#1 Guin Turner. #2 Glenn Close, Col. Margarethe Cammermeyer ( Ret. ) and National Center for Lesbian Rights Executive Director Kate Kendell, Esq. at NCLR's 28th Anniversary Gala at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, May 14. #3 Guin Turner and NCLR Executive director Kate Kendell. #4 Staff Attorney Lena Ayoub ( center ) with NCLR asylum clients, recipients of the National Center for Lesbian Rights 2005 Justice Award. Photos by Lynnly Labovitz and Jan E. Watson
A festive, energized, sell-out crowd of 2,400 lesbians and their supporters packed San Francisco's Moscone Center to celebrate the National Center for Lesbian Rights' 28 years of legal advocacy at its annual gala. The culmination of the evening was the awards ceremony honoring celebrities and courageous individuals who have dedicated their time, energy and talent to creating a world in which lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people can live freely, without fear of discrimination or prejudice:
— Spirit Award: Glenn Close ( presented by Col. Margarethe 'Grethe' Cammermeyer ( Ret. )
— Community Empowerment Award: Guinevere Turner ( presented by queer film expert Jenni Olson )
— Equality Champion Award: San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera ( presented by Shannon Minter, NCLR Legal Director )
— Voice and Visibility Award: Dallas County Sheriff Lupe Valdez ( presented by San Francisco Deputy Police Chief Mindy Pengel )
— Justice Award: NCLR Asylum Clients Shinegerel, Vanessa, Luis, Mariella and Edit ( presented by NCLR Board Member Betsy Allen and NCLR Asylum Project staff Noemi Calonje and Lena Ayoub )
NCLR paid special tribute to Glenn Close for her decision to play Col. Margarethe Cammermeyer, who was discharged from the military for being a lesbian, in the 1995 award-winning film Serving in Silence. Col. Cammermeyer praised Glenn Close as an extraordinary woman who brought visibility and recognition to gay and lesbian service members, 10,000 of whom have been discharged since 1993. She said, 'Glenn Close, at a very risky time in America, decided to play an ostracized colonel who was challenging the military, which one did not do. She took on that challenge and became our voice.'
Accepting the Spirit Award, Glenn Close said, 'I take it humbly and with great honor. You are a group of extraordinary human beings who have tapped the world on the shoulder and said, in the words of one of my most favorite characters ( from the 1987 film Fatal Attraction ) , 'I will not be ignored!''
The enthusiastic crowd cheered as Kate Kendell, NCLR's Executive Director, took the stage. 'It is clear to me that our work has never been more transformative, or more important,' she said.