Social : Great Publicity 11 January 1973 (Family documentary aired) chart Placidus Equal_H.
Work : Published/ Exhibited/ Released 1980 (Wrote for "Interview")
Death:Death by Disease 22 December 2001 at 01:00 AM in Los Angeles (HIV infection and Hepatitis C, age 50) chart Placidus Equal_H.
American gay musician and TV personality, Loud was one of the first gay men to come out on American television in 1973 documentary series, An American Family. He once said, "Television ate my family." He died at age 50 on 22 December 2001 at about 1 AM in Los Angeles according to his mother who gave the information on the public broadcasting system website. He died of liver failure caused by Hepatitis C and HIV infection. The 12-part documentary series focused on the complexities of the modern middle class family life and premiered on 11 January 1973. Ten million viewers watched their real-life drama unfold, and witnessed the marital tensions which ultimately led to divorce, revelation of Lances gay lifestyle and the changing family values of an entire culture. Lance was the eldest son (with four siblings) and arguably the audiences favourite personality in the family. He was gregarious and frank, and his TV appearances in the documentary led him to become a rock and roll musician and later, when the band, The Mumps, disbanded in 1980, a writer and columnist for Andy Warhols "Interview" magazine, "Vanity Fair," "American Film," and other magazines and journals. Loud wanted to be perceived, not as a gay icon, but as "an outsider, a rebel, someone always living on societys edge." He and the family consented to film a follow-up episode in 1983, and, in 2003, the filmmakers released a film, Lance Loud! A Death in an American Family. Link to Wikipedia biography Read less
Loud Lance is a public figure who was born on June 26, 1951 in La Jolla, United States.