9 simple ways Saint Dolly Parton made the world a better place for LGBTQ+ people

Dolly Parton in a silver outfit smiling, holding her hand in out. She is imposed against a rainbow background.

Dolly Parton is a country music legend, a philanthropist, and a major LGBTQ+ ally. (Getty/Canva)

In this household, every day is Dolly Parton Day. But today, 5 August is the official Dolly Parton Day.

Announced back in 2019 by David Briley, then mayor of Parton’s beloved Nashville, Tennessee, Dolly Parton Day is a 24-hour period to sit and think about all the wonderful ways the country music legend has made the world a better place to be.

From releasing 49 (49!) studio albums and writing two of her most adored tunes on the same day (“I Will Always Love You” and “Jolene”), to partly funding a coronavirus vaccine and distributing endless amounts of free books to children, Dolly Parton is a full-time angel on this earth.

Yet the LGBTQ+ community holds a particularly special place in its heart for the singer/living legend. To mark Dolly Parton Day the right way, here are nine times she proved herself a patron saint of queer allyship.


1. Dolly Parton made a defiant pledge of support for LGBT+ people on her 1991 album

Tucked away in her 1991 album Eagle When She Flies was a song that says regardless of religion, lifestyle and sexuality, family is family.

The appropriately titled “Family” includes the lyric: “Some are preachers / some are gay / some are addicts, drunks and strays / But not a one is turned away when it’s family.”

While not all the song’s lyrics would fly today, it was a quiet yet defiant statement of solidarity with queer families.


2. She’s urged her fellow Christians not to ‘shame’ queer people

Dolly Parton coronavirus
Dolly Parton. (Ian Gavan/Getty)

In a 2017 interview that resurfaced last year – re-introducing listeners with their serotonin, long thought lost – Parton called out Christians to be “more loving” of the LGBT+ community.

Speaking on Larry King Now, the songwriter explained that her high-decibel advocacy for LGBT+ rights has drawn criticism from some Christians. But she shrugged it off.

“I keep saying: ‘If you’re the fine Christian that you think you are, why are you judging people? That’s God’s job,'” Parton told Larry King.

“We’re not God, we’re not judges, we’re supposed to love one another, we’re supposed to not judge.”


3. Trans bathroom bans are a bad idea, says Dolly Parton: ‘If I have to pee, I’m gon’ pee’

Dolly Parton performs onstage at a luncheon for the Netflix Film Dumplin’ at Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for Netflix)

Bathrooms have been reduced by social conservatives and anti-trans activists into pinched battlegrounds in the US – lacking federal guidance, states have tugged in different directions about allowing trans people to simply swing by a public restroom.

Parton waded into the tangle of state laws in 2016, emphatically telling CNN:  “I think everybody should be treated with respect. I don’t judge people and I try not to get too caught up in the controversy of things.

“I hope that everybody gets a chance to be who and what they are. I just know, if I have to pee, I’m gon’ pee, wherever it’s got to be.”


4. She doubled down on her stance regarding anti-trans bills in 2023

Dolly Parton pictured on the red carpet wearing a black dress and a gold chain.
Dolly Parton. (Getty)

As anti-trans legislation continued mounting up at an alarming rate in the US in 2023 – the year Parton’s home state Tennessee also attempted to introduce a ban on public drag performances – Parton made her stance clear.

Speaking to the Hollywood Reporter back in November 2023, she argued that trans people “cannot help” being trans “any more than I can help being Dolly Parton”.

“I just want everybody to be treated good,” she said.

“I have some of everybody in my own immediate family and in my circle of employees… I’ve got transgender people. I’ve got gays. I’ve got lesbians. I’ve got drunks. I’ve got drug addicts — all within my own family. I know and love them all, and I do not judge.

“And I just see how broken-hearted they get over certain things and I know how real they are.”

She continued: “If there’s something to be judged, that is God’s business. But we are all God’s children and how we are is who we are.”


5. She gifted a drag queen with a bejewelled guitar

2023 was a tough year for drag performers, who had to face down a raft of legislation that attempted to push them out of public performance spaces. For one queen, it was a particularly testing time: Austin-based drag performer Brigitte Bandit spent much of the year campaigning against Texas’s anti-drag and anti-trans legislation.

She fought in court in full drag, took to social media to raise awareness, and joined a legal case in opposition of Texas’s anti-drag Senate Bill.

But Dolly Parton, it seems, wanted to give her something to brighten her up after her trying year: a signed, bejewelled guitar.

Brigitte Bandit shared a video of herself opening the surprise gift, which was signed: “To Brigitte. Love, Dolly Parton.”


6. After a Dollywood visitor was made to take off her marriage equality tee, Dolly Parton stepped in

A billboard promoting Dolly Parton's Dollywood
A billboard promoting Dolly Parton’s Dollywood. (George Rose/Getty Images)

When a lesbian patron of Dollywood – the theme park all about, you guessed it, Dolly – was forced to turn her pro-marriage equality inside out in order to enter a water ride, Parton was not impressed.

She was quick to issue a statement reaffirming her unwavering support for LGBT+ rights, including her support for marriage equality, according to Hornet.

“I am truly sorry for the hurt or embarrassment regarding the gay and lesbian t-shirt incident at Dollywood’s Splash Country recently,” she wrote in the 2011 statement.

“Everyone knows of my personal support of the gay and lesbian community. Dollywood is a family park and all families are welcome.”


7. She backed marriage equality as early as 2009

Dolly Parton in a pink patterned dress against a pink background
Dolly Parton. (Getty)

Dolly Parton came out swinging for the hot-button issue of US marriage equality years before the Supreme Court legalised it in the historic 2015 judgement.

Back in 2009, talkshow host Joy Behar suggested that Parton’s background as a Tennessee-born country musician would imply that Parton would be in no way supportive.

“I know that’s true,” acknowledged Parton. “I always say, ‘Sure, why can’t they get married? They should suffer like the rest of us do.'”


8. Absolutely everything about ‘Travelin’ Thru’

“Travelin’ Thru” was a tear-jerking, award-winning song written and performed by Parton for the 2005 film Transamerica.

The film starred Felicity Huffman as a trans woman who jumps on a road trip to reunite with her long-lost son, with Parton’s song becoming a queer anthem – capturing the bravery and resilience of the LGBT+ community.

“Some people are blind or ignorant, and you can’t be that prejudiced and hateful and go through this world and still be happy,” Parton said about what motivated her to pen the track, according to her website.

“One thing about this movie is that I think art can change minds. It’s alright to be who you are.”


9. As soon as she joined TikTok, she celebrated her queer fans

@dollyparton

Looks like I missed a lot! You all are so creative. Now that I’m here, tag me! ❤️ #heyitsdolly #dollytok

♬ 9 to 5 – Dolly Parton

In December 2022, Dolly Parton made social media worth using once again as she joined TikTok. After amassing almost half a million followers in just a few hours, she set about celebrating her LGBTQ+ fandom.

In a video montage captioned “You all are so creative,” Parton shared clips of queer performers and drag queens dressed up as the country singer, including trans actress Dylan Mulvaney and Drag Race queens Jan Sport, Shuga Cain, and The Vivienne.

Share your thoughts! Let us know in the comments below, and remember to keep the conversation respectful.

Please login or register to comment on this story.