After Germany made a historic vote to legalize same-sex marriage, we look at the actors, musicians and celebrities who have already tied the knot with their same-sex partners.
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These stars have tied the same-sex knot
After Germany made a historic vote to legalize same-sex marriage, we look at the actors, musicians and celebrities who have already tied the knot with their same-sex partners.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Vennenbernd
David Furnish and Elton John
Elton John, right, and his longtime partner David Furnish embrace after their first wedding, a civil partnership ceremony in Windsor, England, in 2005. But in 2014, the couple - who have two sons - tied the knot for a second time following the legalization of same-sex marriage in Britain, which accorded them full marriage rights. "For this legislation to come through is joyous," said Sir Elton.
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/L. Pitarakis
Jodie Foster and Alexandra Hedison
When Oscar-winning actress Jodie Foster gave birth to two sons in 1998 and 2001, her partner was producer Cydney Bernard, the co-parent of her children. After that relationship ended, the very private Foster finally came out in 2013 and a year later tied the knot with actress and photographer Alexandra Hedison, former partner of Ellen DeGeneres.
Image: Imago/ZUMA Press
Ricky Martin and Jwan Yosef
While singer and actor Ricky Martin had not publicly revealed his sexuality until 2010, he is now engaged to Jwan Yosef, a Syrian-Swedish painter of Kurdish origin. Martin, whose family still lives in Puerto Rico, is planning a big international wedding in his home country - same-sex marriage has been legal in Puerto Rico since 2015 as it's a territory of the United States.
Image: Imago/ZUMA Press/A. Ruiz
Ellen deGeneres und Portia de Rossi
After coming out in 1997, the American comedian Ellen DeGeneres was shunned by the television industry until her award-winning talk show "Ellen" began in 2003. A year later, she began a relationship with Australian actress Portia de Rossi, and in 2008 the couple married in Los Angeles - which was possible after the California Supreme Court overturned the state's bans on same-sex marriage.
For five years the American actor Neil Patrick Harris and actor-chef David Burtka kept their engagement secret. But when same-sex marriage was recognized in New York in 2011, they tweeted their looming marriage joyfully to the world. Already the parents of twins Gideon and Harper, the actors married in Italy in 2014, after more than 10 years together - and wore tuxedos designed by Tom Ford.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Lauren Morelli and Samira Wiley
Samira Wiley, star of "Orange Is the New Black," and Lauren Morelli, a writer and producer of the same hit TV series set in a female prison, were married in March after getting engaged a year earlier. Wiley announced the engagement on Instagram, where she showed off her ring - more recently, she posted an image on the social media site that read: The Future is Queer.
Image: Imago/Independent Photo Agency
Michael Kors and Lance LePere
Fashion guru Michael Kors and longtime partner and colleague Lance LePere tied the knot in New York in 2011 at a private ceremony on a Southampton beach in the Hamptons. "To marry someone as wonderful and special to me as Lance barefoot on a glorious beach is more than I could have dreamed of," Kors said. It all became possible after New York legalized same-sex marriage that year.
Image: Imago/Future Image
Cynthia Nixon and Christine Marinoni
"Sex and the City" star Cynthia Nixon and fiancee Christine Marinoni, an education activist, were engaged at a New York rally demanding same-sex marriage rights in 2009. After these rights were granted two years later - the year Marinoni gave birth to their son - the couple were married in New York in 2012.
Image: Getty Images/Glashuette Orig/C. Bilan
Lance Bass and Michael Turchin
Lance Bass, former singer in boy band 'N Sync, and partner Michael Turchin became the first same-sex couple to get married live on American TV. The "Lance Loves Michael: The Lance Bass Wedding" special aired in 2015, two years after the couple were engaged.
Image: Imago/ZUMA Press/Admedia
Miriam Meckel and Anne Will
The well-known German TV presenter and television journalist Anne Will had already been with the communications expert Miriam Meckel for many years before making the relationship public in 2007. Since August 2016, the two have lived in a registered civil partnership, but with the impending change of law in Germany they could soon consummate their union with marriage.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Vennenbernd
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As in Germany, same-sex marriage rights have been slow in coming internationally. While same-sex unions have been around since the times of Ancient Greece, it wasn't until 2001 that the Netherlands became the first country to introduce full marriage rights for same-sex couples.
Even if gay couples could enter into civil rights partnerships in countries like Germany, they were not accorded full equality under the law - civil union partners could not legally adopt children in Germany, for instance.
But as a successful German vote on same-sex marriage shows, the tide is turning. And a host of gay and lesbian artists, musicians and celebrities have taken the opportunity to embrace same-sex marriage rights, particularly in the US after the Supreme Court sanctioned marriage for gay and lesbian couples in 2015 - or in individual states like New York, where gay marriage was sanctioned in 2011 (allowing, for instance, "Sex and the City" star Cynthia Nixon and fiance Christine Marinoni to tie the knot in the state a year later).
In 2014, same-sex marriage was also legalized in Britain, with singer Sir Elton John and partner David Furnish taking the opportunity to upgrade their civil union.
A May 2015 referendum in the Irish Republic also said yes to full marriage rights for gay couples - it was the first time that gay marriage was legalized by popular vote, the yes vote winning a resounding 62 percent.
Same-sex marriages are now legal in 23 countries.
Germany also joined the list after Chancellor Angela Merkel finally acceded to allowing members of parliament the right to vote according to their individual conscience on the issue of same-sex marital rights. Merkel herself voted against the bill, which passed easily by 393 to 226.