, American drag queen
- Bayard Rustin, civil rights activist, organizer of the 1963 March on Washington, introduced Martin Luther King Jr. to the writings of Mahatma Gandhi and non-violence, fired for being
gay
S
- Marquis de Sade, 18th century author and philosopher,
bisexual
- Leontine Sagan, Austrian film-maker
- Victor Salva, American
writer/director (Jeepers
Creepers)
- Ben Sander, a.k.a.. Brini Maxwell, drag performer and television host
- Emmanuel Sandhu, Canadian figure skater
- Dick Sargent, American actor, (second "Darrin" on Bewitched)
- Dan Savage, American columnist
- David Sedaris, American essayist and radio personality
- Shyam Selvadurai, Canadian novelist (Funny Boy)
- Fred Schneider, lead singer of the B-52s
- Pete Shelley, lead singer of British punk band The Buzzcocks
- Matthew Shepard, hate crime victim, violently murdered in
Wyoming, subject of Emmy winning films
The Laramie Project and The Matthew Shepard Story
- Ned Sherrin, UK broadcaster
- Michelangelo Signorile, columnist, advocate, and
pundit
- Bill Siksay, Canadian member of parliament
- Mario Silva, Canadian member of parliament
- Bryan Singer, movie director (X-Men])
- Sławek
Starosta, Polish gay activist
- Jeffrey Smart, Australian painter
- Bessie Smith, American blues singer
- Chris Smith, UK Politician
- Liz Smith (journalist), gossip columnist,
bisexual
- George Smitherman, Canadian politician (Ontario cabinet minister) [4] (http://www.365gay.com/newscontent/102303smithermanCabinet.htm)
- Socrates
- Solon, Greek statesman
- Jimmy Somerville, singer (Bronski Beat, The Communards) (Who's Who, 2001)
- Susan Sontag, American essayist
and novelist
- Dusty Springfield, singer
- Pam St Clement, UK
television actress (Eastenders)
- Mia St. John, US boxer, bisexual
- Gertrude Stein, American expatriate author, partner of Alice B. Toklas
- Michael Stipe, American singer (R.E.M.), film producer
- Jim Stork, US politician
- Billy Strayhorn, jazz composer, lyricist, arranger, and pianist
(Duke Ellington Orchestra)
- Sylvester, American singer (Who's Who, 2001)
- Gerry Studds, US politician
- Lucius Cornelius Sulla, Roman dictator
- Andrew Sullivan, conservative journalist
T
- Titof, French hard porn star, bisexual (see
http://comingout.free.fr/gpagac15.htm)
- Hordur Torfason, (Who's
Who, 2001)
- Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Russian composer
- Neil Tennant, British musician (Pet Shop Boys)
- Mark Tewksbury, Canadian gold medal winner in the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Scott Thompson, Canadian comedian and actor (Kids in the Hall)
- Virgil Thomson, American theater composer and music critic
- William Tatem (Bill) Tilden II, American tennis champion
- Colm Tóibín, Irish novelist
- Alice B. Toklas, partner of Gertrude Stein, known for her cookbook that contains Brion
Gysin's hashish brownies (marijuana)
- Sandi Toksvig, British comedian
- Lily Tomlin, American comedian, actress, lesbian
- Pussy Tourette, drag performer and singer
- Pete Townshend, guitarist of The Who, self-proclaimed bisexual
- Trajan, Roman emperor
- Michel Tremblay, Canadian writer
- Esera Tuaolo, former NFL player
- Alan Turing, British mathematician, computer scientist and theorist
- Colin Turnbull, British anthropologist, later American citizen,
Buddhist
- Stephen Twigg, UK Politician, MP, defeated Michael Portillo in 1997
election
U
V
- Pierre Vallières, writer, member of the terrorist FLQ
- Lupe Valdez, Dallas County, TX
Sheriff-Elect (2004)
- Michele van Gorp,
WNBA player for the Minnesota
Lynx
- Chavela Vargas, Mexican
singer, who came out as lesbian during an interview with Colombian television
- Paul Verlaine, French poet
- Jim Verraros, singer, actor, American Idol contestant
- Reginald VelJohnson, actor (the dad on Urkel-based
Family Matters)
- Maréchal de
Vendôme, General under Louis XIV
- Compte de
Vermandois, Admiral of France
- Gianni Versace, Italian fashion designer
- Gore Vidal, American writer, bisexual
W
- Tom Waddell, American sports
- Rufus Wainwright, Canadian/American singer
- Horace Walpole, 4th Earl of Orford
- Wanda, American drag performer
- Andy Warhol, American artist and pop art icon
- Tony Warren, British scriptwriter (creator of Coronation Street)
- John Waters, American film director
(Pink Flamingos)
- Sumner Welles, U.S. Under Secretary of State 1937-1943
- Mae West, American actress
- Suzanne
Westenhoefer, American comedian
- Guido Westerwelle, Leader of the German liberal party
FDP
- James Whale, American film director
- Diane Whipple, victim in the Presa Canario dog mauling trial
- Edmund White, American
novelist (A Boy's Own
Story)
- Walt Whitman, American poet (Leaves of Grass)
- Tracey Wigginton, Brisbane's "lesbian vampire murderer"
- Oscar Wilde, Irish playwright and bon vivant, imprisoned after being
convicted of "gross indecency" for his homosexual behavior.
- Thornton Wilder, playwright (Our Town) and novelist
- Kenneth Williams, British actor and diarist
- Tennessee Williams, American playwright
- Johann Joachim Winckelmann, German
classical archaeologist and art historian
- Paul Winfield, American actor
- Jeanette Winterson, UK author
- Dale Winton, British television presenter
- Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosopher
- Monique Wittig,
academic
- Virginia Woolf, British author
- Klaus Wowereit, mayor of Berlin
- Aileen Wuornos, serial killer, bisexual
Y
- Will Young, British pop singer, winner of ITV's 2001 Pop Idol final, and
singer of the million-selling 2002 single "Anything Is Possible / Evergreen"
- Felix Yusupov, Russian prince
Z
Persons of debated lesbian, gay, or bisexual orientation
The following list includes those who some people believe there is evidence the person was gay, lesbian or bisexual. More
information about what is known about each individual's sexuality should be available in the individual's biography.
A
- Christina Aguilera, US singer, has said she enjoys kissing
and looking at women
- Akhenaton, Egyptian pharaoh
- Fernando Allende, actor
- Hans Christian Andersen, Danish author
- Louie Anderson, Family Feud show host
- Marie Antoinette, wife of Louis XVI, bisexual
- Aristotle, Greek philosopher
- Susan B. Anthony, American feminist and women's suffrage activist
B
- Elizabeth Bathory, Hungarian countess, serial killer
- Lucecita Benítez, Puerto Rican singer
- Richard Benjamin, US actor, film director; married to Paula Prentiss
- Miguel Bosé, Spanish
singer
- James Bourne, member of boyband Busted
- Pierre Bouvier, singer with band Simple Plan
- Ian Buchanan, soap
opera actor (General Hospital, The Bold and the Beautiful)
- James Buchanan, 15th President of the United States
- Lord Byron, poet
C
D
- Salvador Dalí, Spanish painter
- F. Holland Day, American photographer and publisher
- James Dean, American actor
- David Desrosiers,
bassist with band Simple Plan
- Edgardo Díaz, Menudo creator
- Matt Drudge, Internet gossip publisher
- Francis
Archibald Douglas, Lord Drumlanrig (1867-1894), Private Secretary to Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl
of Rosebery. Drumlanrig was the eldest son of John Sholto Douglas, 8th Marquess of Queensberry and elder brother of Lord
Alfred Douglas; according to a biography of Oscar Wilde, The Secret Life of Oscar Wilde by Neil McKenna, Drumlanrig had a secret
affair with Rosebery and committed suicide because this became known to his family.
- Guillaume Dufay, composer
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
- Orlando Lasso, composer
- T. E. Lawrence (of Arabia), British soldier
- Adam Lazzara, front man of
Taking Back Sunday
- John Lennon (according to separate biographies by Geoffrey Giuliano and Albert Goldman)
- Abraham Lincoln (1809-1869), Sixteenth President of the United States, as argued in
the book The Intimate World of Abraham Lincoln (ISBN 0743266390)
- Jean-Baptiste Lully (1632-1687), composer
- Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519), Renaissance architect,
musician, inventor, engineer, sculptor, and artist
M
- Madonna, American rock singer
- Benji Madden, guitarist for rock band Good Charlotte
- Shane MacGowan, Irish punk rocker
- Katherine Mansfield, New Zealand author
- Ricky Martin, Lantino singer and soap opera actor (General Hospital)
- Joseph McCarthy, U.S. politician, see http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/usa/joseph-mccarthy
- Walter Mercado, actor, astrologer
- Michelangelo, Renaissance painter and sculptor
- Bernard Montgomery, British soldier
- Modeste Mussorgsky, composer
- Frank Murphy, Mayor of Detroit, Governor of Michigan, and Associate
Justice of the Supreme Court
N
O
P
Q
R
S
- Camille Saint-Saëns
- Sandro, Argentine singer
- Victor Santiago, mayor
in Puerto Rico, accused of sexual harassment by two men
- Sappho, Greek poet: her love poetry to men and women may or may not have
autobiographical import.
- David Schine, aide to Sen.
Joseph McCarthy
- Franz Schubert, Austrian composer (Solomon, Maynard: "Franz
Schubert and the Peacocks of Benvenuto Cellini")
- William Shakespeare, Elizabethan playwright and poet (had a wife and children; his love sonnets to a man may or may not have autobiographical import.)
- Richard Simmons, America fitness guru
- Shepard Smith, US cable news anchor
- Oliver Sipple, who saved president Gerald Ford's family, he sued a newspaper for running a story about his sexuality
- Baron Friedrich von Steuben, American revolutionary soldier
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Persons no longer identifying as gay, lesbian, or bisexual
The following list includes people who at one point identified as gay, lesbian or bisexual but no longer do.
- David Bowie, English musician artist and stage/film performer, came out
as bisexual later identifying as "closeted heterosexual", Aldrich, Robert and Wotherspoon, Gary (Eds.) (2001).
- Anne Heche, American actress
- Madonna, came out as bisexual, later denied
- Lou Reed, American musician, came out as bisexual, later denied - see Victor Bockris' "Transformer"
- t.A.T.u., Russian pop group [5] (http://www.planetout.com/news/article.html?2004/09/21/4)
See also
External links
Sources
- Aldrich, Robert and Wotherspoon, Gary (Eds.) (2001). Who's Who in Contemporary Gay & Lesbian History: From World War II
to the Present Day. New York: Routledge. ISBN 041522974X.
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