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Pink List 2012: to be made into a new page.
'''The <cite>Independent on Sunday</cite>’s Pink List''' recognises the most influential LGBT people in the UK.<ref>http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/news/the-iiosi-pink-list-2011-2374595.html The Pink List 2011</ref>


The most surprising omission in the 2011 List was [[Peter Tatchell]]. According to Hugh Muir in <cite>The Guardian</cite> this was because "the Post-it note with his name was shuffled into an incorrect pile and nobody noticed until it was too late".<ref>http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/oct/26/hugh-muir-diary-peter-tatchell ''The Guardian''</ref>


==Judges==
==Judges==
1. [[Elly Barnes]] was voted No 1 on The Independent on Sunday's Pink List for her commitment to LGBT inclusivity in education. She is the LGBT schools adviser for Birmingham City Council and London schools. She trains teachers nationally through her programme Educate and Celebrate — How to Make your School LGBT Friendly and is the schools rep for LGBT History Month and SchoolsOut.
{{columns-list|3|
*Brian Brady, Whitehall Editor
*Laura Chesters, Business Correspondent
*Matt Chorley, Political Correspondent
*Katy Guest, Literary Editor
*Mike Higgins, Arts Editor
*Jane Merrick, Political Editor
*Hugh Montgomery, Arts Correspondent
*Neil Robinson, Sports Editor.
}}
==2011  Top 101 ==
{{columns-list|3|
# [[Elly Barnes]]– Music teacher, trainer, diversity officer
# [[Michael Salter]] – Broadcast adviser to PM
# [[Jessie J]] – Musician
# [[Clare Balding]] – Broadcaster
# [[Sue Perkins]] – Comedian and TV presenter
# [[Evan Davis]] – Radio 4 Today presenter
# [[Antony Cotton]] – Actor
# [[Charlie Condou]] – Actor
# [[Scott Mills]] – Radio and TV presenter
# [[Heather Peace]] – Actress and singer
# [[Christopher Bailey]] – Chief creative officer, Burberry
# [[Steven Davies]] – Cricketer
# [[Simon Hughes]] – Deputy leader, Lib Dems
# [[Nick Herbert]] – Policing minister
# [[John Barrowman]] – Actor and singer
# [[Will Young]] – Singer
# [[James Wharton]] – Soldier
# [[Michael Bishop]] – Businessman
# [[Julian Glover]] – PM's speech-writer
# [[Matthew Todd]] – Editor of ''[[Attitude]]''
# [[Chris Bryant]] – Labour spokesman
# [[Mary Portas]] – Retail marketing consultant
# [[Alan Carr]] – Comedian
# [[Neil MacGregor]] – Museum director
# [[Nick Boles]] – MP
# [[Terence Etherton]] – Judge
# [[Clare Dimyon]] – Activist
# [[Sarah Brown]] – Cambridge City Councillor
# [[Gok Wan]] – Broadcaster
# [[Jonny Oates]] – Chief of staff to Nick Clegg
# [[Val McDermid]]– Crime writer
# [[Nicholas Hytner]] – Producer and director
# [[Jane Hill]] – Newsreader
# [[Stella Duffy]] – Writer, actress, campaigner
# [[Christine Burns]] – Activist
# [[John Browne]] – Businessman
# [[Steve Reed]] – Leader of Lambeth Council
# [[Jennifer Fear]] – CEO, Step Forward
# [[Eileen Gallagher]] – CEO, Shed Productions
# [[Mark Gatiss]] – Actor and writer
# [[Adrian Fulford]] – Judge
# [[Matthew Parris]] – Times columnist
# [[Sue Sanders]] – Human rights advocate
# [[Christian Jessen]] – Physician and TV presenter
# [[Alan Davey]] – CEO, Arts Council
# [[Matt Lucas]] – Actor and comedian
# [[Russell T Davies]] – TV producer and writer
# [[Jonathan Harvey]] – Stage and screen writer
# [[Russell Tovey]] – Actor
# [[Derren Brown]] – Illusionist
# [[Joe McElderry]] – Singer
# [[Simon Hopkinson]] – Chef
# [[Lynette Nusbacher]] – Strategist and historian
# [[Susie Orbach]] – Psycho-analyst and writer
# [[Eddie Mair]] – Broadcaster
# [[Allegra McEvedy]] – Chef
# [[Dominic Cooke]] – Theatre director
# [[Mandy McBain]] – Royal Navy officer
# [[Phyllida Lloyd]] – Director
# [[Michael King]] – Psychiatrist
# [[Tim Hely Hutchinson]] – CEO, Hachette Livre UK
# [[Guy Black]] – Director, Telegraph Group
# [[Phyll Opoku-Gyimah]] – MD, [[UK Black Pride]]
# [[Alan Duncan]] – Development minister
# [[Ravi Mirchandani]] – Publisher/editor
# [[Philip Hensher]] – Writer and teacher
# [[Angela Eagle]] – Labour spokeswoman
# [[Jay Stewart]] – Co-founder, [[Gendered Intelligence]]
# [[Patrick Strudwick]] – Journalist
# [[Waheed Alli]] – TV producer and peer
# [[Jim MacSweeney]] – Bookshop owner
# [[Evelyn Asante-Mensah]] – Chair, NHS Manchester
# [[Simon Blake]] – Chief executive, Brook
# [[Paul Martin]] – Chief executive, [[Lesbian and Gay Foundation]]
# [[Peter Mandelson]] – Former politician
# [[Dawn Airey]] – Television executive
# [[Stephen Daldry]] – Director and producer
# [[Alice Arnold]] – BBC Radio 4 announcer
# [[Lionel Blue]] – Author and commentator
# [[Nick Partridge]] – Aids activist
# [[Ben Bradshaw]] – Politician
# [[Mark Abrahams]] – RAF squadron leader
# [[Michael Grandage]]– Director and producer
# [[Roz Kaveney]] – Author and activist
# [[Kelvin Holdsworth]] – Dean of Glasgow Cathedral
# [[Jackie Crozier]] – Director, [[Manchester Gay Pride]]
# [[Nigel Owens]] – Rugby referee
# [[Paul Burston]] – Writer
# [[Daniel Winterfeldt]] – [[Interlaw Diversity Forum]]
# [[Richard Heaton]] – Director General for Pensions and Transformation, DWP
# [[Rikki Beadle-Blair]] – Writer and performer
# [[Iain Dale]] – Blogger
# [[Katherine O'Donnell]] – Journalist
# [[Jackie Kay]] – Poet and novelist
# [[Bethany Black]] – Comedian
# [[Deborah Warner]] – Stage director
# [[Stephen Frost]] – Head of diversity and inclusion, 2012 Olympics
# [[Melanie Rickey]] – Fashion editor-at-large, Grazia
# [[Richard Barnes]] – Deputy Mayor of London
# [[Anton Hysen]] – Swedish footballer
}}


2. [[Campbell X]] is an award-winning film-maker and writer who wrote and directed Stud Life (2012), an urban queer comedy set on the streets of east London. Campbell has published articles on film, sexuality and gender and has programmed for the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival and GFEST.
== National Treasures ==


3. [[Jane Czyzselska]] is the editor of DIVA, the UK's leading magazine for gay and bisexual women. She regularly hosts events and debates on LGBT cultural and mental well-being issues and is a frequent contributor to a wide range of media and other publications. She is also a trustee of the LGBT mental health charity Pace.
They need no introduction; they're in a category of their own and life wouldn't be the same without them.
{{columns-list|3|
* [[Stephen Fry]]
* [[Graham Norton]]
* [[Maggi Hambling]]
* [[Sandi Toksvig]]
* [[Alan Bennett]]
* [[Cameron Mackintosh]]
* [[Simon Callow]]
* [[Adele Anderson]]
* [[Rupert Everett]]
* [[Amy Lamé]]
* [[Paul O'Grady]]
* [[Julian Clary]]
* [[Juliet Jacques]]
* [[Bisi Alimi]]
* [[Andrew Haigh]]
* [[Kieron Richardson]]
* [[Jill Jackson]]
* [[Nigel Evans]]
* [[Ellie Harrison]]
* [[Sarah Graham]]
* [[Laurie Penny]]
* [[Suran Dickson]]
}}


4. [[Paris Lees]], a leading equality campaigner, edits META, a new digital magazine that celebrates gender diversity. Lees also writes for Gay Times, The Guardian and The Independent and works regularly with Trans Media Action, Channel 4 and the BBC. She was named Positive Role Model for LGBT at this year's National Diversity Awards."
== Non-LGBT friends ==


5. [[Ben Summerskill]] has been chief executive of Stonewall since 2003. He has successfully led parliamentary campaigns for the introduction of civil partnership, pioneering protections for gay people against discrimination in the delivery of public and commercial services and a new criminal offence of incitement to homophobic hatred. In 2010, Summerskill was a finalist as Ernst & Young Social Entrepreneur of the Year and in 2011 he was shortlisted in the Third Sector Awards as Britain's Most Admired Charity Chief Executive.
You don't have to be lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender to support those who are.
{{columns-list|3|
* [[Ben Cohen]]
* [[Julie Hesmondhalgh]]
* [[Daniel Radcliffe]]
* [[Lynne Featherstone MP]]
* [[Jonathan Ross]]
* [[Beverley Knight]]
* [[Suzanne Moore]]
* [[Bernard and Terry Reed]]
* [[Rachel Shelley]]
}}


6. [[Margaret Unwin]] has been CEO of Pace since September 2012 and is delighted to be working in an LGBT organisation that makes a real impact. As a voluntary sector professional of 20 years, she has worked in mental health, disability and carers' organisations. Unwin lives in Islington, north London with her partner.
== Lifetime achievement award ==
{{columns-list|3|
* [[Jeanette Winterson]]
* [[George Michael]]
* [[Ken Plummer]]
* [[Chris Graham Bell]]
* [[Sir Ian McKellen]]
* [[Stephen Whittle]]
* [[Neil Tennant]]
* [[Jan Morris]]
* [[Sarah Waters]]
* [[Elton John]]
* [[Gareth Thomas]]
* [[Tamsin Omond]]
* [[Stephen K Amos]]
* [[Ben Summerskill]]
* [[Paris Lees]]
* [[Paul Jenkins]]
* [[Margot James]]
* [[John Amaechi]]
* [[Greg Barker]]
* [[Tim Franks]]
* [[Jane Czyzselska]]
}}


==2012 winners==
==See also==
*1 (new entry) [[Nicola Adams]]
*[[Pink List 2010]]
*2 (4) [[Clare Balding]]
*[[Pink List 2012]]
*3 (re-entry) [[Peter Tatchell]]
*4 (new entry) [[Lee Pearson]]
*5 (new entry) [[Carl Hester]]
*6 (judge) [[Greg Barker]]
*7 (10) [[Heather Peace]]
*8 (new entry) [[Nick Grimshaw]]


Radio DJ
==References==
<references>


The exceptionally likeable presenter officially became the biggest deal in radio when he took over the BBC Radio 1 breakfast show in September. That the newly-out Mancunian replaced former Stonewall Bully of the Year Chris Moyles makes his ascent all the sweeter.
[[Category:Lists]]
 
[[Category:Pink List 2011| ]]
9 (re-entry) [[David Laws]]
 
Cabinet office minister
 
Reinstated to Government in September after being forced to resign over his expenses in 2010, Laws, whose responsibilities include schools policy, attends Cabinet and is close to both Michael Gove and Nick Clegg — making him a key influence on the coalition.
 
10 (new entry) [[Luke Anderson]]
 
Winner, Big Brother 13
 
Anderson rose to prominence as a hugely popular winner of Channel 5's Big Brother 13. While in the house, Anderson revealed he had been born a woman and hoped that his appearance on the show "will help to show trans guys that you can lead a normal life".
 
11 (64) [[Phyll Opoku-Gyimah]]
 
MD, UK Black Pride
 
A past winner of the Black LGBT Community Award, Lady Phyll, as she is known, also campaigns for equality in the workplace through her seat on the TUC race relations committee. She was in the World Pride Power List 2012, and won a Prime Minister's Big Society Award nomination in 2012.
 
12 (6) [[Evan Davis]]
 
TV and radio presenter
 
The Radio 4 presenter has a CV that would make even the most successful feel inadequate. He moved to the Today programme after a six-and-a-half-year stint as the BBC's economics editor. The Oxford-and Harvard-educated Dragons' Den presenter has written and co-written several books.
 
13 (5) [[Sue Perkins]]
 
Comedian
 
The Great British Bake Off co-host has hardly been off our TV screens in 2012, but is set to return with her own show next year. The comedian and Stonewall Entertainer of the year has created BBC's Heading Out, and will star as a vet who struggles to tell her parents she is gay.
 
14 (new entry) [[Stephen Twigg]]
 
Labour politician
 
The Labour MP for Liverpool West Derby, Twigg, who is the current shadow Education Secretary, has had a prominent career both in politics and campaigning for LGBT rights. Twigg has consistently campaigned against discrimination both inside and outside the House of Commons.
 
15 (8) [[Charlie Condou]]
 
Actor
 
As well as playing TV's most swoonsome gay character, the Corrie star is an impassioned gay-rights advocate, speaking and writing across a range of topics. A father of two, he recently branded fellow thespian Rupert Everett "a dinosaur" for his critical views on gay parenting.
 
16 (93) [[Iain Dale]]
 
Publisher and blogger
 
Dale made his name from writing Iain Dale's Diary, one of the most prominent blogs in Westminster, which he started a decade ago. He later launched hugely successful Biteback Publishing, publishes Total Politics magazine and also has his own LBC radio show.
 
17 (new entry) Sir [[Paul Jenkins]]
 
Treasury Solicitor'
 
Jenkins is the most senior openly gay civil servant, responsible for the largest legal department within the Civil Service and reporting directly to the Attorney General. The QC was recently appointed the Diversity Champion of the Civil Service and was made a KCB in this year's birthday honours.
 
18 (3) [[Jessie J]]
 
Musician
 
The singer-songwriter has seen her bookability factor soar since she was rather limply "exposed" as bisexual last year. She wowed crowds at the Olympics' closing ceremony and the Queen's Jubilee and worked as a judge on BBC's The Voice, while managing to gain three Brit Awards.
 
19 (judge) [[Gareth Thomas]]
 
Retired rugby player
 
Remains the most high-profile British sportsman to have come out in 2009. Now 38, Thomas played 100 rugby union Tests for Wales before switching to rugby league. He retired in October 2011 after breaking his left arm. A movie of his life is said to be in production.
 
20 (17) [[James Wharton]]
 
Soldier
 
Wharton, who is a member of the elite Household Cavalry regiment, the Blues and Royals, has served in Iraq as well as escorting the Queen during Will and Kate's wedding, and was the first openly gay man to appear on the cover of Soldier magazine. He is also a prominent LGBT rights activist.
 
21 (21) [[Chris Bryant]]
 
Shadow Immigration Minister
 
Scourge of the Murdochs and David Cameron, it was Bryant's question to Rebekah Brooks about payments to police officers that gave birth to the phone-hacking investigation. He's now pursuing the PM over his private emails to Brooks, as well as being a columnist for The Independent.
 
22 (new entry) [[John Partridge]]
 
Actor
 
As EastEnders' Christian, the actor has created one of TV's best-loved gay characters while his on-screen relationship with boyfriend-turned husband Syed Masood has been as touching as it has been tempestuous. Before his soap stint, Partridge was a successful musical theatre actor.
 
23 (new entry) [[Henry Holland]]
 
Fashion designer
 
Holland has gone from strength to strength since founding his label with a small collection of printed T-shirts in 2007. Holland's collaborations with Debenhams, Levi's and Kickers, among others, mark him out as an entrepreneurial presence within British fashion.
 
24 (25) [[Nick Boles]]
 
Conservative Minister
 
One of the early Tory modernisers who was Cameron's policy chief, Boles was elected MP for Grantham in 2010, after fighting non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and finally got a ministerial job in September, handling the difficult responsibility of defending the Government's planning reforms.
 
25 (55) [[Carol Ann Duffy]]
 
Poet Laureate
 
In 2012, Duffy has written poems for the Olympics and the Diamond Jubilee as well as campaigning against library closures and working on a ballet, Rapunzel. She also won the PEN/Pinter and the Costa poetry prizes. Her Wenceslas: A Christmas Poem was published last month.
 
26 (50) [[Derren Brown]]
 
Illusionist/Hypnotist
 
Brown's recent stage production, Svengali, won an Olivier award, but he is also widely known for his television work, including the latest hit series Apocolypse. Brown, who came out in 2007, recently declared: "It's lovely to have somebody love you and it's lovely to love someone else."
 
27 (22) [[Mary Portas]]
 
Queen of Shops
 
One-time PR and mother of three, Mary Portas now straddles both sides of consumer culture, both as a commercial guru and as a Government business tsar. She is married to fashion journalist Melanie Rickey, who gave birth to the couple's first child this year.
 
28 (new entry) [[Pratibha Parmar]]
 
Film maker
 
Parmar shot to fame for her work alongside Alice Walker in the 1993 film Warrior Marks, which deals with female mutilation. Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth, which is produced by Parmar, is soon to be released and covers the life and work of the Pulitzer-prize winning novelist.
 
29 (23) [[Alan Carr]]
 
Comedian
 
Carr's TV career goes from strength to strength. Awarded Best TV Personality by the Television Industries Club and Best Ch*t Show at the National Television Awards this year, he was also nominated for a Bafta. This summer, he took part in Channel 4's Stand up to Cancer campaign.
 
30 (new entry) Sir [[Terence Etherton]]
 
Court of Appeal Judge
 
The Rt Hon Lord Justice Etherton is one of the most successful lawyers in Britain. Having been called to the Bar in 1977, Etherton, who has been in a civil partnership since 2006, recently left his chairmanship of the Law Commission to be appointed to the Court of Appeal.
 
31 (13) [[Simon Hughes]]
 
Deputy leader of the Lib Dems
 
Veteran Lib Dem MP for Bermondsey and Old Southwark, prides himself on being the voice of the party's grassroots. To underline this stance, he turned down a ministerial job offer in September — as deputy Leader of the Commons — preferring to remain as an independent backbencher.
 
32 (29) [[Gok Wan]]
 
TV presenter
 
He might be famous for making all shapes and sizes look great naked, but it turns out he can cook, design clothes and even work with troubled teens, too. This year Wan has starred in four TV shows, has just released his fifth Sainsbury's fashion range, and also hosted the Stonewall Awards.
 
33 (7) [[Antony Cotton]]
 
Actor
 
Cotton rose to fame in Queer as Folk before his role as Corrie's Sean Tully made him a star. He is an active supporter of LGBT charities including the Terrence Higgins Trust, while his place in the public's affection was confirmed by his appearance in 2011's I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here!
 
34 (28) [[Sarah Brown]]
 
Councillor in Cambridge
 
Brown, who represents the Petersfield Ward, is the only out transgender politician in Britain. A Liberal Democrat, she is active in the LGBT community and recently said that she has now experienced three types of discrimination, "transphobia, homophobia and misogyny".
 
35 (16) [[Will Young]]
 
Musician, actor, memoirist
 
With a new memoir, a recent No 1 album, a summer series of concerts, and rave reviews for his role in Cabaret, Young is riding high. Ten years on from his Pop Idol win, he has finally appeared in a video (for his single Jealousy) in which his love object is a man.
 
36 (37) [[Steve Reed]]
 
Labour politician
 
Leader of Lambeth Council, south London, since 1998. Chosen last night to contest the by-election in the safe seat of Croydon North and looks likely to become the new MP. Did much to improve relations between town hall and community in Lambeth and raise audit rating from one to three stars.
 
37 (15) [[John Barrowman]]
 
Actor, musician and writer
 
The man with the pearliest whites in showbiz has had a relatively quiet 12 months — relatively, because it has included co-writing a children's novel with his sister and a leading role in US superhero series Arrow. And there's his forthcoming panto gig in Jack and the Beanstalk in Glasgow.
 
38 (31) [[Val McDermid]]
 
Crime writer
 
An author, journalist and sponsor of a stand at the Raith Rovers' ground, McDermid is a popular figure on the crime-writing scene, and researches her novels meticulously. A publisher once told her that novels with lesbian characters wouldn't sell, but fortunately she didn't listen.
 
39 (32) Sir [[Nicholas Hytner]]
 
Theatre director
 
The National Theatre has never been so prosperous as it is under Hytner's leadership. But his role as a champion of the arts extends beyond the South Bank: only last month he fought the corner of regional theatres, warning they were in "clear and present" financial danger.
 
40 (33) [[Jane Hill]]
 
Newsreader
 
One of the main BBC News anchors, Hill came out in 2009 in the corporation's in-house magazine and has since contributed to Stonewall's It Gets Better campaign. Her partner, Sara Shepherd, is a camera operator and the two announced their civil partnership in November 2011.
 
41 (34) [[Stella Duffy]]
 
Novelist
 
The writer celebrated the publication of her 13th novel, The Purple Shroud, this year, but even that's not enough to keep her busy. She has also written 50 short stories and 10 plays and, in addition, has worked in immersive theatre for more than a quarter of a century.
 
42 (35) [[Christine Burns]]
 
Transgender activist
 
A leading activist for transgender rights, Burns has actively campaigned for equal status (passport and marriage), having her own status recognised in the Gender Recognition Act 2004. She was shortlisted as a positive role model in the 2012 National Diversity Awards.
 
43 (30) [[Jonny Oates]]
 
Chief of staff to Nick Clegg
 
Oates ran the Lib Dems' policy and communications in 2007 but left for a stint at PR giant Bell Pottinger. He was drawn back to Clegg's side to help fight the 2010 election. A former agent to Energy Secretary Ed Davey, Oates would almost certainly remain at the centre in a Davey leadership.
 
44 (re-entry) Dr [[Ashley Steel]]
 
Vice chairman, KPMG
 
Steel is one of the most outspoken supporters of a third runway at Heathrow Airport — and arguably the most prominent lesbian in the City of London. This year, she ran for the UK chairmanship at accountancy giant KPMG, and though she didn't win, she was praised for a tenacious campaign.
 
45 (judge) [[John Amaechi]]
 
Retired UK basketball player
 
As a rare Brit in the NBA, Amaechi already turned heads. After coming out in 2007, he became one of only a handful of publicly gay sportsmen in America and is now a best-selling author, Amnesty International ambassador, TV sports pundit and motivational speaker.
 
46 (41) Sir [[Adrian Fulford]]
 
Judge
 
First openly gay judge in the UK, the Hon Mr Justice Fulford is also one of the most respected, presiding over important recent cases. This year, in The Hague, he delivered the International Criminal Court's first guilty verdict. It was on Thomas Lubanga for humanitarian crimes in DR Congo.
 
47 (48) [[Jonathan Harvey]]
 
Writer
 
From plays such as Beautiful Thing and Boom Bang-A-Bang to his scripts on Coronation Street, and comedy to drama, the 44-year-old has become one of the UK's premier chroniclers of contemporary gay experience. His recent debut novel, All She Wants, was warmly received.
 
48 (new entry) [[April Ashley]] MBE
 
Model and campaigner
 
Awarded an MBE this year for her services to transgender equality — which culminated in the Gender Recognition Act of 2004 — April Ashley was a glamorous 1960s socialite, and supported by models, actors and peers (including John Prescott, her former housemate).
 
49 (38) [[Jennifer Fear]]
 
CEO, Step Forward charity
 
Step Forward works with disadvantaged young people in Tower Hamlets east London. It organises specialist sessions for the LGBT community and. in 2011, it won the coveted GlaxoSmithKline Small Charity of the Year award, beating 420 other charities to the top prize.
 
50 (new entry) [[Casey Stoney]]
 
Footballler
 
The England women's football captain led Team GB in an impressive performance at London 2012. The defender has been capped more than 100 times for England and also captains Lincoln Ladies — one of a few clubs pioneering the women's game not affiliated to a men's team.
 
51 (44) [[Christian Jessen]]
 
Doctor and TV personality
 
Best known for his role on Channel 4's Bafta-winning Embarrassing Bodies (whose website has received more than 100 million hits to date), Jessen is a pioneering expert on sexual health, columnist, and adviser to such publications as Closer, Attitude, the Evening Standard and Top Santé.
 
52 (56) [[Eddie Mair]]
 
Broadcaster
 
The voice of Radio 4's PM, Mair has gained new fans by standing in for Jeremy Paxman on Newsnight — with a much calmer style of interviewing. With Newsnight suffering its current troubles over Jimmy Savile, perhaps a more permanent position on the late-night BBC2 show beckons?
 
53 (40) [[Mark Gatiss]]
 
Actor and writer
 
The comic continues to display octopus-like reach across the arts: currently he's on stage as Charles I in 55 Days, and on TV presenting documentary series Horror Europa. And it's elementary that Sherlock, which he co-writes with Steven Moffat, will be back in the new year.
 
54 (63) [[Guy Black]]
 
Media chief
 
The executive director of Telegraph Media group and chairman of Pressbof, which funds the Press Complaints Commission, is a key figure in the media response to the Leveson report, due within weeks. Given a peerage by David Cameron, he is the first openly gay Tory peer.
 
55 (43 and new entry) [[Sue Sanders]] and [[Tony Fenwick]]
 
SchoolsOUT/LGBT History Month
 
As co-chairs of SchoolsOUT, Sanders and Fenwick aim to provide a support network for all people who want to raise the issue of homophobia, transphobia and heterosexism in education. They have also worked with LGBT History Month and the Classroom Project in the UK.
 
56 (47) [[Russell T Davies]]
 
TV producer and writer
 
Having returned from the US at the end of last year after his partner became seriously ill and after his US version of Torchwood received mixed responses, he ploughed himself back into his UK work, resuming CBBC's new action adventure drama, Wizards vs Aliens which began last week.
 
57 (45) [[Alan Davey]]
 
CEO, Arts Council
 
Times remain tough for Davey after last week's announcement that the Council will axe 118 jobs; meanwhile arts organisations continue to feel the pinch from the Council's funding cuts. On a more positive note, Davey has overseen the launch of online culture channel The Space.
 
58 (new entry) [[David Allen Green]]
 
Lawyer
 
The media lawyer and journalist has had a busy year. He was the solicitor in the successful "Twitter Joke Trial appeal", and a witness at the Leveson inquiry hearings, discussing the role of social media. He is also legal correspondent of the New Statesman and blogs as Jack of Kent.
 
59 (2) [[Michael Salter]]
 
Head of broadcast at No 10
 
Salter's day job is sending out Government ministers, including David Cameron, on to the airwaves but he is also a key voice for the gay community inside Downing Street. Highly regarded long-term Tory staffer who has the ear of the Prime Minister.
 
60 (new entry) [[Anthony Watson]]
 
Chief information officer, Barclays
 
Barclays has had its woes this year with sky-high executive pay and the Libor scandal, but Watson has impressed with his vision of making the bank the Google of its industry. Watson said recently: "The best thing I ever did was come out." He regularly talks to schools about diversity.
 
61 (67) [[Philip Hensher]]
 
Author, columnist, teacher
 
A columnist, writer and teacher of creative writing, Hensher is one of the few people to have judged the Man Booker Prize and been shortlisted (for The Northern Clemency, 2008). His books published this year were Scenes From Early Life and The Missing Ink, about handwriting.
 
62 (9) [[Scott Mills]]
 
Radio DJ
 
One of Radio 1's longest-serving stars and most engaging voices, Mills moved from drive-time to mid-afternoon in the station's recent reshuffle. The World's Worst Place to be Gay?, his acclaimed 2011 documentary about Ugandan homophobia, displayed his serious side.
 
63 (new entry) [[Louise Englefield]]
 
Director, Pride Sports
 
As co-president of the European Gay and Lesbian Sports Foundation, 2010-2012, Englefield ensured that Pride House was an integral part of London 2012, and worked with LGBT history month for two years. One nominator described her as "a rock". Another said: "We could not do without her".
 
64 (49) [[Russell Tovey]]
 
Actor
 
Tovey is one of the UK's few high-profile young gay actors even as his CV remains undefined by his sexuality: recent roles include a cheating boyfriend in a West End play and a nerdy scientist in a horror-comedy, while bedsitcom Him and Her is back on BBC3 for a third series this month.
 
65 (85) [[Roz Kaveney]]
 
Author and activist
 
Kaveney is a poet, author and columnist and now deputy editor of the new trans and genderqueer news & entertainment magazine META. As a founding member of Feminists Against Censorship and a former deputy chair of Liberty she has become a respected campaigner.
 
66 (new entry) [[Ceri Goddard]]
 
Campaigner
 
Chief executive of the Fawcett Society, one of the UK's most prominent campaigning voices for equality, Ceri has played a leading role in highlighting the impact of austerity measures on women. She is also a trustee of the Equality and Diversity Forum.
 
67 (95) [[Jackie Kay]]
 
Poet and novelist
 
With an MBE for services to literature, Kay is a multi award-winning poet and author of the magnificent memoir Red Dust Road (2010). Her poetry collection Fiere was shortlisted for the 2011 Costa Prize for poetry and her short story collection Reality Reality was published in May.
 
68 (53) [[Lynette Nusbacher]]
 
Military strategist and lecturer
 
Nusbacher has been a senior lecturer in War Studies at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst since 1999, and is an influential military authority. She has recently advised the Government on national security strategies, and also writes a popular blog (Nusbacher.com).
 
69 (54) [[Susie Orbach]]
 
Psychotherapist and author
 
Psychotherapist and social critic Susie Orbach is best known for her 1978 work Fat is a Feminist Issue, and continues to publish books examining the state of the modern female psyche with reference to popular culture and sexuality. Orbach lives with her partner Jeanette Winterson.
 
70 (57) [[Allegra McEvedy]]
 
Chef
 
One of the UK's most prominent chefs, McEvedy has written five books on cooking and appeared in numerous television shows, most recently Matt and Allegra's Big Farm with Matt Dawson. She entered a civil partnership with businesswoman Susi Smith in 2006.
 
71 (58) [[Dominic Cooke]]
 
Theatre director
 
From Jerusalem and Clybourne Park to Posh, the new-writing hits have flowed steadily during Cooke's six-year reign as the Royal Court's artistic director. He will step down in April 2013, but not before directing the Christmas show In the Republic of Happiness.
 
72 (68) [[Angela Eagle]]
 
Shadow Leader of the Commons
 
Made history by becoming the first woman to come out while an MP. Eagle — whose twin sister, Maria, is also on the Labour front bench — was a junior minister under Gordon Brown. She has been on incisive form against her new opponent at the despatch box, Andrew Lansley.
 
73 (59) [[Mandy McBain]]
 
Soldier
 
McBain received an MBE in the 2011 New Year's Honours list in recognition of her work fighting discrimination in the armed forces, both British and International. As the UK's most senior gay officer, McBain has worked with countless military groups to rescind LGBT prejudice.
 
74 (60) [[Phyllida Lloyd]]
 
Film and theatre director
 
Lloyd directed one of 2011's most controversial films, The Iron Lady — a harrowing and powerful biopic of Margaret Thatcher. Previously, Lloyd had directed the UK's second highest-grossing film of all time, Mamma Mia!, as well as having an important career in the theatre.
 
75 (61) [[Michael King]]
 
Psychiatrist
 
As a long-standing member of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, Professor King founded the college's LGBT special interest group in 2001. His 2012 publications include Prevalence of same-sex behaviour and orientation in England: results from a national survey.
 
76 (65) [[Alan Duncan]]
 
International Development Minister
 
Irrepressible survivor of the Tory front bench, despite being outspoken during the MPs' expenses scandal. First openly gay Tory MP, millionaire Duncan's knowledge and contacts in the Middle East oil industry helped Britain contribute to the fostering of the Arab Spring protests in 2011.
 
77 (new entry) [[Shaun Dellenty]]
 
Deputy headmaster
 
A campaigning deputy head in south London, Dellenty has discussed tackling homophobia with Government ministers as well as writing books for teachers and children. Dellenty was much nominated, including by one impressed Year 5 student and "Shaun's mum".
 
78 (new entry) [[Lisa Egan]]
 
Activist
 
The disability-rights activist, who founded the Where's the Benefit blog and podcast, is certainly popular. She is a former stand-up comedian and received dozens of nominations in the public vote. Egan was honoured for her "bravery and experience" by those who wrote in.
 
79 (12) [[Steven Davies]]
 
Cricketer
 
Davies is the first openly gay cricketer, having come out in an interview with The Daily Telegraph in 2011. The 26-year-old, who had previously informed his Surrey team-mates of his sexuality, was recalled to the England squad for the tour of the UAE at the start of 2012.
 
80 (new entry) [[Mark Healey]]
 
Founder 17-24-30
 
Healey's group, 17-24-30, aims to unite communities against hatred in the run-up to the 10th anniversary of the London nail-bomb attacks that targeted black, Asian and gay communities. Healey carried the Olympic flame during the 2012 Games torch relay back in July.
 
81 (69) [[Jay Stewart]]
 
Co-founder, Gendered Intelligence
 
Having directed FTM, a support group for trans men, from 2004 to 2007, Stewart is now director of Gendered Intelligence, an organisation that aims to engage young people in debates about gender. He is currently working on a PhD focusing on transgender issues in popular culture.
 
82 (82) [[Ben Bradshaw]]
 
Politician
 
No longer on the Labour frontbench, but he remains a prominent loyalist to Ed Miliband, as he was to Gordon Brown and Tony Blair in their time. The former BBC journalist is a fluent communicator and became the first Cabinet minister to enter a civil partnership.
 
83 (new entry) [[Sara Geater]]
 
CEO, FreemantleMedia UK
 
A barrister by profession, Geater began her TV career in drama production at the now defunct LWT. After joining Channel 4, she oversaw the production of more than 150 films, including Trainspotting, Shallow Grave and TV drama The Politician's Wife. She also holds a pilot's licence.
 
84 (73) [[Evelyn Asante-Mensah]]
 
Chair, NHS Manchester
 
Renewed as Chair of NHS Manchester until 2014, Asante-Mensah was previously Head of Equality and Economic Inclusion for the North West Development Agency where she was responsible for the development of a Single Equality Scheme. She was awarded an OBE in 2006.
 
85 (74) [[Simon Blake]]
 
Chief Executive, Brook
 
Blake is at the head of a national campaign for more relevant advice on sex and relationships for schoolchildren. He is also Chair of Compact Voice, an organisation designed to aid communication between central government and the charity sector. He was awarded an OBEin 2011.
 
86 (new entry) [[Lucy Spraggan]]
 
Musician
 
The 21-year-old X-Factor finalist has broken the talent-show-puppet mould by singing her own self-composed songs throughout this year's series. Discussing coming out to her family, she recently said: "Saying I was gay was like saying, I'm going to the shop,' There was no shock."
 
87 (judge) [[Margot James]]
 
Conservative vice-chairman
 
A regular on Question Time and The Andrew Marr Show, James was a successful businesswoman before becoming MP for Stourbridge in 2010. She is a Cameron ultra-loyalist, never rebelling against the Government, but is yet to be rewarded with a front-bench job.
 
88 (81) [[Sir Nick Partridge]]
 
Chief executive, THT
 
The long-time chief executive of the Terrence Higgins Trust has been appointed a commissioner of the Healthcare Commission for England and works closely in developing HIV trials as well as raising awareness about the importance of HIV and Aids testing.
 
89 (new entry) [[Gary Everett]]
 
Homotopia festival director
 
Everett founded Liverpool's gay arts festival-cum-organisation eight years ago, and since then has steered it from being a local concern to a national and international one via bold, diverse programming. This year's event, running throughout November, is on a theme of "traditional family values".
 
90 (new entry) [[Bisi Alimi]]
 
Activist
 
In 2004, Alimi became the first Nigerian to come out on national television and, despite an attempt on his life in 2007 which forced him to flee Nigeria, has remained a prominent gay rights activist, focusing on LGBT rights in migrant African communities through the Kaleidoscope Trust.
 
91 (86) [[Kelvin Holdsworth]]
 
Dean, Glasgow Cathedral
 
Holdsworth has described the Catholic church's attacks on gay marriage proposals in Scotland as "hugely negative". In August this year he courted controversy by inviting Catholics unhappy with their church's stance on equal marriage to join him in the Scottish Episcopal Church.
 
92 (new entry) [[Dean Atta]]
 
Performance poet
 
The winner of a 2012 London Poetry Award, Atta has been described as "the Gil Scott Heron of his generation". He has written and performed poems for the Damilola Taylor Trust, the Tate and the Houses of Parliament, and leads anti-racism and homophobia workshops for young people.
 
93 (88) [[Nigel Owens]]
 
Rugby referee
 
Nigel Owens is an international rugby union referee who came out in 2007 and has appeared in two World Cups, in 2007 and 2011. Earlier this year, he made more headlines by reprimanding Treviso's Tobias Botes with the words "This is not soccer!", a phrase now printed on T-shirts.
 
94 (new entries) [[Steph Keeble]] and [[David Viney]]
 
LGBT Birmingham
 
At least one person who nominated Keeble (director) and Viney (health and wellbeing manager) insists that they have "transformed Birmingham's LGBT community", by supporting the city's Festival of Queer Culture and successfully bidding to open the first LGBT Health & Wellbeing Centre.
 
95 (new entry) [[Susan Calman]]
 
Comedian
 
Glaswegian Calman gave up a career in corporate law to follow the funny. Since she took the plunge in 2006, she has won Best New Comedian at the Scottish Variety Awards, and scooped Chortle's Best MC gong earlier this year. Now a regular on Radio 4 at the Edinburgh Fringe.
 
96 (new entry) [[Ruth Davidson]]
 
Leader, Scottish Conservatives
 
The new Stonewall Politician of the Year was a journalist before entering politics. She became leader of the Scottish Conservatives a year ago, and counts hill walking and kick boxing among her hobbies. They may come in handy in the negotiations over the independence referendum.
 
97 (new entry) [[Dan Bunker]]
 
Outhouse East
 
As Outhouse East Service development manager, Bunker has been working with the LGBT community to provide a healthy and sustainable environment for gay and transgender people. The service provides education, free health checks and counselling across the county.
 
98 (11) [[Christopher Bailey]]
 
Chief creative officer at Burberry
 
The man at the helm of British fashion's biggest business was singled out for his talent and tasteful handling of the brand's heritage and hallmarks. Bailey has introduced concepts that have made the company the biggest fashion presence on Facebook and Twitter.
 
99 (87) [[Jackie Crozier]]
 
Manchester Gay Pride director
 
As festival director for the 2012 Manchester Gay Pride, Crozier — who previously worked as a community fundraiser for Marie Curie Cancer Care — was responsible for organising the 11-day event, which attracted several top-name artists and thousands of guests.
 
100 (new entry) [[Claire Harvey]]
 
Paralympian
 
She captained Britain's sitting volleyball team at London 2012, having taken up the sport only four years ago, after a bicycle accident meant she lost the use of her leg. When not playing sport she also heads up the corporate responsibility department of the Financial Services Authority.
 
101 (new entries) [[Michael Black]] and [[John Morgan]]
Tourists
 
The couple shot to unsought fame this year after winning a historic legal victory over a Berkshire B&B owner, Susanne Wilkinson, who had refused them a room citing her belief that homosexuality is a sin. The landmark verdict of discrimination will make hotel stays easier for LGBT people.

Latest revision as of 15:59, 25 May 2014

The Independent on Sunday’s Pink List recognises the most influential LGBT people in the UK.[1]

The most surprising omission in the 2011 List was Peter Tatchell. According to Hugh Muir in The Guardian this was because "the Post-it note with his name was shuffled into an incorrect pile and nobody noticed until it was too late".[2]

Judges

  • Brian Brady, Whitehall Editor
  • Laura Chesters, Business Correspondent
  • Matt Chorley, Political Correspondent
  • Katy Guest, Literary Editor
  • Mike Higgins, Arts Editor
  • Jane Merrick, Political Editor
  • Hugh Montgomery, Arts Correspondent
  • Neil Robinson, Sports Editor.

2011 Top 101

  1. Elly Barnes– Music teacher, trainer, diversity officer
  2. Michael Salter – Broadcast adviser to PM
  3. Jessie J – Musician
  4. Clare Balding – Broadcaster
  5. Sue Perkins – Comedian and TV presenter
  6. Evan Davis – Radio 4 Today presenter
  7. Antony Cotton – Actor
  8. Charlie Condou – Actor
  9. Scott Mills – Radio and TV presenter
  10. Heather Peace – Actress and singer
  11. Christopher Bailey – Chief creative officer, Burberry
  12. Steven Davies – Cricketer
  13. Simon Hughes – Deputy leader, Lib Dems
  14. Nick Herbert – Policing minister
  15. John Barrowman – Actor and singer
  16. Will Young – Singer
  17. James Wharton – Soldier
  18. Michael Bishop – Businessman
  19. Julian Glover – PM's speech-writer
  20. Matthew Todd – Editor of Attitude
  21. Chris Bryant – Labour spokesman
  22. Mary Portas – Retail marketing consultant
  23. Alan Carr – Comedian
  24. Neil MacGregor – Museum director
  25. Nick Boles – MP
  26. Terence Etherton – Judge
  27. Clare Dimyon – Activist
  28. Sarah Brown – Cambridge City Councillor
  29. Gok Wan – Broadcaster
  30. Jonny Oates – Chief of staff to Nick Clegg
  31. Val McDermid– Crime writer
  32. Nicholas Hytner – Producer and director
  33. Jane Hill – Newsreader
  34. Stella Duffy – Writer, actress, campaigner
  35. Christine Burns – Activist
  36. John Browne – Businessman
  37. Steve Reed – Leader of Lambeth Council
  38. Jennifer Fear – CEO, Step Forward
  39. Eileen Gallagher – CEO, Shed Productions
  40. Mark Gatiss – Actor and writer
  41. Adrian Fulford – Judge
  42. Matthew Parris – Times columnist
  43. Sue Sanders – Human rights advocate
  44. Christian Jessen – Physician and TV presenter
  45. Alan Davey – CEO, Arts Council
  46. Matt Lucas – Actor and comedian
  47. Russell T Davies – TV producer and writer
  48. Jonathan Harvey – Stage and screen writer
  49. Russell Tovey – Actor
  50. Derren Brown – Illusionist
  51. Joe McElderry – Singer
  52. Simon Hopkinson – Chef
  53. Lynette Nusbacher – Strategist and historian
  54. Susie Orbach – Psycho-analyst and writer
  55. Eddie Mair – Broadcaster
  56. Allegra McEvedy – Chef
  57. Dominic Cooke – Theatre director
  58. Mandy McBain – Royal Navy officer
  59. Phyllida Lloyd – Director
  60. Michael King – Psychiatrist
  61. Tim Hely Hutchinson – CEO, Hachette Livre UK
  62. Guy Black – Director, Telegraph Group
  63. Phyll Opoku-Gyimah – MD, UK Black Pride
  64. Alan Duncan – Development minister
  65. Ravi Mirchandani – Publisher/editor
  66. Philip Hensher – Writer and teacher
  67. Angela Eagle – Labour spokeswoman
  68. Jay Stewart – Co-founder, Gendered Intelligence
  69. Patrick Strudwick – Journalist
  70. Waheed Alli – TV producer and peer
  71. Jim MacSweeney – Bookshop owner
  72. Evelyn Asante-Mensah – Chair, NHS Manchester
  73. Simon Blake – Chief executive, Brook
  74. Paul Martin – Chief executive, Lesbian and Gay Foundation
  75. Peter Mandelson – Former politician
  76. Dawn Airey – Television executive
  77. Stephen Daldry – Director and producer
  78. Alice Arnold – BBC Radio 4 announcer
  79. Lionel Blue – Author and commentator
  80. Nick Partridge – Aids activist
  81. Ben Bradshaw – Politician
  82. Mark Abrahams – RAF squadron leader
  83. Michael Grandage– Director and producer
  84. Roz Kaveney – Author and activist
  85. Kelvin Holdsworth – Dean of Glasgow Cathedral
  86. Jackie Crozier – Director, Manchester Gay Pride
  87. Nigel Owens – Rugby referee
  88. Paul Burston – Writer
  89. Daniel WinterfeldtInterlaw Diversity Forum
  90. Richard Heaton – Director General for Pensions and Transformation, DWP
  91. Rikki Beadle-Blair – Writer and performer
  92. Iain Dale – Blogger
  93. Katherine O'Donnell – Journalist
  94. Jackie Kay – Poet and novelist
  95. Bethany Black – Comedian
  96. Deborah Warner – Stage director
  97. Stephen Frost – Head of diversity and inclusion, 2012 Olympics
  98. Melanie Rickey – Fashion editor-at-large, Grazia
  99. Richard Barnes – Deputy Mayor of London
  100. Anton Hysen – Swedish footballer

National Treasures

They need no introduction; they're in a category of their own and life wouldn't be the same without them.

Non-LGBT friends

You don't have to be lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender to support those who are.

Lifetime achievement award

See also

References

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