• Charlotte Cushman's "Jolly Bachelor Women": The Lesbian Artists' Colony in Rome | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story
    Feb 20 2026

    Drift off to sleep with the story of Charlotte Cushman's "household of jolly bachelor women", a 19th century lesbian artists' colony in Rome where American women sculptors, writers, and painters lived, worked, and loved each other openly.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover how America's greatest actress created a revolutionary community in 1850s Rome. Learn about Charlotte Cushman, famous for playing Romeo on stage, who used her wealth to establish a household for talented women artists. Meet the "jolly bachelor women": sculptor Harriet Hosmer, who proved women could work in marble; Emma Stebbins, who created New York's Bethesda Fountain; pioneering African American sculptor Edmonia Lewis; and writer Grace Greenwood. Explore their romantic relationships, Elizabeth Barrett Browning described Charlotte and Matilda Hays as "a female marriage", and witness the passionate dramas that unfolded: love affairs, heartbreak, even a palimony lawsuit. Understand how these women earned substantial incomes, traveled internationally without male chaperones, and created significant art while living as openly lesbian couples in an era that demanded women marry men.

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep.

    🌙 Perfect for: Lesbian history, 19th century LGBTQ+, women artists, Rome history, artists' colonies, chosen family, bedtime relaxation

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Charlotte Cushman's life (1816-1876) as America's greatest actress
    2. Her famous "Romeo" performances in "breeches roles"
    3. Moving to Rome in 1852 to establish an artists' colony
    4. The "household of jolly bachelor women" - what it meant
    5. Members: Matilda Hays, Harriet Hosmer, Emma Stebbins, Edmonia Lewis, Grace Greenwood
    6. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's observation: "they live together, dress alike… it is a female marriage"
    7. Henry James calling them "The White Marmorean Flock"
    8. William Westmore Story's description: "a harem of emancipated females"
    9. Charlotte and Matilda Hays's relationship and "vows of eternal attachment"
    10. Both women dressing in masculine clothing openly
    11. Matilda leaving Charlotte for Harriet Hosmer (1854)
    12. Their reunion in 1855
    13. Charlotte falling in love with Emma Stebbins (1857)
    14. The dramatic confrontation and physical fight
    15. Matilda's palimony lawsuit - claiming sacrificed career
    16. Harriet Hosmer's sculptures: "Daphne," "Medusa," "Zenobia in Chains"
    17. Emma Stebbins creating the Bethesda Fountain (Central Park)
    18. Edmonia Lewis...
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    46 mins
  • Tom Daley's Olympic Gold: "I Am a Gay Man and Also an Olympic Champion" | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story
    Feb 16 2026

    Drift off to sleep with the inspiring story of Tom Daley—who came out at 19, faced doubt and discrimination, and then stood on the Olympic podium in Tokyo 2021 declaring: "I feel incredibly proud to say that I am a gay man and also an Olympic champion."

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover Tom Daley's journey from child prodigy to openly gay Olympic champion. Learn how he competed at Beijing 2008 at just 14 years old, won bronze at London 2012, and then made the terrifying decision to come out via YouTube in December 2013. Experience his relationship with Oscar-winning screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, their 2017 marriage, and welcoming son Robbie in 2018. Understand the thirteen-year journey from his first Olympics to that golden moment on July 26, 2021, when he and Matty Lee won synchronized 10-meter platform diving by just 1.23 points, and Tom used his moment of triumph to send a powerful message to LGBTQ+ youth worldwide: "You can achieve anything."

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep.

    🌙 Perfect for: Gay male history, contemporary LGBTQ+ athletes, Olympic history, coming out stories, sports representation, bedtime relaxation, inspiration

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Tom Daley's life (born 1994) and diving prodigy career
    2. Beijing 2008 Olympics at age 14 - youngest British Olympian in 48 years
    3. London 2012 bronze medal under intense home-country pressure
    4. December 2, 2013: Coming out via YouTube video at age 19
    5. "I'm dating a guy and I couldn't be happier"
    6. Meeting Dustin Lance Black (Oscar-winning "Milk" screenwriter)
    7. The fear and courage of publishing that video
    8. Homophobic backlash alongside overwhelming support
    9. Identity evolution: initially ambiguous, later gay, now queer
    10. Marriage to Dustin Lance Black in 2017
    11. Son Robbie Ray Black-Daley born 2018 via surrogacy
    12. Rio 2016 bronze - still no gold
    13. Dustin's words: "Your son needs to see you win Olympic gold"
    14. Training for Tokyo 2020/2021 as a husband and father
    15. July 26, 2021: Winning gold with Matty Lee by 1.23 points
    16. The iconic quote: "I am a gay man and also an Olympic champion"
    17. Message to LGBTQ+ youth: "You can achieve anything"
    18. Record 160+ openly LGBTQ+ athletes at Tokyo 2020
    19. Paris 2024 silver medal and Team GB flag bearer
    20. Retirement from diving in 2024
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    43 mins
  • Colette and Missy: Unconventional Love in Belle Époque Paris | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story
    Feb 12 2026

    Drift off to sleep with the story of Colette and Missy, a French writer and an aristocrat in a three-piece suit who built an unconventional life together in early 1900s Paris, whose love inspired art and defied every social boundary.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover the passionate relationship between Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette, who would become one of France's greatest authors, and Mathilde de Morny "Missy," an aristocrat who wore men's suits, smoked cigars, and answered to "Uncle Max." Learn how they met in 1905 and built a life together at Villa Belle Plage by the sea, where Colette wrote with a bracelet engraved "I belong to Missy" on her wrist. Experience the scandal of January 3, 1907, when their onstage kiss at the Moulin Rouge caused a riot and forced them into hiding. Understand how their domestic partnership influenced Colette's groundbreaking novels about female desire and independence, and explore the complex question of Missy's gender identity, was Missy a butch lesbian or a transgender man? Witness how their love, though it eventually transformed into devoted friendship, shaped both their artistic lives.

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep.

    🌙 Perfect for: Lesbian history, gender nonconforming history, Belle Époque Paris, French literature, artistic partnerships, unconventional relationships, bedtime relaxation

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Colette's life (1873-1954) and escape from her fraudulent husband Willy
    2. Mathilde de Morny "Missy" (1863-1944) and aristocratic background
    3. Missy's masculine presentation—three-piece suits, short hair, cigars
    4. Known as "Uncle Max" and "Monsieur le Marquis"
    5. Meeting around 1905 in Paris lesbian circles
    6. Living together at Villa Belle Plage in Le Crotoy (1906)
    7. Colette's bracelet: "I belong to Missy"
    8. Artistic collaboration and domestic partnership
    9. January 3, 1907: "Rêve d'Égypte" scandal at Moulin Rouge
    10. The kiss that caused a riot and police shutdown
    11. Forced separation after the scandal
    12. Buying Manor of Rozven in Brittany (June 21, 1910)
    13. Same day as Colette's divorce from Willy
    14. Relationship ending 1911-1912
    15. Reconciliation as friends in the 1920s
    16. How Missy influenced Colette's novels about female desire
    17. The debate over Missy's gender identity
    18. Missy's death in 1944 during WWII
    19. Their lasting impact on LGBTQ+ history

    💜 Subscribe...

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    43 mins
  • The Two Katharines: "America the Beautiful" Written by a Woman Who Loved a Woman | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story
    Feb 8 2026

    TITLE: The Two Katharines: "America the Beautiful" Written by a Woman Who Loved a Woman | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story

    DESCRIPTION: Drift off to sleep with the story of Katharine Lee Bates and Katharine Coman—two brilliant women who shared 25 years of life, love, and partnership at a Victorian house called "The Scarab," and whose love inspired America's most beloved patriotic song.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover how the woman who wrote "America the Beautiful" built her life around another woman. Learn about Katharine Lee Bates, the Wellesley College English professor, and Katharine Coman, the pioneering economist who founded Wellesley's Economics Department. Explore their decades-long partnership in what was called a "Boston marriage", two women living together, supporting each other's careers, traveling together, and expressing profound devotion through passionate letters and pressed yellow clover flowers. Experience the 1893 journey to Pikes Peak that inspired "purple mountain majesties," understand how Coman's encouragement led to the poem's creation, and witness Bates's grief after Coman's death from breast cancer in 1915, expressed in "Yellow Clover: A Book of Remembrance", some of the most beautiful love poetry ever written between women.

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep.

    🌙 Perfect for: Lesbian history, women's history, American history, Victorian era LGBTQ+, Boston marriages, romantic friendships, bedtime relaxation, insomnia relief

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Katharine Lee Bates's life (1859-1929) as author of "America the Beautiful"
    2. Katharine Coman's pioneering work in economics and environmental science
    3. How they met at Wellesley College in the 1880s
    4. Their 25-year partnership living at "The Scarab"
    5. Passionate letters: "I want to come to you, very much as I want to come to Heaven"
    6. Yellow clover flowers pressed into their letters
    7. The 1893 journey west that inspired "America the Beautiful"
    8. Both Katharines in Colorado together that summer
    9. The climb up Pikes Peak (July 1893)
    10. Writing "O beautiful for spacious skies" after seeing "purple mountain majesties"
    11. Their social reform work at Denison House settlement house
    12. Helping establish Wellesley's first kindergarten
    13. Coman's death from breast cancer (1915)
    14. Bates nursing Coman through two mastectomies
    15. Bates's private memorial—first American breast cancer narrative
    16. "Yellow Clover: A Book of Remembrance" (1922)—love poems to Coman
    17. "If You Could Come"...
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    46 mins
  • Billy Strayhorn: The Openly Gay Genius Behind "Take the A Train" | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story
    Feb 4 2026

    Drift off to sleep with the story of Billy Strayhorn, the quiet, openly gay Black composer who wrote some of the most beautiful jazz in history, and was erased from credit for decades because the world wasn't ready for who he was.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover the man behind "Take the A Train," "Lush Life," and countless other jazz standards that most people attributed to Duke Ellington. Learn how Billy lived openly as a gay man in 1940s and 50s Harlem, an extraordinary act of courage in an era when homosexuality could get you arrested, fired, or blacklisted. Explore his nearly decade-long relationship with fellow jazz pianist Aaron Bridgers, his deep involvement in the Civil Rights Movement alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and his attendance at the 1963 March on Washington. Understand how his identity as a "triple minority", Black, gay, and unwilling to hide, shaped both his art and his erasure, and how his genius is finally being recognized decades after his death.

    This episode features our two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep.

    🌙 Perfect for: Jazz history, Black LGBTQ+ history, gay male history, 20th century music, civil rights era, bedtime relaxation, insomnia relief

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Billy Strayhorn's life (1915-1967) and early musical genius
    2. Growing up in Pittsburgh, finding music through his grandmother
    3. Writing "Lush Life" as a teenager in Jim Crow America
    4. The famous 1938 backstage meeting with Duke Ellington
    5. How "Take the A Train" was inspired by subway directions to Harlem
    6. His relationship with jazz pianist Aaron Bridgers
    7. Living openly as gay in 1940s-50s New York—and why it mattered
    8. The "triple minority" dynamic: Black, gay, and refusing to hide
    9. Writing up to 40% of the Ellington Orchestra's material uncredited
    10. Ellington's complex relationship with Billy's contributions
    11. Civil Rights activism and friendship with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
    12. The 1963 March on Washington
    13. "Jump for Joy"—the groundbreaking anti-racist musical
    14. His final partner Bill Grove at his side when he died
    15. David Hajdu's 1996 biography finally bringing recognition
    16. His 2015 induction into the Legacy Walk
    17. Why his quiet courage changed LGBTQ+ history

    💜 Subscribe for LGBTQ+ history bedtime stories! Like, share, and comment about which jazz musician or Black LGBTQ+ figure you'd like to hear about next.

    🎵 "Take the A Train" has been played millions of times around the world. Now you know who really wrote it—and why his story...

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    40 mins
  • Louisa May Alcott: The Woman Who Refused Marriage and Chose Herself | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story
    Feb 1 2026

    Drift off to sleep with the story of Louisa May Alcott, the beloved author of "Little Women" whose own life was far more unconventional than her famous novel reveals. She refused marriage, centered her life around women she loved, and quietly proved a woman could thrive on her own terms.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover the real Louisa May Alcott, not just the author, but the woman who turned down marriage proposals, declared herself "a literary spinster, with her pen for a spouse," and built a life devoted to her writing, her family of women, and her own independence. Learn how she grew up in the unconventional Transcendentalist world of 19th century Massachusetts, how her deepest emotional bonds were with women, and how she secretly resisted the marriage conventions she felt pressured to include in her own fiction. Understand why her choices matter for LGBTQ+ history and what her quiet refusal of heterosexual norms meant for generations of women who followed.

    This episode features our unique two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep.

    🌙 Perfect for: Lesbian history, women's history, 19th century literature, unconventional lives, chosen family, female friendships, bedtime relaxation, insomnia relief

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Louisa May Alcott's life (1832-1888) and unconventional upbringing
    2. Her Transcendentalist family and experimental lifestyle
    3. Refusing at least two marriage proposals
    4. "A literary spinster, with her pen for a spouse"
    5. Passionate friendships with women including Alf Whitman
    6. Her sisters as the emotional center of her life
    7. Writing "Little Women" and reluctantly marrying off Jo March
    8. How she secretly undermined marriage in her own fiction
    9. Supporting herself financially through writing alone
    10. Adopting her late sister May's daughter
    11. Creating a female-centered family structure
    12. Victorian "romantic friendships" and what they meant
    13. Why her choices matter for LGBTQ+ history
    14. Quiet refusal as a form of resistance
    15. Her legacy for women who chose themselves

    💜 Subscribe for LGBTQ+ history bedtime stories! Like, share, and comment about which unconventional historical woman you'd like to hear about next.

    🏳️‍🌈 Related LGBTQ+ History Stories:

    1. Radclyffe Hall: The Banned Lesbian Novel That Changed History
    2. Rosa Bonheur: The French Painter Who Lived as Herself
    3. Gertrude Stein: The Writer Who Loved Women Openly
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    39 mins
  • Radclyffe Hall: The Banned Lesbian Novel That Changed History | LGBTQ+ Bedtime Story
    Jan 28 2026

    Drift off to sleep with the inspiring story of Radclyffe Hall, who wore men's clothing in the 1920s, loved women openly, and wrote "The Well of Loneliness", the banned lesbian novel that became a beacon for generations.

    In this soothing LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover how Radclyffe Hall lived authentically as a masculine-presenting lesbian in early 20th century England. Learn about her enduring partnership with Una Troubridge, her courage to write "The Well of Loneliness" (1928) knowing it would bring persecution, and the infamous obscenity trial that banned the book in Britain. Understand how the controversy made the novel famous worldwide, how lesbian women found themselves in its pages for the first time, and why Radclyffe's quiet determination to choose truth over safety changed LGBTQ+ literature forever.

    This episode features our unique two-telling format: the story told once at a comfortable pace, then repeated slower with longer pauses to guide you gently into sleep.

    🌙 Perfect for: Lesbian history, LGBTQ+ literature, 1920s England, banned books, butch/masculine presentation, bedtime relaxation, insomnia relief

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Radclyffe Hall's life (1880-1943) as masculine-presenting lesbian
    2. Going by "John" in her personal life
    3. Relationship with Mabel "Ladye" Batten
    4. 30-year partnership with Una Troubridge
    5. Writing "The Well of Loneliness" (1928)
    6. November 1928 obscenity trial in Britain
    7. Book banned and destroyed in UK
    8. James Douglas's attack calling it obscene
    9. 1929 US trial finding it NOT obscene
    10. Worldwide publication despite British ban
    11. Impact on generations of lesbian readers
    12. How imperfect representation still saved lives
    13. Radclyffe's masculine clothing and presentation
    14. Living openly as a lesbian couple in the 1920s
    15. The book finally published legally in UK (1949)
    16. Legacy for lesbian literature and LGBTQ+ visibility

    💜 Subscribe for LGBTQ+ history bedtime stories! Like, share, and comment about which banned book or censored LGBTQ+ story you want to hear next.

    ⏰ Story Format: Told twice—first at normal pace, then slower for sleep

    📚 "The Well of Loneliness" was banned, burned, and condemned—but it survived and became one of the most important lesbian novels in history.

    #RadclyffeHall #WellOfLoneliness #LesbianHistory #BannedBooks #LGBTQLiterature #1920sLGBTQ #ButchHistory #ObscenityTrial

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    40 mins
  • Kestral Gaian: Non-Binary Trans Artist Preserving LGBTQ+ Stories
    Jan 25 2026

    Drift off to sleep with the inspiring story of Kestral Gaian (they/them), a non-binary trans artist who is documenting LGBTQ+ history right now, preserving Section 28 survivors' stories and creating queer poetry for future generations.

    In this unique contemporary LGBTQ+ history bedtime story, discover how Kestral Gaian is building the archives of tomorrow. Learn about their groundbreaking work editing "Twenty-Eight: Stories from the Section 28 Generation," documenting the UK's original "don't say gay" law. Explore their newest poetry collection "Tubelines: The Poetry of Motion," which transforms London Underground journeys into gorgeous queer verse about identity, transition, and everyday beauty. Understand how they survived Section 28 themselves and now ensure those stories aren't lost.

    This is LGBTQ+ history in the making, a non-binary trans writer with autism creating the representation they never had, preserving queer stories, and building bridges across generations.

    Learn more about Kestral - https://kestr.al/

    🌙 Perfect for: Contemporary LGBTQ+ history, non-binary representation, trans artists, Section 28 history, queer poetry, autism advocacy, bedtime relaxation

    📚 What you'll learn in this bedtime story:

    1. Kestral Gaian's work as non-binary trans artist and archivist
    2. Editing "Twenty-Eight: Stories from Section 28 Generation"
    3. "Tubelines: The Poetry of Motion" - queer poetry about London Underground
    4. Other works: "Counterweights," "Hidden Lives"
    5. How they survived Section 28 era and now preserve those stories
    6. Their interdisciplinary work: psychotherapy, technology, activism, art
    7. Living as non-binary trans person with autism
    8. Philosophy: "stories help us practice being better humans"
    9. Why documenting contemporary queer life creates future history
    10. The "soft and furious" voice of queer activism and art
    11. How they integrate all aspects of identity in their work
    12. Building archives that future LGBTQ+ people will need

    💜 Subscribe for LGBTQ+ history, past AND present! Like, share, and comment about contemporary queer artists you admire.

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    39 mins