Malé | male | Latin Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Album | Il Male | Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo | A male ''Labidura riparia'' specimen in Köpenick | Pale Male | National Film Award for Best Male Playback Singer | I Was a Male War Bride | Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance | Male prostitution | Malé Atoll | Male and Female | Malè | Best Male Soccer Player ESPY Award | Best Male Action Sports Athlete ESPY Award | YL Male Voice Choir | Yellow-haired male ''Bombus lucorum | Trento–Malè–Marilleva railway | The Male Animal | Sub-adult male ''T.p. leucogaster'' in Ranthambhore National Park | Story of a Prostitute | Pontarddulais Male Choir | ''Podarcis filfolensis'' ssp. ''maltensis'' male from Gozo | Mungaru Male | Malé Svatoňovice | Male ''P. c. malabaricus'' in Shamirpet | Male on ''Leucanthemum vulgare | Male ''L. klugi'' displayed at Pitt Rivers Museum | Male Kompolje |
After serving in the U.S. Naval Reserve during World War II, Birimisa supported himself with a series of jobs, including factory worker, bartender, disc jockey, health studio manager, television network page, prostitute, and Howard Johnson's counterman.
In between his drag performances, his days as a hustler and his convictions of murder, his image as the legendary cabaret performance artist Madame Satã meaning Madam Satan having been influenced by the 1930s film by Cecil B. DeMille about a woman disguising herself as a notorious temptress to win back her errant husband.
Other characters include Mr. Lancaster, Waldemar, Ambrose (based on Francis Turville-Petre), Hans, Aleko, Geoffrey, Paul (based on real-life male prostitute Denham Fouts), Augustus, Ronny, and Ruthie.
He hires a young male prostitute, but in a hotel room he can only passively observe the young naked man dancing to The Pet Shop Boys's song Always on My Mind.
A perceived miscarriage of justice after the murder of male prostitute Maxwell Confait, and a subsequent critical report by the retired High Court judge Sir Henry Fisher in 1977, led to a Royal Commission on Criminal Procedure chaired by Sir Cyril Philips, which reported in 1981.