Bisexual Women Videos

Bisexual Women Videos




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Bisexual Women Videos
This teen gun control activist doesn't just have pride. She makes us proud. 
Before founding the March for Our Lives, the bisexual advocate was the president of her GSA at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. Known for her bold buzz cut, she says it wasn't related to her queer identity, but to the Florida heat.
"People asked me, 'Are you taking a feminist stand?' No, I wasn't. It's Florida. Hair is just an extra sweater I’m forced to wear," González recalled to thr Sun Sentinel . "I even made a PowerPoint presentation to convince my parents to let me shave my head, and it worked."
However, that didn't stop Leslie Gibson, a Republican candidate for the Maine House of Representatives, from calling her a "skinhead lesbian." His homophobia (and bi erasure) didn't do him any good. He was running unopposed, but Republican former state Sen. Thomas Martin Jr. jumped into the race, along with Eryn Gilchrist on the Democratice side, and they denounced Gibson's remarks.
A few days later, Gibson, a longtime National Rifle Association member, dropped out of the race.
Not only has this bi singer-songwriter brought needed visibility to the music industry, but Ashley Nicolette Frangipane (Halsey) has penned some of the greatest bisexual anthems.
Halsey, who lovingly calls herself tri-bi, referring to her bisexual, biracial, and bipolar identities, sings openly about struggles she's had with both male and female partners in Bad at Love. She's has collaborated with Lauren Jauregui, the bisexual bandmate in Fifth Harmony, on "Strangers. " Both have become staples of representation for the bi community.
Refusing to erase her bi identity, Halsey has created two music video cuts of her first hit, Ghost – one that features her in a relationship with a man and another with a woman.
An apologetic advocate, Halsey has stood up against sexual assault, delivering a poem at the Women's March in 2018 that went viral. When anti-LGBTQ protesters crashed her concerts, Halsey tweeted out the snarky response "I feel like I’ve done enough good in the world that God’s gonna forgive me for eating some p*ssy.”
The Westworld actress came out as bisexual on Twitter in 2012, and she's been an outspoken champion for the community ever since. 
In 2017, Wood received the Human Rights Campaign's Visibility Award. "I thought women were beautiful," she said in her acceptance speech . "But because I was born that way I never once stopped to think that was strange or anything to fear...I also thought that men were beautiful."
Wood has specifically addressed false stereotypes bisexuals face. 
“I think because we’re usually erased, people just don’t have the information,” she told Motto . “There ae so many negative connotations with that label. I understand the argument about labels and the desire to do away with them altogether. I think that’s a great idea. But before that, we have to give people a chance to identify with somebody or a group in some way. That helped me.”
The actress turned activist certainly has made her mark on the bisexual community.
The Emmy-winner had two children with schoolteacher Danny Mozes, and one of them is transgender. But later she began to date education activist Christine Marinoni, and they eventually married. They have a child together, and they attend the LGBTQ synagogue Congregation Beit Simchat Torah.
 "I don't really feel I've changed. I'd been with men all my life, and I'd never fallen in love with a woman. But when I did, it didn't seem so strange. I'm just a woman in love with another woman," Nixon explained to The Telegraph in 2008. In 2012 she identified herself as bisexual. 
After portraying a headstrong and powerful woman on Sex and the City, Nixon went on to run for governor of New York. During the race, former New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn, a lesbian herself, referred to Nixon as "an unqualified lesbian." But Nixon took the label in stride.
The Arizonan member of the U.S. House is the first openly bisexual person to be elected to Congress. However, she's just getting started.
This year she won the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate from Arizona, becoming the first out bisexual person to win a major party nomination for that body.
"We're simply people like everyone else who want and deserve respect," Sinema declared after a Republican colleague made demeaning remarks toward the LGBTQ community. When reporters pressed her for her sexuality, Sinema replied, "Duh, I'm bisexual."
Not just a musician but also an outspoken figure who challenged how Americans view race, gender, and sexual orientation, Nina Simone is a bisexual icon.
After leaving her husband, a white beatnik named Don Ross, Simone moved to New York City in 1959, befriending James Baldwin, Langston Hughes, and Lorraine Hansberry, who soon became her mentor. In Harlem, she spent her days with gay and bisexual artists who focused on blackness and African independence. At the time, she partook in numerous same-sex affairs. However, that came to an end when she married former New York police detective Andrew Stroud, who physically and sexually abused her while working as her manager. 
Although she died in 2003, her music lives on, sampled in songs by Lil Wayne, 50 Cent, the Roots, Dr. Dre, Common, Talib Kweli, Timbaland, Brother Ali, Prodigy, and Jay-Z.
A YouTuber and a New York Times best-selling author, Dunn is one of the most necessary bisexual figures in new media.
A voice for both bisexuals and polyamorous individuals, Dunn has never been afraid to speak up and out, breaking down slut-shaming of queer women with comedy and grace.
“I say bisexual, but then people say, 'No you mean pansexual,' and then I say, 'Fine, queer./ Then people say, 'Queer is a slur.' So who knows?" Dunn told Autostraddle in 2016. "The queer people — everyone stays friends. But I’ve also never had the bad experiences with queer people that I’ve had with cis men, so … take from that what you will, world."
Sara Ramirez came out as bisexual in 2016 after playing bisexual character Callie Torres on Grey’s Anatomy for a decade. Since then, she's has become one of the most notable bisexual activists in Hollywood and has continued to play bisexual as Kat Sandoval on Madam Secretary .
A graduate of Julliard, the Tony winner was honored with the Ally for Equality Award by the Human Rights Campaign in 2015.
Married to Ryan DeBolt, Ramirez has worked hard to stand for bisexual visibility through philanthropy. As a member of the True Colors Fund board of directors and task force, she’s combated homelessness among LGBTQ youth. She also lends her voice to the Bisexual Organizing Project, National Day Labor Organizing Network, and Mujeres de Maiz.
Frida Kahlo is one of the most impactful yet underacknowledged bisexuals in history.
While married to fellow artist Diego Rivera, Kahlo was openly bi and had several extramarital affairs. Her lovers included ranchera singer Chavela Vargas and actress Dolores del Río. But it was dancer and international sensation Josephine Baker who won her heart.
After separating from Rivera in 1939, Kahlo traveled to Paris for an exhibition of her paintings. It’s rumored that there she met Baker at a nightclub. The two, who had both suffered multiple miscarriages, sought unusual ways to become mothers. Kahlo would portray her unborn child through her art, while Baker adopted 12 children. The two artists were politically engaged and outspoken activists; Kahlo offered refuge to ousted Soviet leader Leon Trotsky, and Baker became a French spy during World War II and also fought for black civil rights.
Named one of the most influential LGBTQ people in media by The Advocate in 2017, Gay has never shied away from the most difficult issues, including her sexuality.
Originally, the writer came out as a lesbian, but she later said she's always felt she was bi.
"When I came out I knew it wasn't the whole truth. I knew that I was also still attracted to men, but I was so scared of men that I just thought, OK, I'm just going to find some safe harbor here, and so I wanted to be the best lesbian I could so that maybe that would make my attraction to men go away," Gay told NPR . "No community has been more welcoming to me, and when I needed community the most, [that] community was there for me."
"It was like discovering water for the first time, discovering clean air for the first time — to be seen and to be appreciated and to be thought of as sexy and beautiful, it was just invaluable, and I will never, ever forget the ways in which I was embraced by my community as I came out," she concluded.
Although she was outed by the publication Spin when she was just 21, Brownstein has grown to be proud of her bisexuality. 
Spin detailed that one of her songs from her Sleater-Kinney days was about her romantic relationship with female band mate Corin Tucker, changing Brownstein's life forever. "I hadn't seen the article, and I got a phone call. My dad called me and was like, 'The Spin article's out. Um, do you want to let me know what's going on?' The ground was pulled out from underneath me … my dad did not know that Corin and I had ever dated, or that I even dated girls," she explained .
In 2010, Brownstein identified herself as bisexual, saying  "It's weird because no one's actually ever asked me. People just always assume, like, you're this or that. It's like, OK. I'm bisexual. Just ask ."
Since then, the actress has played gay on Transparent. 
Comedian Margaret Cho was out as bisexual long before the term was even in most people's lexicon.
Boldly taking on race and sexuality in her comedy, Cho has been on the cover of many gay magazines.
In 2004, Cho started Love Is Love , a website that promoted marriage equality. That year she was invited to speak at the Democratic National Convention but was disinvited from speaking because people thought her comments might be too controversial. But her activism did not end there. In 2007, she joined the True Colors Tour, where she performed with Cyndi Lauper and the Indigo Girls to raise money for the Human Rights Campaign, PFLAG, and the Matthew Shepard Foundation.
"I don’t know if using bisexual is right because that indicates that there’s only two genders, and I don’t believe that. I’ve been with people all across the spectrum of gender and who have all kinds of different expressions of gender, so it’s so hard to say. Maybe pansexual is technically the more correct term but I like bisexual because it’s kind of '70s," Cho told HuffPost in 2018.

Who knows if it's the repression, the fetish costumes that include corsets and hosiery, or simply the chance to tell a story of early forbidden love, but Hollywood and plenty of independent producers love to set stories about queer women in the past. While queer women in bodices have proliferated of late in Ammonite, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, and The Favourite, some period pieces about women in love are set in the not-so-distant past of the 1970s or 1950s. Some viewers long for more contemporary stories of queer lives while others love a good love story that holds its cards close to the vest. It's safe to say, though, that for viewers who prefer to time travel with a good love story about queer women, there are plenty of options. Here are 31 stories of desire between women, all set in the past. 
Based on Dorothy Bussy’s semi-autobiographical novel of the same name, director Jacqueline Audry’s Olivia is set in a young women’s finishing school that is also a hotbed of desire. The film was still shockingly ahead of its time when it was restored and released in theaters in late 2019. While Olivia was originally released in 1951, it was set in the 19th century in a world nearly devoid of men and brimming with desire and jealousies among its young characters — particularly Olivia’s infatuation with her superior, Mademoiselle Cara.
The inimitable Vanessa Redgrave was nominated for an Oscar for her portrayal of Olive Chancellor in The Bostonians, a suffragette who becomes romantically entangled with Verena (Madeleine Potter), a rising star and speaker in the turn-of-the-century feminist movement. Based on the novel by Henry James and directed by James Ivory, the film begins in 1886. A triangle is at the center of the love story as Christopher Reeves’s charming Basil also vies for Verena’s attention. Jessica Tandy, Nancy Marchand, and Linda Hunt costar.
One of the most beloved and acclaimed films about queer women of all time, Donna Deitch’s Desert Hearts was ahead of its time even if it was set in the late ’50s. Helen Shaver stars as Vivian, an English professor from New York City who gets a whole new education while waiting to obtain a “quickie” divorce in Reno, Nev. There she meets the wild child Cay (Patricia Charbonneau), whose affair with Vivian is not her first time at the rodeo. The women are soon deep in a relationship in a movie that had the audacity in 1985 to offer up a hopeful ending — something many films about queer women wouldn’t do for decades to come.
Based on Alice Walker’s novel, The Color Purple, set in the early 20th century, tells the story of Celie (Whoopi Goldberg) whose life is upended when she’s torn from her home and forced to marry Albert (Danny Glover), a man she doesn’t love and who’s abusive. Much of the film, directed by Steven Spielberg (the fact that this was perhaps not his story to tell is another matter altogether), that touches on issues affecting Black people in the post-Civil War South, focuses on letters Celie finds from her long-lost sister Nettie who became a missionary in Africa. Much more prevalent in the novel and alluded to in the film is the decades-long love affair between Celie and the singer Shug Avery (Margaret Avery).
This film tells the story of one of the most famous lesbian literary couples of all time. Linda Hunt stars as Alice B. Toklas, and Linda Bassett plays Gertrude Stein in Waiting for the Moon, from acclaimed director Jill Godmilow. In the film, set in the ’30s, Stein and Toklas rub elbows in their salon with the likes of Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Picasso, and Guillaume Apollinaire.
While the queerness wasn’t overt in Jon Avnet’s adaptation of Fannie Flagg’s Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Café, those who knew it knew that Idgie (Mary Stuart Masterson) and Ruth (Mary Louise Parker) were life partners and romantically involved. Told in flashback by Jessica Tandy’s Ninny to Kathy Bates's frustrated housewife Evelyn, Fried Green Tomatoes is set in the early 20th century, and its central plot revolves around the decades-long love that forms between the “bee charmer” Idgie and Ruth, who leaves her abusive husband to be with her one true love. Of course, they build a café together, raise Ruth’s son together, and make killer fried green tomatoes together before tragedy strikes.
There’s a lot of plot in Tom Robbins’s novel about a stunning young woman with indescribably enormous thumbs who’s born to, well, hitchhike (among other things) But Gus Van Sant’s adaptation of the novel about model and wanderer Sissy Hankshaw (Uma Thurman) boils much of that plot down to a neat queer love story between the protagonist and Bonanza Jellybean (Rain Phoenix), a cowgirl she meets on a spa ranch for women. The uneven but wildly enjoyable adaptation, especially for queer women, is set in the freewheeling ’70s. Lorraine Bracco, Pat Morita, Angie Dickinson, Keanu Reeves, John Hurt, Ed Begley Jr., Carol Kane, Victoria Williams, Sean Young, Crispin Glover, Roseanne Barr, Buck Henry, Grace Zabriskie, and a very young Heather Graham costar. The film gets extra queer points for its soundtrack, which includes original songs by k.d. lang. 
Jean Genet’s play The Maids, about murderous, incestuous maids, got the celluloid treatment in this adaptation that stars Joely Richardson ( Hollow Reed, Nip/Tuck ) as Christine Papin and Jodhi May ( Tipping the Velvet ) as her sister Lea Papin. In the film, set in 1930s France and loosely based on the gruesome true story of a pair of maids who murdered their employer, Sister My Sister ’s protagonists begin to unravel under the thumb of their controlling employer Madame Danzard (Julie Walters) and her entitled daughter Isabelle (Sophie Thursfield). While living in a tiny room in the attic of the home and cleaning it by day, the sisters soon become everything to one another emotionally and sexually.
The film that introduced Kate Winslet and costarred Melanie Lynskey ( But I’m a Cheerleader ), Heavenly Creatures is based on the true events of two girls who committed matricide in New Zealand in the early 1950s. In Peter Jackson’s first feature, Lynskey plays Pauline (Paul), who’s from a working-class family, while Winslet’s Juliet (Hulme, who would go on to be an author) was a member of an upper-crust family. The girls, having met at school and bonded over their love of the opera singer Mario Lanza and their hatred of Orson Welles, form an obsessive relationship that includes a rich fantasy life of world-building.
A devastating love story, Aimée and Jaguar is based on Erica Fischer’s book about real women Lilly Wust and Felice Schragenheim. Maria Schrader plays Felice, a Jewish journalist who assumes a false identity in order to survive in Nazi Germany, while Juliane Köhler plays Lilly, a mother who’s married to a high-powered Nazi. The film is told in flashbacks that begin in the late 1990s, but the meat of the story occurs in the 1940s at the height of World War II. The women fall in love with some moments of pure ardor, but the story is ultimately tragic, as befits the setting.
This adaptation of Sarah Waters’s beloved lesbian novel Tipping the Velvet was actually a BBC miniseries, but since it’s not a full TV series and its influences and reach were so impactful at the time, we’ve made an exception for it and for the BBC’s Fingersmith (also based on a Waters novel). “Born a Whitstable oyster girl” circa the mid-19th century, Nan Astley (Rachael Stirling) was bound for bigger things. Hence, her move to London, where she enters the world of the stage and of male drag. She is entranced by the drag king of the moment, Kitty Butler (Keeley Hawes), and the women eventually fall madly in love until Kitty breaks Nan’s heart for a more conventional life. Don’t fret, though; Nan goes on to live a full queer life that includes sex parties, dildos, and eventually a long-term relationship with the lovely Florence Banner (Jodhi May).
The second BBC miniseries to be included, Fingersmith, based on Sarah Waters’s twisty mystery of a novel set in the 1860s, stars Sally Hawkins as Sue Trinder, an accomplished “fingersmith” or pickpocket, who’s enlisted by acquaintance Richard Rivers (Rupert Evans) to run a scam on Maud Lilly (Elaine Cassidy), the heir to a massive fortune. With the intention of marrying her and later having her committed to an asylum, Rivers engages Sue to help gaslight Maud. The hitch? The women fall in love. Fingersmith keeps the viewer guessing as to Sue’s true intentions until the final act.
The World Unseen is one of two films Lisa Ray and Sheetal Sheth made together, the other being the comedy I Can’t Think Straight; both were directed by Shamim Sarif. The World Unseen is set in South Africa in the 1950s at the beginning of apartheid. As the country becomes more politicized, Sheth’s Amina is a rabble-rouser who stands up to authority while running a café. Meanwhile, Ray’s Miriam is bound to her husband in claustrophobic ways. It’s a slow burn of a love story, but the women eventually form a deep romantic bond in the film that explores not only sexuality but cultural mores.
Those familiar with HBO’s Gentleman Jack will recognize the story of The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister. The British film about Anne Lister, the 19th-century land-owner in Y
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