David Bowie raised a few eyebrows when he posed in a dress on the
cover of his 1970 album, The Man Who Sold the World. But
the question on everyone's mind wasn't explicitly answered until a
January 1972 issue of Melody Maker, in which Bowie told a
reporter, "Yes, of course I'm gay, and always have been." In
Seventies Britain, that was more than enough to fan the flames of
controversy into a five-alarm blaze. Of course, it was also a good
way to sell a few albums, particularly if said record was a
conceptual work about a sexually ambiguous alien messiah. When
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from
Mars was released six months later, it turned Bowie into an
international superstar. Bowie -- now married to model Iman (yes, a
woman) -- clearly wasn't surprised, later saying that,
strategically speaking, his coming-out comment was "probably the
best thing I've ever said."
From the Archives
Bowie Proclaims He's Gay
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