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The 30 most inspirational lesbian celebrities

Your honor, the lesbian celebrities are giving! We are living in very iconically homosexual times, and I couldn’t be happier about it. From the music to the film industry, Hollywood lesbians are proudly embracing their identities and shedding light on the beautiful and diverse landscape of queerness.

So, I thought it would only be right to complete a deep dive into some of the most inspirational and badass womxn loving womxn celebs out there. It’s our gay-given right. 


First of all, what is a celesbian?

A celesbian is a celebrity in the lesbian society. They can be lesbians who are actually famous, love Ellen Degeneres or Lena Waithe, or D-list dykes appreciate the former cast members of The Real L World (sorry, babes).

Celesbians also include internet celebrities or influencers that lezzies worship. Basically, any widely known dyke or dykon(dyke icon) is a celesbian. 

It’s important to note that direct celebrities who participate lesbian characters complete not necessarily fit underneath the celesbian umbrella, so let’s celebrate the astonishing peop

29 Queer Girls On Which Lesbian Characters Made Them Feel Seen

I might be aging myself with this, but Spencer from South of Nowhere. Her struggles with adjusting to existence at a new lofty school, navigating different relationships with both men and women while fighting her true gay self from coming out of the closet — just so she could be standard by society, her peers, her family and herself — are all too familiar. Eventually, in spite of everything, she learns to accept herself and accept the fact that she’s in love with her best friend, Ashley. Plus, the guy she dated briefly, Aiden, realizes she’s gay, helps gently pull her out of the closet, and turns out to be one of her best friends too. My coming out experience was similar. South of Nowhere was on at a time when I really needed it, when I really didn’t want to be lgbtq+, tried to be bi, tried to be linear, and finally stopped fighting who I really am.

—bluesilverblue33


There have never been more out Lesbian actresses, bi-curious actors, and queer women actors than there are right now in this very moment. The Homosexual community is plowing head-first onto stage and screen, playing a diverse array of roles, winning awards and headlining cinema films. But whomst amongst them is the most prolific? Who has simply managed to appear in the most things, accumulated the most imdb credits? It&#;s not who you think! (Besides Jane Lynch, you already knew Jane Lynch would be on this list.)

You won&#;t see a lot of the most popular lesbian actresses and bisexual actors on this list that you might expect to see — for example, Kristen Stewart and Angelina Jolie both do film, rather than television, pretty exclusively, and tend to be very particular about the roles they take on, so they may be well-liked, but they&#;re not quite as prolific. There&#;ll also be plenty of names you&#;ve likely never heard before — I hadn&#;t! — but it turns out have been infusing their gay selves into our lives on a regular basis for the past several decades.

Because history is long and

Famous lesbians, gay women and gender fluid people you really should know

1

Famous lesbians - Jacqueline Wilson

Author Jacqueline Wilson came out publicly in at the age of 74, although she said her relationship with her partner Trish had never been a covert. “I’ve never really been in any kind of closet,” Wilson told The Guardian. “It would be such old news for anybody that has ever acknowledged anything much about me. Even the vaguest acquaintance knows perfectly well that we are a couple.”

2

Famous lesbians - Megan Rapinoe

US soccer star and co-captain Megan Rapinoe spoke to CNN and said she didn't know she was gay when she was younger. "It's so embarrassing because I'm just very gay, I don't know how it happened but as soon as it clicked I was like she has arrived. She is here. Her life is beginning."

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3

Famous lesbians - Lena Waithe

Master of None player Lena Waithe said, at the Essence Black Women in Hollywood Awards in , "Being born gay, black and female is not a revolutionary act. Entity proud to