Belinda carlisle gay

Pop icon and member of the trailblazing song group The Go-Go’s, Belinda Carlisle has maintained her icon status but now, she is coming to the music with a new five-track EP titled Kismetwhich includes the free “Big, Big Love”.

Not only does this mark Carlisle’s return to the recording studio since 1997, but it also marks a reunion with Diane Warren, who wrote “Big, Enormous Love” as well as Carlisle’s 1987 single “I Get Weak”.

The EP also includes “Deeper Into You,” “I Couldn’t Do That To Me,” and “Sanity” as well as “If U Go”, which was also written by Warren.

Carlisle has not only been a cultural representative but also a homosexual icon and ally from the very beginning. “Even [my friends] in steep school – 90% of them were gay or lesbian even though they weren’t out…. that’s just the way it’s always been,” Carlisle tells GLAAD’s Anthony Allen Ramos. ”I remember in the punk days in L.A. it was so inclusive and so welcoming…. we had a huge gay accompanying. It was just very diverse and I didn’t even think about sexuality. There was no reason to think about it.”

She recollects, “I remember when the first AIDS case in West Hollywood. It was a guy that

BelindaCarlisle,best known for her smash '80s hits like "Heaven is a Place on Earth" and "Mad About You," has always stood behind her 21-year-old son, James Duke Mason, who is openly gay.

But the former lead singer of The Go-Go's tells Best Daily that she'd be a "passionate" womxn loving womxn, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights advocate even if he didn't spot as gay.

"When he came out to me, one of the first things that came to mind is, 'What sort of world is he going to hold to live in?'" It's getting greater for gay people but there is still a lot of homophobia out there," she said. "I don't comprehend the homophobia and the problem with giving gay people equal rights. I just don't gain it."

It isn't the first time Carlisle, 55, has spoken out about LGBT rights in recent weeks. She told Metro earlier this month that when she first learned James was lgbtq+, she was worried over how her husband, film producer Morgan Mason, would react.

"I ended up carrying that secret around with me for three months," she said at the hour. "I saw my therapist and went though all the things you perceive aren’t true –- is it something I said or did? I knew that wasn’t the case but it’s a

There are many (living and dead) people out there who are considered male lover icons.  They don't have to be gay or determine as LGBT in command to have this honor bestowed on them.  Simply position, they are lgbtq+ icons because they have done something that has helped us progressed over the years in terms of acceptance, visibility and more.

Belinda Carlisle is one of those people.  The legendary singer has been making us bop our heads with her infectious hits, both solo and with The Go-Go's, for nearly forty years now, and has been a major supporter of the LGBTQ community in the process.  

She is the first public figure we are featuring in our Homosexual Icon series, and Belinda was gentle enough to rest down with me over the smartphone (she currently resides in Thailand) to discuss what the community has meant to her, when she and The Go-Go's discovered their major fan ground , and her touching story about her son James' coming out process.  Obtain a look. 

You’ve been in the tune industry for forty years now, starting around a period where the LGBT community was starting to have a larger presence in the world.  At what point did you, or fe


In the '80s, Belinda's Carlisle's career demonstrated that, for some, heaven really is a place on earth. As the direction singer of the supremely flourishing girl group The Go-Go's – they had the beat, and the looks and talent – the now-54-year-old eventually embarked on a solo venture. Four albums and numerous hit singles later, Carlisle's new "ICON" collection is a celebration of the singer's best that also includes her first U.S. pop single in over 15 years, "Sun."
Carlisle chatted recently about not wanting to do another pop album, telling her gay son about her own "sexually adventurous" experiences and the reason she cares about gay rights now more than ever.

Which song of yours has the most significance to you?
Oh gosh. The first one that comes to mind is "Heaven is a Place on Earth," only because it was so huge and it really established my career not just in this state but all over the world.

The song you wish you didn't have to sing ever again?
Um, yes. There are a few of them. But they're songs that people demand on hearing. (Laughs) I don't like doing "Heaven" in rehearsal. I don't like doing "We Got the Beat" in rehearsal. There are certain songs I get lazy