Los Angeles gay community gathers to help a chronicler of its history

Posted by NewsEditor  at 8:36 AM (PT)
In: books

Source: Los Angeles Times, Advocate
Renowned gay writers and artists will gather today in Los Angeles to honor Stuart Timmons, a longtime community organizer and author of the best-selling book Gay L.A. Timmons suffered a debilitating stroke in January that has left him unable to speak or move.

Timmons has spent most of his life telling the story of gay Los Angeles.

As a journalist, he has written bestselling books on the history of the community.

And as a gay man, he has endured its struggles and celebrated its triumphs.

In January, as he was finishing a book about gay men who were imprisoned because of their sexuality, Timmons suffered a stroke.

Timmons, 51, lost almost all of his movement and his ability to speak; the gay community lost one of its steadiest and most poetic voices. Now the community that Timmons has spent his life documenting is helping him regain his voice, Los Angeles Times reports.

"We just want to get him back and writing," said Trebor Healey, a friend.

Today, Timmons' friends and family will gather at a fundraiser, with performances and readings, to help pay for extra physical therapy.

The benefit will raise funds to provide much-needed hours of physical therapy and other medical necessities beyond what routine insurance will allow. Malcolm Boyd, Chris Freeman, Trebor Healey, Michael Kearns, Felice Picano, Derek Ringold, and Terry Wolverton are among the organizers, the Advocate reports.

Timmons is expected to attend. It will be his first time out of the hospital since falling ill, Los Angeles Times reports.

Organizers say the event is especially urgent because of the recent approval of Proposition 8, which bans same-sex marriage.

"It's taken a little extra significance because our community has taken a very public defeat," said Mark Thompson, a longtime friend and neighbor of Timmons in Silver Lake. Thompson, a noted author and activist in his own right, thinks the fundraiser is a chance for the gay community to prove itself. "I don't think any community is worth its salt if it doesn't rally when it needs to," he said.

Timmons has been chronicling gay life for more than 30 years, LA Times reports. His work as a student activist at UCLA, where he majored in film, caught the attention of Thompson, who was then the senior editor of the Advocate, a national gay and lesbian newsmagazine. Thompson asked Timmons to come on board.

"I quickly recognized in Stuart a really passionate and energetic voice," he said.

"And he was a great reporter. He had a real knack for helping people to feel comfortable enough to open up about their lives."

Over the years, Timmons worked as an activist and at a number of nonprofits. But his true love was writing.
He wrote "The Trouble with Harry Hay," a biography of one of the early leaders of the gay rights movement.

He combed through archives and police ledgers and conducted hundreds of interviews for his groundbreaking book, Gay L.A: A History of Sexual Outlaws, Power Politics, and Lipstick Lesbians, which he co-wrote with Lillian Faderman. Historian Kevin Starr, former California state librarian, praised the bestselling book as "energetically researched and vividly written."

His illness left some in the activist community adrift. "He's touched so many lives," Thompson said. "We in the movement didn't know who we were."

A new network began to form around Timmons' hospital room (he now lives at a long-term-care facility). "Through the crisis, we've been connecting," Thompson told LA Times.

As the months passed, a familiar glimmer began to return to Timmons' hazel eyes. One day when Thompson was visiting, Timmons let his frustration spill. "I said to him, 'I know you're trapped in there. You must be depressed and angry as hell,' " Thompson said.

Then something unexpected happened. "The tears flowed," Thompson said. "We just both started to cry together. There was communication."

Today, Timmons communicates with "smiles and winks and blinks," Thompson said. And if he can regain enough small-muscle movement, his friends hope, he can return to writing.

Contributions to the Timmons fund can be sent to the Stuart Craig Timmons Irrev. Trust, c/o Gay Timmons, P.O. Box 472, Los Gatos, CA 95031.

Source: Gay community waits for one of its voices to return | Los Angeles Times 
Fund-raiser for Author Stuart Timmons, November 15 in L.A. | Advocate

Last modified: 15 Nov 08 08:08

,

Comments are closed