a&e features
BETTY’s triumphant return
D.C. band gearing up for World AIDS Day show

BETTY
World AIDS concert
The Hamilton
600 14th St., N.W.
Tuesday, Dec. 1
Doors 6:30 p.m.
Show 7:30 p.m.
$20-30
For fans of “The L Word,” BETTY has been in your living room for years.
The band, originating in Washington, formed after performing at a party for the original owner of the 9:30 Club, Dodie Bowers. Since then, sisters Amy and Elizabeth Ziff and Alyson Palmer have performed at numerous LGBT rights, pro-choice and HIV/AIDS awareness events. With Amy on vocals and cello, Elizabeth on vocals and guitar and Palmer on vocals and bass, the trio, who now reside in New York City, are approaching their 30th anniversary and performing at the Hamilton for World AIDS Day on Tuesday, Dec. 1. A portion of the profits will benefit Whitman-Walker Health.
During a phone interview in the recording studio, Amy and Elizabeth discussed their new album, ties to D.C. and how they feel about being called a lesbian band.
WASHINGTON BLADE: What are you working on in the recording studio?
ELIZABETH: We’re working on our next album it should be out in springtime. Our next full album with the producer Mike Thorn.
BLADE: What’s the recording process been like so far?
ELIZABETH: It’s been good and interesting because Mike produced our first album in 1991, so it’s nice to be working with him again. We’ve done a couple of albums with him. It’s an interesting process to go back and look 20-something years ago and then to look now. I think it’s a little bit more open about change when you get to work with somebody that you’ve known a long time. You trust them a little bit more.
AMY: We’re looking at some songs that we’ve been performing and looking at them differently to record. It’s fun, it’s really opening them up.
BLADE: How did the band get started?
AMY: We started in Washington. We advertised on the radio for a bass player and I think Alyson was the third. Alyson called me at the job I had at the time and we talked for a really, really long time. She came over to audition and basically stayed almost all night.
ELIZABETH: Amy and I were actually still living at our parents’ house. We were little kids.
AMY: We laughed and starting working on songs and that was that. It was the beginning.
ELIZABETH: That was our first band together. Then Dodie Bowers from the original 9:30 Club asked us to sing at her Valentine’s Day party. She heard that we sing a cappella sometimes so we sang a cappella and then people loved it. So we decided to start BETTY. Coming up in 2016 this is going to be our 30th anniversary.
BLADE: You’re also very involved in LGBT rights and women’s equality. What made you decide to use your music this way? Was it always the plan to be so political?
AMY: I think we’ve always been political. We came of age in D.C. and it was a very political time. D.C. has always been political and I’m sure it still is, because the industry there is politics. So we were involved with feminist causes and LGBT stuff and AIDS work very early on. It was just a part of who we were. You went to Take Back the Night marches and you went to pro-choice stuff. When we started doing music we performed at them. It was sort of a synthesis of who we were as feminists and who we were as women at the time.
ELIZABETH: Also, AIDS started affecting a lot of our friends. As musicians, we tried to start singing or performing in any kind of way, on any scale, that would make us feel less helpless. Because our friends were getting sick and dying. I don’t know what comes first whether you’re an arts activist or an activist artist but they just seemed to happen at the same time.
AMY: Also, at the time we actually did some stuff for Whitman-Walker and early stuff for gay Pride. No one played at gay pride in the early days because people were afraid. It was back when it was hidden sort of behind P Street.
ELIZABETH: We were like, ‘Of course we’ll play for gay Pride,’ and we thanked our friends in the hospital and things like that. Whitman-Walker is such a great organization and has been around for so long and it’s in D.C. so it’s really fun to be back and to be able too give back a little to the community in D.C.
BLADE: The band has also provided the theme song for “The L Word.” How did that collaboration come about? Did you expect the show to be as popular as it became?
ELIZABETH: Ilene Chaiken asked four different bands to submit a theme song because she really wanted the theme song to reflect the actual song. So we submitted ours and three or four other bands did and the network chose the song, and they chose ours. We didn’t know the show was going to be such a seminal, groundbreaking show. It was really exciting to be a part of it. You have to understand that we had been together for 20 years already and then the show happened so it opened up a whole new thing for us. Especially in Europe and South America so that’s been really great and really fun.
BLADE: Since the band has been involved in things like “The L Word” and LGBT rights, how much of that is a part of your band’s identity?
ELIZABETH: As an identity, its female-identified. Now, we’ve never really labeled ourselves as a lesbian band because Alyson is straight. We’ve always played for gay rights and lesbian rights and trans rights. We’ve done a lot of pro-choice work, cancer and AIDS work. But our music hopefully transcends politics.
AMY: Our music isn’t really political. It’s fun and dance or folky or thoughtful. But we like to involve ourselves in causes that are important to us. But our music is pop music.
ELIZABETH: Other people can label us however they want. If they want us to be a lesbian band then right on. If they want us to be a gay band, fine. But we don’t really label ourselves because we don’t need to. I think labels hopefully are going away a little bit. Except for the label of being women and feminists.
BLADE: How do you find performing in D.C. different from your home base New York?
AMY: We are always really excited to go back to D.C. to perform. We actually did the soundscape for an exhibit at the Freer/Sackler museum right now. It’s called Peacock Room: Remix. It’s the re-do of Whistler’s Peacock Room. We were so excited to be a part of that and to be a part of Darren Waterston’s amazing piece. So we did some events in synthesis to promote that and to be a part of the Smithsonian. A lot of old friends came out and a lot of people that we hadn’t seen. When we did our off-Broadway show “BETTY Rules” we were excited that all of the references that we put in the show really came to life when we were performing in Washington. That’s when we started as a band. That was a really great time to perform our show there. It was so exciting.
ELIZABETH: We haven’t been back to play at a club in D.C. in a while. The last time was at the 9:30 Club and that was a few years ago. We heard the Hamilton was fun. What’s always been great about D.C. is that hopefully we get what we always get, which is a nice mix of race and gender and sexual identity as well.
AMY: People who knew us when we lived there can bring other people that don’t know about us or their kids or their parents.
ELIZABETH: People who know us from “The L Word” and are curious to see how we are live because we’re fun live.
BLADE: This show is also a holiday show. What can people expect? Will you be performing any of your new music?
AMY: I think a couple of our fresh new songs that we’ve never performed before will be there. And also some of our holiday songs that we’ve written. And some of our songs that aren’t holiday, but can be put in a holiday context. So you can expect to have a good time. Laugh a little bit, maybe feel a little bit. Move a little bit, cruise a little bit.
ELIZABETH: People will be cruising a lot.
a&e features
Visit Cambridge, a ‘beautiful secret’ on Maryland’s Eastern Shore
New organization promotes town’s welcoming vibe, LGBTQ inclusion

CAMBRIDGE, Md. — Driving through this scenic, historic town on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, you’ll be charmed by streets lined with unique shops, restaurants, and beautifully restored Victorian homes. You’ll also be struck by the number of LGBTQ Pride flags flying throughout the town.
The flags are a reassuring signal that everyone is welcome here, despite the town’s location in ruby red Dorchester County, which voted for Donald Trump over Kamala Harris by a lopsided margin. But don’t let that deter you from visiting. A new organization, Proudly Cambridge, is holding its debut Pride event this weekend, touting the town’s welcoming, inclusive culture.
“We stumbled on a beautiful secret and we wanted to help get the word out,” said James Lumalcuri of the effort to create Proudly Cambridge.
The organization celebrates diversity, enhances public spaces, and seeks to uplift all that Cambridge has to share, according to its mission statement, under the tagline “You Belong Here.”
The group has so far held informal movie nights and a picnic and garden party; the launch party is June 28 at the Cambridge Yacht Club, which will feature a Pride celebration and tea dance. The event’s 75 tickets sold out quickly and proceeds benefit DoCo Pride.
“Tickets went faster than we imagined and we’re bummed we can’t welcome everyone who wanted to come,” Lumalcuri said, adding that organizers plan to make “Cheers on the Choptank” an annual event with added capacity next year.
One of the group’s first projects was to distribute free Pride flags to anyone who requested one and the result is a visually striking display of a large number of flags flying all over town. Up next: Proudly Cambridge plans to roll out a program offering affirming businesses rainbow crab stickers to show their inclusiveness and LGBTQ support. The group also wants to engage with potential visitors and homebuyers.
“We want to spread the word outside of Cambridge — in D.C. and Baltimore — who don’t know about Cambridge,” Lumalcuri said. “We want them to come and know we are a safe haven. You can exist here and feel comfortable and supported by neighbors in a way that we didn’t anticipate when we moved here.”

Lumalcuri, 53, a federal government employee, and his husband, Lou Cardenas, 62, a Realtor, purchased a Victorian house in Cambridge in 2021 and embarked on an extensive renovation. The couple also owns a home in Adams Morgan in D.C.
“We saw the opportunity here and wanted to share it with others,” Cardenas said. “There’s lots of housing inventory in the $300-400,000 range … we’re not here to gentrify people out of town because a lot of these homes are just empty and need to be fixed up and we’re happy to be a part of that.”
Lumalcuri was talking with friends one Sunday last year at the gazebo (affectionately known as the “gayzebo” by locals) at the Yacht Club and the idea for Proudly Cambridge was born. The founding board members are Lumalcuri, Corey van Vlymen, Brian Orjuela, Lauren Mross, and Caleb Holland. The group is currently working toward forming a 501(c)3.
“We need visibility and support for those who need it,” Mross said. “We started making lists of what we wanted to do and the five of us ran with it. We started meeting weekly and solidified what we wanted to do.”
Mross, 50, a brand strategist and web designer, moved to Cambridge from Atlanta with her wife three years ago. They knew they wanted to be near the water and farther north and began researching their options when they discovered Cambridge.
“I had not heard of Cambridge but the location seemed perfect,” she said. “I pointed on a map and said this is where we’re going to move.”
The couple packed up, bought a camper trailer and parked it in different campsites but kept coming back to Cambridge.
“I didn’t know how right it was until we moved here,” she said. “It’s the most welcoming place … there’s an energy vortex here – how did so many cool, progressive people end up in one place?”
Corey van Vlymen and his husband live in D.C. and were looking for a second home. They considered Lost River, W.Va., but decided they preferred to be on the water.
“We looked at a map on both sides of the bay and came to Cambridge on a Saturday and bought a house that day,” said van Vlymen, 39, a senior scientist at Booz Allen Hamilton. They’ve owned in Cambridge for two years.
They were drawn to Cambridge due to its location on the water, the affordable housing inventory, and its proximity to D.C.; it’s about an hour and 20 minutes away.
Now, through the work of Proudly Cambridge, they hope to highlight the town’s many attributes to residents and visitors alike.
“Something we all agree on is there’s a perception problem for Cambridge and a lack of awareness,” van Vlymen said. “If you tell someone you’re going to Cambridge, chances are they think, ‘England or Massachusetts?’”
He cited the affordability and the opportunity to save older, historic homes as a big draw for buyers.
“It’s all about celebrating all the things that make Cambridge great,” Mross added. “Our monthly social events are joyful and celebratory.” A recent game night drew about 70 people.
She noted that the goal is not to gentrify the town and push longtime residents out, but to uplift all the people who are already there while welcoming new visitors and future residents.
They also noted that Proudly Cambridge does not seek to supplant existing Pride-focused organizations. Dorchester County Pride organizes countywide Pride events and Delmarva Pride was held in nearby Easton two weeks ago.
“We celebrate all diversity but are gay powered and gay led,” Mross noted.
To learn more about Proudly Cambridge, visit the group on Facebook and Instagram.
What to see and do
Cambridge, located 13 miles up the Choptank River from the Chesapeake Bay, has a population of roughly 15,000. It was settled in 1684 and named for the English university town in 1686. It is home to the Harriet Tubman Museum, mural, and monument. Its proximity to the Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge makes it a popular stop for birders, drawn to more than 27,000 acres of marshland dubbed “the Everglades of the north.”
The refuge is walkable, bikeable, and driveable, making it an accessible attraction for all. There are kayaking and biking tours through Blackwater Adventures (blackwateradventuresmd.com).
Back in town, take a stroll along the water and through historic downtown and admire the architecture. Take in the striking Harriet Tubman mural (424 Race St.). Shop in the many local boutiques, and don’t miss the gay-owned Shorelife Home and Gifts (421 Race St.), filled with stylish coastal décor items.
Stop for breakfast or lunch at Black Water Bakery (429 Race St.), which offers a full compliment of coffee drinks along with a build-your-own mimosa bar and a full menu of creative cocktails.
The Cambridge Yacht Club (1 Mill St.) is always bustling but you need to be a member to get in. Snapper’s on the water is temporarily closed for renovations. RaR Brewing (rarbrewing.com) is popular for craft beers served in an 80-year-old former pool hall and bowling alley. The menu offers burgers, wings, and other bar fare.
For dinner or wine, don’t miss the fantastic Vintage 414 (414 Race St.), which offers lunch, dinner, wine tasting events, specialty foods, and a large selection of wines. The homemade cheddar crackers, inventive flatbreads, and creative desserts (citrus olive oil cake, carrot cake trifle) were a hit on a recent visit.
Also nearby is Ava’s (305 High St.), a regional chain offering outstanding Italian dishes, pizzas, and more.
For something off the beaten path, visit Emily’s Produce (22143 Church Creek Rd.) for its nursery, produce, and prepared meals.
“Ten minutes into the sticks there’s a place called Emily’s Produce, where you can pay $5 and walk through a field and pick sunflowers, blueberries, you can feed the goats … and they have great food,” van Vlymen said.
As for accommodations, there’s the Hyatt Regency Chesapeake Bay (100 Heron Blvd. at Route 50), a resort complex with golf course, spa, and marina. Otherwise, check out Airbnb and VRBO for short-term rentals closer to downtown.
Its proximity to D.C. and Baltimore makes Cambridge an ideal weekend getaway. The large LGBTQ population is welcoming and they are happy to talk up their town and show you around.
“There’s a closeness among the neighbors that I wasn’t feeling in D.C.,” Lumalcuri said. “We look after each other.”
a&e features
James Baldwin bio shows how much of his life is revealed in his work
‘A Love Story’ is first major book on acclaimed author’s life in 30 years

‘Baldwin: A Love Story’
By Nicholas Boggs
c.2025, FSG
$35/704 pages
“Baldwin: A Love Story” is a sympathetic biography, the first major one in 30 years, of acclaimed Black gay writer James Baldwin. Drawing on Baldwin’s fiction, essays, and letters, Nicolas Boggs, a white writer who rediscovered and co-edited a new edition of a long-lost Baldwin book, explores Baldwin’s life and work through focusing on his lovers, mentors, and inspirations.
The book begins with a quick look at Baldwin’s childhood in Harlem, and his difficult relationship with his religious, angry stepfather. Baldwin’s experience with Orilla Miller, a white teacher who encouraged the boy’s writing and took him to plays and movies, even against his father’s wishes, helped shape his life and tempered his feelings toward white people. When Baldwin later joined a church and became a child preacher, though, he felt conflicted between academic success and religious demands, even denouncing Miller at one point. In a fascinating late essay, Baldwin also described his teenage sexual relationship with a mobster, who showed him off in public.
Baldwin’s romantic life was complicated, as he preferred men who were not outwardly gay. Indeed, many would marry women and have children while also involved with Baldwin. Still, they would often remain friends and enabled Baldwin’s work. Lucien Happersberger, who met Baldwin while both were living in Paris, sent him to a Swiss village, where he wrote his first novel, “Go Tell It on the Mountain,” as well as an essay, “Stranger in the Village,” about the oddness of being the first Black person many villagers had ever seen. Baldwin met Turkish actor Engin Cezzar in New York at the Actors’ Studio; Baldwin later spent time in Istanbul with Cezzar and his wife, finishing “Another Country” and directing a controversial play about Turkish prisoners that depicted sexuality and gender.
Baldwin collaborated with French artist Yoran Cazac on a children’s book, which later vanished. Boggs writes of his excitement about coming across this book while a student at Yale and how he later interviewed Cazac and his wife while also republishing the book. Baldwin also had many tumultuous sexual relationships with young men whom he tried to mentor and shape, most of which led to drama and despair.
The book carefully examines Baldwin’s development as a writer. “Go Tell It on the Mountain” draws heavily on his early life, giving subtle signs of the main character John’s sexuality, while “Giovanni’s Room” bravely and openly shows a homosexual relationship, highly controversial at the time. “If Beale Street Could Talk” features a woman as its main character and narrator, the first time Baldwin wrote fully through a woman’s perspective. His essays feel deeply personal, even if they do not reveal everything; Lucian is the unnamed visiting friend in one who the police briefly detained along with Baldwin. He found New York too distracting to write, spending his time there with friends and family or on business. He was close friends with modernist painter Beauford Delaney, also gay, who helped Baldwin see that a Black man could thrive as an artist. Delaney would later move to France, staying near Baldwin’s home.
An epilogue has Boggs writing about encountering Baldwin’s work as one of the few white students in a majority-Black school. It helpfully reminds us that Baldwin connects to all who feel different, no matter their race, sexuality, gender, or class. A well-written, easy-flowing biography, with many excerpts from Baldwin’s writing, it shows how much of his life is revealed in his work. Let’s hope it encourages reading the work, either again or for the first time.
a&e features
Looking back at 50 years of Pride in D.C
Washington Blade’s unique archives chronicle highs, lows of our movement

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of LGBTQ Pride in Washington, D.C., the Washington Blade team combed our archives and put together a glossy magazine showcasing five decades of celebrations in the city. Below is a sampling of images from the magazine but be sure to find a print copy starting this week.

The magazine is being distributed now and is complimentary. You can find copies at LGBTQ bars and restaurants across the city. Or visit the Blade booth at the Pride festival on June 7 and 8 where we will distribute copies.
Thank you to our advertisers and sponsors, whose support has enabled us to distribute the magazine free of charge. And thanks to our dedicated team at the Blade, especially Photo Editor Michael Key, who spent many hours searching the archives for the best images, many of which are unique to the Blade and cannot be found elsewhere. And thanks to our dynamic production team of Meaghan Juba, who designed the magazine, and Phil Rockstroh who managed the process. Stephen Rutgers and Brian Pitts handled sales and marketing and staff writers Lou Chibbaro Jr., Christopher Kane, Michael K. Lavers, Joe Reberkenny along with freelancer and former Blade staffer Joey DiGuglielmo wrote the essays.

The magazine represents more than 50 years of hard work by countless reporters, editors, advertising sales reps, photographers, and other media professionals who have brought you the Washington Blade since 1969.
We hope you enjoy the magazine and keep it as a reminder of all the many ups and downs our local LGBTQ community has experienced over the past 50 years.
I hope you will consider supporting our vital mission by becoming a Blade member today. At a time when reliable, accurate LGBTQ news is more essential than ever, your contribution helps make it possible. With a monthly gift starting at just $7, you’ll ensure that the Blade remains a trusted, free resource for the community — now and for years to come. Click here to help fund LGBTQ journalism.





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