Arts & Entertainment
Lance Bass says ‘Finding Prince Charming’ cast member is HIV-positive
Bachelor thinks ‘It’s really a stigma that we have to resolve now’

(Screenshot via LOGO)
“Finding Prince Charming” host Lance Bass has confirmed rumors a cast member will reveal he is HIV-positive on the show.
“It is true,” Bass told People Magazine about the gay dating reality show. “This is one of the things I love about the show â it’s a fun reality show, it’s dramatic, but there’s a lot of heart in it and amazing story lines that you’re going to shed a tear over. And one of those is finding about this guy’s HIV.”
“All of us know someone that is living with HIV, and I think the stigma is still really bad out there â people are just so uneducated about it,” Bass continued. “To us, obviously it doesn’t matter at all, we’ve been around it so much, but I think this is really going to educate a lot of people. I’m excited for people to watch it, especially this episode.”
The contestants will be competing for the affections of Robert SepĂșlveda Jr. who told People Magazine that the contestant’s HIV status did not deter him from giving him the same chance at love as everyone else.
“For me, it’s like: Is someone HIV-positive not worthy of love?” SepĂșlveda Jr. says. “That’s really the question, and it doesn’t matter to me. ‘Prince Charming’ would be accepting of anyone, and that’s how I am.”
“In the gay community, in just any community, if you have a disease, it’s not going to be anything that someone’s going to push you away from,” SepĂșlveda Jr. continued . “Again, me being ‘Prince Charming’ â the guy that everyone’s vying for their attention â I’m not going to not date someone because they’re HIV-positive. That’s ridiculous. It’s really a stigma that we have to resolve now.”
“Finding Prince Charming” airs on LOGO Thursday, Sept. 8 at 9 p.m.
Theater
JosĂ© Zayas brings âThe House of Bernarda Albaâ to GALA Hispanic Theatre
Gay Spanish playwright Federico GarcĂa Lorca wrote masterpiece before 1936 execution
âThe House of Bernarda Albaâ
Through March 1
GALA Hispanic Theatre
3333 14th St., N.W.
$27-$52
Galatheatre.org
In Federico GarcĂa Lorcaâs âThe House of Bernarda Alba,â now at GALA Hispanic Theatre in Columbia Heights, an impossibly oppressive domestic situation serves, in short, as an allegory for the repressive, patriarchal, and fascist atmosphere of 1930s Spain
The gay playwright completed his final and arguably best work in 1936, just months before he was executed by a right-wing firing squad. âBernarda Albaâ is set in the same year, sometime during a hot summer in rural Andalusia, the heart of âEspaña profundaâ (the deep Spain), where traditions are deeply rooted and mores seldom challenged.
At Bernardaâs house, the atmosphere, already stifling, is about to get worse.
On the day of her second husbandâs funeral, Bernarda Alba (superbly played by Luz NicolĂĄs), a sixtyish woman accustomed to calling the shots, gathers her five unmarried daughters (ages ranging from 20 to 39) and matter-of-factly explain whatâs to happen next.
She says, âThrough the eight years of mourning not a breeze shall enter this house. Consider the doors and windows as sealed with bricks. Thatâs how it was in my fatherâs house and my grandfatherâs. Meanwhile, you can embroider your trousseaux.â
Itâs not an altogether sunny plan. While Angustias (MarĂa del Mar RodrĂguez), Bernardaâs daughter from her first marriage and heiress to a fortune, is betrothed to a much younger catch, Pepe el Romano, who never appears on stage, the remaining four stand little chance of finding suitable matches. Not only are they dowry-less, but no men, eligible or otherwise, are admitted into their motherâs house.
Lorca is a literary hero known for his mastery of both lyrical poetry and visceral drama; still, âBernarda Albaâsâ plotline might suit a telenovela. Despotic mother heads a house of adult daughters. Said daughters are churning with passions and jealousies. When sneaky Martirio (Giselle GonzĂĄles) steals the photo of Angustiasâs fiancĂ© all heck kicks off. Lots of infighting and high drama ensue. Thereâs even a batty grandmother (Alicia Kaplan) in the wings for bleak comic relief.
At GALA, the modern classic is lovingly staged by JosĂ© Zayas. The New York-based out director has assembled a committed cast and creative team whoâve manifested an extraordinarily timely 90-minute production performed in Spanish with English subtitles easily ready seen on multiple screens.
In Lorcaâs stage directions, he describes the set as an inner room in Bernardaâs house; itâs bright white with thick walls. At GALA, scenic designer Grisele GonzĂĄles continues the one-color theme with bright red walls and floor and closed doors. There are no props.
In the airless room, women sit on straight back chairs sewing. They think of men, still. Two are fixated on their oldest siterâs hunky betrothed. Only Magdelena (Anna MalavĂ©), the one sister who truly mourns their dead father, has given up on marriage entirely.
The severity of the place is alleviated by menâs distant voices, Koki Lortkipanidzeâs original music, movement (stir crazy sisters scratching walls), and even a precisely executed beatdown choreographed by Lorraine Ressegger-Slone.
In a short yet telling scene, Bernardaâs youngest daughter Adela (MarĂa Coral) proves she will serve as the rebellion to Bernardaâs dictatorship. Reluctant to mourn, Adela admires her reflection. She has traded her black togs for a seafoam green party dress. Itâs a dreamily lit moment (compliments of lighting designer Hailey Laroe.)
But thereâs no mistaking whoâs in charge. Dressed in unflattering widow weeds, her face locked in a disapproving sneer, Bernarda rules with an iron fist; and despite ramrod posture, she uses a cane (though mostly as a weapon during one of her frequent rages.)
Bernardaâs countenance softens only when sharing a bit of gossip with Poncia, her longtime servant convincingly played by Evelyn Rosario Vega.
NicolĂĄs has appeared in âBernarda Albaâ before, first as daughter Martirio in Madrid, and recently as the mother in an English language production at Carnegie Melon University in Pittsburgh. And now in D.C. where her Bernarda is dictatorial, prone to violence, and scarily pro-patriarchy.
Words and phrases echo throughout Lorcaâs play, all likely to signal a tightening oppression: âmourning,â âmy house,â âhonor,â and finally “silence.”
As a queer artist sympathetic to left wing causes, Lorca knew of what he wrote. He understood the provinces, the dangers of tyranny, and the dimming of democracy. Early in Spainâs Civil War, Lorca was dragged to the the woods and murdered by Francoâs thugs. Presumably buried in a mass grave, his remains have never been found.
Cupidâs Undie Run, an annual fundraiser for neurofibromatosis (NF) research, was held at Union Stage and at The Wharf DC on Saturday, Feb. 21.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)













Sweat DC is officially expanding to Shaw, opening a new location at 1818 7th St., N.W., on Saturday, March 28 â and theyâre kicking things off with a high-energy, community-first launch event.
To celebrate, Sweat DC is hosting Sweat Fest, a free community workout and social on Saturday, March 14, at 10 a.m. at the historic Howard Theatre. The event features a group fitness class, live DJ, local food and wellness partners, and a mission-driven partnership with the Open Goal Project, which works to expand access to youth soccer for players from marginalized communities.
For more details, visit Sweat DCâs website and reserve a spot on Eventbrite.
