Celebrating 45 Years! Issue 3 Volume 47
Seattle Opera’s Il Trovatore
So Long, Dearie! CAROL CHANNING SEC 2 PG 1 1921-2019
SEC 2 PG 1
Seattle Gay News
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Seattle-born Carol Channing dies at age 97
New governors order protections for LGBT employees
Executive orders restore protections canceled by previous Republican governors
Carol Channing – Photo by BEI / REX / Shutterstock
by Tim Peter SGN Contributing Writer Broadway star and LGBTQ icon Carol Channing died Tuesday, January 15, at age 97, less than a month from her 98th birthday. She won a Tony Lifetime Achievement Award
and was most known for her Broadway roles in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1949) and Hello, Dolly! (1964), in which she won the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical. As a film actress, she won the Golden Globe
see CAROL CHANNING page 3
Winning universal health care
Federal, state, local legislation to debut at January 26 forum
Photo by Jim Watson / AFP / Getty Images
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer One of the consequences of “the blue wave” that swept the country is renewed potential for significant health care legislation leading to a universal single-payer system.
Federal, state, and local legislation in that direction will be explained at a forum on Saturday, January 26, from 9:45 to 11:30 a.m., at El Centro de la Raza, Beacon Avenue S. and S. Lander Street.
see FORUM page 4
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine – Photo by AP
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer Two newly inaugurated state governors – one Democrat and one Republican – signed executive orders January 14, protecting their LGBT state employees from discrimination.
Kansas Gov. Laura Kelly – Photo by AP
Two other Democratic governors moved to protect LGBT workers after their inaugurations the previous week. Democrat Laura Kelly of Kansas and Republican Mike DeWine of Ohio signed
see NEW GOVS page 5
Fourth same-sex surviving spouse denied survivor’s benefits Lambda Legal sues Social Security Administration
Frederick Colosimo (r) and his late husband Harvey – Photo courtesy of Lambda Legal
CHARLOTTE, NC (January 17, 2019) – Lambda Legal today filed a motion on behalf of a 75-year-old gay man arguing that the Social Security Administration’s denial of spousal survivor’s benefits to him, on the grounds that he was not married for long enough – despite discriminatory marriage
laws that prevented him from marrying earlier – is unconstitutional. The lawsuit filed on behalf of Frederick Colosimo, who was in a 43-year committed relationship with his husband, in the US District Court
see WIDOWER page 5