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Ed Wood, Jr. (October 10, 1924 – December 10, 1978)
Plan 9 From Outer Space is a film that’s so bad it’s good, and its quirky style is the result of the determined creativity of director Ed Wood. Even the death of its star, Bela Lugosi, did not prevent Wood from completing the picture—using his wife’s chiropractor as a stand-in for Lugosi’s remaining scenes. Wood was a cross-dresser, notorious for wearing his girlfriends’ angora sweaters while on the job. He claimed that as a Marine in World War II, he had participated in the Battle of Guadalcanal while secretly wearing a brassiere and panties beneath his uniform. His 1953 film Glen or Glenda was based on the life of transsexual Christine Jorgensen.
Wood was depicted as basically a hetero transvestite in the brilliant eponymous motion picture, which was directed by Tim Burton and starred Johnny Depp as Wood. Wood’s actual sexual orientation was considerably more ambiguous, with at least one biographer who knew him (Jean Marie Stine) claiming he had “homosexual tendencies.”
Stern, Keith (2009-09-01). Queers in History: The Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Historical Gays, Lesbians and Bisexuals (Kindle Locations 12762-12770). Perseus Books Group. Kindle Edition.
( Further Readings )
Henry Dixon Cowell was an innovative proponent of Modernist theory in music and one of the most influential composers of the twentieth century. He taught at the New School for Social Research (1928-1963) and developed techniques of “tone clusters,” where the fist or palm is used to hit several keys at once, and percussing directly on piano strings. He wrote some of the first “aleatory” works, where an element of chance enters into each performance. 
Jim Hulick, who coached Kristi Yamaguchi and Rudi Galindo to the national championship in pairs figure skating, died of AIDS-related cancer at 38 on December 10, 1989, in a West Covina hospital.
Mark Allan Takano (born December 10, 1960) is a Japanese American teacher and politician from California. A Democrat, Takano has served on the Riverside Community College Board of Trustees since 1990.
Patrick Kelly was a dancer and dance writer. A member of the corps de ballet of companies in Portland, San Francisco, and Cleveland. He died at Cabrini Medical Center in Manhattan on December 10, 1993. He was 40 and lived in Manhattan.
Philipp C. Jung was a set designer for theater, opera and dance productions, best known for Broadway's Eastern Standard, Mastergate, and Closer Than Ever. He died on December 10, 1992, at age 43.
Thomas Lee "Tommy" Kirk (born December 10, 1941) is a former American actor, and later a businessman.
William Armstrong Percy III (born December 10, 1933) is an American professor, historian, encyclopedist, and gay activist. He taught from 1968 at the University of Massachusetts Boston, and started publishing in gay studies in 1985.
Sometime you need serious, sometime you need playful… Poppy’s Pleasure is a pretty little story. Poppy is a cuteness overloaded character who is completely unaware of the danger he is for other men… not cause “he” is dangerous, but cause he can provoke an overdose of prettiness to the chosen companion. And I’m totally saying this with a positive perspective, it’s not easy to write a character like this one without falling into ridiculousness, but Stormy Glenn managed it without any stumble (maybe that is due to her experience with this character type).
Here is the Bestsellers List on Amazon I'm referring to for the challenge: