Wisconsin Pride
A Movement Begins
Clip: Special | 2m 37sVideo has Closed Captions
The Madison Alliance for Homosexual Equality was Wisconsin’s first LGBTQ+ advocacy group.
Stonewall gave LGBTQ+ people greater visibility and media coverage. A 1969 TIME cover story, “The Homosexual in America” gave an anonymous writer to The Daily Cardinal the inspiration to pen an open letter to his fellow homosexuals on the UW-Madison campus. His idea was for an advocacy group that became the Madison Alliance for Homosexual Equality, the state’s first such organization.
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Wisconsin Pride is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin Pride is provided by Park Bank, SC Johnson, the Greater Milwaukee Foundation, the Evjue Foundation, the charitable arm of the Capital Times, TruStage, the New Harvest Foundation,...
Wisconsin Pride
A Movement Begins
Clip: Special | 2m 37sVideo has Closed Captions
Stonewall gave LGBTQ+ people greater visibility and media coverage. A 1969 TIME cover story, “The Homosexual in America” gave an anonymous writer to The Daily Cardinal the inspiration to pen an open letter to his fellow homosexuals on the UW-Madison campus. His idea was for an advocacy group that became the Madison Alliance for Homosexual Equality, the state’s first such organization.
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[angry crowd] - Dick Wagner: The '60s had seen a whole range of activism here in Wisconsin.
You had the anti-war movement, which was very strong on the Madison campus.
In Milwaukee, you had a push for Black Civil Rights.
There was a sense that there was this activism, which was a way to change things.
- Protester: Sisterhood is powerful!
- A generation began to rise up during a time of political and social strife.
Advancing a variety of movements, including gay rights.
- Dick Wagner: There was this impetus that it was time to do something.
Stonewall sent that signal, and people responded to it.
- In 1969, TIME magazine's cover story, "The Homosexual in America," put gay life in to the national conversation.
This inspired an anonymous writer at the University of Wisconsin-Madison to publish an open letter in the campus paper calling for homosexuals to band together.
- Scott Seyforth: They started by calling themselves the Madison Alliance for Homosexual Equality.
♪ ♪ - Dick Wagner: The Madison Alliance for Homosexuality Equality was recognized as the first gay organization in Wisconsin.
- Scott Seyforth: Just months after Stonewall, they were on the local news channel.
You know, out queers are on television in the state of Wisconsin.
In March, they hold the first publicly announced gay dance.
They had the first protest.
- The group protested outside a Madison theater playing the film The Boys in the Band.
- Dick Wagner: They felt it depicted self-loathing homosexuals.
The early activists particularly found that despicable as a portrayal.
- Film: You're a sad and pathetic man.
You're a homosexual, and you don't want to be.
But there's nothing you can do to change it.
- Dick Wagner: While they were picketing, they heard shouts of "faggots" from young kids in cars driving by.
But it was very brave to do that kind of public action.
To go out and be visible homosexuals in the community.
You found other people who were willing to be out, and that gave you strength.
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Clip: Special | 5m 57s | Responding to the AIDS pandemic took political will and new social action led by ACT-UP. (5m 57s)
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Clip: Special | 2m 9s | Gay bars once were the only place you could be gay, and it was still risky. (2m 9s)
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Clip: Special | 4m 46s | Years before Stonewall, a Milwaukee bar’s patrons fought back against homophobic attacks. (4m 46s)
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Clip: Special | 2m 19s | Gay Peoples Union nurtured LGBTQ+ life in 1970s Milwaukee. (2m 19s)
Gay Press and Leaping La Crosse News
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Clip: Special | 5m 27s | A diverse gay press united LGBTQ+ people. La Crosse had its own lesbian newsletter. (5m 27s)
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Clip: Special | 11m 6s | Wisconsin led the nation in enacting anti-discrimination laws for gays and lesbians. (11m 6s)
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Clip: Special | 5m 2s | The nation’s first out lesbian candidate for office ran to protest anti-LGB school policy. (5m 2s)
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Clip: Special | 4m 58s | A trans-pioneer from Wauwatosa, WI, Lou Sullivan helped others to live as themselves. (4m 58s)
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Clip: Special | 5m 25s | Milwaukee lesbian couple sought marriage equality in the Seventies. (5m 25s)
Preview: Special | 30s | Remarkable stories of fighting injustice define a pivotal LGBTQ+ era in Wisconsin. (30s)
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Wisconsin Pride is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin
Funding for Wisconsin Pride is provided by Park Bank, SC Johnson, the Greater Milwaukee Foundation, the Evjue Foundation, the charitable arm of the Capital Times, TruStage, the New Harvest Foundation,...