
In 2009 Dustin Lance Black won the Best Original Screenplay Oscar for the 2008 film, Milk. 
Raised in a strict Mormon  household (he won two Writers Guild of America Awards for his work on the television series Big Love).  Growing up surrounded by Mormon culture and military bases, Dustin said he worried about his sexuality. He told himself, "I'm going to hell.  And if I ever admit it, I'll be hurt, and I'll be brought down" when he  found himself attracted to a boy in his neighborhood at the age of about 7. 
Dustin spoke movingly of the day he read Harvey Milk's real life  story. Milk, who was shot dead in 1978, was the first openly gay man  elected to public office in California. "It gave me the hope one day I  could live my life openly as who I am and then maybe even I could fall  in love and one day get married," Black said. 

"If  Harvey had not been taken from us 30 years ago, I think he would want  me to say to all of the gay and lesbian kids out there tonight who have  been told that they are 'less than' by their churches, by the government  or by their families: that you are beautiful, wonderful creatures of  value. And that no matter what anyone tells you, God does love you. And  that very soon, I promise you, you will have equal rights federally  across this great nation of ours. Thank you, God, for giving us Harvey  Milk."

 It's reported that his acceptance speech was censored in 50 different Asian nations by pan-Asian satellite TV network STAR, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation.  STAR spokeswoman Jannie Poon defended the network’s  muting of the words “gay” and “lesbian” by saying STAR has “a  responsibility to take the sensitivities and guidelines of all our  markets into consideration.”
 
