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Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame welcomes 2013 inductees

Wed. November 13, 2013

Chicago, IL - Fourteen individuals and two organizations were inducted Nov. 12 into the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame, the country's only known government-sponsored hall of fame that honors members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities.



The chosen nominees, selected by a committee composed of former inductees, were inducted at the Hall of Fame's annual ceremony Nov. 12, at the Chicago History Museum, 1601 N. Clark St.

Beginning with the first ceremony in 1991, former Mayor Richard M. Daley personally participated in the Hall of Fame's induction ceremonies. Mayor Rahm Emanuel has continued the tradition, but he did not make this year's event.  

Those honored Nov. 12, 2013 were:

"Individual" Category



Gaylon B. Alcaraz, 42, for almost 20 years of work on behalf of women's reproductive freedom, the interests of African American lesbian and bisexual women, adolescent health, and other social concerns. She was a founder ofAffinity Community Services, a South Side social-justice group, and is the Chicago Abortion Fund's executive director.

James L. Alexander, 63, for his contributions to Chicago cultural and other nonprofit institutions, including LGBT- and HIV/AIDS-related organizations, through board service, advice, and leadership and through directing philanthropic support. He is co-trustee of The Elizabeth Morse Charitable Trust and the Elizabeth Morse Genius Charitable Trust.



James L. Bennett, 48, for his leadership in the nonprofit community and a career as a comedic writer and performer.  He has fought for social justice in the United Methodist Church and through other groups.   He has written and performed in 14 sketch- comedy revues and appears and emcees at radio and staged events.  He is the Midwest regional director for Lambda Legal.

Jorge Cestou, 41, for 16 years of social-service activism, organizing, and leadership in LGBT Latina/o and HIV/AIDS organizations locally and nationally, as well as in the Chicago leather community. He is director of programs and services for Vida/SIDA, a Latina/o AIDS  service organization in Chicago.

Rocco J. Claps, 52, for public service in political and government roles as an openly gay man and for advancing LGBT rights goals. He began on Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan's staff in 1987, worked in federal and Democratic National Committee positions during the Clinton administration, and since 2003 has been director of the Illinois Department of Human Rights.

Rudolph Johnson, Jr. (1947–2006), for 23 years as a well-known and well-regarded North Halsted Street bar owner who led the Northalsted Merchants Association and other neighborhood groups, instituted and promoted local festivals, sponsored sports leagues and events, and lent and recruited support for a wide array of LGBT nonprofit organizations and pro-LGBT politicians.

Lee A. Newell II, 64, for his community service in Chicago from 1976 to 2001. He led the financial revival and growth of Gay Horizons (an early precursor of today's Center on Halsted); documented local events, assembling what is now a Chicago History Museum collection of some 5,000 photos; led the city's first LGBT PAC; and was an officer in neighborhood groups.

Paté, 55, for her community involvement since 1986 as a bartender in numerous venues, where she has built a loyal customer base, won mixology awards, and volunteered and raised funds for numerous organizations, while also devoting countless hours to organizations rescuing and rehoming lost, neglected, and discarded pet animals, both locally and after Hurricane Katrina.

Andrew Patner, 53, for more than three decades as a journalist, editor, biographer, lecturer, teacher, and internationally active arts critic and interviewer in print and electronic media, besides media advocacy since 1979 for LGBT and HIV/AIDS concerns. A lifelong Chicagoan, he is critic-at-large for WFMT Fine Arts Radio and contributing critic to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Laura Ricketts, 46, for generous donor support and board service to LGBT and non-LGBT organizations, including Lambda Legal, Housing Opportunities for Women, GayCo Productions, Opportunity Education, and Democratic Party entities. She has backed ecotourism and, as a part owner of the Chicago Cubs, is the first openly LGBT owner of a Major League Baseball team.

Burr Tillstrom (1917–1985), a native Chicagoan, for his contributions to the early days of television and in particular for his creation of unforgettable puppet characters such as Kukla and Ollie. He enriched the lives of children and adults through the Kukla, Fran and Ollie show with co-host Fran Allison, as well as through other performances over five decades beginning in 1936.

David Zak, 58, for 31 years of producing and directing Chicago and LGBT theater as well as developing new stage and screen plays, especially through the former Bailiwick Repertory's Pride Series and now through Pride Films and Plays. He has won numerous awards, has directed in cities around the world, and has helped to enrich LGBT lives and advance social equality.

"Organization" Category

Lambda Legal, for the 20 years of groundbreaking, precedent-setting work done by its Midwest Regional Office since its 1993 establishment in Chicago, involving such local issues as equal parade participation, HIV and fertility-treatment insurance coverage, real-estate discrimination, adoption rights, and student organizing rights, plus participation in critical national litigation.

POW-WOW (once formally known as Performers or Writers for Women on Women's Issues, Inc.), for 10 years of offering an open and affirming space for women, especially those of color, to create and present artistic performances and writing, as well as helping women and girls re-entering society to develop artistic careers and providing socially relevant, arts-based literacy programs.

"Friend of the Community" Category

Neil Steinberg, 53, for 26 years as a Chicago Sun-Times writer or columnist who has repeatedly portrayed LGBT lives and social-justice issues while insightfully commenting on them. His work has contributed to better public understanding and has often been produced when issues were more unpopular than now, such as human-rights laws in the 1980s and marriage rights in 1996.

Brenda Webb, 60, executive director of Chicago Filmmakers, for her 32 years of perseverance as organizer of Reeling, the Chicago LGBT international film festival. Reeling is said to be the world's second-oldest such festival and has become a major cultural event for Chicago's LGBT communities and the city's general arts and culture scene.

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