Elizabeth Wilson photograph

Elizabeth Wilson

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Gender Female
Death8 years ago
Date of birth August 2,1936
Zodiac sign Leo
Born Grand Rapids
Michigan
United States
Date of died May 9,2015
DiedNew Haven
Connecticut
United States
ParentsHenry Dunning Wilson
Marie Ethel Wilson
Job Actor
Awards Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Play
Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Ensemble Performance
Obie Award for Performance
Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Performances
Tony Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Featured Role in a Play
Siblings Mary Muir Wilson
Official site elizabethwilson.net
Edited worksPortrait of the Canadia...
Education St Paul's Girls' School
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID483565

Adorned in Dreams: Fashion and Modernity
The sphinx in the city
Bohemians: The Glamorous Outcasts
The Girl in Berlin
War Damage
She Died Young
The Twilight Hour
Love Game: A History of Tennis, from Victorian Pastime to Global Phenomenon
Cultural Passions: Fans, Aesthetes and Tarot Readers
Women & the welfare state
The contradictions of culture
Only halfway to paradise
Through the Looking Glass: A History of Dress from 1860 to the Present Day
House of the Dead
Mirror Writing: An Autobiography
Hidden Agendas: Theory, Politics, and Experience in the Women's Movement
The lost time café
Poisoned Hearts
What is to be Done about Violence Against Women?
Chifa Chi's Little Adventure in Nevis
Hallucinations: Life in the Postmodern City
AgriScience Explorations
Chifa Chi's Little Adventure in Washington DC
Va Va Voom: Purify
Prisons of Glass
Study Skills for Part-Time Students
Chifa Chi's Little Adventure in New York City
Chifa Chi's Little Adventure in Cuzco & Machu Picchu
Australian Country Style Country Gardens
Lights and Shadows of Ancient European Mythology, Language and History: Or, Odin's Runa of Yggdrasil
Ezra Thanks God
What We Know About: Effective Early Reading Instruction
College Planning 101: What Every Parent Needs to Know Now
Sound Investments
Guide to One Hundred One of the Best Values in America's Colleges and Universities
Unfolding the Past
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Elizabeth Wilson Life story


Elizabeth Wilson is a British independent researcher and writer best known for her commentaries on feminism and popular culture. She was a professor at London Metropolitan University and the London College of Fashion and is the author of several non-fiction books and fiction books.

Pride at 50: The LGBT revolution sparked in a basement

Jul 1,2022 3:30 am

It's 1972 - The swinging '60s are over, The miners' strike has turned off The lights and Donny Osmond is topping The Charts with Puppy Love .

It will be another 20 years before same-sex attraction is declassified as a mental illness and, despite homosexual acts being decriminalised, in 1967, The Age Of consent remains five years older than for heterosexual couples.

But , in a basement room at The London School of Economics, a revolution is brewing.

Fresh from protests calling for The Age Of consent to be lowered, The year before, members of The are planning a new March - not only demanding change and equality But celebrating who they are.

And, although they do Not Yet know it, The ripple effects will still be felt decades later.

The UK's first Pride protest is about to be born.

Bbc News has brought together some of those original members who attended The First UK Pride March , in 1972, and some LGBT people from The younger Generation - to reflect on how much has changed and how much is still to be done.

'By The Time we'd finished snogging each other, The Police had completely Disappeared ' - Stuart 's story

Stuart Feather was 32 when he attended his first GLF meeting, in The early 1970s.

" They were telling us about Coming Out and how important it was for us to stand up and be recognised and That we weren't The Monsters The Press , psychiatrists and Everyone Else was telling The World we were, " he says.

" In a way, I had no self-worth.

" I had no gay pride or anything like That , because I had been hiding who I was. "

But before long, Stuart was marching for gay rights and joining feminists protesting against Miss World contests.

On 1 July, several hundred people came to London's Trafalgar Square for The First Pride March .

Many carried placards and wore Fancy Dress .

" There were so many police on either side of us That you couldn't really see us, " Stuart says, " But when we got to Marble Arch , we had a mass kiss-in - and by The Time we'd finished snogging each other, The Police had completely Disappeared .

" They were so disgusted with what we were doing and ultimately powerless. "

'It was Brilliant - The freedom, The Ability to be yourself' - Bruce 's story

For Bruce Bayley, The concept of a gay-pride March was different from That of previous political marches.

" I thought of it more as a takeover of joy, " he says.

" It said, 'Look, you can be joyful in something political That you're doing. '"

Bruce was 24 when he joined The GLF.

He had grown up in India But was studying sociology in London and had been awarded a grant to research political " deviants".

On The recommendation of his tutor, Bruce decided to study The GLF - and it changed his life.

" As soon as I began to research The GLF, and The more I went to their meetings and discos, I soon realised I was 'one of them', " he says.

" It was Brilliant - The freedom, The Ability to be yourself, The excitement, The Glamour , The Bravery and The courage to say, 'Yes, I Am gay. '"

'There are still many Challenges ' - Rebecca 's story

Rebecca Bullamore, 21, is organising a group of her friends to go to their very first together, on Saturday, 2 July.

" Of course we've come long way in 50 Years , " she says, " But many people around The World don't have The rights and so many in This Country don't feel comfortable expressing themselves and really struggle Coming Out .

" There is more positive representation in media and positive stories and children's books with representation - That is really important - But there are still many Challenges of people not caring or understanding and polarising The community. "

'There was this tremendous personal feeling of liberation and Love ' - Angela 's Story

Angela Mason joined The GLF when it was formed, in October 1970, and it enabled her To Live openly for The First Time .

" I had not been out before and had been having quite a miserable Time and suddenly there was this tremendous personal feeling of liberation and Love and solidarity, " Angela says.

" It wasn't an individual Experience - what made it so exciting was That it was a collective Experience , The Most exciting period of My Life . "

She met her partner, Elizabeth Wilson , at a GLF meeting - and The pair are still together.

Angela went on to become and successfully led The Campaign to lower The Age Of consent.

'There was a sense of naughtiness' - Shân's story

When Shân Veillard-Thomas joined The GLF, she had just met her first girlfriend and Run Away from home.

She was part of a group of 30 That organised The First Pride protest.

" The March was very controversial - it was terrifying, it was daring, I was only 21, " Shân says.

" There was a sense of naughtiness and daringness That was attractive to me.

" It was very public and we were being very daring Coming Out in The Street , in public. "

But That Experience would be short lived because, a year later, Shân joined The Army and was driven Straight back into The Closet .

She had not realised it was at The Time - and remained so until 2000.

" It wasn't talked about, " Shân says.

" I saw a few reports which horrified me, of The Level of interrogation That was going on.

" I hoped just never to meet Another Woman . "

Shân went on to marry A Man and had children in what she says was a very loving relationship.

But years later, she Once Again came out as a lesbian.

'It's about expressing who you are' - Sam 's story

Sam Stevens, 23, says Pride should make leaders look at how they communicate with The rest of The World , including Saudi Arabia and China, which have anti-LGBT laws.

" Pride is a protest and That 's true to a certain extent, " he says, " But it's about expressing who you are and generally understanding each other.

" When I was A Kid , The Word 'gay' was used as an insult But now it's not so much and it's not accepted and That 's good.

" We need to see more of That - and That 's impacted by The laws. "

'The gay Manifesto ' - Roz 's story

In The autumn of 1971, when she met The GLF, Roz Kaveney was 28 and had already come out as transgender, in what she described as a " frightening Time ".

She co-wrote its Manifesto , a pamphlet calling for an end to " oppression" with a list of demands, including changes in The Law and society's attitudes towards LGBT people.

" It was for everyone whether they are black, white, trans, Cis - not That That language was available to us at The Time - Straight and gay, marching together into The 'glorious liberated future', " Roz says.

" It was probably rather more of an idealistic document than even I felt at The Time - But it was a Manifesto . "

And parts of it remain valid today.

Like many of The GLF, Roz continued campaigning, marching against Section 28 of The Local Government Act 1988, which effectively banned homosexuality being taught in schools and was repealed in 2003, and for 2004's Gender Recognition Act, which enabled trans people to legally change The gender on their birth certificate.

The GLF will re-create That first Pride protest, on Friday, setting off from St Martin's in The Fields , near Trafalgar Square , at 13:00.



Source of news: bbc.com

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