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The passion of Sister Dixon...fer sure

Standard-Examiner/December 9, 2010

By Nancy Van Valkenburg

Sister Dottie S. Dixon may not be a smart woman, but she knows what love is.

"I'm a simple Mormon girl, born and raised in Spanish Fark, Utah," Dottie said, in an interview by e-mail.

(The spelling and punctuation are her own. We did downsize her overzealous capitalization.)

"I am a 10th generation Mormon. I am married ta Don Dixon fer 37 years, and we are the proud parents of a gay son Donnie P. Dixon. I am a accidental activist, but now stand fer the minoritized and miniaturized peoples of the world."

Sister Dottie is an advocate for gay, women's and homeless rights, along with those of "Specific Islanders, Asio-Americans, and all them illegal Hisspanish people, I love em' all rilly, truly I do."

Sister Dottie is the comically irreverent creation of Salt Lake City actor L. Charles Frost, who also performs the role of the good-hearted, uneducated, small-town Utah woman, whose goal is to get people laughing and talking about the personal differences — especially in sexual orientation — that can break families apart.

Dottie makes her first Ogden appearance on Saturday, for the "Sister Dottie S. Dixon's Holiday Extravaganza." The Weber State University event is a fundraiser for the OUTreach Resource Center and the WSU Center for Diversity and Unity.

"I have found that family preservation is the most impartant thing I stand fer currently. It simply breaks my heart when families, expecially Mormon families are torn apart because parents choose their church over their child! There has been far, far too many needless suicides because of ignorance on this topic, and I am all about makin' sure people know my pretty strong opinions about it all.

"I am also recently all about equality and protection for all God's children, standin' on the side of love. I fight against bullyin' in any form, and will not tolerate it in any fashion whatsoever. I want ta bust open wide the conversation and the context fer all families talkin' about love, acceptance, and celebration of their LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) family members and friends."

Sister Dottie agreed to answer a few questions about her life.

"I can't say as I love everyone in ma ward. We've all got someone who pushes our buttons, and fer me it's Sister Barbara B. Booth. Barbara is the spiritchal living teacher in Release Saciety and yet it turned out she was bearing false witness against me!

"She had the audasticles ta tell the whole Release Society at brother Checketts funeral I only put one bag of potato chips on the top of my funeral potatoes, when I always put two! It created all sarts of consternation with the sisters, and it's just not true. I never skimp on the chips. Never!"

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