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Showing results for Gay Abston Tudor
...In the furore over the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, Pushaw tweeted that opposition to the bill was tantamount to complicity in paedophilia....
...There had been a big Tudor house in the park, in which Elizabeth I used to visit her favourite, Lord Essex. In 1673, it was bought by a pinnacle of social mobility, Josiah Child. He owned a brewery....
...Most exciting of all, Hilary Mantel completes her Tudor trilogy with The Mirror & the Light (Fourth Estate RRP£25/Henry Holt RRP$30, March)....
...“King Edward the Fourth was gay. King Edward the Fourth was charming.” But “he upside-downed his brother and drowned him, dead in a butt of malmsey”. Farjeon wasn’t far wrong....
...He was always open about being gay, but in the late 1980s the church hierarchy’s attitude to homosexuality led him to refuse to go through with his full ordination....
...A devout Christian, he opposed gay marriage....
...The pale walls have etchings, photographs and prints of those he has written about: Oscar Wilde and Tudor politician Thomas More stare across at Victorian music-hall star Dan Leno....
...I am breakfasting with Gérard Araud, France’s envoy to Washington DC, at his exquisite mock-Tudor official residence....
...Guy, a leading authority on the Tudor period, uses Elizabeth’s handwritten letters and other rarely exploited primary sources to impressive effect....
...A teenage lesbian has two kids with a caustic gay poet living in a Virginia swamp, then absconds with her pale blonde daughter and passes as black....
...Juxtapositions create a fragmented yet coherent impression of the city: accounts of executions sit beside coronations; Soho’s gay pubs alongside a gaggle of geese in Victoria Park....
...It is nicknamed, not always admiringly, the “People’s Republic of Cambridge” and was the first city in the US to elect an openly gay, black man as mayor....
...In Carl Van Vechten’s double portrait of the choreographer Antony Tudor and the dancer Hugh Laing, the two handsome, urbane men nestle close together, undetectably holding hands behind an accommodating elbow...
...John Guy, author of the acclaimed Tudor England and A Daughter’s Love: Thomas and Margaret More, describes a deep, complicated and symbiotic relationship between Becket and Henry....
...suicide, and her own coming out as gay while in college....
...In an installation of family-style photographs, they capture gay love at its most domestic, intimate and sensual....
...Inclined to the latter as the party of the people, Gabriele becomes a double agent through his links with a gay aristocrat....
...To reach the Portrait Restaurant at the top of London’s National Portrait Gallery, an elegant and very long escalator bears you up through the cool, modern Ondaatje wing to the Tudor rooms....
...No one seems interested in speaking about women bishops or gay priests....
...Kenneth MacMillan’s Elite Syncopations, to Joplin rags, belongs to the seedy-bar genre of Balanchine’s Slaughter on Tenth Avenue or Tudor’s Judgment of Paris....
...So while it was possible to claim Shakespeare was gay, straight or bisexual, a crypto-Catholic or a Protestant or a propagandist for the Tudor regime, for a very long time it remained heretical for Shakespeare...
..., part of the one-act ballet Tudor choreographed in l943 (not being given in full this season, although they are marking Tudor’s centennial with several of his works)....
...that racked England throughout the Tudor period....
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