Noreen Stevens | |
---|---|
Born | 1962 (age 61–62) Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada |
Area(s) | Cartoonist |
Notable works | The Chosen Family |
Spouse(s) | Jill Town (2006-present) |
Children | 2 |
Noreen Stevens (born 1962) is a Canadian cartoonist, who illustrated and wrote the lesbian comic strip The Chosen Family . Her work in the field of comics began in 1984. The Chosen Family is featured in the ensemble comic book Dyke Strippers: Lesbian Cartoonists from A to Z alongside the likes of Diane DiMassa and Alison Bechdel. [1]
Stevens was born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario and grew up in Mississauga, Ontario and Strathroy, Ontario. She graduated from the University of Manitoba with a bachelor's degree in interior design in 1985.
After graduating Stevens realized she wanted to dedicate her time to creating and illustrating comics. She began working on a comic strip titled Local Access Only which was published in the University of Manitoba's student newspaper from 1986 to 1987. [2] In 1987 the Manitoba Arts Council granted Stevens $5,000 in order to help fund her renowned comic strip The Chosen Family. Also in that same year, she began producing and self-syndicating bi-weekly strips to LGBTQ+ newspapers and magazines in Canada, the US, the UK and Australia, including Xtra! , Swerve , Herizons , Chicago Outlines and The Washington Blade .
In 1991, Stevens worked with photographer Sheila Spence to create an artist collective called Average Good Looks. [3] Their goal was to mount billboards across Winnipeg that would condemn homophobia in Canada through a series of photographs of queer people in different scenarios, in order to normalize homosexuality in the early 90s. The pictures contained text that read: "Lesbian, it's not a dirty word," and "Gays & Lesbians, your family." These billboards also contained phone numbers, purposefully placed in order to see the kind of answering machine messages they would receive. The result was a pile up of homophobic messages, which Stevens and Spence played for the first time during a gallery show labeled Passion Pink. Homophobia Is Killing Us, was then created and soon stretched to 14 different locations further from Winnipeg into Calgary, Edmonton, Regina and Saskatoon . [4]
In 1992 Stevens collaborated with Ellen Orleans on her collection of essays titled Can't Keep a Straight Face, where Stevens illustrated all the visual material. In March 1993 Stevens was featured in Roz Warren's anthology Mothers!. In 1995 Stevens' work was featured in the anthology of comics from 20 different women cartoonists titled Men are From Detroit, Women are From Paris. In 1996 Stevens collaborated with Ellen Orleans again on her second collection of essays titled StillCan't Keep a Straight Face.
From September 1997 to April 1998 Stevens' The Chosen Family appeared several times in the pages of Canadian comic strips OH... (Issues #19-22).
Stevens' strips also appeared in The Body Politic , Ms. , Gay Comix, A Queer Sense of Humor, Weenie-Toons!, the Women's Glib [5] series, and several feminist and LGBTQ+ anthologies. Stevens retired The Chosen Family in 2004 after producing almost 400 semi-serialized installments of the strip. [6] Her last public online article is posted in the Xtra! webpage titled 'Strathroy suicide shows how teasing can kill.'
From 1993 to 1995, Stevens was an owner and the manager of Winona's Coffee and Ice, the first gay and lesbian café in Winnipeg. [7] In 2003, Stevens and her partner, Jill Town, were the first same-sex couple in Manitoba to jointly adopt two children, Dillon and Savannah Stevens, whom they had fostered since birth. [8] Their adoption experience was featured on a 2009 episode of the Discovery Health Channel series Adoption Stories. In 2006, Stevens married Jill Town.
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The Chosen Family was a Canadian comic strip, written and drawn by Winnipeg cartoonist Noreen Stevens from 1987 to 2004. The strip evolved from an earlier project, Local Access Only, published in the University of Manitoba newspaper, The Manitoban. The Chosen Family used social and political satire to shine a light on late 20th century queer experience through Stevens' lens as lesbian feminist. It featured four on-going characters, lesbians Kenneth-Marie and Weed, whose relationship was undefined, and the couple's friends and neighbours, Puddin' Head and The Straight Chick Upstairs. Later the strip also featured Kenneth-Marie and Weed's two fostered/adopted children, a daughter named Rosebud and an unnamed son.
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