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MOST ELIGIBLE SINGLES: Blake Dremann

Meet D.C.’s top 20 LGBT bachelors and bachelorettes

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Blake Dremann, gay news, Washington Blade

Blake Dremann (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Name: Blake Dremann

Age: 36

Occupation: Navy officer, advocate, MBA student

Identify as: Straight trans male

What are you looking for in a mate? Authenticity, independence, confidence. Someone I can cook with because I hate cooking for just me (plus someone to enjoy my baking). An extrovert for my extreme introvertness. And must pass the dog test.

Biggest turn-off: Drama, superficial, neediness

Biggest turn-on: Powerful eyes and a wild spirit

Hobbies: Board games, running, books, movies, breakfast and Lucas (the dog)

Describe your ideal first date: Sunday breakfast (not brunch) in a quiet diner where we talk till lunch, then go for a walk.

Pets, kids or neither? Lucas the dog

Would you date someone whose political views differ from yours? Depends on the view.

Celebrity crush: Anna Kendrick, Helen Hunt

One obscure fact about yourself: I graduated from Bible college, meaning that during public speeches I can go into all out preacher mode.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE TOP 20 LGBT SINGLES

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Photos

PHOTOS: Winchester Pride

LGBTQ celebration held at Museum of the Shenandoah Valley

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A scene from Winchester Pride on Saturday. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

The 2024 Winchester Pride festival was held on the grounds of the Museum of the Shenandoah Valley in Winchester, Va. on Saturday, Oct. 5. Performers included LaLa Ri of “RuPaul’s Drag Race.”

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

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Photos

PHOTOS: Dominique Jackson at Bunker

‘Pose’ star special guest at LGBTQ nightclub

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Dominique Jackson was the special guest at the 'Kunty' party at Bunker on Saturday. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Star of “Pose” Dominique Jackson was the special guest at the vogue party “Kunty” on Saturday, Oct. 5 at Bunker. DJ Mascari provided the music.

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

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Theater

‘Acting their asses off’ in ‘Exception to the Rule’

Studio production takes place during after-school detention

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Cast of ‘Exception to the Rule’ at Studio Theatre (Shana Lee Hill, Khalia Muhammad, Jacques Jean-Mary, Sabrina Lynne Sawyer, Khouri St.Surin, and Steven Taylor Jr.) (Photo by Margot Schulman)

‘Exception to the Rule
Through Sunday, October 27
Studio Theatre
1501 14th St. NW, Washington, D.C.
$40-$95
Studiotheatre.org

After-school detention is a bore, but it’s especially tiresome on the last day of classes before a holiday.  

In Dave Harris’s provocative new play “Exception to the Rule” (now at Studio Theatre) that’s just the case. 

It’s Friday, and the usual suspects are reporting to room 111 for detention before enjoying the long MLK weekend. First on the scene are blaring “bad girl” Mikayla (Khalia Muhammad) and nerdy stoner Tommy (Stephen Taylor Jr.), followed by mercurial player Dayrin (Jacques Jean-Mary), kind Dasani (Shana Lee Hill), and unreadable Abdul (Khouri St.Surin). 

The familiar is jaw-droppingly altered by the entrance of “College Bound Erika” (Sabrina Lynne Sawyer), a detention first timer whose bookworm presence elicits jokes from the others: What happened? You fail a test? 

Dasani (who’s teased for being named for designer water) dubs Erika “Sweet Pea” and welcomes her to the rule-breaking fold. Together the regulars explain how detention works: The moderator, Mr. Bernie, shows up, signs their slips, and then they go. But today the teacher is tardy. 

As they wait, the kids pass the time laughing, trash talking, flirting, and yelling. When not bouncing around the classroom, Dayrin is grooming his hair, while Dasani endlessly reapplies blush and lip gloss. At one point two boys almost come to blows, nearly repeating the cafeteria brawl that landed them in detention in the first place.  

It’s loud. It’s confrontational. And it’s funny.

Erika is naively perplexed: “I thought detention was quiet. A place where everyone remembers the mistakes that got them here and then learns how to not make the same mistakes again.” 

For room 111, the only connection to the outside world is an increasingly glitchy and creepy intercom system. Announcements (bus passes, the school’s dismal ranking, the impending weekend lockdown, etc.) are spoken by the unseen but unmistakably stentorian-voiced Craig Wallace. 

Dave Harris first conceived “Exception to the Rule” in 2014 during his junior year at Yale University. In the program notes, the Black playwright describes “Exception to the Rule” as “a single set / six actors on a stage, just acting their asses off.” It’s true, and they do it well. 

Miranda Haymon is reprising their role as director (they finely helmed the play’s 2022 off-Broadway debut at Roundabout Theatre Company in New York). Haymon orchestrates a natural feel to movement in the classroom, and without entirely stilling the action on stage (makeup applying, scribbling, etc.), the out director gives each member of the terrific cast their revelatory moment. In a busy room, we learn that Tommy’s goofiness belies trauma, that Mikayla is admirably resourceful, and most startling, why Erika, the school’s top student, is in detention.   

Mr. Bernie is clearly a no-show. And despite his absence, the regulars are bizarrely loath to leave the confines of 111 for fear of catching yet another detention. Of course, it’s emblematic of something bigger. Still, things happen within the room.

While initially treated as a sort of mascot, awkwardly quiet Erika becomes rather direct in her questions and observations. Suddenly, she’s rather stiffly doling out unsolicited advice. 

It’s as if an entirely new person has been thrown into the mix.  

Not all of her guidance goes unheeded. Take fighting for instance. At Erika’s suggestion, St.Surin’s Abdul refrains from kicking Dayrin’s ass. (Just feet from the audience gathered for a recent matinee in Studio’s intimate Mead Theatre, Abdul’s frustration resulting from anger while yearning for a world of principled order is palpable as evidenced when a single tear rolled down the actor’s right cheek) 

Set designer Tony Cisek renders a no-frills classroom with cinder block walls, a high and horizontal row of frosted fixed windows that become eerily prison like when overhead fluorescent lighting is threateningly dimmed.  

Still, no matter how dark, beyond the classroom door, a light remains aglow, encouraging the kids to ponder an exit plan. 

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