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She got a lot of trouble for it : how Tammy Faye Bakker went from televangelist to gay icon | Movies
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Obituary: Geoffrey-Martin Cyr
LOS ANGELES, Calif. - Geoffrey-Martin Cyr, 55, passed away on Saturday, June 19, 2021, in Palm Springs, Calif. from complications brought .
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Geoffrey-Martin Cyr
LOS ANGELES, Calif. – Geoffrey-Martin Cyr, 55, passed away on Saturday, June 19, 2021, in Palm Springs, Calif. from complications brought on by heat stroke. Geoffrey was born in Augusta, Maine on August 7, 1965, to parents Martin and Sandra Cyr, and graduated from Oak Hill High School in 1983.
Geoffrey moved to Los Angeles in 1987 where he served the entertainment community in human resources roles at United Talent Agency, CBS, The Walt Disney Studios, and CNN.
Outside of work Geoffrey became active in the LGBTQ community, volunteering for Aids Project Los Angeles (APLA) raising awareness and hundreds of thousands of dollars to fight AIDS and advance research for a cure for HIV. Geoffrey was immersed in the Daytime entertainment community, making countless friends and serving in t
Oceanside
In 1969, Tom DiCioccio was 19 years old and he had a secret that was burning a hole in his life.
Unable to accept his attraction to other men, the Oceanside resident said he attempted suicide and was on the verge of undergoing electroshock conversion therapy. Then, he confessed his secret to a high school friend named Marla Epstein, and she taught him a lesson in unconditional love.
“What she said to me was, ‘So what? You’re Tommy. You’re a good person. What difference does that make with your life?’ ” said DiCioccio, now 68.
Epstein’s open-hearted response started DiCioccio on a journey toward self-acceptance, but then she abruptly disappeared from his life. This month, his decades-long quest to reconnect with Epstein is featured in “We’ll Meet Again,” a six-part television series hosted by Ann Curry.
Elizabeth Taylor, Cleopatra Star and Oscar Winner, Was a Pioneering AIDS Activist
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Elizabeth Taylor, who would have turned 89 on Feb. 27, lived multiple lives. She was a movie mega-star, a tabloid mega-celebrity (which are not always the same thing), an innovator in creating herself as a brand and a tireless and effective philanthropist and activist.
She was adored, admired, denounced, scandal-ridden and unpredictable, and the public couldn’t get enough of her.
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On screen, she was at her most breathtakingly beautiful in such 1950s and ‘60s films as “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,” “Suddenly, Last Summer,” “Cleopatra” and “The Taming of the Shrew.” And in the 1966 “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf,” at age 34, she frumped herself up and gave a great performance, winning the second of two Oscars (after the 1960 “Butterfield 8”).
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