Background
Klein was born in Vienna, Austria, to Orthodox Jewish parents.
Klein was born in Vienna, Austria, to Orthodox Jewish parents.
He received a Bachelor from Yeshiva University in 1953, and an Master of Business Administration from Columbia University in 1955. He studied medicine at University of Bern in Switzerland for six years, receiving his Doctor of Medicine in 1961.
He was an author and editor, as well as the developer of the Klein Sexual Orientation Grid, a scale that measures an individual"s sexual orientation. Klein believed that sexual orientation changed over the course of a lifetime and that researches underestimated the number of men that had sexual interactions with both sexes. He was a proponent of using neurolinguistic programming to change behavior.
He and his family fled to New York when he was a child, to escape antisemitism.
He practiced as a psychiatrist in New York City in the 1970s. Self-identified as bisexual, Klein was surprised at the lack of literature on his sexuality in the New York Public Library in 1974.
That year he founded the Bisexual Forum, the first support group for the bisexual community. He devised the Klein Sexual Orientation Grid, a multi-dimensional system for describing complex sexual orientation, similar to the "zero-to-six" scale Kinsey scale used by Alfred Kinsey, but measuring seven different vectors of sexual orientation and identity (sexual attractions, sexual behavior, sexual fantasies, emotional preference, social preference, lifestyle and self-identification) separately, as they relate person"s past, present and ideal future.
Klein published The Bisexual Option: A Concept of One Hundred Percent Intimacy in 1978, based on his research, the world"s first real psychological study of bisexuality.
He also co-authored The Male, His Body, His Sex in 1978. Klein moved to San Diego in 1982. He published Bisexualities: Theory and Research in 1986.
In 1998 he founded the American Institute of Bisexuality (Associate of the Institute of Bankers), also known as the Bisexual Foundation, to encourage, support and assist research and education about bisexuality.
Klein also founded the Journal of Bisexuality. He remained the Journal"s principal editor until his death.
Klein published a novel, Life, Sex and the Pursuit of Happiness in 2005. In 2006 Klein was diagnosed with cancer, and underwent surgery as a result.
Although expected to die from cancer in a matter of months, Fritz Klein instead died at home in San Diego, California, from cardiac arrest aged 73.
Klein donated his body to science.