Anita Bryant, a popular singer who became known for opposition to gay
rights, dead at age 84
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[January 11, 2025]
NEW YORK (AP) — Anita Bryant, a former Miss Oklahoma,
Grammy-nominated singer and prominent booster of orange juice and other
products who became known over the second half of her life for her
outspoken opposition to gay rights, has died. She was 84.
Bryant died Dec. 16 at her home in Edmond, Oklahoma, according to a
statement posted by her family to news site The Oklahoman on Thursday.
The family did not list a cause of death.
Bryant was a Barnsdall native who began singing at an early age, and was
just 12 when she hosted her own local television show. She was named
Miss Oklahoma in 1958 and soon began a successful recording career. Her
hit singles included “Till There Was You,” “Paper Roses” and “My Little
Corner of the World.” A lifelong Christian, she received two Grammy
nominations for best sacred performance and one for best spiritual
performance, for the album “Anita Bryant ... Naturally.”
By the late 1960s, she was among the entertainers joining Bob Hope on
his USO tours for troops overseas, had sung at the White House and
performed at the national conventions for both the Democrats and
Republicans in 1968. She also became a highly visible commercial
spokesperson, her ads for Florida orange juice featuring the tag line,
“A day without orange juice is like a day without sunshine.”
But in the late 1970s, her life and career began a dramatically new
path. Unhappy with the cultural changes of the time, Bryant led a
successful campaign to repeal an ordinance in Florida's Miami-Dade
County that would have prohibited discrimination based on sexual
orientation. Supported by the Rev. Jerry Falwell among others, Bryant
and her “Save Our Children” coalition continued to oppose gay rights
around the country, denouncing the “deviant lifestyle” of the gay
community and calling gays “human garbage.”
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Anita Bryant is seen at a press conference in Miami Beach, Fla., on
June 8, 1977. (AP Photo/Bill Hudson, File)
Bryant became the object of much
criticism in return. Activists organized boycotts against products
she endorsed, designed T-shirts mocking her and named a drink for
her — a variation of the screwdriver that replaced orange juice with
apple juice. During an appearance in Iowa, an activist jammed a pie
in her face. Her career in entertainment declined, her marriage to
her first husband, Bob Green, broke up, and she later filed for
bankruptcy.
In Florida, her legacy was challenged and
perpetuated. The ban against sexual discrimination was restored in
1998. Tom Lander, an LGBTQ+ activist and board member of the
advocacy group Safe Schools South Florida, told The Associated Press
on Friday, “She won the campaign, but she lost the battle in time.”
But Lander also acknowledged the “parental rights” movement, which
has spurred a recent wave book bannings and anti-LGBTQ+ laws in
Florida led by such conservative organizations as Moms Against
Liberty.
“It’s so connected to what’s happening today,” Lander said.
Bryant spent the latter part of her life in Oklahoma, where she led
Anita Bryant Ministries International. Her second husband, NASA test
astronaut Charles Hobson Dry, died last year. According to her
family's statement, she is survived by four children, two
stepdaughters and seven grandchildren.
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Associated Press writer Kate Payne in Tallahassee, Florida
contributed to this report.
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