Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I'm always happy to support the gay community.
Everyone in the gay community doesn't think alike.
The gay community has been so faithful and good to me.
I've always felt very attuned to, and at home in, the gay community.
I think you could say L.A. has a bit of a cookie-cutter gay community.
I don't have any intention to be anti-gay or to persecute the gay community.
Just because you are out doesn't make you the poster boy for the gay community.
I've become this sort of icon for the gay community. I don't like the position.
It's not the '90s anymore. I think the gay community is a lot more accepted these days.
Some people in the gay community were very upset with me for not coming out on their terms.
The gay community is very fickle. And I know because I'm part of it and I see it every day.
I think the gay community, just like anybody, should be represented in all forms and all types.
In all honesty, when you talk about 'the gay community,' you are talking about my community, haha.
If it was up to me, I would send the gay community, who insisted on celebrating in Jerusalem, to Sodom and Gomorrah.
There isn't a way to depict the gay community without at least mentioning the existence of online dating apps like Grindr.
I don't like Mitt Romney. I wouldn't vote for Mitt Romney in a million years. Mitt Romney is no ally of the gay community.
I have been hung in effigy by the gay community for a long time, from when I was on President Reagan's first AIDS commission.
In the 1980s and the 1990s, when HIV hit its peak, the gay community was at the forefront of the fight against the silent killer.
I think so many doors have been opened for the gay community as far as the dangers and horrors of HIV. There is so much more out-ness now.
When I moved to New York, the gay community welcomed me with open arms and told me how beautiful I was. I will never turn my back on them.
I've been standing with and united with the gay community. I know so many gay men and women that homophobia is such a baffling thing for me.
A lot of times I've reached my hand out to people in the gay community that just didn't have nobody to help them when they were down and out.
I think the word 'twink' is pejorative. There's something endemic about the gay community where we praise masculinity more than anything else.
The gay community just recognizes what their closets are and we straight have to spend years trying to figure out which closet we are trapped in.
I do think some older people in the gay community could be better influencers for gay youth, better educators. I made it a point to be that person.
When I first started talking about gay marriage, most people in the gay community looked at me as if I was insane or possibly a fascist reactionary.
There are certain performers that the gay community receives and recognizes with love, and my whole life, I've always responded to those same artists.
Being a teenager, a gay teenager, in such a small village is not that much fun. I am part of the gay community and most gays have a similar story to mine.
It's daunting, taking on the task of representing the gay community, because there are so many different facets and different schools of thought and behavior.
I just live my life - but the support from the gay community is always fantastic. It's really great because they are always the best people to always be around.
I'm a heterosexual, married woman with children. I'm a mother who's also a track mom, who cooks and cleans. And I just happen to be an ally for the gay community.
The male gay community seems to be very into female singers. I think it could be the songs we sing. They're more open with their feelings. And they have good taste!
'La Cage' has got a broad appeal. It obviously appeals to the gay community, but it's also a good, fun show that appeals across a broad audience, a great big mixture.
If the gay community thinks you're doing a good job, you're in. I don't think anything gets done in this business without the gay community - at least not anything good.
I would like to do another piece of fiction dealing with a number of issues: Lesbian parenting, the 1960's, and interracial relationships in the Lesbian and Gay community.
I was inadvertently raised in the 'gay community.' I had straight parents, but I spent massive amounts of time at a very early age with gay, theater-hopeful thirty-somethings.
There were, and still are, a lot of different points of view in the gay community. It's not everybody holding hands and singing 'Kumbaya.' People have very different perspectives.
I believe we all have different ways we came to the gay community and we can't and shouldn't be pigeon-holed into one cultural narrative which can be uninclusive and disempowering.
I didn't want the responsibility, I didn't know how to handle the responsibility of speaking for the gay community. I always felt like I owed them a huge apology for coming out too late.
A lot of people in my world - in the acting world - have either lost friends to Aids or live with HIV because its origin in our culture, in New York for instance, was in the gay community.
I'd say it's even harder to cater to Hispanics than to the lesbian or gay community. We're so culturally separated: Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, Mexicans, Venezuelans. We're all so different.
I love San Francisco and Brighton has something of San Francisco about it. It's by the sea, there's a big gay community, a feeling of people being there because they enjoy their life there.
I made dance records and the gay community gravitated toward them. They gave me a place to really shine, a place to develop, and a place to spread my wings - I'll forever be grateful for that.
In the gay community there are not very many Jewish drag queens. I've always found that funny because there are a lot of Jewish gay people out there, so why aren't there more Jewish drag queens?
Watching AIDS play its evil game of give and take has made me understand why lobbying for increased research funding should be an urgent priority - not only for the gay community but for us all.
I do not think the gay population has been all that rabid for gay marriage. Note that I do not use the words 'gay community.' Expunge that expression from your vocabulary. We are not a community.
Think about it: Look at the strides of awareness and treatment and tests that women have had with breast cancer, that the gay community has had with AIDS, because they're active and they talk about it.
The gay community has had a sometimes tumultuous relationship with non-queer people coming to their shows because it was tourism, like using the queer spaces as a form of comic relief or entertainment.
In my work with young Jewish adults in the gay community, I hear their stories of discrimination, of struggling for acceptance, of feeling invisible not for what they have done but simply for who they are.
The thing about gay male pop stars is: they aren't supported by gay men. Gay men don't really support them until they've gone beyond the gay community and had success in the mainstream, so it's really challenging.