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.
The Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington perform “The Holiday Show” at Lincoln Theatre (1215 U St., N.W.). Visit gmcw.org for tickets and showtimes.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)



















































Santa will be very relieved.
Youâve taken most of the burden off him by making a list and checking it twice on his behalf. The gift-buying in your house is almost done â except for those few people who are just so darn hard to buy for. So what do you give to the person who has (almost) everything? You give them a good book, like maybe one of these.
Memoir and biography
The person who loves digging into a multi-level memoir will be happy unwrapping âBlessings and Disasters: A Story of Alabamaâ by Alexis Okeowo (Henry Holt). Itâs a memoir about growing up Black in what was once practically ground zero for the Confederacy. Itâs about inequality, it busts stereotypes, and yet it still oozes love of place. You canât go wrong if you wrap it up with âQueen Mother: Black Nationalism, Reparations, and the Untold Story of Audley Mooreâ by Ashley D. Farmer (Pantheon). Itâs a chunky book with a memoir with meaning and plenty of thought.
For the giftee on your list who loves to laugh, wrap up âIn My Remaining Yearsâ by Jean Grae (Flatiron Books). Itâs part memoir, part comedy, a look back at the late-last-century, part how-did-you-get-to-middle-age-already? and all fun. Wrap it up with âHere We Go: Lessons for Living Fearlessly from Two Traveling Nanasâ by Eleanor Hamby and Dr. Sandra Hazellip with Elisa Petrini (Viking). Itâs about the adventures of two 80-something best friends who seize life by the horns â something your giftee should do, too.
If thereâll be someone at your holiday table whoâs finally coming home this year, wrap up âHow I Found Myself in the Midwestâ by Steve Grove (Simon & Schuster). Itâs the story of a Silicon Valley worker who gives up his job and moves with his family to Minnesota, which was once home to him. That was around the time the pandemic hit, George Floyd was murdered, and life in general had been thrown into chaos. How does someone reconcile what was with what is now? Pair it with âHomestand: Small Town Baseball and the Fight for the Soul of Americaâ by Will Bardenwerper (Doubleday). Itâs set in New York and but isnât that small-town feel universal, no matter where it comes from?
Wonât the adventurer on your list be happy when they unwrap âI Live Underwaterâ by Max Gene Nohl (University of Wisconsin Press)? They will, when they realize that this book is by a former deep-sea diver, treasure hunter, and all-around daredevil who changed the way we look for things under water. Nohl died more than 60 years ago, but his never-before-published memoir is fresh and relevant and will be a fun read for the right person.
If celeb bios are your gifteeâs thing, then look for âThe Luckiestâ by Kelly Cervantes (BenBella Books). Itâs the Midwest-to-New-York-City story of an actress and her life, her marriage, and what she did when tragedy hit. Filled with grace, itâs a winner.
Your music lover wonât want to open any other gifts if you give âOnly God Can Judge Me: The Many Lives of Tupac Shakurâ by Jeff Pearlman (Mariner Books). Itâs the story of the life, death, and everything in-between about this iconic performer, including the mythology that he left behind. Has it been three decades since Tupac died? It has, but your music lover never forgets. Wrap it up with âPoint Blank (Quick Studies)â by Bob Dylan, text by Eddie Gorodetsky, Lucy Sante, and Jackie Hamilton (Simon & Schuster), a book of Dylanâs drawings and artwork. This is a very nice coffee-table size book that will be absolutely perfect for fans of the great singer and for folks who love art.
For the giftee whoâs concerned with their fellow man, âThe Lost and the Found: A True Story of Homelessness, Found Family and Second Chancesâ by Kevin Fagan (One Signal / Atria) may be the book to give. Itâs a story of two âunhousedâ people in San Francisco, one of the countryâs wealthiest cities, and their struggles. Thereâs hope in this book, but also trouble and your giftee will love it.
For the person on your list who suffered loss this year, give âPine Melodyâ by Stacey Meadows (Independently Published), a memoir of loss, grief, and healing while remembering the person gone.
LGBTQ fiction
For the mystery lover who wants something different, try âCrime Ink: Iconic,â edited by John Copenhaver and Salem West (Bywater Books), a collection of short stories inspired by âqueer legendsâ and allies you know. Psychological thrillers, creepy crime, cozies, theyâre here.
Novel lovers will want to curl up this winter with âMiddle Spoonâ by Alejandro Varela (Viking), a book about a man who appears to have it all, until his heart is broken and the fix for it is one he doesnât quite understand and neither does anyone he loves.
LGBTQ studies â nonfiction
For the young man whoâs struggling with issues of gender, âBefore They Were Menâ by Jacob Tobia (Harmony Books) might be a good gift this year. These essays on manhood in todayâs world works to widen our conversations on the role politics and feminism play in understanding masculinity and how itâs time we open our minds.
If thereâs someone on your gift list who had a tough growing-up (didnât we all?), then wrap up âIâm Prancing as Fast as I Canâ by Jon Kinnally (Permuted Press / Simon & Schuster). Kinnally was once an awkward kid but he grew up to be a writer for TV shows youâll recognize. You canât go wrong gifting a story like that. Better idea: wrap it up with âSo Gay for You: Friendship, Found Family, & The Show That Started It Allâ by Leisha Hailey & Kate Moennig (St. Martinâs Press), a book about a little TV show that launched a BFF-ship.
Who doesnât have a giftee who loves music? You sure do, so wrap up âThe Secret Public: How Music Moved Queer Culture from the Margins to the Mainstreamâ by Jon Savage (Liveright). Nobody has to tell your giftee that queer folk left their mark on music, but theyâll love reading the stories in this book and knowing what they didnât know.
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Theater
Studioâs âMother Playâ draws from lesbian playwrightâs past
A poignant memory piece laced with sadness and wry laughs
âThe Mother Playâ
Through Jan. 4
Studio Theatre
1501 14th St., N.W.
$42 â $112
Studiotheatre.org
âThe Mother Playâ isnât the first work by Pulitzer Prize-winning lesbian playwright Paula Vogel that draws from her past. Itâs just the most recent.
Currently enjoying an extended run at Studio Theatre, âThe Mother Play,â (also known as âThe Mother Play: A Play in Five Evictions,” or more simply, “Mother Play”) is a 90-minute powerful and poignant memory piece laced with sadness and wry laughs.
The mother in question is Phyllis Herman (played exquisitely by Kate Eastwood Norris), a divorced government secretary bringing up two children under difficult circumstances. When we meet them itâs 1964 and the family is living in a depressing subterranean apartment adjacent to the buildingâs trash room.
Phyllis isnât exactly cut out for single motherhood; an alcoholic chain-smoker with two gay offspring, Carl and Martha, both in their early teens, she seems beyond her depth.
In spite (or because of) the challenges, things are never dull in the Herman home. Phyllis is warring with landlords, drinking, or involved in some other domestic intrigue. At the same time, Carl is glued to books by authors like Jane Austen, and queer novelist Lytton Strachey, while Martha is charged with topping off motherâs drinks, not a mean feat.
Despite having an emotionally and physically withholding parent, adolescent Martha is finding her way. Fortunately, she has nurturing older brother Carl (the excellent Stanley Bahorek) who introduces her to queer classics like âThe Well of Lonelinessâ by Radclyffe Hall, and encourages Martha to pursue lofty learning goals.
Zoe Mannâs Martha is just how you might imagine the young Vogel â bright, searching, and a tad awkward.
As the play moves through the decades, Martha becomes an increasingly confident young lesbian before sliding comfortably into early middle age. Over time, her attitude toward her mother becomes more sympathetic. Itâs a convincing and pleasing performance.
Phyllis is big on appearances, mainly her own. She has good taste and a sharp eye for thrift store and Goodwill finds including Chanel or a Von Furstenberg wrap dress (which looks smashing on Eastwood Norris, by the way), crowned with the blonde wig of the moment.
Time and place figure heavily into Vogelâs play. The setting is specific: âA series of apartments in Prince Georgeâs and Montgomery County from 1964 to the 21st century, from subbasement custodial units that would now be Section 8 housing to 3-bedroom units.â
Krit Robinsonâs cunning set allows for quick costume and prop changes as decades seamlessly move from one to the next. And if by magic, projection designer Shawn Boyle periodically covers the walls with scurrying roaches, a persistent problem for these renters.
Margot Bordelon directs with sensitivity and nuance. Her take on Vogelâs tragicomedy hits all the marks.
Near the playâs end, thereâs a scene sometimes referred to as âThe Phyllis Ballet.â Here, mother sits onstage silently in front of her dressing table mirror. She is removed of artifice and oozes a mixture of vulnerability but not without some strength. Itâs longish for a wordless scene, but Bordelon has paced it perfectly.
When Martha arranges a night of family fun with mom and now out and proud brother at Lost and Found (the legendary D.C. gay disco), the plan backfires spectacularly. Not long after, Phyllisâ desire for outside approval resurfaces tenfold, evidenced by extreme discomfort when Carl, her favorite child, becomes visibly ill with HIV/AIDS symptoms.
Other semi-autobiographical plays from the DMV nativeâs oeuvre include âThe Baltimore Waltz,â a darkly funny, yet moving piece written in memory of her brother (Carl Vogel), who died of AIDS in 1988. The playwright additionally wrote âHow I Learned to Drive,â an acclaimed play heavily inspired by her own experiences with sexual abuse as a teenager.
âThe Mother Playâ made its debut on Broadway in 2024, featuring Jessica Lange in the eponymous role, earning her a Tony Award nomination.
Like other real-life matriarch inspired characters (Mary Tyrone, Amanda Wingfield, Violet Weston to name a few) Phyllis Herman seems poised to join that pantheon of complicated, women.
