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‘Homo’ statement

Provocative performer Thomas among fall dance highlights

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Gay dancer/choreographer Vincent Thomas performs at Dance Place in two weeks. (Photo by John Addis; courtesy Dance Place)

Several gay-themed performers and programs highlight the region’s fall dance offerings.

The Washington Ballet opens its season Nov. 2-6 at the Kennedy Center with the return of gay director Septime Webre’s “The Great Gatsby,” an adaptation of the F. Scott Fitzgerald classic about obsession, wealth and excess in the roaring ‘20s. Gay actor/singer Will Gartshore is slated as a guest artist. Tickets go on sale Sunday and range from $20-$125. Subscriptions for the entire season, which will include a Twyla Tharp tribute in February and an adaptation of “Alice in Wonderland” in April, range from $87-$425. Visit washingtonballet.org for details.

Dance Place (3225 8th Street, N.E.) has a bounty of offerings slated for fall.

Pearsonwidrig Dancetheater presents the world premiere of “Sayonara Dear,” which explores an elderly romance, next weekend, Sept. 17-18. Tickets are $22. On Sept. 24-25, VT Dance/Vincent Thomas presents a series of thought-provoking works including the provocatively titled “Homo Will Not Inherit,” a collaboration with Iron Crow Theatre. Thomas is gay. Tickets are $22.

Dancer/choreographer Lucy Bowen McCauley returns to Dance Place on Oct. 1-2 to help the company open its 16th season with a show called “ReSuitened,” featuring a mash-up of Bach suites performed by cellist Yvonne Caruthers, a choreographed hodge-podge dubbed “Lucy’s Playlist” that finds her assigning moves to various pop/rock-era cuts and the solo piece “Tus Ojos Claros … Santa Lucia,” a 2006 work that has Mexican influences. Tickets are $22. Visit bmdc.org for details or danceplace.org for tickets.

Another gay choreographer, Dana Tai Soon Burgess appears with his company at Dance Place the weekend of Oct. 14-16 with “Becoming American” along with a revival of his critically acclaimed autobiographical “Charlie Chan and the Mystery of Love.” Tickets are $22.

Several other Dance Place events are on the calendar for fall. Details at danceplace.org.

Dakshina/Daniel Phoenix Singh Dance Company, a local gay-helmed outfit, has several events slated for fall including its eighth annual Fall Festival of Indian Arts. Indian dancer Leela Samson closes the festival with a special performance Oct. 8. Tickets range from $22.50 to $47.50 for the Lincoln Theater (1215 U St., N.W.) event. Visit dakshina.org for tickets and more information.

Other gay dance outfits have performances slated for fall. X Faction performs at Town Danceboutique (2009 8th Street, N.W.) every weekend. And D.C. Lambda Squares, a regional gay square dancing club, has weekly events. Visit dclambdasquares.org for information.

 

 

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Photos

PHOTOS: WorldPride Street Festival and Closing Concert

Doechii, Khalid among performers

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Doechii performs at the WorldPride Closing Concert on Sunday, June 8. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

WorldPride 2025 concluded with the WorldPride Street Festival and Closing Concert held along Pennsylvania Ave., N.W. on Sunday, June 8. Performers on the main stage included Doechii, Khalid, Courtney Act, Parker Matthews, 2AM Ricky, Suzie Toot, MkX and Brooke Eden.

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

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PHOTOS: WorldPride Parade

Thousands march for LGBTQ rights

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The 2025 WorldPride Parade (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

The 2025 WorldPride Parade was held in Washington, D.C. on Saturday, June 7. Laverne Cox and Renée Rapp were the grand marshals. 

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key and Robert Rapanut)

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Theater

A hilarious ‘Twelfth Night’ at Folger full of ‘elegant kink’

Nonbinary actor Alyssa Keegan stars as Duke Orsino

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Alyssa Keegan (Photo courtesy Folger Theatre)

‘Twelfth Night’
Through June 22
Folger Theatre
201 East Capitol St., S.E.
$20-$84
Folger.edu

Nonbinary actor Alyssa Keegan (they/them)loves tapping into the multitudes within. 

Currently Keegan plays the melancholic Duke Orsino in Folger Theatre’s production of Shakespeare’s romantic comedy “Twelfth Night.” Director Mei Ann Teo describes the production as “sexy, hilarious, and devastating” and full of “elegant kink.” 

Washington-based, Keegan enjoys a busy and celebrated career. Her vast biography includes Come From Away at Ford’s Theatre; Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (Helen Hayes Award, Best Actress) and Paula Vogel’s How I Learned to Drive, both at Round House Theatre; Diana Son’s Stop Kiss directedby Holly Twyford for No Rules Theatre Company; and Contractions at Studio Theatre, to name just a few. 

In addition to acting, Keegan works as a polyamory and ethical non-monogamy life and relationship coach, an area of interest that grew out of personal exploration. For them, coaching seems to work hand in hand with acting. 

WASHINGTON BLADE: You’re playing the lovesick Orsino in Twelfth Night. How did that come about? 

ALYSSA KEEGAN: The director was looking to cast a group of actors with diverse identities; throughout auditions, there were no constraints regarding anyone’s assigned sex at birth. It was really a free for all. 

BLADE: What’s your approach to the fetching, cod-piece clad nobleman?

KEEGAN: Offstage I identify as completely nonbinary; I love riding in this neutral middle space. But I also love cosplay. The ability to do that in the play gives me permission to dive completely into maleness. 

So, when I made that decision to play Orsino as a bio male, suddenly the part really cracked open for me. I began looking for clues about his thoughts and opinions about things like his past relationships and his decision not to date older women.

Underneath his mask of bravura and sexuality, and his firmness of feelings, he’s quite lonely and has never really felt loved. It makes sense to me why his love for Olivia is so misguided and why he might fall in love with the Cesario/Viola character.

BLADE: As an actor, do you ever risk taking on the feelings of your characters? 

KEEGAN: Prior to my mental health education, yes, and that could be toxic for me. I’ve since learned that the nervous system can’t tell the difference between real emotional distress and a that of a fully embodied character. 

So, I created and share the Empowered Performer Project. [a holistic approach to performance that emphasizes the mental and emotional well-being of performing artists]. It utilizes somatic tools that help enormously when stepping into a character. 

BLADE: Has changing the way you work affected your performances?

KEEGAN: I think I’m much better now. I used to have nearly debilitating stage fright. I’d spend all day dreading going onstage. I thought that was just part of the job. Now, I’ve learned to talk to my body. Prior to a performance, I can now spend my offstage time calmly gardening, working with my mental health clients, or playing with my kid. I’m just present in my life in a different way. 

BLADE: Is Orsino your first time playing a male role?

KEEGAN: No. In fact, the very first time I played a male role was at the American Shakespeare Center in Staunton, Va. I played Hipolito in Thomas Middleton’s The Revenger’s Tragedy. 

As Hipolito, I felt utterly male in the moment, so much so that I had audience members see me later after the show and they were surprised that I was female. They thought I was a young guy in the role. There’s something very powerful in that.

BLADE: Do you have a favorite part? Male or female? 

KEEGAN: That’s tough but I think it’s Maggie the Cat. I played the hyper-female Maggie in Tennessee Williams’ Cat on a Hot Tin Roof at Round House. In the first act she didn’t stop talking for 51 minutes opposite Gregory Wooddell as Brick who barely had to speak. That lift was probably the heaviest I’ve ever been asked to do in acting. 

BLADE: What about Folger’s Twelfth Night might be especially appealing to queer audiences?

KEEGAN: First and foremost is presentation. 99% of the cast identify as queer in some way. 

The approach to Shakespeare’s text is one of the most bold and playful that I have ever seen.  It’s unabashedly queer. The actors are here to celebrate and be loud and colorful and to advocate. It’s a powerful production, especially to do so close to the Capitol building, and that’s not lost on any of us.

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