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.
a&e features
35 years after âTruth or Dare,â Slam is still dancing
Salim Gauwloos on Madonna, HIV, and why he almost didnât audition for Blond Ambition Tour
Most gay men of a certain age remember âthe kiss.â
It was the moment Madonnaâs dancers Salim Gauwloos and Gabriel Trupin locked lips in the hit 1991 documentary film âTruth or Dare,â which is celebrating its 35th anniversary this spring.
The kiss was hot, but what made it groundbreaking is that it appeared in a mainstream Hollywood movie that screened in suburban multiplexes across the country. This wasnât an obscure art house film. The movie, and tour on which it was based, received months of breathless media attention all over the world for bold expressions of female empowerment and queer visibility. Madonna was threatened with arrest in Toronto for simulating masturbation on stage and Pope John Paul II urged Catholics to boycott the show, triggering a media firestorm.
âTruth or Dareâ was billed as a behind-the-scenes documentary of the tour, but it quickly became clear that the real star of the show wasnât Madonna, but rather her colorful troupe of seven backup dancers, six of whom identified as gay: Kevin Stea, Carlton Wilborn, Luis Xtravaganza Camacho, Jose Gutierez Xtravaganza, Gauwloos, and Trupin; Oliver Crumes III identifies as straight.
We saw them party and march in the New York City Pride parade. They were unabashedly queer at a dangerous time â before protease inhibitors began to stem the AIDS plague and before most celebrities and politicians embraced the gay community in any real way. Being out in 1991 carried major risks to career and reputation.
Enter Gauwloos, one of those brave dancers who vogued his way into the hearts of countless gay men entranced by his handsome looks, his stage presence, and dance skills.
Gauwloos â known then and now as âSlamââ sat down with the Blade to talk Madonna, the lasting impact of âTruth or Dare,â the public disclosure of his HIV status, and plans for a new book on his life.
His story is fascinating â from growing up in Europe to dancing in New York to landing the gig of a lifetime with Madonna. He performed on that tour while secretly HIV positive and went without medical treatment for 10 years because he was living in the United States as an undocumented immigrant. Not even Madonna knew of his HIV status. Two other dancers on the tour were also HIV positive but no one talked about it. Ironically, Madonna was singing âExpress Yourselfâ and advocating for condom use during her concerts yet backstage three of her dancers were secretly positive.
“A lot of people were dying so I wasnât going to tell Madonna I had HIV,â said Slam, now 57. âAnd the others didnât either. It wasnât the moment to do it. She used to make speeches about Keith Haring and AIDS and I thought itâs going to be me next.â
Gabriel Trupin died of AIDS in 1995. Slam was diagnosed at age 18 in 1987, a frightening time when a positive test result often meant a death sentence. He booked the âBlond Ambition Tourâ at age 21 after moving to New York. His friends encouraged him to audition but Slam resisted because he wasnât a big Madonna fan.
âIt was crazy, everyone wanted that job,â he said, âbut I wanted to dance with Janet Jackson and Paula Abdul.â He listened to his friends and shortly after the audition, Slam received a call from Madonna herself inviting him to join the tour.
âWe all wanted to be stars but not even Madonna knew how big that tour would become. The way it was choreographed and directed, the stars aligned. ⊠It never looks dated even today.â

The world tour kicked off in Japan in April 1990 then moved to the United States and Europe, stirring controversy wherever it went. There was the iconic cone bra; the aforementioned simulated masturbation during âLike a Virginâ; and religious imagery that offended many Catholic groups and the Vatican.
And the controversy didnât end with the tour. Cameras were rolling throughout the tour for what Slam thought would be a âvideo memoryâ for Madonna. But as the tour unfolded, director Alek Keshishian reportedly became more interested in what was happening behind the scenes so plans for mere tour footage were expanded into a full documentary.
âWe were young and partying and didnât really know what was going on,â Slam said. âYou live in this celebrity bubble and you sign a paper â I donât even know what I signed.â
In 1992, Kevin, Oliver, and Gabriel sued Madonna for invasion of privacy and fraud claiming she used some footage without their consent. They claim they were told nothing would be included in the film that they didnât want to be seen. In one specific incident, Gabriel alleged that he told producers he didnât want the scene of him kissing Slam to be in the film as he wasnât fully out.
âGabriel was forcibly outed,â in the movie, Kevin said in a 2016 interview.
Slam did not join his colleagues in the lawsuit.
âI couldnât sue because I was illegal but I wasnât ever going to sue,â Slam said. âIâm not a suing kind of person. But good for them, they fought for it and won. A lot of people donât have the balls to sue Madonna.â The suit was settled two years later for an undisclosed sum.
âWe were all conflicted about the kiss,â he said with a laugh. âThe kiss, oh my God, my boyfriend is going to kill me! Belgian stress!â
Beyond worrying about his boyfriendâs reaction, Slam had concerns about the impact of being openly gay on his modeling career.
âIn 1990, you couldnât get high fashion campaigns as an openly gay model,â he said. âI was worried about that. I couldnât get a campaign because I was gay. My agency told me to say I was straight and it was just a game.â
In 2016, pegged to the 25th anniversary of âTruth or Dare,â the surviving six dancers filmed a documentary about their lives post-Madonna titled âStrike A Pose.â In it, Slam publicly revealed his HIV status for the first time in an emotional scene with his former colleagues.
âI found the strength to tell the world I have HIV,â he recalls. âI was scared but I felt brave. The outcome and messages were beautiful. After I saw âStrike A Pose,â I knew we gave people hope. And not just for gay people.â
He was infected in 1987 but didnât get treated until 1997. After the tour ended, he said he went into a depression and his agency dropped him.
âI was partying too much after the tour,â he recalls. âI made a decision to live as an illegal alien.â In 1997, Slam collapsed and was rushed to the hospital with pneumonia.
âThey started treating me and thank God the new HIV drugs were out, the cocktails, it took me a couple months to get better.â
Madonna didnât participate in âStrike A Poseâ and Slam said he hasnât seen or spoken to her since the end of the tour. He said he had no idea of the impact âTruth or Dareâ would have.
âYou look at this movie in 1991 and you donât think itâs going to be such a big thing and 35 years later itâs still helping people,â he said. âIt was helpful for people who felt alone at that time. It was such an important documentary.
âI donât think younger gay people realize how important Madonna was to gay and queer visibility â she was a big part of it. We showed the world itâs OK to be gay and that was the great message of this movie.â
He noted that, decades later, many of his friends have transgender kids and that queer culture is represented in much of mainstream pop culture.
âItâs amazing how far weâve come,â he said. âI know weâll always be marginalized but we have come so far. Iâm really proud of our community. The current nightmare will be over and I do believe that things will get better.â
Referencing President Trumpâs attacks on the LGBTQ community and crackdown on immigration, Slam described the situation in the U.S. today as âsad.â
âEverything is such a mess,â he said. âSome of these people have lived here 30-40 years and they take you out of your home. I canât even imagine. It breaks my heart. When I was illegal it was a different story.â
Slam met his husband, Facundo Gabba, whoâs from Argentina, in 2000, and he helped him get a legal case together to win citizenship. He filed a case in 2001 and was told there was a 99 percent chance he wouldnât be permitted to stay in the United States because they werenât allowing HIV-positive immigrants to remain in the country. But he got his green card anyway in 2005 and became a U.S. citizen in 2012.
Today, Slam and Gabba live in Brooklyn, though they travel a lot because âI canât take the cold.â The couple married in Argentina in 2010 and in the U.S. in 2016.
Slam is still dancing and working as a choreographer. Heâs teaching at a contemporary dance festival in Vienna in July and even offers online lessons via Salimdans.com.
As a longtime HIV survivor, Slam is dedicated to a healthful lifestyle.
âYou have to keep moving; when you move you stay healthy,â he says. âDance heals everything. I do yoga, I eat healthy and clean as possible. I donât watch much TV ⊠I try to stay healthy and positive. If I absorb all of the negativity I would be sick.â

In addition to his ongoing work in dance and choreography, Slam is in the early stages of writing a book about his extraordinary life and pioneering career.
âI always knew I had a book inside of me. I want to talk about my HIV status. I know I can inspire more people. I want to tell even more secrets in the book; secrets are a poison so I want to tell everything.â
Among those secrets, he notes, is a desire to write about his strict Muslim father and the years he spent as an undocumented immigrant in America.
âThose are the things I want to talk about, the struggles. Itâs a love story, hope and resilience. I know it will help people.â
As for his friends from the tour, Slam says he remains in contact with Gabrielâs mother and JosĂ© Xtravaganza is his best friend. Baltimoreâs Center Stage theater is currently developing a new musical about Xtravaganzaâs life. And Slam said he occasionally talks to Oliver, though âhe still canât pronounce Sandra Bernhardâs name.â
At the end of our interview, Slam indulged a round a rapid fire questions:
âą Favorite song to perform in the âBlond Ambitionâ tour? âExpress Yourself.â
âą Aside from Madonna, who was your favorite artist you worked with? Toni Braxton in âAidaâ on Broadway.
âą Favorite Madonna song? âLive to Tellâ
âą Favorite Madonna video? âBedtime Storiesâ
âą Whatâs more stressful: performing in a concert or performing on the VMAs? âBoth, because we always had to be perfect.â
âą Did you go to Madonnaâs recent âCelebrationâ tour? âI didnât see the show but I saw clips online.â
âą What do you remember most about performing âVogueâ at the VMAs? âIt was nerve-racking for them to flip those fans.â
âą When was the last time you vogued? âI teach classes so a couple weeks ago.â
Books
Love or fear flying youâll devour âWhy Flyâ
New book chronicles a lifetime obsession with aircraft
âWhy Flyâ
By Caroline Paul
c. 2026, Bloomsbury
$27.99/256 pages
Tray table folded up.
Check. Your seat is in the upright position, the airflow above your head is just the way you like it, and youâre ready to go. The flight crew is making final preparations. The lights are off and the plane is backing up. All you need now is âWhy Flyâ by Caroline Paul, and buckle up.

When she was very young, Paul was âobsessedâ with tales of adventure, devouring accounts written by men of their derring-do. The only female adventure-seeker she knew about then was Amelia Earhart; later, she learned of other adventuresome women, including aviatrix Bessie Coleman, and Paul was transfixed.
Time passed; Paul grew up to create a life of adventure all her own.
Then, the year her marriage started to fracture, she switched her obsession from general exploits to flight.
Specifically, Paul loves experimental aircraft, some of which, like her âtrike,â can be made from a kit at home. Others, like Woodstock, her beloved yellow gyrocopter, are major purchases that operate under different FAA rules. All flying has rules, she says, even if it seems like it should be as freewheeling as the birds it mimics.
She loves the pre-flight checklist, which is pure anticipation as well as a series of safety measures; if only a relationship had the same ritual. Paul loves her hangar, as a place of comfort and for flight in all senses of the word. She enjoys thinking about historic tales of flying, going back before the Wright Brothers, and including a man who went aloft on a lawn chair via helium-filled weather balloons.
The mere idea that she can fly any time is like a gift to Paul.
She knows a lot of people are terrified of flying, but itâs near totally safe: generally, thereâs a one in almost 14 million chance of perishing in a commercial airline disaster â although, to Paulâs embarrassment and her dismay, itâs possible that both the smallest planes and the grandest loves might crash.
If youâre a fan of flying, you know what to do here. If you fear it, pry your fingernails off the armrests, take a deep breath, and head to the shelves. âWhy Flyâ might help you change your mind.
Itâs not just that author Caroline Paul enjoys being airborne, and she tells you. Itâs not that sheâs honest in her explanations of being in love and being aloft. Itâs the meditative aura youâll get as youâre reading this book that makes it so appealing, despite the sometimes technical information that may flummox you between the Zen-ness. Itâs not overwhelming; it mixes well with the history Paul includes, biographies, the science, heartbreak, and exciting tales of adventure and risk, but itâs there. Readers and romantics who love the outdoors, canât resist a good mountain, and crave activity wonât mind it, though, not at all.
If you own a plane â or want to â youâll want this book, too. Itâs a great waiting-at-the-airport tale, or a tuck-in-your-suitcase-for-later read. Find âWhy Flyâ and youâll see that itâs an upright kind of book.
The Blade may receive commissions from qualifying purchases made via this post.
Theater
Out actor Kevin Cahoon on starring role in âChez Joeyâ
Arena production adapted from Broadway classic âPal Joeyâ
âChez Joeyâ
Through March 15
Arena Stage
1101 Sixth St., S.W.
Tickets start at $93
Arenastage.org
As Melvin Snyder in the new musical âChez Joey,â out actor Kevin Cahoon plays a showbiz society columnist who goes by the name Mrs. Knickerbocker. He functions as a sort of liaison between cafĂ© society and Chicagoâs Black jazz scene circa 1940s. Itâs a fun part replete with varied insights, music, and dance.
âChez Joeyâ is adapted from the Broadway classic âPal Joeyâ by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. Itâs inspired by John O’Hara’s stories based on the exploits of a small-time nightclub singer published in The New Yorker.
A warm and humorous man, Cahoon loves his work. At just six, he began his career as a rodeo clown in Houston. He won the Star Search teen division at 13 singing songs like âSome Peopleâ from âGypsy.â He studied theater at New York University and soon after graduating set to work playing sidekicks and comedic roles.
Over the years, Cahoon has played numerous queer parts in stage productions including âHedwig and the Angry Inch,â âLa Cage aux Folles,â âRocky Horrorâ as well as Peanut in âShucked,â and George the keyboardist in âThe Wedding Singer,â âa sort of unicorn of its time,â says Cahoon.
Co-directed by Tony Goldwyn and the great Savion Glover, âChez Joeyâ is a terrific and fun show filled with loads of talent. Its relevant new book is by Richard Lagravenese.
On a recent Monday off from work, Cahoon shared some thoughts on past and current happenings.
WASHINGTON BLADE: Is there a through line from Kevin, the six-year-old rodeo clown, to who we see now at Arena Stage?
KEVIN CAHOON: Anytime I want to land a joke in a theater piece it goes back to that rodeo clown. It doesnât matter if itâs Arenaâs intimate Kreeger Theatre or the big rodeo at the huge Houston Astrodome.
I was in the middle stadium and there was an announcer â a scene partner really. And we were doing a back and forth in hopes of getting laughs. At that young age I was trying to understand what it takes to get laughs. Itâs all about timing. Every line.
BLADE: Originally, your part in âChez Joeyâ Melvin was Melba who sings âZip,â a clever woman reporterâs song. It was sort of a star feature, where they could just pop in a star in the run of âPal Joey.â
CAHOON: Thatâs right. And in former versions it was played by Martha Plimpton and before her Elaine Stritch. For âChez Joey,â we switched gender and storyline.
We attempted to do âZipâ up until two days before we had an audience at Arena. Unexpectedly they cut âZipâ and replaced it with a fun number called âI Like to Recognize the Tune,â a song more connected to the story.
BLADE: Wow. You must be a quick study.
CAHOON: Well, weâre working with a great band.
BLADE: Youâve played a lot of queer parts. Any thoughts on queer representation?
CAHOON: Oh yes, definitely. And Iâve been very lucky that Iâve had the chance to portray these characters and introduce them to the rest of the world. I feel honored.
After originating Edna, the hyena on Broadway in âThe Lion King,â I left that to do âHedwig and the Angry Inchâ as standby for John Cameron Mitchell, doing one show a week for him.
Everyone thought I was crazy to leave the biggest musical of our time with a personal contract and getting paid more money that Iâd ever made to get $400 a week at the downtown Jane Street Theatre in a dicey neighborhood.
At the time, I really felt like I was with cool kids. I guess I was. And I never regretted it.
BLADE: When you play new parts, do you create new backstories for the role?
CAHOON: Every single time! For Melvin, I suggested a line about chorus boys on Lakeshore Drive.
BLADE: Whatâs up next for Kevin Cahoon?
CAHOON: Iâm about to do the New York Theatre Workshop Gala; Iâve been doing it for nine years in a row. Itâs a huge job. Iâll also be producing the âCats: The Jellicle Ballâ opening on Broadway this spring; itâs a queer-centric uptown vogue ball with gay actor AndrĂ© de Shields reprising his role as âOld Deuteronomy.â
BLADE: Thereâs a huge amount of talent onstage in âChez Joey.â
CAHOON: There is. Iâm sharing a dressing room with Myles Frost who plays Joey. He won accolades for playing Michael Jackson on Broadway. Weâve become great friends. Heâs a miracle to watch on stage. And Awa [Sal Secka], a D.C. local, is great. Every night the audience falls head over heels for her. When this show goes to New York, Awa will, no doubt, be a giant star.
BLADE: Do you think âChez Joeyâ might be Broadway bound?
CAHOON: I have a good feeling it is. Iâve done shows out of town that have high hopes and pedigree, but donât necessarily make it. âChez Joeyâ is a small production, itâs funny, and audiences seem to love it.
