Talk:Gay icon/Archive 1

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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Gay icon (2nd nomination) Speedy kept.--Docg 16:01, 15 January 2007 (UTC)

A gay icon is a larger-than-life celebrity or public figure with wide-spread fans amongst the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) communities[citation needed]. In particular, they are figures perceived to be strong or brave individuals who have wrestled with psychological demons, or issues of sexuality, or have suffered publicly and survived.[citation needed] Sometimes, the term Dycon is used to describe celebrities loved by the lesbian community in particular.

The terms larger-than-life, wrestled, demons,suffered publicly and survived is incorrect terminology, and does not meet the standards of wikipedia. It is essential that the user who continues to change this article the second it is corrected must cease in his actions of negletful, unconscious vandalism.

Can anybody tell me what "Marxist revolutionary imagery" has to do with "Gay icons"? Anyone? Or are you all as confused as me? Last time I checked they weren't screeching for the blood of the bourgeousie.

Apology Monster 17:10, 14 March 2006 (UTC)

Contents

Deleted Criticism Section

The criticism section is without fact or merit, despite the fact that it is well-written. "Some believe" or "some argue" can be said about anything (i.e. "some argue that cigarettes lead to eternal life" because I argued it 5 minutes ago.

As for an argument against this opinion being parroted as legitimate, it is ridiculous to criticize gays as being shallow for historically finding icons that they identified with in the entertainment field. Where else could they look when being gay was taboo, mouch of the population was hiding living as straights (and likely still is), and such. Society did not allow gay role models, and so they found people to identify with to give them hope. The fact that this tradition lingers on, despite the fact that some small steps toward equal rights have been made is not shallow.

Finally, criticisms against Madonna Ciccone should be put on her entry. There is no reason to put them here.

With these thoughts in mind, I believe the criticism section should be deleted and only restored if any actual, cited, verifiable criticism can be found, but it's seriously petty to criticize a culture for choosing an icon (icons are supposed to be simplistic images, no?, i doubt a silhouette of albert einstein would be as effective?) 24.13.85.220 10:54, 15 January 2007 (UTC)

Pop Icon and Gay Icon

I don't get it. The pop icon article lists a number of public figures who are considered "Pop Icons", so why can't this page list public figures seen as Gay Icons? To me there isn't much difference.CoffeeAndCigarettes 02:59, 3 December 2006 (UTC)CoffeeAndCigarettes

Why Isn't This Deleted?

I don't understand why this article isn't deleted yet. It had a majority vote against it, it's bigoted (there's no "black icon" entry, you'll notice; hell, there isn't even a black HEROES entry), and most of all there is no argument as to why this fits in an encyclopedia. If an artist says they're a gay icon, put that they said so in their own article. It isn't a fact to be stated categorically--there's no fact to present! You can't simply print an article to tell gay people who they admire. It's repulsive. It's magazine culture, nothing more.

I realize the vote came to "no consensus" but aren't there other ways to delete articles like this, on the basis of them being inappropriate and unverifiable/indisputable? Mistertruffles 17:48, 31 August 2006 (UTC)

  • The method for deleting articles is AFD. Wikipedia is run by consensus. No, there aren't other ways. Fan-1967 17:51, 31 August 2006 (UTC)

Bookmark

Google give 91 000 hits for the phrase "gay icon". Why is Judy Garland such a popular gay icon? popped up near the top. It looks a very good article. -- RHaworth 10:19, 3 October 2005 (UTC)

  • Gay icon is definitely a term in current usage. Whether it belongs on Wikipedia (rather than Wiktionary) is another matter. - Just zis Guy, you know? [T]/[C] :: AfD? 18:05, 4 November 2005 (UTC)
  • As it stands now, this text is merely a dictionary definition, something more suitable for Wiktionary. Can this be expanded into a more encyclopedic article? Hall Monitor 18:10, 4 November 2005 (UTC)
  • Can it or should it? No opinion really, just curious. It's defensible in Wiktionary for sure, but apart form the dicdef is there actualyl that much more to say? - Just zis Guy, you know? [T]/[C] :: AfD? 18:15, 4 November 2005 (UTC)
  • I'm not sure, but if it cannot be expanded beyond its present form it should be transwiki'd. Hall Monitor 18:58, 4 November 2005 (UTC)

Ok, I'm straight, so maybe I just don't understand the distinction. What is the difference between a gay icon and a normal celebrity? I mean, many people enjoy "...dramatic movie stars (especially those who died under tragic circumstances), divas, male and female musical stars (particularly those with powerful, emotive voices and/or troubled personal lives), rock stars with a flair for clothing, prominent boybands and genderbending artists and groups," not just gay people. I like many, if not most, of the people on your examples list...does that somehow call my sexual orientation into question? If you really like and respect these people, why attempt pigeonhole their appeal, as if only gay people have any business holding these people as icons? Also, the term gay icon is highly ambiguous - are these icons of gay people or icons that are gay? I think many of the straight people on your list might resent being called a gay icon. Applejuicefool 15:27, 1 February 2006 (UTC)

I'm not "in that world" but from what I can tell I think it's entertainers who have a disproportionately large fan base in the LGBT community or whose current fan base has become majority LGBT. Many gay icons also seem to be active in gay-rights, have children who are gay or lesbian(Cher), or are even gay themselves. Those are the ones where it's likely easiest to understand why they're a gay icon. I think other communities also have their own iconic figures, but they tend to more often have their icons be their own members. For example most iconic figures in deaf culture I believe are deaf themselves.--T. Anthony 11:29, 19 February 2006 (UTC)
AJF, you say you like gay icons. Ask yourself this. Do you play or buy Madonna/Cher/Judy Garland records? I know everyone might like them, but the people who actually buy the dvd's and cd's as well as concert tickets of these people are majority gay.
Uh-huh, and every man who has ever gone to see a broadway musical, indeed even watched the DVD of "The Producers." is gay. Yeah, right. And yes, I'm straight and I have a Madonna CD. As for Cher, I was a fan of hers when she was back with Sonny long before she was adopted as an "icon", I just liked her songs. I had no idea, as you point out, I needed to be gay in order to like "half breed" and the song about the gypsy fortune-teller.

Examples

I've been working on the Laura Branigan page and wondered why a link from there to this Gay Icon page disappeared. Has she been demoted?! Wondering if it were those involved here making a decision about this page's contents or the variously motivated vandals I've encountered over there who removed it. I welcome the link, if you wish to put it there, though I hesitated to put it back myself if there's an issue at hand, am new to Wiki. J T 16 November 2005 preceding unsigned comment by 69.86.17.200 (talk • contribs)

In a similar vein, the "examples" section is threatning to grow without bound. There isn't any reason we have to give up on WP:V for this section, so I'm moving all of the current section here, and we can move them back to the main page when some sources are WP:CITEd as to thier gay icon status. - brenneman(t)(c) 05:47, 18 November 2005 (UTC)

In my opinion, the main entry offers an extremely stereotyped description of what human qualities and accomplishments give rise to gay icon status.


--- My opinion of what a gay icon is is a celebrity who has a lot of drama in their lives. A female who has married a lot or has gone through a number of high profile relationships; a woman who has been an extreme egotist in the media (a la Madonna) are the more recent examples - just my opinion. Elizabeth Taylor, Judy Garland and Marilyn Monroe. Tragic and vulnerable and most assuredly, off her marbles gets gay icon status. Recent people are Angelina Jolie, Courtney Love. Madonna is a person who seems invincible, strong, and is a fighter. Almost what is considered masculine in her quest for fame and ego massaging. (See above sentence).

   **shouldn't Tammy Wynette be included in this list. She was a close friend of Elton John, had may fans who were gay men , had lots of drama in her life, and was married multiple times 

(List merged with the other list below. -- Beland 13:11, 16 June 2006 (UTC))

Crit section

Seems to be mostly used for providing a sounding board for the author mentioned? I'd like to savagly edit that section.
brenneman{T}{L} 23:43, 19 March 2006 (UTC)

You bet - especially that part saying that "activists and revolutionaries" should be role models in the first sentence. What bunk. Somebody is seriously trying to push their "being LGBT means you must have a total oppositional stance toward mainstream society" POV with that bit about "activists and revolutionaries". The section either needs specific cites or it needs to go. 70.108.84.143 03:04, 26 June 2006 (UTC)

Category is up for deletion

FYI, Category:Gay icons is up for deletion, at Wikipedia:Categories for deletion/Log/2006 April 8#Category:Gay icons. (I hate the transinclusion style of deletion votes; if you forget to look even one day you may totally miss a vote in progress. I'm betting there are others in the same boat, which is why I bring it up here.) --TreyHarris 06:49, 11 April 2006 (UTC)

I've voted to keep. Without repeating myself verbatim, in essence I think that just because the category and article have been misused by some editors does not make the subject itself invalid. We may need to be strict about insisting on sources, but we should be doing this anyway. Throwing it away simply because it's difficult to manage is not a good enough reason - if that was the case we'd be deleting every contraversial topic at the first sign of an edit war. Rossrs 14:58, 13 April 2006 (UTC)

I've registered the following on the deletion voting page under "STRONG KEEP," but post it here as well in the hopes it will spur imaginative, constructive response from those with an eye toward improving the content and scope of the article and list. I don't disagree with some of the criticisms of the article, yet I don't find them to be valid reasons to dispense with the topic before a more complete, balanced article has the chance to be composed. I apologize for its all being in two clumps, but the style of the voting page isn't such that I felt able to start a new paragraph without calling into question who wrote what. Thanks to Trey, it was coincidental I wound up here as it was and would not have learned of the vote without your heads-up.

This reminds me of the "death to disco" thing in the '70s. It was homophobia that spurred the disco backlash, because it wasn't enough that AOR and Punk were alternatives, the queers had to be put down. But synth-pop came hot on its heels and Hi-NRG with it, and even AOR and pop metal veered in a direction that had the same quarters clamoring for it to be brought to its knees once more. If this sounds like a tangent, think about the language you've heard people "dis" disco music, new wave music, Hi-NRG, "hair bands," boybands, female vocalists, sentimental music, opera, indeed pop itself, with..."Gay." It's all a part of the same issue, people identify these things as "gay" whether they're iconizing it or demonizing it. So as long as boybander A or pop diva B is going to receive the cultural stigma of being "gay," it might as well be acknowledged that there is a segment of the population that makes a similar association but without any of the negative emotion—to the contrary is drawn to seek it out and support it. No, indeed, not every gay white male in the U.S. will find every icon on this list to be a personal favorite, and yes, indeed, the entry would ideally be expanded—to the point of requiring disambiguation if and when necessary—to include the gay icons of not only all races and nationalities in the world today but throughout history. And presumably it would, were it allowed to remain long enough for people of varied viewpoints and other cultures to catch on to its presence and potential and offer their distinctions, impressions, additions, counterproposals, which when relevant would be incorporated into the article and represented in any list. Isn't that part of the point of Wiki, that if a (presumably) white male presents the initial definition and list, and can only do so from his perspective, anyone and everyone can submit their own views, and must, as none of us knows everyone else's culture? The very point that some people still don't get what this is about, some seeking to stomp it out yet again, others thinking it's merely fluffy fun, is why it's so necessary to allow this topic's exploration by its inclusion in Wikipedia, open to contributions that can be made anonymously by gays of all cultures - including those where homosexuality isn't merely sneered at or camped up but crushed by an overbearing society and who have no other avenue to contribute and "represent" their unique sexual, cultural truth - to allow people to recognize the deep need to acknowledge the importance of who, and by association what, one holds "sacred" and where that leads - or leaves - one. In whittling down these lists, we're not doing anyone a service, then, we're suggesting the examples must remain limited and then suggesting the limited view is part of the reason it should be removed. Does anyone need an article to tell them Madonna and Cher are gay icons? The point is to go a little deeper and provide a bit of an education as to why, and how the definition embraces some less obvious names that might have people scratching their heads struggling to understand the complexities in some instances, and in others simply going "A-ha!" (No reference to the Norwegian pop group!) This isn't about what Tom Cruise is going to feel about being included, it's about what everyone else has felt about being excluded, and what they've gravitated toward from that place, and why, and what it did for them; it's about the fact that certain individuals from all walks of life and throughout time have held a peculiar appeal for better or worse, in their words, actions, work, demeanor, or very life story. Indeed some have consciously—and others subconsciously—cultivated such an appeal. While still others would argue none exists? Or that it exists but is unworthy of recognition? Does not the Christian faith hold as all its holy icons Jewish figures...many whom the Jewish faith does not recognize or identify with? Yet some here can't understand how straight people would have unique appeal in the gay community, and that it should be up to straight people to sanction such an appeal? In fact, I would offer that the fact that a Tom Cruise might bridle at his inclusion in a list of gay icons is partly the point of the importance of such a list—not to tick him off, but to point out the fact that indeed, society coexists, and people take us as they will; we appear on one another's lists one way or another. The more one takes a stand or fails to, the more one constructs an image, the more one plays a role or shows their true selves, the more certain groups identify with them. I'm sure Donald Rumsfeld and George W. Bush don't want to appear on lists suggesting they be censured or impeached or brought up on charges in the Hague, but that's beside the point if they've lived the lives that warrant such inclusion. I'm not suggesting they have, I'm suggesting the question is, it's all in the outcome of the investigation, not in the squelching of its very idea, that answers and determinations ought to be arrived upon.

The article as it exists now is sorely underexplored and as brief a list as appeared even before it was chopped in two is superfluous. In response to an earlier question: How can you provide a source that someone is a civil rights icon? And do you presuppose that person must be involved in black issues in America? Or is the struggle for civil rights a human issue that knows no color, sexuality, or border? Limiting the dissemination of information on the heroes or inspirations (read: icons) of oppressed groups is to participate in that oppression. While I find the article sorely underwritten, I agree with one point: the image of the gay icon as it's generally acknowledged in the mainstream media is counterintuitively apolitical. Such a thing in itself makes for an interesting discussion - is it the shallowness of gay culture, the fear of mainstream media to elevate a political icon, or the inability of the gay political movement to coalesce and re-present itself in the new millennium - and may invite the recognition that there are gays who do or would iconify, if I may coin a phrase, something deeper than a drama queen or a pinup. It is the challenge of the various constituencies within the gay community, as it is in the broader constituencies in the wider world community, to view their limited interests of preference with a dose of political awareness; and in this shrinking world, the only way we're going to manage to live together—or apart, for that matter—is to find a way to not only tolerate but be interested in our common personal advancement and sociopolitical identities. "Know thyself," but know how the self exists in external contexts; know there are other "selves" than onesself. The core of the negative response to this issue seems to be to preserve the ambiguity of certain people's sexuality so that wider audiences can enjoy their contributions without being aware of, soured or deterred by, a knowledge that they're interested in a gay person's work. We saw this in the 1950s when white audiences clamored for the music of black artists, but only when they were performed by white artists. Educated people in this millennium seeking to present a democratic encyclopedia shouldn't be supportive of preserving such ignorance. This isn't about outing anybody, but it mustn't be about closeting anybody either. Nobody's existence is devoid of a political reality, or the potential for a controversial response. Nobody's iconography is, either. Abrazame 13:18, 13 April 2006 (UTC)

moving uncited list here

I don't know who moved the list here, but some of the articles actually explain the gay icon status, so I moved those back into the article. Some need to be checked further, or perhaps shouldn't be included.

There's a starter list here: [1] -- Beland 04:08, 16 June 2006 (UTC)

  • Liza Minnelli - listed, but this is not mentioned in her article
  • Rock Hudson - famous gay actor, died of AIDS, but not listed, not described as "icon" in article
  • Freddie Mercury - famous gay singer
  • Ellen DeGeneres - famous gay entertainer
  • Melissa Etheridge - famous gay entertainer
  • Angelina Jolie - not listed and not mentioned in her article, but they were singing about her at Pride...also, she is bisexual, and had a famous role as a supermodel who died of AIDS, has a dramatic personal life, and does lots of charity work

Merging the previously removed list, the following are also left over:

  • Bee Gees - Stay'n Alive is popular among the gays...does that make them iconic?
  • Britney Spears - Why is she here?
  • Diana, Princess of Wales - Oh. My. God. But you know, everyone loved her. (Or hated her.) More research definitely indicated.

There are more people on the "starter list" referenced above that should be added. -- Beland 13:15, 16 June 2006 (UTC)

Ahem. You’re asking in an online encyclopedia who Jimmy Somerville is. Try looking him up. I’m not gay but even I can tell he’s a cast iron candidate for gay icon if ever there was one, even if Americans have never heard of him. Bombot 15:57, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

What the...?! (Proposal to clarify or delete paragraph from article)

Can't believe nobody's brought this paragraph up for discussion, as I was sure it would be edited out of the article by now:

<<Another criticism of gay icons is that the concept is based on the notion that a person's sexual orientation dictates, or at least influences, a person's cultural and aesthetic preferences. By extension, a person's role models would be dictated by their sexual preferences. This effectively means that the role models afforded to androphile men are narrowed to a few celebrities and would not include people like Dwight D. Eisenhower, Albert Einstein, drag racing legend Don Garlits, Iggy Pop or Muhammad Ali.>>

For one thing, it seems to be misworded or badly edited. Androphiles are persons of any sex or gender identity who are attracted to men. The writer doesn't support the declaration of the final sentence with the previous two. Is the author's point that gay men aren't attracted to all types of men, but rather to men whose sexual image is either stereotypically gay (even if not actually gay or bisexual, like some of the boybanders people keep putting up here), or iconically straight (even if actually gay or bisexual, like Rock Hudson or James Dean), thereby excluding types of men more typical to the gender, such as Eisenhower or whomever this Garlits character is? And who is the author of that paragraph to imply that gay men not attracted to Iggy Pop or Muhammad Ali? I'd say the sexual component to both of those men's appeal was within the realm of that appreciated by some gays, if not to the level of gay iconography. On the other hand, Iggy Pop has always been cited as one of the major proponents of androgyny, alongside David Bowie and Marc Bolan, and as such would have a fairly iconic stature affecting the sexual or gender identities of some who grew up with him as an influence. So if that was the writer's point, the glam Iggy Pop - or for that matter, the very vain and rather handsome Muhammad Ali, who spouted poetry about his own physical beauty - would seem to be out of place, as they do have a sexual appeal to certain segments of the gay community, and therefore don't support that point.

The only way it makes sense as I read it is if Eisenhower, Einstein and the rest ARE gay icons yet gay icons whose appeal is not explained by the definition. Yet...is there a subculture of gays who would cite Eisenhower, Einstein and Garlits as chief among their icons?! ("Drag racing legend" seems to me about as synonymous with "gay icon" as "Aboriginal spear-thrower." Less, as at least the Aborigine shows some skin.) Finally, the writer doesn't make the point that gay icons are limited to celebrities by citing other celebrities - Bella Abzug or Harvey Milk, while known personages and people who fought for the rights of women and gays (and thereby candidates for iconic appreciation), were not celebrity-famous, and neither classically attractive nor part of a trendy subculture, and would more appropriately festoon (?!) a list of those lamentably relegated to would-be icons but for the fact they're not celebrities, if that was the point. Could the original writer, or someone who understands and can explain this point clearly, help me and others understand what this statement means, so that we can clarify that point in the article? If not, I propose it be removed. Abrazame 19:10, 22 June 2006 (UTC)

=A response

I added this criticism section because there is an argument that gay men can (and sometimes do) miss out on a lot of history, because of their narrow choice of role models/heroes. I was giving examples of people who were innovators in their fields who don't have a gay following to show that gay men don't necessarily follow icons like Cher or have any interest in gay culture at all. Who a person likes shagging and who their role models can be unrelated. (Chris Henniker 15:22, 26 June 2006 (UTC))

Individual celebrities

Editingoprah (talk · contribs) has added large paragraphs on individual celebrities who have influenced gay culture. This seems POV to choose just four people, so I will return the info to their respective bios. Thanks. Harro5 09:04, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

I've been looking at this over the last few days, and I agree with you. Rossrs 09:09, 3 July 2006 (UTC)
They were the only 4 people who had relevant info in their articles with references. Just making an ever expanding list based on no references does not have educational value for people doing research on this topic. Also, the 4 people chosen comform to a very precise definition of the term. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Editingoprah (talkcontribs)
This is another in a line of unproductive edits that you have made. Why delete sourced, neutral and broad content with information best placed on the individuals' articles (and drastically improved when it gets there, I hope)? Please refrain from making any further edits to this page for the time being. Thank you. Harro5 09:27, 3 July 2006 (UTC)
The problem is that the way the article looks, there are only 4 people in the entire history of the universe to qualify as gay icons. The level of detail, especially for Oprah Winfrey was too much, sourced or not sourced. It's absolutely fine, and in fact it's probably even essential, that something more than the bare bones of a list be compiled, but it needs a paragraph at most for each person describing in short, sharp detail why they qualify for the list, and you're completely correct - references are mandatory. The Winfrey section reads like a bio but with a totally pro-gay bias - too much detail. Way, way too much. The Madonna section is not bad, but a short paragraph linking to the Madonna and the gay community would have saved this page from getting overbloated. A similar page for Oprah Winfrey would be excellent, I think. Same with Judy Garland - the whole thing about Stonewall and her death coinciding with a display of gay assertion is a fairly notable event. It would make a good article I think. Here it just gives a LOT of info without specifically discussing the subject at hand "gay icon" which needs something broader, and more of an explanation of how and why gay icons have evolved and how they have been represented.
Also the images don't qualify as fair use on this page and I would suggest that you have a look at Wikipedia:Fair use and Wikipedia:Copyright - fair use images can only be used under very specific circumstances and here they don't meet Wikipedia's policy. The article as it stands (after reverting to the old format) is poor and needs a lot of work, but it is a more acceptable skeleton on which to build a good article, than the Oprah/Judy/Madonna/Cher page that this article has been for the last few days. Wikipedia:Three revert rule makes excellent reading - I would suggest everyone cool down and read it, and then perhaps we can look at a way of improving this article to a degree that we can all feel happy with it. Rossrs 09:39, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

Protection

See discussion here about why the article has been protected. Thanks. Harro5 09:58, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

Proposal to delete this article

Am I missing something here? I thought Wikipedia was supposed to contain facts but this looks like some sort of personal favorites list one or a few people dreamt up. You're sitting here creating an article where people are going "Hugh Grant... ok! Justin Timberlake... nah. Cameron Diaz? Yipee!" I find it preposterous that an encyclopedia would contain drivel like this. JettaMann 15:45, 27 July 2006 (UTC)

I AM GAY and I think this article sucks right now. The people who created it are obviously biased and/or don't seem to understand gay culture. A gay icon is generally someone who did several things to become a gay icon such as:

1 support gay people openly if they are straight and were open and unforgiving about their sexuality if they are gay. Elton John hid his homosexuality so he isn't considered a gay icon, and there aren't very many modern gays who even like him. Remember: the younger gay people dominate gay culture because being beautiful is stressed in the gay community.

2 they tend to have gained long exposure within the gay community ... Judy Garland and Madonna have supported the GLBT community for a long period of time. Kelly Clarkson is popular among the gays but is too new (and uninvolved with gays) to have icon status.

3 they may have also been people who died and were thought to be gay such as James Dean.

There are also other factors but those are some of the main ones. If this article doesn't get seriously fixed we should "be bold" and restart it from scratch. But then again ... it might be better for the wiktionary because this article really is just a description of a word, right?

I am also gay and I think this article is incredibly stereotypical! Okay, so alot of gay people just happen to like these certain celebrities... AS IF STRAIGHT PEOPLE DON'T! I happen to like quite a few other celebrities, don't they count as GAY ICONS! It's almost like they've given every gay person a list of celebrities they're supposed to like and no other celebs count! Delete it! Bubble bunny

Some suggestions

Alright I have few suggestions to the examples list:

It seems there's a lot of singers who are just popular rather than icons, Whitney Houston, Kelly Clarkson, Sean Combs (seriously what is P. Diddy doing here?), Janet Jackson and Celine Dion being the most obvious. Could someone explain to me why they are considered icons?

Also Marilyn Monroe seems like a strange pick for a gay icon, because isn't she an icon for all people and not just gay people?

I get that Debra Messing is a gay icon, but shouldn't Eric McCormack, Megan Mullaly and Sean Hayes also be on the list?

Finally how about adding RuPaul, Jobriath (the worlds first openly gay popstar has got to be an icon) and maybe The Scissor Sisters to the list?


What? Debra Messing and the rest of the "Will And Grace" cast aren't gay icons just because it's such a popular gay show. I'm gay and I've never even heard of Jobriath, being a gay icon is half history/half popularity. Keep that in mind. And instead of adding anyone that seems would be a gay icon we should only put people in with that status given to them by the gay community. Research, research, research. Also ... Marilyn is both a gay and national icon because gays consider her a gay icon. It's all about gay community concensus, if they say you're a gay icon then you hold gay icon status. It's because us gays are odd like that. --QuirkyAndSuch 04:43, 1 August 2006 (UTC)


Don't you think that the very famous people are missing? I really don’t know that what they have done regarding activity, but in UK and so many other countries they are popular among gays: Joanna Lumley and Jennifer Saunders from Absolutely Fabulous. How about Calvin Kline, I think all the gays have at least one Calvin Kline underwear. Doesn’t it make it iconic. By the way I agree that this page has turned to a chat room rather than being based on facts and evidences (what are they doing there? Mariah Carey/Britney Spears/Janet Jackson)- By Nemo (Living in Dubai). August 7, 2006.

Removing names from list

Unless there is an actual reference attached, names can and should be removed.

The following I removed from the list. If one of them is wrong, get a reliable source (or two) that says that they're a gay icon. Note that I don't know what the gay community considers an icon, so don't get pissed if I remove someone who "obviously" is an icon:

  • Christina Aguilera - one claim of experimentation
  • Julie Andrews - no mention
  • Are You Being Served? - a portrayel of gay character
  • Joan Collins - "sex icon" who is in Will & Grace
  • Ann Margret - "sex-kitten", no mention
  • Deborah Harry - icon, no mention
  • Rita Hayworth - icon, no mention
  • Audrey Hepburn - icon, no mention
  • Daniel Craig - gay scene in a movie, no other mention
  • Nicki French - performed at a gay pride festival, no mention
  • Geri Halliwell - no mention
  • Ayumi Hamasaki - no mention
  • Celine Dion - no mention
  • Aretha Franklin - no mention
  • Mariah Carey - no mention
  • Patsy Cline - no mention
  • Betty Buckley - no mention
  • Shirley Bassey - no mention
  • Lance Bass - last minute outing
  • Bronwyn Bishop - politician of Liberal party
  • Tom Brady - American football qb
  • Dean Cain - Superman actor, Republican
  • Tom Cruise - "allegedly" gay
  • Pauline Hanson - conservative politician

I'm done sorting. Someone else can pick up where I left off. Try and be objective. 24.126.199.129 20:20, 29 August 2006 (UTC)


Removed (almost all) of the names from the list

Please read WP:RS, WP:CITE and WP:V for further information. Unsources statements will be removed. IolakanaT 17:05, 13 September 2006 (UTC)

Why you removed George Michael, Elton John, ABBA. These people do not need evidence to be Gay Icon. They are!

If they truly are, you won't have trouble finding a source. IolakanaT 16:32, 14 September 2006 (UTC)

Distillation

To the person who says it's bigoted because there's no "Black icon" category: create one. If you think the whole idea of the "x icon" category is bigoted because it favors one group over another, then you are basically saying that to define anybody as a gay icon (or for anybody to define themselves as such) is bigoted, and I think you could agree that's absurd. That argument is not as clear as I'd like it to be; I hope you get the gist.

I think this article has merit; "gay icon" is a phrase that has entered the culture to describe some people, and it requires more than a dictionary definition. I agree that you should be able to support your choices, but I suspect some people removed the entire list because they want the article deleted, for whatever reason.

I think it needs a major, NPOV rewrite, for sure. I also think the personal attacks need to stop.

Rather than external links as are currently done, shouldn't that be a reference list? I'll fix it sometime, but I have a paper to write.

Finally, I added Barbra Streisand because she's a gay icon and she knows it. I submit as my evidence her comments at her Madison Square Garden concert.

The end. Thor Rudebeck 08:19, 16 October 2006 (UTC)


Adding gay icons

People when adding gay icons add them because they are an icon and not just because they are gay. Not every gay celebrity is necessarily an icon. --Jaydeejj 04:04, 23 October 2006 (UTC)


Dalida a french singer is the most known gay icon in France and Middle East. It's better to recognize the icons internationally...

Critisism too big.....

Need I say more? It takes up most of the article! Zazaban 00:53, 15 November 2006 (UTC)

Larry Mullen Jr. from U2...straight man who has always sported a gay man appearance, and has been acknowledged by Bruce Springsteen and Bono as a reluctant gay icon. Please add. And please remove Oprah and Elton John. Both are pop culture icons, at best.

"The most popular gay icon is Cher."

That's great that you think that. I'd tend to disagree and say it's probably Judy Garland. Another person might say it's Barbra Streisand. You can't pick just one person as the most popular, especially without citing a source. Cher is extremely popular among gay men; after all, she was cool enough to put in an appearance on Will & Grace. But I don't think we can classify her as the "most popular" without a source. Thor Rudebeck 00:56, 28 November 2006 (UTC)

This article is severely lacking in tons of areas

I find this article absolutely unncessary. Although it has been discussed at length, I don't think it's necessary for "Gay icon" to be it's own article, and frankly the wording and phrasing is up for debate about what classifies "an icon" (i.e., "larger than life" is both poor prose and very vague)

Now, if the article stays (which it probably will), I think it would be beneficial to include those that have been instrumental in gay society. If Madonna is such a great "icon", what has she actually DONE for the community? Not every homosexual is a rabid fan of Madonna (the Madonna article already states what she has done ... why mention it here?) The names that come to mind aren't always celebrities, and of those that are, they have a truly unique impact to the overall well-being of the gay community.

Further, it's stereotypical to assume that a "gay icon" is "someone that died young and beautiful" or something along those lines. Once again, it's up for interpretation, which in turn, makes it POV and subject to deletion.

I am more than willing to write a solid, factual article on Gay icons, but I can tell you that it won't inclde petty things, such as actors or play gay characters (who are paid to do so), or musicians who may be bi-sexual and appeal to the subset. Trodaikid1983 22:55, 13 December 2006 (UTC)

Changes as of 15 January, 2006

I have substantially rewritten this terrible weak article, adding as many ref as I could. I rendered the criticism section invisible, as it was added by an anon IP and I could not find a single reference for any assertion in the section. Feel free to re-add that section if you can find any refs. A criticism section would be nice, if it was sourced. Jeffpw 14:07, 15 January 2007 (UTC)

There is some critisism in the following article: John Howard. Pink doesn't mean fluffy // Independent, The (London), 4 August, 2005. I have added the link, but not the info yet.--Antanta 19:23, 16 January 2007 (UTC)

Listing

This has the potential to become a great article - I'm not going to debate the merits of it; that was done in the AFD. However, parts of this article are beginning to resemble a list, which will almost certainly reflect someone's personal views about inclusion at some point. Every name in the list has a citation, but that doesn't necessarily make the list "accurate." Theoretically, future editors would seek out information to prove names they already wish to add, rather than finding information and then adding names based on it. How can we deal with this effectively? Thor Rudebeck 17:34, 15 January 2007 (UTC)

I think there should be a single paragraph (subsection) for each person with expanded explanation or citation from references. It would look more apprortiate, I think, as opposed to the plain list without any explanations. For example, the link for Shirley Bassey is incorrect - the term "gay icon" is used only in comments, but not in the original bbc article. The correct link is this.--Antanta 19:26, 16 January 2007 (UTC)

Additional info

This recent poll of 5000 gays and lesbians about gay icons would seem very appropriate here.--Antanta 19:29, 16 January 2007 (UTC)

  • Thanks for the info, Antanta. I have updated the Bassey ref accordingly, and will look at this link now. I was working hard and fast yesterday, as the article was nominated for speedy deletion. There's lots of room to improve this, and you're welcome to edit it, too. Jeffpw 20:34, 16 January 2007 (UTC)
    • I will try as I'm also working on the russian version of this article. Gosh, you can't imagine the anti-gay bias I am facing.--Antanta 07:24, 17 January 2007 (UTC)

Abhishek Bachchan, not a gay icon

OK, first there has to be a consensus on who is a gay icon. First, I have never heard of him. A gay icon must be well known in the gay community to get icon status, this would include people like Liza Minnelli or Judy Garland. I would nominate Paul Lynde and Charles Nelson Reilly for gay icons. azalea_pomp

The actor in question is listed here because he is known in India as a gay icon. I note from your user talk page that you are involved in India projects here, so I am assuming that's how you got to this page. In any event, his listing here is sourced, and in the article used as a reference he discusses his gay icon status. Facts are facts. Just because you've never heard about something doesn't mean it isn't true. Aren't you glad Wikipedia exists, so you can broaden your knowledge base like you did with this subject??? Jeffpw 08:47, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

I see your point. I have added Paul Lynde as he is sourced and a well known gay icon. I still think to warrant inclusion as a gay icon on an encyclopedic article, the person in question should be well known. For example, would Encyclopedia Britannica have Bachchan listed in their article on gay icons? Probably not, he doesn't quite meet the standard as Cher or Judy Garland. What makes a gay icon (in the big sense of the meaning icon) is not one poll taking in India, but a large number embracing the figure for truly iconic status. azalea_pomp
While I do not agree with your addition of Paul Lynde as a gay icon, I will not revert it. I note from the reference that he as a person is not listed as an icon, but rather his role on a television series from the 1960s (Bewitched). That does not, in my opinion, qualify him for inclusion on this page, but I will leave it so that others can discuss it. Jeffpw 09:27, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
Paul Lynde is a gay icon albeit a closeted one. Here is just one URL with a reference to him as a gay icon: http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1504693/story.jhtml?newsSection=loder

An article by Kurt Loder of MTV is quite an important cultural one. More gay icons not on the page are Charles Nelson Reilly, Richard Simmons, Snagglepuss, and perhaps Dionne Warwick and Angie Dickinson to some extent. azalea_pomp

That's a much better ref to use than the one you put in earlier, since it states explicitly that he was "an early gay icon". If we could reference Angie Dickinson, I'd love to add her. I'd go straight for her. And finally...Snagglepuss! He is definitely a gay icon!!!!! I never would have thought to include him, but he does fit the bill. And with that, I have nothing left to say except.."Exit, Stage left!" Jeffpw 09:43, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

I agree that Bachchan should be mentioned, but just sticking him in a list between Bette Midler and Elton John seems like missing the point. The most interesting part of the source article is the fact that Mumbai has a gay icon poll in the first place (and that it gets enough mainstream attention for the winner to be interviewed about it). For a truly international view we should try to add more information about how the concept of a gay icon does or doesn't travel, if it can be found. —Celithemis 21:41, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

Cindy Lauper

While I agree that Cindy Lauper is a (minor) gay icon, and it is a very pretty picture, I do think we need to include her name on the list with a source before adding a photograph. I also wonder if the picture is appropriately placed, in the section about political icons. Maybe a nice picture of Princess Diana would be better there? Jeffpw 22:26, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

(edit conflict) I added her name and a citation at the same time as the photo.
I don't think photos necessarily have to be next to the text they relate to, and thought that photo was particularly appropriate because she's wearing the rainbow dress at the Gay Games, but I can see not wanting to overemphasize entertainers too. Whatever works. (Obviously, one can't *not* have a picture of Judy Garland....) —Celithemis 22:37, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
Actually, it would be interesting to have something about how people react to being gay icons -- do they embrace it, do they try to ignore it -- which the Lauper photo would then go with. —Celithemis 22:39, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
That's a fabulous idea! You can get a really juicy Judy quote about that, and I am sure Liz and Cher, along with Cindy, would have some particularly good quotes. Also, when you've been editing, did you see the "hidden" stuff? I couldn't find any sources at all, and it all looks like WP:OR, so I had to hide it. I didn't want to just trash it though, in case somebody could use it as the basis of a criticism section. Take a look--it's right above the footnotes if you go into edit mode. Jeffpw 22:45, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
Ooh, interesting. When I get a chance, I'll see if I can find any criticism in the various databases I have access to (there are back issues of The Advocate among others).
Going back to the international stuff, the Greek Wikipedia mentions Despina Vandi and Anna Vissi as Greek gay icons but I haven't found any solid sources for them yet. Most of the other Wikipedias just seem to talk about the same people already listed here. —Celithemis 22:53, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
If you can read Greek, change your search preferences in Google to find Greek sources. I just did that for a few Dutch ones, and we can add Willeke Alberti and the Zangeres zonder Naam. I have to go to sleep now (work in 6 hours) so I will add them tomorrow, with a few sentences about them. Jeffpw 23:04, 7 February 2007 (UTC)

Possible Gay Icons or Gay Pioneers?

I agree Cindy Lauper is at least a minor gay icon as she does have many gay fans. Thinking of gay icons who may be better called gay pioneers would include people like Jim (JM) J. Bullock, Harvey Fierstein, and RuPaul. Just some other possible gay icons which come to mind are Ethel Merman, Tina Turner, Delta Burke, Charo, Divine, Tim Curry, and Patti LaBelle. We can't forget the girls from Golden Girls which are all gay icons especially Bea Arthur. In my opinion, even Nancy Grace from Court TV/CNN seems to be getting some iconic status due to her strong personality, big hair, and ton of makeup. azalea_pomp

In Entertainment Section

This section looked very messy so I changed it into a list format, but it's still not perfect. If anyone can make it better, please do, or if you think it was better the original way revert it. davekeeling 20:25, 8 March 2007 (UTC)

I don't care for the way it looks a all, though I won't revert it. Let's see what others have to say. Jeffpw 09:44, 9 March 2007 (UTC)
I don't care for it either, though that long prose list really was getting out of hand. Might be possible to break it up by saying something more about why and how each of these people is a gay icon, instead of just listing them. —Celithemis 10:14, 9 March 2007 (UTC)

How About Elizabeth Montgomery?

Hey, I'm a gay man and I vote for the inclusion of the sadly departed actress Elizabeth Montgomery as a gay icon. As Samantha Stevens in the "Bewitched" sit-com she was a camp favorite of mine and many of my gay baby boomer friends. I even read an article somewhere on why the character Samantha was a gay male icon and Jeannie of "I Dream Of Jeannie" is not one. Anyway, although a heterosexual herself, Ms. Montgomery was thoroughly sympathetic and devoted to the cause of LGBT rights: she was even a official Grand Marshall of the Gay Pride Parade in Hollywood, along with her friend and co-star Dick Sargent, who played Darren in "Bewitched."Buddmar 08:13, 6 April 2007 (UTC)buddmar

Hmmm, gay icons, that may be a bit strong in my opinion. Although I would favor Elizabeth Montgomery over Dick Sargent as a gay icon. Azalea pomp 05:34, 10 April 2007 (UTC)

More possible Gay Icons

How can we forget Wayland Flowers and his puppet Madame or Bea Arthur (or the Golden Girls in general). Azalea pomp 05:34, 10 April 2007 (UTC)

Why was Debbie Harry deleted from this list?

Debbie Harry was the original frontwoman and forerunner to everyone from Annie Lennox and Madonna to Gwen Stefani and Shirley Manson. She was good friends with Andy Warhol, a regular on the Studio 54 scene and has a huge LGBT following. She has long been a promoter of LGBT issues and is going to be touring the USA with Erasure, Cyndi Lauper and other campaigners for gay rights. She has even admitted, while being heterosexual, to having enjoyed relationships with men and women. Why therefore have you deleted her from the list of gay icons?

As a gay man myself I happen to love many of the gay icons included in your list, but Debbie Harry has been associated with gay rights for far longer than for example Beyonce, who would still have been in nappies when Blondie were conquering the music scene. Much as she is a fabulous modern diva, in the words of the Lauren Bacall "she's not a legend". She's not been on the scene long enough. Debbie Harry has had over 30 years in the music industry and has during most of this time been very much part of the LGBT community.

I appreciate gay icon is a fairly loose term and it kind of suggests that everyone who is gay is somehow expected to associate with all of these characters to be part of the "club" like clones. But a fair number of gay men do associate themselves with queer history and culture and this most certainly does include Debbie Harry. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Divinelydecadent (talk • contribs) 23:12, 26 April 2007 (UTC).


Removed Sentence

This article seemed really well written and superbly neutral in tone, until I got to this sentence, which seemed so out of place that it borders on vandalism:

"Also, his rejection of the girl, his penchant for tights, his friendship with fairies, his skill for swordplay, and finally, his never-ending obsession with youth - it's no surprise members of the gay community are drawn to Peter Pan."

So, I removed it. I put it here, so someone can restore it - if they don't find it as demeaning and stereotyped as I did.

And speaking of which, I'm going to take this opportunity to comment on the repeated AfD's for this article: enough, already! Anyone who is involved in any way with a gay community knows that there are certain people held especially 'close to heart' by a large number of gays; these people certainly have a 'gay icon' status. I myself happen to be a breeder, but I don't let that limit my social contacts, so I've been lucky enough to enjoy the company and friendship of a whole bunch of ppl from Dallas' incredibly populous gay community. And one of the very first things I became acquainted with in that community some 30 years ago was the special place that Judy Garland held in the hearts of so many gay men. The 'code phrase' "friends of Dorothy" is well documented for nearly 50 years. Clearly, there is a substantial and important category here.

However, that being said, this article almost completely fails to recognize that membership in the gay icon category is extremely debatable - at best!! There are perhaps a handful (Garland, Babs, James Dean) that everyone would (might!) agree on, but all the rest are going to be contentious. Therefore, this article should not be about "the list" of gay icons -- because there isn't one! Only the very few consensual examples of the category should be specifically mentioned as descriptive of the overall nature of the category (these might also be explored a bit). The article should be about the category of gay icon itself, and not any particular group's definition of the term by list (including ours). Imho, $0.02 worth, etc. Eaglizard 01:12, 8 May 2007 (UTC)

I must have missed it when that Peter Pan section was added. The whole thing sounds pretty dubious to me, and has no sources; I'd support removing it.
Re the list, I agree completely, and have been meaning to say something similar. People throw around the term "gay icon" very loosely. One of the sources for the list is "Gay Icons of the 20th Century" which includes "the acronym AIDS" and "the short stories of Truman Capote" -- obviously not using the same definition of gay icon as in this article. And I'm pretty sure that for some magazine writers, "X is a gay icon" means "I had this gay friend once who liked X." If we try to list everyone that has ever been called a gay icon by a source, the results won't be very illuminating.
I think we should make sure that the really well-known ones that everyone would name are included, and beyond that, just mention individuals when it's helpful to illustrate points. —Celithemis 02:09, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
Oh, and i wouldn't worry about anyone trying to delete the article again. It was thoroughly overhauled and sourced by Jeffpw after the last time someone tried to delete it; no deletion attempt would get anywhere now. —Celithemis 02:23, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
Good, it's really turned out quite a nice little article. Good work, ya'll. :) Eaglizard 10:28, 26 June 2007 (UTC)

Julie Andrews as a gay icon

The Sound of Music film has a huge gay (and lesbian) following and the highly popular Sing-a-Long-A Sound of Music was created for London's Gay and Lesbian Film Festival in 1999. It was also part of Sydney's Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras in 2001. (See 'The Stalls Are Alive') An episode of Will and Grace was also dedicated to the Sing-a-Long-A Sound of Music phenomenon.

Julie Andrews is known to have a strong following among the GLBT community and is widely seen as a gay icon. She was featured, along with Barbra Streisand, Ethel Merman and Mary Martin, in the book "A Problem Like Maria", where her performance appeal to lesbian spectators was analyzed. She is often credited as a significant presence (and signifier) in various individual accounts of growing up gay, such as in Rupert Everett's autobiography Red Carpets and Other Banana Skins, and Wayne Koestenbaum's The Queen's Throat: Opera, Homosexuality, and the Mystery of Desire. She is featured in the poem Something Good in The Countess of Flatbroke, a collection of lesbian-themed poetry. --B

WTF!?!

Okay. This article sucks. I don't consider myself a "gay icon expert" or anything, but I'm a gay man living in San Francisco. I know enough to realize this article is poorly vetted. Specifically, let me discuss this "list" of gay icons. HEATHER LOCKLEAR IS A DIE HARD REPUBLICAN. Her name should be removed from the list immediately. A lot of people are a stretch, like Beyonce. Just because they have a gay fan base does not make them a gay icon. Amy Sedaris, Kelly Clarkson, and Paris Hilton should all be removed immediately unless citations can be provided. They're clearly unqualified. I'm removing them tomorrow unless good reasons can be provided for them to remain. My proposed additions...WHERE THE HELL ARE MARGARET CHO AND PATSY CLINE...two women who are clearly "gay icons" in every sense of the word. This article is pathetic, and I'm starting with the additions and subtractions I've proposed unless someone can provide justification. Agrippina Minor 20:40, 13 June 2007 (UTC)

As promised, I waited and removed the pretenders because no one provided justification. I did not add my "nominations," namely Patsy Cline and Margaret Cho because I don't want to be presumptuous. I do think it's shameful they're not included. Agrippina Minor 17:24, 14 June 2007 (UTC)
I agree with some of them, though a lot of that (a lot of this article, in fact) probably reflects personal bias. (I hate, hate, hate Paris Hilton.) I do think Amy Sedaris, whose television series Strangers with Candy featured a gay couple and whose brother David Sedaris is both openly gay and reasonably well-known, belongs on the list. But honestly, the major qualification for being a gay icon is adoration by a fair percentage of gay people, possibly even just gay men. Heather Locklear may be a die-hard Republican, but that doesn't mean gay people automatically hate her. (Heck, I know a couple of gay Republicans, and I bet Mary Cheney doesn't vote Democrat, not if she wants to keep posing for official photographs with her dad.) I still don't know if she counts, but if not, that isn't why. Margaret Cho... well, I like her. Do lots of gay people? I don't know... but being gay herself doesn't make her a gay icon. The construction refers to icons of gay people, not gay people who are icons, though I bet Ellen counts. The big trouble with this entry is that even in the real world, the phrase "gay icon" is pretty nebulous, and if we can't agree on specific criteria, how are we supposed to agree on who belongs on a list? The last thing I have to say is maybe tone down the emotion a little. The shouting, ranting, "pathetic", "this article sucks" sort of thing stresses the boundaries of WP:CIVIL maybe just a little bit. Also, what makes Patsy Cline a gay icon "in every sense of the word"?

David Beckham

David Beckham is not a gay icon. He is certainly considered attractive by many gay men (like thousands of other celebrities), but this does not constitute him as a gay icon and nor does he have any significant link to the gay community other than the fact that his wife is friends with Elton John. In order to be a gay icon, a person must have a relevant characteristic in their work or personal life that is relevant to gay men and lesbians. Beckham does not.

New Gay Icon's

Can Someone please add Davina McCall onto this list?? This might not make much sense to US readers but will hit home with the UK readers, if we're going to list gay icons at leat list them all from all countries not just US and UK

Do you have a reliable source where she's described as a gay icon? People don't get added to this list just because some reader or editor considers them a gay icon. —Angr 17:42, 21 August 2007 (UTC)

An icon of compassion

An icon of compassion as well as camp mentions this article. -- Jreferee (Talk) 15:09, 30 August 2007 (UTC)

Superman?

How the hell is Superman a gay icon? 58.165.223.49 00:08, 17 September 2007 (UTC)

Read the article:
Superman: Gay Icon? Christ Figure?. CBS news (2006-06-16). Retrieved on 2007-08-01.
-- SatyrTN (talk | contribs) 00:31, 17 September 2007 (UTC)

He's the only fictional person on the list, and as such, does he really belong?  — AMK1211talk! 15:52, 27 March 2008 (UTC)

Debbie Reynolds

Ok, so she was a little before my time, but after recently seeing the movie "Connie & Carla" which is all about drag queens, I think this lady deserves a mention 121.218.125.107 (talk) 01:57, 21 November 2007 (UTC)

No problem. Just find a reliable source to cite stating she's seen as a gay icon. —Angr 05:11, 21 November 2007 (UTC)

Patsy Stone

If fictional Superman can make this list, I think "poor, sad, old" Patsy Stone from Absolutely Fabulous might be a contender for this list, considering how many gay men claim to be just like her. If anyone can find an article supporting this, she'd be a good addition, don't you think? 121.218.125.107 (talk) 22:15, 25 November 2007 (UTC)

I agree in principle. Patsy is certainly an icon of mine, anyway. Just find a ref and we'll add it to the list. Jeffpw (talk) 22:26, 25 November 2007 (UTC)

Arbitrariness

Is it just me or does this sound completely arbitrary and subjective? For starters, there is an overwhelming cultural bias towards the USA. Also, how does one define a "gay icon"? Is there some sort of election each year I don't know about? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Amourfou (talkcontribs) 06:22, 26 November 2007 (UTC)

I think the usual criterion for inclusion here is that the person in question has been referred to in the press (blogs don't count) as a gay icon. —Angr 08:57, 26 November 2007 (UTC)
I would agree that there is an overwhelmingly anglophone and (mostly American) cultural bias to this article. I'd like to mark it as such. Somewildthingsgo (talk) 17:51, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Go for it but please also start a new talk thread based on the clean-up tag title so those interested can work to improve upon the issue. Benjiboi 20:26, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Done. Do you know if there's anyone working on this in any systematic way throughout the LGBT stuff as part of the wikiproject on systemic bias? Somewildthingsgo (talk) 20:52, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

Revision War

jeffpw, can we at least talk about all the edits of mine you're reverting? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Amourfou (talkcontribs) 06:31, 26 November 2007 (UTC)

I don't recall which edits those were, but since a slew of edits were made with falkse refs, everything had to be checked again. now if I see additions added without refs, I delete them. Please either add refs or suggest the name on the talk page. Jeffpw (talk) 14:15, 29 November 2007 (UTC)

Patsy Stone inclusion

What about www.bbc.co.uk/comedy/abfab/guide/p/index.shtml ? Does this count as proof enough of Patsy's appeal. And her inclusion might balance out the fact that the majority of gay icons listed here are from the USA. Here in Australia, and I imagine the UK, Patsy is what most gay men aspire to be - funnily enough?? cattona Cattona (talk) 13:17, 29 November 2007 (UTC)

The reference does specifically call her a gay icon, so I don't see it as problematic. However, maybe you could find a second reference to support it. That shouldn't be hard. Jeffpw (talk) 14:50, 29 November 2007 (UTC)
I'm skeptical about including fictional characters in the list, at least in the main list. Maybe there could be a second list of fictional gay icons. —Angr If you've written a quality article... 16:59, 29 November 2007 (UTC)
That's a great idea, Angr. Can you think of more iconic gay characters? Off the top of my head, I can think of Dorothy, Blanche Du Bois and Baby Jane Hudson, and perhaps Martha from Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? I would have to search for refs for those, though, to see if we can support those assertions. Jeffpw (talk) 17:03, 29 November 2007 (UTC)
Well, we want to avoid overlap. The gay iconicity of Dorothy and Baby Jane is inexorably wrapped up with the gay iconicity of Judy Garland and Bette Davis. Joanna Lumley, on the other hand, isn't really a gay icon, even if Patsy is one. —Angr If you've written a quality article... 17:08, 29 November 2007 (UTC)
If we did decide tomake a subsection about characters, then we could start by mentioning how several gay icons ended up having roles which also became iconic to the gay community. How does that sound? That would give context for a few of the characters. Jeffpw (talk) 17:13, 29 November 2007 (UTC)
Or that their earlier roles became iconicized retroactively? I don't think whiny little Dorothy was much of a gay icon in 1939; it was probably only later that Judy Garland's adult fabulousness rubbed off on Dorothy. —Angr If you've written a quality article... 17:17, 29 November 2007 (UTC)

Fictional gay icons

I think the inclusion of fictional gay icons would be a huge plus to this article, since we have so many. Off the top of my head, Blanche Devereraux from The Golden Girls, C3PO from Star Wars, Uncle Arthur on Bewitched, Snagglepuss, Frankie Doyle on Prisoner, Karen Walker and Jack McFarlane on Will and Grace, the list could be endless......! If people can find articles, it'd be a great inclusion that lots of us could relate to, just as much as those real icons Cattona (talk) 20:42, 29 November 2007 (UTC)

Yes, I was wondering why there wasn't a fictional gay icon list. My first thought is Bianca Montgomery (from the soap opera All My Children), and, no, of course not just because I work on that article often. Perhaps, a fictional gay icon list wasn't included in this article because of worry of it and the non-fictional icon list becoming too big. I mean, the Supercouple article is long in lists, for example. I'm trying to figure out if maybe I want to create a split article for that one. Flyer22 (talk) 21:18, 29 November 2007 (UTC)
In an attempt to keep this article's international focus and from becoming too dependent upon U.S. media, may I suggest you be bold and start a new article on American fictional characters iconized by the LGBT community. - Davodd 22:01, 30 November 2007 (UTC)

Merge proposal

Resolved.

Editor is article-shopping because he doesn't want there to be a separate article on Garland. The independent reliable sources exist to support a separate article and there is no real reason being offered as to why the Garland article shouldn't exist. Otto4711 (talk) 15:25, 26 December 2007 (UTC)

  • I did look at the article, and also think the material should be merged. It's awfully stubby, and covered here already, as well as a bit in Friend of Dorothy. It seems a good idea to put it into the Garland bio itself, since that bio doesn't mention her gay following at all, which seems an odd omission. Why do you object? Jeffpw (talk) 15:29, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
  • I have to say I think the article is fine on its own and already I can see the recurring themes even if they have yet to be explored. Benjiboi 16:45, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
  • The material exists for expansion (I have a number of additional sources beyond those listed by Benjiboi on the talk page. Her gay following is now mentioned in the new Legacy section and putting much more in that article would unbalance it. The icon information has been in the article previously and was split off per the talk page. The Garland article is about 50kB at this point and will continue to grow. Otto4711 (talk) 19:19, 26 December 2007 (UTC)