Vito Russo(1946-1990)
- Writer
- Additional Crew
- Actor
Vito Russo was involved with many important projects in the early
history of the gay and lesbian movement, and he was there fighting for
change until his death from complications caused by AIDS in 1990 at the
age of 44. A New York native, Russo was one of the earliest activists
to study the media's impact on our lives and recognize that media
representation partially determines how lesbians and gays are treated.
Russo's work in media arose from his love of films. In the early
1970's, he organized screenings of camp classics at New York's
Firehouse for the Gay Activist Alliance. Those screenings grew into
lectures, which grew further into articles that appeared in The
Advocate, Rolling Stone and The Village Voice. Hethen assembled his
research and work into the book The Celluloid Closet: Homosexuality In
the Movies, a highly acclaimed survey of how gay men and lesbians have
been portrayed in film. Published in 1981 and later revised in 1987,
this landmark text was political, scholarly and entertaining. Russo was
also a street activist, adding his voice to debates and controversy. He
was a co- founder of ACT-UP and, when furor arose over how the NY Post
was covering the AIDS crisis, he was there for the founding of an
organization aimed at holding the media accountable for its homophobia,
The Gay and Lesbian Anti-Defamation League, which later became GLAAD.
Russo also made a panel for the AIDS quilt memorializing his companion,
Jeffrey Sevick, which was featured in the film "Common Threads." Russo
is survived by his parents, Angelo and Angelina, and his brother,
Charles.