Virginia Mae "Ginni" Clemmens (February 28, 1936 – February 15, 2003) was an American folk musician and songwriter in the genres ofwomen's music andchildren's music. She was inducted into theChicago LGBT Hall of Fame in 2021.
Clemmens was born inEvergreen Park, Illinois and raised in the suburbs of Chicago, the daughter of Glenn Edward Clemmens and Dorothy Cleo Groves Clemmens (later Friday). Her father was abig band musician andWorld War II veteran;[1] her parents divorced in 1946, and both remarried.[2][3] She attended high school and trained as a nurse in California.[4]
Clemmens worked as a pediatric nurse in California, and sometimes played her guitar or banjo for her young patients.[5] Back in Chicago, she taught guitar and banjo classes at theOld Town School of Folk Music. She performed in folk clubs and at music festivals and benefit concerts from the 1950s through the 1980s.[6][7][8][9] Her first album,Sing a Rainbow (1965), and another,We All Have a Song (1977) featured children's music, and she performed in schools as part of Urban Gateways, a non-profit program to bring cultural programs to Chicago city schools.[10]
In 1976 Clemmens started her own label, Open Door Records, and released several more albums.[11] She also helped to produce the compilation album,Gay and Straight Together (1980).[12][13] She organized and performed at women's music festivals in the 1970s and 1980s.[14][15]
Clemmens came out as a lesbian in the late 1970s. "When Ginni did come out, it was with a bang," said journalistMarie J. Cuda.[13] She moved to Hawaii in 1988. She died in 2003, at the age of 66, from injuries sustained in a car accident onMaui.[18][19] In 2021, she was posthumously inducted into the Chicago LGBT Hall of Fame.[4][20]