a&e features
Queer Queens are out and proud
Poppy Champlin on finding her true self as a performer

From left are Poppy Champlin, Jessica Kirson and Mimi Gonzalez — the Queer Queens of Qomedy. (Photo courtesy Champlin)
Queer Queens of Qomedy
CAMP Rehoboth Women’s Fest 2015
April 10
8 p.m.
Downtown Rehoboth Beach, Del.
$35-100
On a Sunday afternoon at a comedy club in Baltimore about 175 people, mostly lesbian and a few gay men, gathered to view a comedy stand-up show. It’s a significant number for a sleepy Sunday. They were all there to watch a lesbian comedian and the club owners were taking notice. Poppy Champlin was also there and paying attention.
The potential crowds were part of the reason Champlin, who resides in Rhode Island, decided she wanted to start her Queer Queens of Qomedy self-produced, stand-up show, which consists of three lesbian comedians including herself.
The show will be a part of Camp Rehoboth’s Women’s Fest with Jessica Kirson and Mimi Gonzalez performing along with Champlin on April 10 at 8 p.m. She’s also slated to play Jammin’ Java in Vienna, Va., (a D.C. suburb) on May 17.
“There is a need for lesbian entertainment,” Champlin says. “Of course, the club isn’t giving us a Friday or Saturday night. That’s reserved for the male comedians that bring in the male audiences that bring in their dates.”
The comedy show has a rotation of lesbian comedians performing alongside Champlin. These are friends or fellow lesbian comedians she wants to be a part of the show. It’s a draw she’s learned works for her in the industry, despite not being as popular as straight male comedians.
“It just says it right there blatantly in your face Queer Queens of Qomedy. It’s queer come in here! You know what you’re gonna get. Thank God the club owners at least are saying, “Oh yeah we want the queers to come in here. We don’t want them on a Friday or Saturday night but we’ll give you a Sunday matinée.’”
The popular Queer Queens of Qomedy Show is one that Women’s Fest organizers feel is a perfect fit for their entertainment lineup.
“We’re delighted to welcome the Queer Queens of Qomedy to our Women’s Fest fundraising event,” Steve Elkins, executive director of CAMP Rehoboth Community Center, says. “Poppy Champlin, Jessica Kirson and Mimi Gonzalez are incredible comics and Improv champs and tickets are selling like hot cakes.”
Champlin’s love for comedy began as a popularity contest with her sister, who was in the theater department and Champlin joined because she wanted to be popular. She kept doing theater throughout college and the faculty began to take notice. She started doing her own stand-up comedy routine that became a hit.
“Comedy was just taking off then, it was in the early ‘80s and comedy was like a viable job,” Champlin says. “You could be a comedian and make money. I was like, ‘Oh my God, that’s what I want to do. I don’t want to study physics. I want to make people laugh.’”
After college, Champlin found it hard to achieve the same success she had before. She started dressing up like Joan Rivers and performing one of Rivers’s comedy albums at a hotel for a couple weekends. She didn’t realize that what she was doing was wrong, but performing the show renewed her love for hearing an audience laugh like she had in college.
Another comedian Champlin found inspiration from was Lucille Ball.
“She broke the first ceiling you know what I mean? In the ‘50s? A woman carrying the show?” Champlin says. “She just really said to me, ‘Yeah, it’s OK to be wackadoo and you don’t have to conform to all the norms of what an American woman is supposed to be.’ Because here’s a woman that’s leading the charge in comedy. I just loved her.”
Her love for Ball and Rivers grew into admiration for fellow women comedians, especially lesbian comedians. Champlin learned she had to decide what her special “it” factor was to make it in comedy. She decided that she wanted that factor to be her sexuality.
“When I was in L.A., everyone was like, ‘Who are you? What is your thing? How would we build a sitcom around you?’ And I’m like, ‘I don’t know I’m funny?’ And they were like, ‘Nope not it, thanks,’” Champlin says. “They really want to put you in a corner so you really got to find your niche. So I guess being gay is my niche at this point. I mean I’ll take it. It’s working.”
Being gay as a niche is something fellow comedians like Wanda Sykes and Ellen DeGeneres have banked on. Champlin recognized that not every lesbian comedian would be able to have the amount of success and fame that those popular comedians did. However, Champlin isn’t bitter about their success and instead welcomes it.
“I wanted to be them. I wanted to have that much fame and notoriety. But I’m glad that they did so that it does make a normalcy of being gay and being on TV and all the gay things on TV. Gay is way OK on TV. So that’s a good thing and they pushed that and I appreciated their efforts and their works doing it.”
Champlin says straight people have become more receptive to entertainment fronted by gay and lesbian people.
“People don’t care anymore really. There are bigger fish to fry. Being gay isn’t a problem for straight people anymore, especially at a comedy club. They actually do want to hear about it.”
Champlin still faces some challenges like when to “come out” to an audience when she performs her stand-up show. She recalls that in a recent showcase she performed at in Atlantic City, she waited until around the five-minute mark of her eight minute set to disclose she is a lesbian. She also sometimes struggles with revealing some of her personal life.
Her new girlfriend, who is divorced and Champlin is her first girlfriend, makes for good comedic fodder for Champlin but she struggles with her girlfriend begging her not to use certain jokes. If she isn’t comfortable with them, Champlin cuts them even though she thinks they fit perfectly into her routine.
Despite those challenges, Champlin’s love for comedy doesn’t waver. She credits it for helping people get through tough times and uniting people together. It’s the reason Champlin enjoys what she does.
“During comedy, there’s no guards and everybody is equal. It’s a great equalizer. There’s no black, there’s no white, there’s no gay, there’s no straight when everyone is laughing. It’s awesome.”
a&e features
Queery: Meet artist, performer John Levengood
Modern creative talks nightlife, coming out, and his personal queer heroes
John Levengood (he/him) describes himself as a modern creative with a wide‑ranging toolkit. He blends music, technology, civic duty, and a sharp sense of wit into a cohesive artistic identity. Known primarily as a recording artist and performer, he’s also a self‑taught music producer and software engineer who embodies a generation of creators who build their own lanes rather than wait for one to appear.
Levengood, 32, who is single and identifies as gay and queer, is best known as a recording artist who has performed at Pride festivals across the country, including the main stages of World Pride DC, Central Arkansas Pride, and Charlotte Pride.
“Locally in the DMV, I’m known for turning heads at nightlife venues with my eye-catching sense of style. When I go out, I don’t try to blend in. I hope I inspire people to be themselves and have the courage to stand out,” he says.
He’s also known for hosting karaoke at Freddie’s Beach Bar in Arlington, Va., on Thursday nights. “I like to create a space where people feel comfortable expressing themselves, building community, and showcasing their talents.”
He also creates social media content from my performances and do interviews at LGBTQ+ bars and theatres in the DMV. Follow the Arlington resident @johnlevengood.
How long have you been out and who was the hardest person to tell?
I have been fully out of the closet since 2019. My parents were the hardest people to tell because my family has always been my rock and at the time I couldn’t imagine a world without them. Their reactions were extremely positive and supportive so I had nothing to fear all along.
I remember sitting on the couch with my mom, dad, and sister in our hotel room in New Orleans during our winter vacation and being so nervous to tell them. After I finally mustered up the nerve and made the proclamation, I realized my dad had already fallen asleep on the couch. My mom promised to tell him when he woke up.
Who’s your LGBTQ hero?
My LGBTQ heroes are Harvey Milk for paving the way for gays in politics and Elton John for being a pioneer for the fabulous and authentic. My local heroes in the DMV are Howard Hicks, manager of Green Lantern, and Tony Rivenbark, manager of Freddie’s Beach Bar. Both of them are essential to creating spaces where I’ve felt welcome and safe since moving to the DMV.
What’s Washington’s best nightspot, past or present?
Trade tops the list for me because of the dance floor and outdoor space. It’s so nice to get a break from the music every once and a while to be able to have a conversation.
We live in challenging times. How do you cope?
I’m still figuring this out. What is working right now is writing music and spending time with family and friends. I’ve also been spending less time on social media going to the gym at least three times a week.
What streaming show are you binging?
After “Traitors” Season 4 ended, I was in a bit of a show hole, but “Stumble” has me in a laughing loop right now. The writing is so witty.
What do you wish you’d known at 18?
At 18, I wish I would have known how liberating it is to come out of the closet. It would have been nice to know some winning lottery numbers as well.
What are your friends messaging about in your most recent group chat?
We are planning our next trip to New York City. If you can believe it, I visited NYC for the first time in 2025 for Pride and I’ve been back every quarter since. Growing up in the country, I was subconsciously primed to be scared of the city. But my mind has been blown. I can’t wait to go back.
Why Washington?
It’s the closest metropolitan area to my family, but not too close. I love the museums, the diversity, the history, and the proximity to the beach and mountains. It’s also nice to live in a city with public transportation.
Aging RFK Stadium has come down, but the RFK grounds are still getting lit up. Welcome back to the stage Project GLOW, D.C.’s homegrown electronic festival, on May 30-31. Back for its fifth year on these musically inclined acres, Project GLOW returns with an even more diverse lineup, and one that continues to celebrate LGBTQ antecedents, attendees, and acts.
Project GLOW 2026 headliners include house and techno star Mau P, progressive house legend Eric Prydz, hard-techno favorite Sara Landry, and bass acts Excision b2b Sullivan King, among the lineup of trance, bass, house, techno, dubstep, and others for the fifth anniversary year.
President & CEO Pete Kalamoutsos — born and raised in D.C. — founded Club GLOW in 1999. In 2020, GLOW entered into a partnership with global entertainment company Insomniac Events to produce live events like Project GLOW, which kicked off in 2022.
As in past years, Project GLOW not only makes space, but is intentionally inclusive of the LGBTQ community, one of its most dedicated fan bases. The festival’s LGBTQ-focused Secret Garden stage blooms again — a more intimate dance area that stands on the strength of DJs and musicians who draw from the LGBTQ community. D.C.’s LGBTQ nightlife mastermind Ed Bailey is the creative mind behind Secret Garden again. He joined Project GLOW in 2023.
“Kalamoustos says that “he’s proud of his partnership with Ed Bailey, along with Capital Pride and [nightlife producer] Jake Resnikow. It’s amazing to collaborate with Bailey at the Secret Garden stage, especially after the curated lineup we worked on at Pride last year.”
The Secret Garden will be a bit different from other stages: Eternal (“At the Eternal stage, time stands still. Lose yourself in the dance of past, present, and future, surrendering to the eternal rhythm of the universe”) and Pulse (“Feel the rhythm of the beat pulse through your veins as the heartbeat of the crowd synchronizes into one. Here, every moment vibrates with life as it guides you through a new dimension of euphoria”). The Secret Garden stage is in the round, surrounded by 16 shipping containers. The containers play canvas to muralists from around the world, who are coming in to paint them in a vibrant garden-style vibe. “We gave this stage some extra love with this layout,” K says, “ we finally cracked the code.”
K says that this will be the biggest lineup yet for the Secret Garden, featuring Nicole Moudaber b2b Chasewest, Riordan b2b Bullet Tooth, Ranger Trucco, Cassian, Eli & Fur, Cosmic Gate and Hayla. The stage is also the largest yet, featuring an expanded dance floor and 360-degree viewing.
Across all stages, K says that his goal for the fifth anniversary is “More art and fan interactive experience, more like a festival, strive to be like a Tomorrowland, as budget grows to add more experience.” Last year’s Project GLOW alone drew 40,000 attendees over two days.
K, however, was not satisfied with one festival this spring. GLOW recently announced a “pop-up” one-day event. Teaming up with Black Book Records, GLOW is set to throw a first-of-its-kind dance-music takeover of Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., headlined by electronic music star Chris Lake. Set for April 18, this euphoric block party will feature bass and vibes blocks from the White House. Organizers expect as many as 10,000 fans to attend. Beyond music, there will be food, activations, and plenty of other activities taking place around 6th St and Pennsylvania Ave NW – a location familiar to many in the LGBTQ community, as this sits squarely inside the blocks of the Capital Pride party that takes place in DC every June.
Over the past two decades, Club GLOW has produced thousands of events, from club nights to large-scale festivals including Project GLOW, Moonrise Festival, and more. Club GLOW also operates Echostage.
a&e features
New book celebrates 1970s dance music icons
‘A Night at the Disco’ features interviews with Donna Summer, Debbie Harry, more
If you’re a fan of 1970s-era dance music, don’t miss the irresistible new book by Christian John Wikane and Alice Harris, “A Night at the Disco,” which revisits more than 90 interviews conducted with some of the biggest names in pop culture.
“A Night at the Disco” (ACC Art Books) was published on March 24, and distributed by Simon & Schuster. It celebrates more than 100 artists who sparked a phenomenon in dance music from 1970-1979 and features excerpts from interviews with everyone from Donna Summer to Debbie Harry.

Lost City Books (2467 18th St., N.W.) will welcome author Christian John Wikane for a book signing and conversation about “A Night at the Disco” on Thursday, April 16 at 6 p.m. Details at lostcitybookstore.com. Bird in Hand Coffee & Books in Baltimore (11 E. 33rd St.) )will also host a Q&A with the author on Wednesday, April 15 at 6 p.m. Details at theivybookshop.com.
Below is an excerpt from “A Night at the Disco.”
“I’ll let in anyone who looks like they’ll make things fun.” Steve Rubell is guiding a New York Times reporter through Studio 54 as resident DJ Richie Kaczor dazzles the crowd with records by CHIC, Odyssey, and T-Connection. “Disco, that’s where the happy people go,” The Trammps sing as dancers spin and twirl underneath tubes of flashing lights. Seven months since Rubell and co-owner Ian Schrager opened Studio 54 in April 1977, it’s welcomed untold numbers of “happy people” … at least those lucky enough to pass through the doors.
“We were part of the chosen few,” says André De Shields, who immortalized the title role in The Wiz on Broadway at the time. “We could show up at Studio 54 and the doorman at the velvet stanchion would look over everyone and point to us from The Wiz to come in, that kind of thing.” As the lead vocalist in the GRAMMY-nominated Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band, whose debut modernized big band sophistication for the discothèques, Cory Daye had carte blanche in the club. “The energy was like a New Year’s Eve party every night,” she says. “I would go up to the mezzanine and watch the mechanical light pillars go up and down, metallic confetti falling from the ceiling, the spoon and the moon. I was so fascinated and enamored by it.
“When a certain song came on, the people would just rush to the dance floor. There was no contact dancing — the hustle was pretty much on its way out — but it was just an amazing experience to see all the cultures together. It was a fusion of cultures, which described my life and my band, so I was right at home there.”
“Studio 54 was the place,” adds Linda Clifford. “Crazy parties. If you could think it, you would see it. It was like a circus. Just an amazing place to be. I worked 54 so many times. It was like a second home to me. The people there treated me so well. The crowd always seemed to enjoy my show. I always had a good time with them. That was the most important thing: making sure that they had fun.”
Well before Studio 54 opened, disco had become a business juggernaut. “A four billion dollar market and still growing,” Billboard announced in February 1977, with dance music offering more variety than ever. “There is no longer a single, readily identifiable disco beat, but a kaleidoscope of sounds that are melodic and danceable,” Tom Moulton told the magazine. In the clubs, records by veteran artists like Stevie Wonder and the Bee Gees were mixed in with a range of new acts like Grace Jones, Boney M., and The Ritchie Family, while everyone from ABBA to Marvin Gaye scored number one pop hits with songs that had club-centric storylines.
Beyond the charts, disco itself remained as idiosyncratic as ever, especially on several productions by Laurin Rinder and W. Michael Lewis, whose studio creations, El Coco (“Let’s Get It Together,” “Cocomotion”) and Le Pamplemousse (“Le Spank”), joined their own “Lust” from Seven Deadly Sins (1977) among the most tantalizing releases on AVI Records. Rinder & Lewis also produced acts for the newly hatched Butterfly Records in Los Angeles, where Saint Tropez (“On a Rien à Perdre”) and Tuxedo Junction (“Moonlight Serenade”) reflected the duo’s high gloss sound, spanning everything from European sophistication to a more literal translation of the ’40s sensibilities popularized by Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band.
12-inch singles had also grown as the preferred format to approximate the club music experience at home. Nearly a year after Atlantic Records introduced its series of promotional 12-inch singles for DJs, New York-based Salsoul Records released the industry’s first commercially available 12-inch single, “Ten Percent” by Double Exposure, in May 1976. A year later, T.K. Records was the first label to certify a gold record for a 12-inch single when Peter Brown’s “Do You Wanna Get Funky With Me” tallied one million sales.— Christian John Wikane
(From “A Night at the Disco” by Alice Harris & Christian John Wikane. Published by ACC Art Books.)
The Blade may receive commissions from qualifying purchases made via this post.
