Early life
Melvin "Mel" Cheren was born on January 21, 1933, inWest End Records
In 1976, Mel Cheren and Ed Kushins founded West End Records, the music label that defined the sound of New York City in the heyday of disco. Cheren created the 12-inch vinyl single, which permitted longer playing time than the standard seven-inch, and which gained its greatest popularity in discos.Paradise Garage
Cheren was business partner and former lover of Michael Brody, who created the Paradise Garage in 1977 with the financial back-up of Cheren. In the 2006 "The Godfather of Disco," a documentary about Cheren, he himself called the Garage "the ultimate expression of the whole fabric" of gay night life.Gay Men's Health Crisis
When Rodger McFarlane began a crisis counseling hotline about AIDS in 1982 as a program of the Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC) organization, he operated it out of a couple of rooms in a building in Chelsea owned by Mel Cheren. The building subsequently became the first headquarters and office of GMHC, rent-free. In 1984, when GMHC moved to larger quarters, Cheren turned the building into the Colonial House Inn, a 20-room gay-oriented guesthouse where he himself lived until his death.24 Hours for Life
In the late 1980s Cheren founded the nonprofit group "24 Hours for Life" to raise money for AIDS relief. Through the organization he published his autobiography, "My Life and the Paradise Garage: Keep On Dancin'" (2000).Personal life
Mel Cheren died on December 7, 2007, from complications associated with AIDS.References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cheren, Mel 1933 births 2007 deaths People from Everett, Massachusetts American LGBT rights activists