Greg Malone subsequently campaigned for HIV and AIDS education in Sexton's memory. Tommy's sister, filmmaker
Mary Sexton, produced a documentary film about him,
Tommy…A Family Portrait, in 2001. Along with Malone and their
CODCO co-star
Andy Jones, Sexton was a posthumous recipient of the
Earle Grey Award, the lifetime achievement award of Canadian television's
Gemini Awards, in 2002. The Tommy Sexton Centre, a new assisted housing complex for people living with HIV and AIDS, was opened in St. John's in 2006. In 2009, several
drag queens in the city put together "Ravishing in Red", a tribute show to Sexton, as a fundraiser for the Sexton Centre. One performer, Betty "Boo" Kakke, singled him out as Newfoundland's "clown prince". Sara Sexton was announced as an inductee to the
Order of Newfoundland and Labrador in 2013, and was inducted in February 2014. Sara Sexton died on February 28, 2020; in 2021, Mary Sexton and her son
Nik Sexton released
Me, Mom & COVID, a documentary film about Sara's life and death of COVID-19. == References ==