Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama drag queen donates items from gay marriage fight

- BY JAY REEVES

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — A drag queen known for opposing Republican U.S. Senate candidate and gay marriage foe Roy Moore has given Alabama’s history agency the garb she wore during the fight that helped unseat Moore from the state Supreme Court last year.

Joined by officials from the Alabama Department of Archives and History at a Monday news conference, Ambrosia Starling said she’s giving the navy-blue dress, Cashmere coat, wig, heels and jewelry now because October is LGBT history month, not because Moore is running for Senate.

“I don’t want to fire up his supporters,” said Starling.

Photograph­er Christiane Robinson also donated more than 2,200 images and videos she made during events related to same-sex marriage.

Political history is a strength of the agency, said Archives Director Steve Murray, and the donations help fill a gap in its collection.

“No matter what your position, I don’t think anyone can say that they don’t help document an important time,” he said.

The Moore campaign did not immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment. Moore is running against Democrat Doug Jones.

Starling appeared at numerous rallies last year while Moore’s opposition to gay marriage was making headlines. Robinson documented the events, photograph­ing supporters and opponents of gay marriage.

Murray said Starling’s wardrobe will join a textile collection that includes the suit worn by former Gov. George C. Wallace when he was shot while campaignin­g for president in 1972. Neither the clothes nor images will

Starling’s wardrobe will join a textile collection that includes the suit worn by former Gov. George C. Wallace when he was shot in 1972.

be displayed immediatel­y, he said.

The donations were “a little unusual” since archivists typically get items contribute­d decades after events, not just months, Murray said. The items are welcome partly because they will help the agency tell the story of a recent event, he said.

Starling donated the clothing she wore while helping lead a January 2016 rally outside the state’s main judicial building. Dozens of people at the demonstrat­ion filed complaints against Moore, a conservati­ve Christian and vocal opponent of same-sex marriage. Robinson took photos of the protest.

State judicial investigat­ors later filed charges against Moore, and a special court suspended him from office over an order he issued about gay weddings.

Moore resigned from the court and announced a run for Senate after Jeff Sessions became U.S. attorney general under President Donald Trump. The election will be held Dec. 12.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ambrosia Starling speaks during Monday’s news conference at the Alabama Department of Archives and History in Montgomery, Ala. after donating an array of materials associated with the marriage equality campaign.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ambrosia Starling speaks during Monday’s news conference at the Alabama Department of Archives and History in Montgomery, Ala. after donating an array of materials associated with the marriage equality campaign.

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