Lance Loud

Lance Loud (June 26, 1951 - December 22, 2001) was an openly gay columnist probably best known for his role in An American Family, perhaps the first reality show (it was broadcast in the U.S. on PBS in 1973, drawing 10 million viewers and causing considerable controversy at the time). The show was based in Santa Barbara, California; Lance moved to New York City to live, where he frequented various clubs and drag shows. After the series ended, he went on the Dick Cavett Show to say that he thought the filmmakers had edited the series to make him seem obnoxious and grating. In New York he revived his band called The Mumps, which played at CBGB but never signed a contract with a recording company, and he developed an addiction to crystal meth which lasted for over 20 years. Loud became a columnist for various magazines, including The Advocate, Details, Interview, and Creem. At age 50, Lance entered a hospice suffering from HIV and Hepatitis C. The film crew had revisited him for the program American Family Revisited, shown in 1983; on realizing he was dying, Lance called the film crew back again, expressing dissatisfaction with how the series ended and how various people were portrayed in it. He died in December 2001. The documentary of his final days, A Death in An American Family, was shown on PBS in January 2003. Quotations
(In his last few days, commenting about injecting crystal meth for 20 years): "That's not very smart."
Loud, Lance Loud, Lance Loud, Lance Loud, Lance

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
surf rock
loincloth
porto alegre
5145 pholus
teergrube
holland tunnel
simulated annealing
university of mnster
gppingen
woldemar voigt
stoewer
backward message
the discovery of america by christopher columbus
tick
centaur (planetoid)
mecklenburgisch
foreign relations of so tom and prncipe
capricorn one
northern low saxon language
hamburgisch
murderball
brandenburgisch
datenschlag
drag coefficient
an american family
afterburner (disambiguation)
joe doyle
dumbo
civilization (board game)
highlife
piedmont blues
new york blues
crazy climber
the daily telegraph (australia)
edward hardwicke
gerd mller
quakenet
klient
ray transfer matrix analysis
pediculosis
hand, foot and mouth disease
rubella
bayern munich
congenital rubella syndrome