THE RELEVANT QUEER: Bruce Voeller, Biologist and Gay Rights Activist

Bruce Voeller as he leans against a tree in New York City, July 6, 1981. Photo Fred W. McDarrah, Getty Images
Bruce Voeller as he leans against a tree in New York City, July 6, 1981. Photo Fred W. McDarrah, Getty Images

“Americans should be free to make their own choice of lifestyles and private habits without being subject to discrimination or prosecution.”

TRQ: Bruce Voeller, Born May 12, 1934

Biologist and gay activist Bruce Raymond Voeller, most widely known for his role in fighting AIDS, was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Reed College in Oregon, in 1956.

He earned a doctorate in developmental biology, biochemistry and genetics after winning a fellowship at Rockefeller University in New York. During his postgraduate studies he met Kytja, his wife, with whom he would have three children. He continued at Rockefeller until he was promoted to the university’s youngest associate professor in 1966. He published several articles and four books.

When he was 29 years old, Voeller acknowledged his homosexuality and came out of the closet. He divorced his wife in 1971, and afterwards had to take his fight for the right to visit his children to the United States Supreme Court. The court’s decision was a landmark decision for gay parents, and influenced Voeller to continue his fight for gay rights.

He went on to help found the Gay Activists Alliance (GAA). However, after many of its members later advocated for an approach around street activism and attracting media attention, Voeller would leave the organization in 1973.

Following he founded the National Gay Task Force (NGTF), which became the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force in 1986. The organization aimed at addressing the lgbtq community’s concerns around discriminatory laws, the psychiatric classification of homosexuality as a mental disorder, and the negative portrayals of homosexuality in the media.

In 1976 Voeller, with the help of the NGTF co-executive director Jean O’Leary, advocated for gay rights to be included in the Democratic Party’s election platform. This effort formed a basis for an alliance with Midge Constanza, a presidential assistant to Jimmy Carter. They worked with the Department of Jusice and Housing and Urban Development, the Immigration and Naturalisation Service to strengthen NGTF’s national reach to impact policy and organise communities.

In 1978 Voeller left the NGTF and moved with his life partner Richard Lucik to California to form the Mariposa Education and Research Foundation, with the intention of studying and informing the public on homosexuality. Early on, Mariposa commissioned the “Gay Liberation” sculpture by George Segal in commemoration of the Stonewall Rebellion’s tenth anniversary. Controversial from the start, elderly Italian Catholics around New York’s Christopher Street objected to gay public art, while there was objection that Segal was heterosexual. Voeller later explained that many gay and lesbian sculptors had declined the project out of concern for their careers.

As AIDS began to reach its height as an epidemic, Voeller began studying the use of condoms and spermicides in presenting sexually transmitted disease. Voeller fought against naming the disease GRID (Gay-Related Immune Deficiency), and suggested AIDS for Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.

He wrote articles and co-edited AIDS and Sex: An Integrated Biomedical and Behavioral Approach (1991) with June M. Reinisch and Michael Gottlieb for the Kinsey Institute Series. Voeller also testified at Congressional hearings on AIDS, and helped organisations fight AIDS at federal, state and local levels.

In 1988 Voeller donated the Mariposa archives to Cornell University, as part of their Human Sexuality Collection.

Voeller died of AIDS-related complications on February 13, 1994, at his home in Topanga, California. He was surrounded by Lucik, his sons Jon and Christopher, his daughter Suzanne Sundheim, and his sister Nancy Petron.

After his partner’s death, Lucik lead Mariposa in commissioning artist Don Bachardy to make portraits of gay and lesbian rights leaders. Portraits were made of Voeller, Phyllis Lyon, Del Martin, Frank Kameny, Barbara Gittings, Troy Perry and Jean O’Leary, among others.

In June 2019, Voeller was one of the inaugural inductees to the National LGBTQ Wall of Honor within the Stonewall National Monument in New York’s Stonewall Inn. The monument is the first U.S. national monument dedicated to LGBTQ rights and history.

Bruce Voeller with Gloria Steinam, Bella Abzug, Midge Costanza, Jean O'Leary, and others at the Costanza Fund Dinner, 1978. Photo National Gay and Lesbian Task Force records, #7301
Bruce Voeller with Gloria Steinam, Bella Abzug, Midge Costanza, Jean O’Leary, and others at the Costanza Fund Dinner, 1978. Photo National Gay and Lesbian Task Force records, #7301
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Bruce Voeller on the cover of Chicago Gay Life, August 14, 1981. Photo Albert N. Williams
Bruce Voeller & partner Bill Bland, circa 1970s. Photo Michael Bedwell collection
Bruce Voeller & partner Bill Bland, circa 1970s. Photo Michael Bedwell collection
Bruce Voeler at a rally for gay rights in Lafayette Park in Washington DC, August 15, 1976. Photo Brandon Wolf
Bruce Voeler at a rally for gay rights in Lafayette Park in Washington DC, August 15, 1976. Photo Brandon Wolf
Dr. Bruce Voeller with Danny kofoed and Albert Williams at the Chicago GayLife office on Huron Street in the summer of 1981. Photo Stephen Kulieke
Dr. Bruce Voeller with Danny kofoed and Albert Williams at the Chicago GayLife office on Huron Street in the summer of 1981. Photo Stephen Kulieke
Midge Costanza, Jean O'Leary, and Bruce Voeller at the Costanze Fund Dinner, 1978. Photo National Gay and Lesbian Task Force records, #7301. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library
Midge Costanza, Jean O’Leary, and Bruce Voeller at the Costanze Fund Dinner, 1978. Photo National Gay and Lesbian Task Force records, #7301. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library
Charlie Brydon, Jean O’Leary, and Bruce Voeller, Frank Kameny, Myra Riddell, George Raya leaving the White House after meeting with Midge Costanza, 1977. Photo Bill Bland, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force records, #7301
Charlie Brydon, Jean O’Leary, and Bruce Voeller, Frank Kameny, Myra Riddell, George Raya leaving the White House after meeting with Midge Costanza, 1977. Photo Bill Bland, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force records, #7301
Bruce Voeller as he leans against a tree in New York City, July 6, 1981. Photo Fred W. McDarrah, Getty Images
Bruce Voeller as he leans against a tree in New York City, July 6, 1981. Photo Fred W. McDarrah, Getty Images

About the Authors

Troy Wise is currently a PhD student at UAL Central St Martins and teaches fashion and graphic design at London College of Contemporary Arts. His background is in marketing and is founder and co-editor of Image Amplified. He lives in, and is continually fascinated by, the city of London.

Rick Guzman earned his most recent MA at UAL Central St Martins in Applied Imagination in the Creative Industries. He currently holds two MA’s and an MBA in the New Media, Journalism and International Business fields. Co-editor at Image Amplified since its start, he lives in London, is fascinated by history and is motivated by continuing to learn and explore.

Sources:

GLBTQ Archive

LA Times

LGBT History Month

Metro

NY Times

Reed Magazine

SF Bay Times

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