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Films about Queer History

 

The Advocate

Ellen DeGeneres

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Texts & Media:  Ellen DeGeneres
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Ellen: The Real Story of Ellen DeGeneresEllen: The Real Story of Ellen DeGeneres by Kathleen Tracy  

All Ellen DeGeneres wanted to be was funny. She kept her humor clean and steered clear of politics and social agendas, instead honing a quirky, off-center, mistrustful view of the world.

I was coming home from kindergarten--well, they told me it was kindergarten. I found out later I had been working in a factory for ten years. It's good for a kid to know how to make gloves.

If ever there was a more unlikely comic to become a symbol of controversy, it was Ellen DeGeneres. Throughout her career, she balanced her ever-growing success with her desire to keep her sexuality private. How that struggle affected her life and career and ultimately inspired her to come out of the closet, putting her life in the spotlight and her career at considerable risk, forms the emotional core of this biography. And in a broader sense, the controversy caused by Ellen's acknowledged sexuality is a reflection of America's own struggle with tolerance and acceptance.

Ellen examines the repercussions still being felt by the comic as a direct result of her revelations and offers a glimpse of what her future may hold. It details:
 
Ellen's colorful family history, which includes a swashbuckling pirate ancestor
How her conservative father turned his back on Ellen when he learned she was gay
The personal tragedy that became her greatest inspiration
Her secret life in the gay bar scene during her stand-up days
The women Ellen has loved
Her life as a gay crusader

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Ellen DeGeneres - The Beginning (2000) Ellen DeGeneres - The Beginning (2000)

This post-coming-out performance fully acknowledges Ellen DeGeneres's status as America's most famous lesbian, but it is nevertheless imbued with a sense of fun. For instance, rather than describe the experience of closet-exiting on her self-titled situation comedy in the late 1990s, she performs an amusing "interpretive dance." She uses her trademark goofiness to ruminate on the necessity of directions on shampoo bottles, ant road rage, and the possible nightmarish consequences of buying cheese. While the performance is not orientation-specific, the comedienne spends a fair amount of time on sex-related issues, including jokes about blow-up dolls and people who videotape their relations. She does venture into the political with an appeal for same-sex marriage and a monologue on meeting God, who turns out to be a middle-aged black woman. None of this fazes her clearly supportive audience at New York's Beacon Theatre who get to ask her questions at the end à la Carol Burnett. The best moment of the 65-minute performance for HBO comes at the end, when DeGeneres accidentally exhibits some gender confusion with a young audience member, who then pays her moving tribute as a role model. --Kimberly Heinric

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www.ellen-degeneres.com

This site hosts bios, information about the sitcom, a huge gallery of photos of both Ellen and Anne Heche, news, information, a forum and chat.

 

Ellen DeGeneres- Hero!

This page is dedicated to Ellen and those who appreciate her (affectionately called "Ellenheads"), not only as a gifted performer, but also as a principled, caring person. Her coming out has not only provided a public figure with whom many of us identify, but also a role model for gay and lesbian youth everywhere. We love you Ellie, and your mother, Betty, too!

  

The Australian Ellen DeGeneres Homepage

This page is built out of respect and admiration for Ellen DeGeneres, who I believe is a truly gifted and talented comedian/actress. It contains anything and everything you want to know about her. When I first started searching for information and pictures in January 96, she had only two personal pages dedicated to her. I knew nothing about web creating, but slowly taught myself so that I could have a page of my own.

A lot has happened to Ellen over the past year with her character Ellen Morgan "coming out". The now famous Puppy Episode, which aired in the States to much controversy on April 30, 1997 made her the first lead in a sitcom to do so. It was a huge success, rating a 26.5 and saw "Coming out" parties held all over the country. With all this happening Ellen herself decided to bite the bullet and announce on the front of Time Magazine...."Yep I'm Gay". And then on May 13, 1998 we got to see her final hour long finale go to air with less than flattering reviews. It's a cruel world out there...

  

Ellen DeGeneres

From the Gale Group, Celebrating Women's History Month

Excerpt:

When Ellen DeGeneres was growing up in New Orleans, she dreamed of becoming a veterinarian, but, as she told TV Guide, she gave up the idea because she was "not book smart." Since then she has waited tables, sold vacuum cleaners, painted houses, worked as a legal secretary, and finally, found success as a wry comedian and actress with her own prime-time sitcom and a budding film career. All of the positive attention has not quelled DeGeneres's insecurities, however. "If the show is successful, then you're reaching millions of people," the actress observed in TV Guide. "But you're also standing there naked, saying, `What do you think of me?' And there are mean people who just want to tear you apart. That kind of frightens me ... I try not to, but I worry about everything..."

 Breakthrough Episode

In April of 1997 Ellen made television history with the cameo-happy "The Puppy Episode," in which DeGeneres's character proclaimed herself a lesbian. This was preceded by months of speculation, culminating in a Time cover story in which Ellen (both the comedienne and the character) said, "Yep, I'm Gay." DeGeneres's partner, actress Anne Heche, also came out...

  

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