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Alanson Russell "Lance" Loud (June 26, 1951 – December 22, 2001) was an American television personality, magazine columnist, and new wave rock-n-roll performer.Loud is best known for his 1973 appearance in An American Family, a pioneer reality television series that featured his coming out, leading to his status as an icon in the gay community.
Mumps (sometimes credited as The Mumps) were an American punk band fronted by Lance Loud. [2] [3] [4] The mainstays of the band were Loud and keyboardist and primary songwriter Kristian Hoffman (who he had met at school), and guitarist Rob Duprey. [5] The initial rhythm section was Jay Dee Daugherty and Aaron Kiley on drums and bass ...
An American Family is an American television documentary series that followed the life of a California family in the early 1970s. Widely referred to as the first example of an American reality TV show, [1] the series drew millions of weekly viewers, who were drawn to a story that seemed to shatter the rosy façade of upper-middle-class suburbia.
Patricia Loud, the matriarch of the Loud family in the TV documentary An American Family died on Sunday from natural causes. Upon returning to her hometown she met William Loud and they would go ...
A representative for Loud confirmed her death to Variety, and the news was posted to the official Loud Family Facebook page. “With inconsolable sorrow, we are sad to share the news with friends ...
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Moving to New York City in 1974, Jay Dee Daugherty co-founded the Mumps with high school friends Lance Loud and Kristian Hoffman.He began playing with Patti Smith in 1975 after a brief stint as her sound man.
A Death in An American Family, Magnuson credited the idea of Lance Loud — a member of an all-American family filmed day-in/day-out for the landmark PBS documentary An American Family, who came out as gay during the course of that documentary miniseries — with inspiring her to leave West Virginia for New York: