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・ Tim Menzies
・ Tim Merritt
・ Tim Mertens
・ Tim Metcalf
・ Tim Metcalfe
・ Tim Metcalfe (musician)
・ Tim Metcher
・ Tim Michels
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・ Tim Mikkelson
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・ Tim Miller
・ Tim Miller (director)
・ Tim Miller (ice hockey)
Tim Miller (performance artist)
・ Tim Miller (poet)
・ Tim Miller (politician)
・ Tim Miller (yoga teacher)
・ Tim Mills (actor)
・ Tim Minchin
・ Tim Minear
・ Tim Miner
・ Tim Misny
・ Tim Mitchell
・ Tim Mitchison
・ Tim Mixon
・ Tim Modise
・ Tim Moen
・ Tim Mohr


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Tim Miller (performance artist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Tim Miller (performance artist)

Tim Miller (born September 22, 1958 in Pasadena, California) is an American performance artist and writer, whose pieces frequently involve gay identity, marriage equality and immigration issues. He was one of the NEA Four, four performance artists whose National Endowment for the Arts grants were vetoed in 1990 by NEA chair John Frohnmayer.
==Life and career==
Miller was born in Pasadena, California but grew up in nearby Whittier.
He has developed shows based on his personal life as a gay man and as an activist. A member of ACT UP and other campaigning organizations, Miller has participated in numerous demonstrations to call for funding of AIDS research and treatment and to promote equal rights. His civil disobedience has led to his arrest on several occasions.〔Gott, 1994 p.150〕
Miller's interest in performance began in high school, where he took classes in theater and dance. He played the lead role of John Proctor in Lowell High School's production of ''The Crucible'' by Arthur Miller. At nineteen he moved to New York and studied dance with Merce Cunningham.
In 1980 Miller joined with Charles Moulton, Peter Rose and Charles Dennis to found P.S. 122, a space for performance art. The name derives from the former school building that houses the project. In 1987 Miller returned to California and with Linda Frye Burnham founded another performance space, Highways, in Santa Monica.
In 1993 Miller was featured in the episode of ''The Larry Sanders Show'' called ''The Performance Artist''. He played himself as the titular performance artist, who appears as a guest both on Larry Sanders' show and on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno performing a portion of ''My Queer Body''.
In 1997 Miller published ''Shirts & Skin'', a compilation of personal stories that he had told in his shows over the previous decade. He also launched a show of the same name.
Miller took on a new topic, immigration rights for gay and lesbian partners of American citizens, in ''Glory Box'' (1999). The immigration issue is a personal cause as Alistair McCartney, his partner since 1994, is Australian.
In 2002 Miller published ''Body Blows'', a collection of scripts from six of his shows with associated essays.
Miller returned to the theme of the problems of Americans with same-sex life partners in ''Us'' in 2003. The title refers both to his relationship with McCartney and to the laws in the United States which could prevent them from being together.〔(''Through Thick and Thin'' ), Sebastian Cordoba, 2007, a documentary on US immigration laws for same-sex couples which features Miller and McCartney as one of the seven couples.〕

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