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Hank Naczas
By Steve Weltman
My lover, Hank Naczas, was nothing if not a political activist.
Like many of his contemporaries, Hank's activism had its
origins in the anti-Vietnam War movement at the University
of Massachusetts, where he was also a Phi Beta Kappa graduate
in Russian language and literature. Later, in L.A. during
our 14 memorable years together, he was a much loved out-to-everyone
lesbian and gay rights activist, serving for several years
as treasurer of Stonewall Democratic Club, as well as being
a participant in every gay and lesbian rights protest and
march. The photograph shows Hank, on the right, standing
proudly with me before the Washington Monument at the 1993
Lesbian and Gay March on Washington, the last political event
Hank and I attended before his death in December 1993. His
memorial service in January 1994 was attended by over 300
people, including the entire Los Angeles IRS, where Hank
worked as an appeals officer, as well as most of the state's
Democratic elected officials.
Connie Norman
By Michael Weinstein
Connie Norman was the most original person I ever met.
Connie and I met in ACT UP. I wore a suit and tie and she
was often in something floral. I remember when I rode with
her in Gay Pride she was wearing a bra made out of coconuts
and carrying an obscenity laden sign against Sheriff Block.
Connie and I spent endless amount of time dissecting the
issues of the day and we developed a profound respect for
one another. Connie always spoke her mind and did not worry
about offending anyone. Yet, Connie was also able to bridge
so many worlds. She had a knack for putting people at ease
while provoking them. She was as comfortable in the halls
of power as she was at the ACT UP meetings. What distinguished
her was that her anger never overtook her love. There were
so many outrageous instances it is hard to pare them down
to one. Every year Connie would make a motion on the HIV
Planning Council to defund any Catholic programs. I was the
only one who would second her motion. During the discussion
she was fond of saying that if the Catholics needed money
they should pry some gems loose from the altar at St. Peters.
Connie had many loves in her life, Bruce her long-time companion,
her many friends and comrades and Kauai. I had the great
fortune of visiting the island with her twice. In a rented
house right by the water she held court and brought community
along with her. It was one of the most special experiences
I have ever had. Connie died at the Chris Brownlie Hospice
in 1996. It was a very bittersweet day for me. I arrived
back in L.A. from the International AIDS Conference in Vancouver
that Saturday night full of optimism about the new HIV drug
cocktails. We had finally broken through. Sunday when I went
to the hospice I found out that she had died the night before.
How do you replace a spirit like Connie Norman? - you don't.
Sometimes when we ask ourselves what happened to AIDS activism
you have to say a big piece of it died with Connie Norman,
Chris Brownlie, Mark Koustopolous and so many others. Before
she died Connie gave me her favorite teddy bear and I often
reflect on Connisms when I'm deciding what position to take
on an issue. Connie had a spirit that will never die. Love
and kisses Michael.
Remembering Connie Norman
By David Reid
Connie Norman with a bullhorn. It served more as a prop
than a utility. Her rage did not need the amplified assist.
Whether it was outside the FDA, on the streets of New York,
or the three-day vigil at L.A. County/USC hospital, her anger
drew people. She was a magnetic for activism. And she was
a she. As she told homophobic callers on her week-nightly
radio call-in show, "I paid for my surgery and I can
damn well chose my pronoun." And like much of her commentary,
it flew right over the heads of the homo-haters.
Until the radio station sank in a sea of red ink, Connie
was at the mic for three hours every night challenging change-making
it happen. She did not care what you thought of her, but
she did care that you would think. She loved logic and would
relish turning a caller around in their way of thinking.
And it wasn't solely sexuality that Connie discussed; she
went so far beyond that. She understood the fear America
has toward sex and she challenged it. She faced down Wally
George on his show as a caveat to get him on hers and he
became a fan.
Connie saved lives. She wasn't alone; a lot of activists
in the streets cut red tape and fast tracked drugs that have
extended countless lives. But she was special. She had a
power that changed people. Which seems apropos for a person
that had undergone such a radical change herself. Radical
was a word she embraced.
She had heroes, radicals too: Larry Kramer, Mark Kostopolous,
Wayne Karr, and anyone else that put themselves on the line
to affect change. She helped dispel the innate fear a person
has to challenge "authority." She empowered others
to take up the bullhorn.
There were many at the launching of ACT-UP/LA in December
1987, including Connie. But she later recalled it was for
the selfish reason of not wanting to die that motivated her
to join. It was at these meetings that she "got it" and
became the voice of our community that she was. She did more
in 10 years of activism than most do in a lifetime.
During her last days at Chris Brownlie Hospice she seemed
resigned to forced retirement. She met with visitors between
cigarettes, talked of her husband Bruce's new lover, who
she was wildly fond of, who would "replace" her
after she died. Like that was possible. She knew time was
short, yet she didn't show anger, didn't regret nor show
remorse for her path. Connie Norman chose the road she took
and led the parade along it.
-David Reid is a producer and founder of AIDSWatch.
Rembering my friend The Owl
July 19, 1941 - July 22, 1991
By Richard E. Settle, photographer
The Owl, known affectionately by his friends as "T.O.",
was born Phillip Anthony Bierly in Columbus, Ohio. His fascination
with owls began at age seven on a camping trip with his family.
Later, when an uncle gave him a blue glass owl, it was the
start of a collection that grew over the years to be unique,
beautiful, and vast.
Home was a special place for The Owl. Nestled in the Hollywood
hills above the Sunset Stip and dubbed "Owl Mansion." The
Owl limo was parked in the garage. His landscaped gardens,
fishponds, and rare palms were a site to behold. On the 4th
of July the interior and exterior was decorated with American
flags of all sizes and red, white, and bunting adorned the
balconies. Halloween saw a coffin in the living room, tombstones
in the yard and ghoulish sounds wafting over the grounds.
A 12-foot Christmas tree decorated with over 851 owl ornaments
and thousands of twinkling lights filled the living room
with a festive spirit. New Year's Eve everyone would gather
around the Duo-Art player piano and sing songs to ring in
the new year.
April 14, he gathered a group of friends together for a
midnight trek to the Pacific ocean to scatter flower petals
in memory of the survivors and casualties of the Titanic.
Over the years he collected autographs and stories from the
passengers who lived to tell of the disastrous voyage.
Devoted to the glamour days of old Hollywood, on Aug. 23
he would dress in a Sheik's costume and visit Hollywood Memorial
Park to celebrate the life and death of Rudolph Valentino,
giving "The Woman in Black" a supportive wink.
A very caring man and a thrill seeker since childhood,
he was a member of Roller Coastering America and rode every
wooden roller coaster built the USA. Donating many hours
of his time restoring the coaster in Pacific Beach, Ca. to
its former glory.
A wonderful friend and he is missed and remembered in my
heart. PEACE!
James Carroll Pickett
By Michael Kearns
Among the things I miss the most about James Carroll Pickett
are his insatiability, instability, and integrity: qualities
that built the foundation of an emotional bond cemented by
the intimacy of recognition. Pickett was my artistic soulmate,
the brotherly love of my life.
For ten years, we voraciously explored AIDS through the
theatre, raising the curtain on the (initially) silent disease.
You might even say we were gluttonous, as piggy as we were
when we were boozed-up and drugged-up sex addicts on the
prowl. But the plague fueled our insatiability with a focused
passion that neither of us had ever experienced, resulting
in a shared hunger to produce-readings, benefits, and plays,
oh my.
Our families reflected the stuff of Tennessee Williams'
tortured scenarios, oozing with madness and reeking of debauchery,
particularly when it came to our mothers, the desperate tragediennes,
not merely housewives (think Blanche DuBois and Alexandra
Del Lago). Sharing a restless instability that no amount
of so-called "self-esteem" could quell, Pickett
and I both feared mirroring our mothers' drunken manquests.
Finally, it was Pickett who taught me integrity, a trait
that I endeavor to maintain. When we were producing an AIDS
benefit, a closeted actor who was set to perform in the show
refused to allow his photograph to appear on the cover of
a gay mag. Pickett, one of the founders of the producing
entity (STAGE), quit because of the insidious hypocrisy.
I breathe James Carroll Pickett's life on a daily basis
and will continue to until that day that I die.
Johnnie Pipkin
By Karen Ocamb
I first learned about AIDS in 1984 in Salome Jens' acting
class, where I was studying to be a playwright. A young man
Salome had proclaimed was destined for greatness as an actor/director
suddenly landed in the emergency room with an inexplicable
brain disease. Salome rushed to his side; he died three days
later. In class it was whispered that he was gay and had
the new disease.
After that, several strapping young actors started wasting
away. When Johnnie Pipkin first landed in the VA hospital,
he was held in isolation, his food was often left outside,
and we were ordered to wear masks, gloves and a surgical
gown before seeing him. He wanted so much to be touched-his
family had essentially deserted him-and we-the acting troupe,
his 12-Step buddies, and his ex-lover-were the only ones
this once brazen, funny, and sweet young soul had left to
love him. His next bout landed him at County hospital where,
uninsured, he was placed in a large room with straight macho
men with a variety of illnesses. They didn't much care for
the "homo pervert" hidden behind the hospital curtain.
One bout landed him a room of his own. But since County
was a USC teaching hospital, he was hostage to the whims
of the staff and was too often forced to endure trainees
repeatedly sticking him with needles like a pin-cushion,
trying, often unsuccessfully, to find a vein. I wanted to
scream at them-to demand that they stop treating him like
he wasn't human. But Johnnie screamed at me instead, begging
me not to upset them lest they withhold pain medication when
he most needed it at night.
So I railed at God instead. And I berated myself for not
being Jesus, not being able to go in and wave my hands and
heal him. I was utterly powerless. I failed Johnnie, too.
Before he lost his voice to the cancer in his esophagus-the
cancer which added to the yeast infection in his mouth and
the assortment of fungi on his body and PAC-Man viruses eating
at his insides as if AIDS was eating him alive-Johnnie asked
me to help him die. It was easy, really-he pleaded. He would
drink a bottle of scotch or two, pass out, and then I would
hold a pillow over his face. I said no-I wouldn't help him
relinquish his sobriety and die with demon alcohol screaming
in his brain. I still wrestle with that decision.
The day before Johnnie died in 1986, I helped the homecare
nurse lift his skeletal frame from his bed to the wheelchair
so he could take one more look at his precious Silver Lake
garden. I didn't know how to say goodbye so I just said I'd
see him tomorrow. The next day, a Sunday, I was speaking
at a straight 12-Step meeting in Pacific Palisades and when
suddenly I felt a spiritual imperative to talk about what
was happening to my gay friends. I spoke from the heart,
and several people cried, including me. When I got home I
found out that Johnnie died while I was speaking. I knew
it. I felt him.
Johnnie Pipkin was my second AIDS death. My first was actor/singer
Stephen Pender the year before. I was with Stephen when he
died. I had stayed with him all day and night as his friends
shuffled in and out of his room in the Betty Ford wing of
Cedars Sinai Hospital. Stephen was my 12-Step sponsor-and
miraculously, he remembered me from my first sober days at
the meeting behind the red door in Greenwich Village. Not
letting him be alone when he died was my way of thanking
him and all those gay men for being with me as I struggled
back from the death of addiction. I have often wondered:
why them and not me?
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