•
Forman Brown (born in Otsego), one of the world's leaders in puppet theatre in his day, as well as an important early gay novelist •
Cookie Buffet (born in Ann Arbor), drag queen, gay rights activist •
David Burtka (born in Dearborn), actor and chef •
Lynn Conway, computer scientist and trans activist •
James K. Dressel, state representative in the
Michigan legislature in the late 1970s and early 1980s •
Ruth Ellis, activist and inspiration for
Ruth Ellis Center •
Feloni, rapper •
Marilyn Frye, feminist theorist, teaches feminist philosophy, metaphysics, and philosophy of language at Michigan State University since 1974 •
LZ Granderson (born in Detroit), journalist and commentator •
David M. Halperin, scholar •
Quentin Harris (born in Detroit), house music producer, remixer and DJ •
James Leo Herlihy (born in Detroit), novelist, playwright and actor. •
Holly Hughes, (born in Saginaw), performance artist •
Chris Kolb (born in Ann Arbor), former member of the Michigan State House of Representatives for the 53rd district •
Lisa Kron (born in Ann Arbor), actress, playwright. •
Kathy Kozachenko, won a seat on the Ann Arbor City Council in 1972, first openly gay or lesbian candidate to run successfully for political office in the United States •
Lawrence La Fountain-Stokes, author, scholar, and performer •
W. Dorr Legg, trained as a landscape architect at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, one of the founders of the United States gay rights movement •
Holly Miranda, singer-songwriter and musician •
Peter McWilliams (born in Allen Park), writer and self-publisher of best-selling self-help books •
Gary Miller, conductor, graduated from University of Michigan with a Master of Music in choral conducting •
Jeffrey Montgomery (born in Detroit), activist and co-founder of Triangle Foundation (now
Equality Michigan) •
Steven Piziks, novelist •
Charles Pugh (born in Detroit), television journalist, radio personality and politician best known for his work at WJBK in Detroit from 1999 to 2009, elected council president of Detroit City Council in 2009 •
Alma Routsong, poet •
Gayle Rubin, scholar •
Nate Silver (born East Lansing), statistician and writer who analyzes in-game baseball activity and elections •
Jon Stryker, architect, philanthropist and activist for social and environmental causes •
Jim Toy, co-author of the first official "Lesbian-Gay Pride Week Proclamation" in U.S. history (in Ann Arbor), founded the
Spectrum Center at the University of Michigan ==See also==