How Morris Kight Helped Build the Modern LGBTQ Rights Movement
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This week on Duke’s Download, I’m joined by writer and former TV producer Mary Ann Cherry, author of Morris Kight: Humanist, Liberationist, Fantabulous — a biography that took more than a decade to write and was created with Morris’s personal blessing.
Mary Ann didn’t just research Morris Kight — she knew him. Their ten-year friendship shaped this book, and her reporting took her deep into the untold parts of his life, including multiple trips to Texas to interview his ex-wife after she had a stroke, uncovering the double lives and hidden chapters that history almost lost.
So who was Morris Kight?
Before he became a leader in the Gay Liberation Front in Los Angeles after Stonewall, Morris was a Depression-era Texas kid with a fierce moral compass. As a young man, he helped women in a brothel access medical care — an early sign of the justice-driven activism that would define his life.
From there, we trace how that same instinct led him to:
- Organize underground STD treatment when queer people were denied care
- Build housing networks and bail funds during LAPD entrapment
- Help launch early Los Angeles Pride organizing
- Lead bold boycotts like Coors and Barney’s Beanery
- Use street theater and “fantabulous” tactics to demand visibility
Morris believed activism wasn’t just about protest — it was about people. One-on-one conversations. Coalition building. Working with unlikely allies. Sometimes even working with your enemies.
We talk about what made his strategy different — and why his approach to money, compromise, incremental progress, and resisting purity tests feels incredibly relevant right now.
We also dig into:
- Post‑Stonewall organizing in Los Angeles
- Early gay rights activism before marriage equality
- Coalition building across movements
- The loneliness of long-term activism
- AIDS-era unity and unexpected allies
- Why visibility was revolutionary
- Lessons modern LGBTQ activists can learn from Morris Kight
This conversation is a reminder that the LGBTQ rights movement didn’t happen by accident. It happened because people like Morris Kight were willing to be bold, strategic, and yes — sometimes “fantabulous.”
And maybe most importantly: they were willing to stay in the fight.
Click below to order Morris Kight: Humanist, Liberationist, Fantabulist NOW
https://feralhouse.com/morris-kight/
https://maryanncherrywriter.com/
https://www.morriskight.com/
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