LOS ANGELES (AP) — Richard Adams, who used
both the altar and the courtroom to help begin the push for gay marriage four
decades before it reached the center of the national consciousness, has died,
his attorney said Sunday.
After a brief illness, Adams died Dec. 17
at age 65 in the Hollywood home he shared with Tony Sullivan, his partner of 43 years,
attorney Lavi
Soloway told The Associated Press.
Adams and Sullivan met at a Los Angeles gay bar
called "The Closet" in 1971, but their life and relationship would soon be on
display for a worldwide audience.
They were granted a marriage license in
1975, but for years fought in vain to see it recognized by governments and a
population for whom the idea of two married men was still strange and foreign.
They were subjected to anti-gay slurs even from government agencies.
The couple's public life began when they
heard about a county clerk in Boulder, Colo., named Clela Rorex, a pioneer in her own right who
took the unprecedented step of giving marriage licenses to gay couples after
learning from the district attorney's office that nothing in Colorado law
expressly forbade it.
Among the first six couples to take advantage were Adams and Sullivan, who traveled to Colorado, had a ceremony at the First Unitarian Church of Denver and were granted a license from Rorex, before the state's attorney general ordered her to stop giving them to gay couples. Rorex remained in contact with Adams throughout his life.
Adams and Sullivan's primary motivation in marrying was to get permanent U.S. residency status for Sullivan, an Australian, and they promptly put in an application with what was then called the Immigration and Naturalization Service.
They received a one-sentence denial from INS that was stunning in its bluntness.
"You have failed to establish that a bona fide marital relationship can exist between two faggots," the letter said.
The INS issued a follow-up response that removed the offending language but gave no ground in its thinking.
Adams' attempt to have that decision overturned was the first federal lawsuit seeking gay marriage recognition, according to the Advocate magazine and the Los Angeles Times, the first media outlets to report his death.
He took the INS to court in 1979, and later filed a separate lawsuit on the constitutionality of denying gays the right to marry.
His position appeared strong. Gay couples always thought they would have to sue for the right to marry in the first place, but Adams was defending a marriage he had been officially granted.
Despite reaching the highest federal appeals courts, he was met only with rejections.
The couple did became a hot topic, especially as Sullivan's deportation became likely in the mid-1980s, and they appeared on the "Today" show and "The Phil Donahue Show," giving some of the first national attention to gay marriage when it was considered an oddity even by future supporters.
Adams' application for Australian residency
was also denied, so the couple spent a year in Europe before returning to the
United States and leading a low-profile life in Los Angeles.
They're the subject of an upcoming documentary, "Limited Partnership." And just two days before Adams' death they were working with Soloway on a challenge to the federal Defense of Marriage Act, one of two gay-marriage laws the U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear in its upcoming term.
"After 40 years of fighting he missed the outcome at the Supreme Court," Soloway said, "but he felt optimistic."
And he got to see what he deemed a major
victory for his particular cause, gay couples and immigration, in October when
the Obama Administration issued written policy guidelines saying same-sex
couples in long-term partnerships "rise to the level of a 'family relationship'"
when it comes to deportation.
"You can draw a straight line from Tony and
Richard's efforts in the 1970s to that piece of paper in 2012," Soloway
said.
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