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Anita Bryant - dead*

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 8:25 pm
by The Seer
remember?

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 8:29 pm
by Mikey
WDDTH

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 8:48 pm
by Y2K
The "Gays" finally got her in the end.

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 8:55 pm
by Mister Bushice
Who will be the third Anita?

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 8:57 pm
by Mikey
Anita Drink?

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 9:04 pm
by Mister Bushice
I'm not seeing a dead anita bryant anywhere yet:

http://www.deadoraliveinfo.com/dead.nsf ... yant+Anita

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 9:50 pm
by Jack
As far as I know Anita is still alive...

She taught us all,

When it comes to Homosexuals.. keep your mouth shut!!!


****
Anita Jane Bryant (born March 25, 1940, in Barnsdall, Oklahoma) is an American singer who made a series of television commercials for Florida orange juice. A member of the Southern Baptist church, she is best remembered today for campaigning in the mid-1970s to repeal a local ordinance in Miami, Florida, that prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.

Bryant was singing on stage at local fairgrounds in Oklahoma at age six. She sang occasionally on radio and television, and was invited to audition when Arthur Godfrey's talent show came to town. Her family, though, was extremely religious, and her father at first refused to allow her to go on Godfrey's show, relenting only when he was told his daughter had a God-given talent, and it would be a sin not to share it.

Bryant became Miss Oklahoma in 1958 and was a second runner-up in the 1959 Miss America beauty pageant at age 19.

She had three big pop hits: "Till There Was You" (1959) (covered by The Beatles in 1963 at the Royal Variety Performance); "Paper Roses" (1960) (successfully covered 13 years later by Marie Osmond); and "In My Little Corner of the World" (1960). In 1960, she married Bob Green, a Miami disc jockey, with whom she eventually raised four children.

She became a spokeswoman for the Florida Citrus Commission in 1969, and nationally televised commercials featured her singing "Come to the Florida Sunshine tree", and opining that "breakfast without orange juice is like a day without sunshine".

She became widely recognizable, doing advertisements for Coca-Cola, Kraft Foods, Holiday Inn, and Tupperware. She sang "The Battle Hymn of the Republic" during the graveside services for Lyndon Johnson in 1973, and performed the National Anthem at Super Bowl III in 1969.

In 1977, Florida's Dade County (now Miami-Dade County) passed a human-rights ordinance that prohibited discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. In response to this, Bryant led a highly publicized campaign to repeal the ordinance. The campaign was waged based on "Christian beliefs regarding the sinfulness of homosexuality and the perceived threat of “homosexual recruitment” of children and child molestation."


The fallout from her political activism had a devastating effect on her entertainment career. Her contract with the Florida Citrus Commission also was allowed to lapse because of the negative publicity generated by her political campaigns, the resulting boycott of Florida orange juice, and, at least reportedly, because of her divorce.

Her marriage to Bob Green failed at that time and in 1980 she divorced him. She married her second husband, Charlie Hobson Dry, in 1990, and they have tried to reestablish her career in a series of small venues. Commercial success has been elusive, and they have left behind them a series of unpaid employees and creditors. They filed for bankruptcy in Arkansas (1997) and in Tennessee (2001).

Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2006 10:00 pm
by Mister Bushice
I don't think her dead career counts.