a&e features
Questioning protagonist anchors new Signature play
‘Mystery of Love & Sex’ opens April 5

From left are Emily Townley, Xavier Scott Evans, Shayna Blass and Jeff Still in ‘The Mystery of Love & Sex’ at Signature Theatre. (Photo by Justin Chiet; courtesy Signature)
‘The Mystery of Love & Sex’
April 5-May 8
Signature Theatre
4200 Campbell Ave., Arlington
703-820-9771
Bathsheba Doran won’t be attending the area premiere of her play “The Mystery of Love & Sex” at Signature Theatre. She’s far too pregnant to travel.
“It’s true,” Doran says via phone from her home in New York. “Yesterday I bought a caftan. I never imagined myself wearing a caftan and now I never want to take it off.”
The baby will be Doran and her wife’s second child. The first time around her wife gave birth, and now it’s the British-born playwright’s turn. Still, Doran has been intimately involved in the lead up to the production, conferring regularly with the play’s director, Stella Powell-Jones.
“The Mystery of Love & Sex” is about love — love between fathers and daughters, husbands and wives, best friends and ultimately romantic relationships, says Doran who’s familiarly known as Bash. It charts the turbulent journey of longtime best friends Charlotte (Shayna Blass) who is Jewish and African-American Jonny (Xavier Scott Evans) who was brought up a strict Baptist. Now college age, they take their relationship to the next level despite an absence of attraction. And while Charlotte attests to love Jonny, she also thinks she loves a new friend, Claire. Charlotte’s parents played by Emily Townley and Jeff Still, have mixed feelings. Doran requests no spoilers, citing the word “mystery” in the play’s title.
As playwright, Doran’s way into the work was the experience she shares with Charlotte. The details are different yet the emotions are the same. But, she adds, it’s not a coincidence that she wrote this after she became a parent.
“Having a child gave me an ability to look back at youth with a degree of omniscience allowing me to write from a new and different perspective,” she says.
What still surprises Doran is how much Charlotte’s quasi-romantic relationship with her best friend Jonny resonates with gay theatergoers. After the play was first produced at New York’s Lincoln Center last spring, she heard from many people who’d been through the same thing.
“It’s a really lovely example of a specific experience becoming general and relatable, and one that’s not dramatized much. It’s something beautiful but has a tragic element about it too, because it can prevent you from being who you actually are.”
D.C. native Shayna Blass, 25, who plays Charlotte in the Signature production, is amazed by her character’s growth throughout the play and relates to her “struggle in dealing with expectations — the struggle between who you are and who you’re supposed to be.” While Blass identifies as “primarily straight but open to more” (not an uncommon status among young people in theater, she says), she finds Charlotte’s journey relatable to everyone who is experiencing or has experienced revelations about themselves.
Until now, Doran’s work didn’t include a lot of gay characters or specifically gay themes. “It’s partly because a not-very-great mentor advised me not to,” she says. “On some level it had an effect on me. I had an anxiety that writing gay characters ran the risk of not being universal. This is not something I feel now.”
Her last play “Kin” (2011) is about two different kinds of people falling in love. And though it was inspired by the early days of her relationship when she met her wife who was stage managing her first New York production, the playwright chose to write the couple as heterosexual.
“I felt not wrongly that if I made it two women, it would become about two women and not that. I was more interested in the machinations of how lovers meet. I didn’t want it to be overshadowed by the specifics of sexuality.”
“With ‘The Mystery of Sex & Love,’ I didn’t feel it needed to be about heterosexuals,” Doran says. “The play burst out of me. I wasn’t sure it would be produced. I’d thought the moment for characters struggling with their sexuality had passed. Well, turns out it hasn’t. We still live in a world of resentment and hatred. Sometimes I think people living in the bubble of Manhattan don’t understand that.”
Earlier in Doran’s career, Signature produced her play “Nest” (2007), a re-imagining of the true story of a Pennsylvania indentured servant who murdered her baby in 1809, and the man who wrote the ballad that was sold at her hanging. She describes it as a daring and difficult play that wouldn’t have been written if it wasn’t for the support she received from Signature. Now many plays and TV writing gigs (HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire” and Showtime’s “Masters of Sex”) later, Doran is pleased to have another Signature production. This type of support is important to playwrights, she says.
Director Stella Powell-Jones, granddaughter of famed biographer Lady Antonia Frazer, is a longtime Doran fan.
“I wish I had a more romantic story about our first meeting, but the truth is we have the same agent,” Powell-Jones says. “I read the play in London where I grew up. Bash and I are both English and that was a wonderful way to meet the play because it’s about home and family. Reading this play I fell instantly in its clutches.”
Powell-Jones was also struck by Doran’s “gorgeous dialogue and intelligent characters. Each is given the full range of her imagination. I love it when they use their language. It feels very human.” By setting the play in the American South, an area where the playwright has spent a lot of time, Doran not only put things in a context where society isn’t accepting toward matters of questioning sexuality, but also opened the door to interesting language, a world with characters who use language evocatively.
“My job has always been to honor the truths of the plays,” Powell-Jones says. “I hope I’ve done that with this work. It’s a rich, dense, and fresh intersection of race, sexuality and family. There’s a lot of personal honesty and it’s also hilarious — funny and sad at the same time because that’s how life is. It’s not trying to say this is the definitive experience of coming out. It gives you one story and hopefully from the specifics of that story you draw something broader.”
a&e features
Memorial for groundbreaking bisexual activist set for May 2
Loraine Hutchins remembered as a ‘force of nature’
The Montgomery County Pride Center will host a celebration honoring the life and legacy of Loraine Hutchins, Ph.D., on May 2. People are invited to attend the onsite memorial or a livestream event. The on-site event will begin at 10 a.m. with a meet-and-greet mixer before moving into a memorial service around the theme “Loraine a Force of Nature!” at 11 a.m., a panel talk at 12 p.m., break out sessions for artists, academics, and activists to build on her legacy at 1 p.m. and a closing reception at 2 p.m.
Attendees are encouraged to register for the on-site memorial gathering or the livestreamed memorial. The goal of this event is also to collect stories and memories of Loraine. Attendees and others can share their stories at padlet.com.
An obituary for Hutchins was published in the Bladelast Nov. 24, where people can learn more about her activism in the bisexual community. A private service for friends and family was held in December but this memorial service is open to all.
Alongside her groundbreaking work organizing for U.S. bisexual rights and liberation including co-editing “Bi Any Other Name: BIsexual People Speak Out” (1991), she also integrated faith into her sexual education and advocacy work. Her 2001 doctoral dissertation, “Erotic Rites: A Cultural Analysis of Contemporary U.S. Sacred Sexuality Traditions and Trends,” offered a pointed queer and feminist analysis to sex-neutral and sex-positive spiritual traditions in the United States. Her thesis was also groundbreaking in exploring the intersections between sex workers and those in caregiving professionals, including spiritual ones.
In an oral history interview conducted by Michelle Mueller back in August 2023, Hutchins described herself as a “priestess without a congregation.” While she has occasionally had a sense of community and feels part of a group of loving people, she admitted that “I don’t feel like we have the shape or the purpose that we need.”
“I’ve often experienced being the Cassandra in the room, the Cassandra in the community. Somebody who’s kind of way out there ahead, thinking through the strategic action points that my community hasn’t gotten to yet, and getting a lot of resistance and hostile responses from people who are frightened by dissent and conflict and not ready for the changes we have to make to survive,” she said.
“For somebody who’s bisexual in an out political way and who’s been a spokesperson for the polyamory movement in an out political way, it’s very exposing. And it’s very important to me to be able to try to explain and help other people understand the connection between spirituality and sexuality,” she explained citing how even as a graduate student she was “exploring how to feel erotic and spiritual, and not feel them in conflict with each other in my own spiritual contemplative life and my own sensual body awareness of being alive in the world.”
“Every religion has a sense of sacred sexuality. It’s just they put a lot of boundaries and regulations on it, and if we have a spiritual practice that is totally affirming of women’s priesthood and of gay people, queer people’s ability to minister to everyone and to be ministered to be everyone, what does that do to the gender of God, or our understanding of how we practice our spirituality and our sexuality in community and privately?”
“There’s no easy answer,” she concludes, and she continued to grapple with these questions throughout her life, co-editing another seminal text, “Sexuality, Religion and the Sacred: Bisexual, Pansexual, and Polysexual Perspectives,” published in 2012. Her work blending spiritual and queer liberation remains groundbreaking to this day.
Rev. Eric Eldritch, a local community organizer and ordained Pagan minister with Circle Sanctuary who has worked for decades with the DC Center’s Center Faith to organize the Pride Interfaith Service, is eager to highlight this element of her legacy at the memorial service next month.
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.
-
District of Columbia5 days agoYour guide to D.C. region’s many Pride celebrations
-
Cannabis Culture5 days agoLGBTQ people, weed, and mental health: what you need to know
-
The Vatican5 days agoNew Vatican report acknowledges LGBTQ Catholics feel isolated in the church
-
Television5 days agoRepression, toxic masculinity fuel intense queer drama ‘Half Man’
