Olivia Launches Lesbian Honeymoon Cruise
NewsMax Wires
Monday, July 5, 2004
OAKLAND, Calif. -- Judy Dlugacz knew she was onto something
when the cruise ship she had chartered for 400 lesbians arrived in
the Turkish port of Kusadasi.
Instead of meeting rejection, as they sometimes did in the
United States, the travelers got a red carpet welcome from
merchants eager to do business with the "lovely lesbian ladies."
The half-million dollars they poured into Turkey's economy made the
front pages of Istanbul's major newspapers.
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"When hundreds of women get off a ship and go shopping, they
are noticed," Dlugacz (Du-LOOG'-atch) said.
Four years later, the venture Dlugacz founded as a tiny women's
record label in 1973 -- named Olivia after a character in a
lesbian-themed pulp novel from 1949 -- is making waves again.
Olivia Cruises and Resorts, the Oakland-based "lifestyle
company," produced a Boston-to-Montreal wedding celebration and
luxury honeymoon cruise this weekend for 1,200 women, featuring
Grammy-winning singer k.d. lang as entertainment.
The ship, Holland America's MS Maasdam, set sail Saturday night
from Boston.
The honeymoon excursion was announced in December, less than a
month after the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court's ruling that
gays and lesbians could obtain marriage licenses in the state.
After legal challenges that threatened to block the unions, the
weddings commenced May 17.
"It's been fun having customers call you and say 'I'm going on
my honeymoon,' and it's not just a metaphor," said Amy Errett,
Olivia's chief executive officer.
Co-owners Errett and Dlugacz both married longtime partners
during the month same-sex couples were able to tie the knot in San
Francisco earlier this year.
In March, Olivia became the first business owned and operated by
gays to sponsor a professional athlete, signing an endorsement deal
with golfer Rosie Jones on the LGPA tour.
Olivia also has worked on making its vacation offerings as
sophisticated and diverse as the tastes of its frequently
misunderstood market.
This fall, for example, Showtime's lesbian drama "The L-Word"
will film part of an episode aboard an Olivia cruise to the
Caribbean. Cast members are scheduled to socialize with guests at
the company's first shipboard film festival and be serenaded by
Shawn Colvin and Indigo Girls.
Another upcoming trip, set at a resort in Mexico, is a
sports-themed vacation featuring golfer Jones, tennis pro Rosie
Casals and swimmer turned broadcaster Diana Nyad.
Securing such talent doesn't come cheap, but neither do Olivia's
vacations, which range from $599 to $14,000 per person. Errett says
her customers, who have an average age of 46 and an average annual
income of $80,000, want world-class accommodations and
entertainment.
"It's an interesting and much more educated group than people
think," she said, acknowledging that much of straight America
still views lesbians as favoring flannel shirts and inexpensive
country living.
Despite its increasingly upscale image, Olivia has maintained
the strong social mission that was at its core when Dlugacz founded
the record label, which became produced pioneering lesbian singers
Cris Williamson and Meg Christian. For many guests, an Olivia
vacation is the first time they can openly hold hands and kiss
while they travel.
"It is not just music and it is not just travel," she said.
"There is also the piece of serving a community simply by creating
a place to be free."
The entrepreneurs already are making plans for Olivia's next
incarnation, a series of gay and lesbian retirement communities
that mirror the company's resort-chic image.
"I like to think of us as the lesbian Disney," said Errett.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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