Talk:John Wojtowicz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is within the scope of WikiProject Biography. For more information, visit the project page.
Start This article has been rated as Start-Class on the Project's quality scale. [FAQ]
(If you rated the article, please give a short summary at comments to explain the ratings and/or to identify the strengths and weaknesses.)
This article is within the scope of WikiProject LGBT studies, which tries to ensure comprehensive and factual coverage of all LGBT related issues on Wikipedia. For more information, or to get involved, visit the project page.
Start This article has been rated as Start-Class.

Both the Dog Day Afternoon article and the imdb page say that Ernest Aron died in 1987, not 1982. I'm changing it, but don't know if the article date quoted was correct apart from the year, so I'm removing the entire date. — Asbestos | Talk 3 July 2005 00:30 (UTC)

Wojtowicz says that he and Aron were married [[1]]. But Dragonpi says they weren't, although his claim is uncited and appears to be based upon an assumption. Do we know anything about the circumstances of Wojtowicz's marriage that might shed light upon the question?

As I read it, Dragonpi seems to be arguing that, because the Roman Catholic church does not recognize gay marriage, whatever ceremony Wojtowicz and Aron performed was not properly Roman Catholic. The article may be better phrased "married in a mock Roman Catholic wedding," or something like that. Uucp 02:50, 7 October 2006 (UTC)
Yes, but we don't know what the circumstances of the wedding were. If a Roman Catholic priest performed a wedding mass for them, it seems reasonable to say they were married in a Roman Catholic ceremony, even if that ceremony wasn't approved by church hierarcy. I realize it's a semantic argument, but if, for example, the priest decided that they should be married, or didn't realize they were a same-sex couple (Aron WAS a transsexual, after all), that doesn't mean the ceremony didn't happen. "In a mock Roman Catholic wedding" doesn't seem quite accurate if the priest married them in good faith, to me. -FisherQueen 21:22, 7 October 2006 (UTC)