Mark Segal has established a reputation as the dean of American gay journalism over the past five decades. From the Stonewall demonstrations in 1969 to founding the Philadelphia Gay News in 1975, along with his more recent forays into TV and politics, his proven commitment as a tireless LGBT advocate has made him a force to be reckoned with. Respected by his peers for pioneering the idea of local LGBT newspapers, he is one of the founders and former president of both the National Gay Press Association and the National Gay Newspaper Guild. Segal was recently inducted into the National Lesbian & Gay Journalist Association's Hall of Fame and was appointed a member of the Comcast/NBCUniversal Joint Diversity Board, where he advises the entertainment giant on LGBT issues. He is also president of the dmhFund, though which he builds affordable LGBT-friendly housing for seniors. He lives in Philadelphia.
The reader can clearly see how Segal's fearless determination,
cheerful tenacity, and refusal to attack his opponents made him a
power broker in Philadelphia and a leading advocate on the national
level. Segal fills his book with worthy stories . . . funny
anecdotes and heart.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Activist Mark Segal, who was present at Stonewall and later went on
to found the Philadelphia Gay News was a featured judge at Miss'd
America and the recipient of a lifetime achievement award the night
of the pageant. In his new memoir, And Then I Danced: Traveling the
Road to LGBT Equality, he writes about how he was kicked off a
television show in the 1970s called Summertime on the Pier because
he was dancing with another man, but four decades later, he cut a
rug with his husband Jason Villemez while the Marine Corps Band
played Barbra Streisand at the White House's first ever Gay Pride
reception hosted by President Obama.-- "Huffington Post"
Segal's book has been described as part autobiography, part history
lesson. He grounds the history with a moving glimpse into the lives
of his struggling but dignified, and, in their own modest way,
heroic parents. The historical sections recount Segal's clever
interventions to save America from its addiction to hate, and to
empower strait and gay allies who were ready and eager to help but
were just waiting for an opening . . . Time and again, Segal found
a way to provide that opening in the vast wall of silence.
-- "Friends Journal"
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