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Calendar: Oct. 22

Halloween parties, the Indigo Girls, Janis Ian and more

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Ricardo Alvarez and Kelly Southall in a publicity photo for the gay-themed 'Charlie Chan and the Mystery of Love' a new work being performed this weekend by Dana Tai Soon Burgess & Company at Dance Place. (Photo by Zain Shah; courtesy of Dana Tai Soon Burgess)

Friday, Oct. 22

Reel Affirmations presents a night of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” on screen with two movies at the U.S. Navy Memorial Theatre (701 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.). “A Marine Story,” a film about a Marine officer who unexpectedly returns home from the war and is recruited to help a troubled teen prepare for boot camp until the real reasons for her return become known, will begin at 7 p.m. “Out of Annapolis,” a documentary about LGBT alumni of the U.S. Naval Academy, will being at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are $15 each or $25 for both and a reception in between and can be purchased at reelaffirmations.org.

Apex presents an employee drag show tonight at 10 p.m. to benefit Metro Teen AIDS. The entire Apex (1415 22nd St., N.W.) staff will be performing with music by DJ45Z. The show will be hosted by Kristina Kelly and Rachel Savage. Cover for the evening is $10. Attendees must be 18 to enter, 21 to drink.

The 2011 Queen of Queen City Pageant will be tonight at 9 p.m. at the New Embassy Theatre (49 Baltimore St.) in Cumberland. The theme of this yearā€™s pageant is jungle attire. Tickets are $9 and include one free drink. Attendees must be 21 or older. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit newembassy.org.

Ski Bums will be having a happy hour tonight from 8 to 11 p.m. at Nellieā€™s (900 U St., N.W.) during which the D.C. day trip season will be announced. For more information, visit ski-bums.org.

Choreographer Dana Tai Soon Burgess’s newest work “Charlie Chan and the Mystery of Love” opens tonight at the Dance Place (3225 8th St., N.E.) at 8 p.m. The multi-media, autobiographical piece is inspired by the popular film detective Charlie Chan and uses video projection, spoken word text and a soundtrack of 1930s and ā€˜40s music to tell a gay coming-of-age and coming-out story. Tickets range from $22 for general admission to $8 for children 2-17 and can be purchased at danceplace.org.

The International Drag King Extravaganza continues today in Baltimore with workshops, an art and film festival, spaghetti dinner at 5 p.m. and more. (2640 Saint Paul St.) The workshops are $45 for a three-day pass and the dinner is $10. Also part of the event is “Glitterbox” at 8 p.m. and “Lesque” at 11 p.m. at Ottobar (2549 N. Howard St.). $12 gets you into both events. Visit idkexii.com for more information and to purchase tickets and passes.

Saturday, Oct. 23

Connections 2010, a one day business and professional development conference, is today at the Washington Post (1150 15th St., N.W.) from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The Capital Area Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce has assembled a line up of speakers, business leaders and vendors for this event.

Defend Yourself will hold a self-defense class for the LGBT community today on the second floor of the Emergence Community Arts Collective (733 Euclid St., N.W.) from 1 to 4 p.m. The class costs $52. For more information and to learn how to register, visit defendyourself.org.

Neil Simonā€™s ā€œThe Odd Coupleā€ opens tonight at Theater J (1529 16th St., N.W.) presented by the D.C. Jewish Community Center at 8 p.m.

The International Drag King Extravaganza continues with the last day of workshops and art and film and the keynote and lunch at 1 p.m. with keynote speaker Tristan Taormino, both at 2640 Saint Paul St. Later tonight is the showcase at Sonar (407 E. Saratoga St.) at 9 p.m. This is the first time in the history of the event that is will be held on the east coast. The lunch is $20 and the showcase is $15. Visit idkexii.com for more information and to purchase tickets and passes.

Sunday, Oct. 24

GayParazzi, a new LGBT photo group, will explore the Georgetown area and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal path near the Potomac River today at 10 a.m. The group will meet in front of AMC Loews Georgetown Theater (3111 K St., N.W.) and head to the waterfront.

Equality Marylandā€™s 2010 Signature Gala with special guest Governor Martin Oā€˜Malley, is tonight at the Samuel Riggs Alumni Center at the University of Maryland, College Park. There is a VIP reception at 5:30 p.m. and the dinner and program beings at 6:30. For more information and to learn how to purchase tickets, visit equalitymaryland.org.

The Imperial Court of Washington presents ā€œDragging Out the Gospelā€ hosted by Co Co L. Blackwell at Green lantern (1335 Green Court, N.W.) at 7 p.m. One performer will be chosen by audience participation as the best performer and will qualify for “drag gospel performer of the year.” Doors open at 6 p.m. There is a $3 cover.

Lesbian band the Indigo Girls will be at the Birchmere (3701 Mt. Vernon Ave.) in Alexandia tonight at 7:30 p.m. with Mount Moriah. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased at ticketmaster.com.

Monday, Oct. 25

SAGE Metro D.C. will be having its monthly meeting tonight at 6:30 p.m. at the D.C. Center (1318 U St., N.W.).

The D.C. Gay Flag Football League presents speed dating at Nellieā€™s (900 U St., N.W.) tonight from 7 to 10 p.m. There is a $15 cover and check in is at 6 p.m.

Hope Operas, whose founder is openly gay, has its third week of five new shows tonight to raise money for charity. The shows are at 8 p.m. at the Comedy Spot, in Ballston Mall (4238 Wilson, Blvd.), in Arlington. Each show benefits a different charity. Tickets are $12 per show. For more information call 323-788-8970 or e-mail [email protected].

Adele Stan will be at Busboys & Poets’s 5th and K streets location tonight signing and discussing “Dangerous Brew: Exposing the Tea Party’s Agenda to Take Over America,” an anthology she co-edited with Don Hazen.

The Indigo Girls will be at the Birchmere (3701 Mt. Vernon Ave.) in Alexandia, tonight at 7:30 p.m. with Mount Moriah. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased at ticketmaster.com.

Tuesday, Oct. 26

The Mautner Project will be having a workshop entitled ā€œGetting Unstuckā€ tonight at its headquarters (1875 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Ste., 710) from 7 to 8:30 p.m. with Gail Waldman. To RSVP call 202-332-5536 or e-mail [email protected].

Nellie’s (900 U St., N.W.) will be holding a “Glee” watch party tonight on the deck in the pub room at 8 p.m. featuring a $3 beer special all night.

Wednesday, Oct. 27

Secrets (1824 Half St., S.W.) is holdings it monthly amateur dance contest tonight beginning at 11 p.m. Contests must sign up at the main bar between 10 and 10:45 p.m. This monthā€™s contest is masquerade themed and contestants are encouraged to wear masks.

The Pink Party is hosing a candlelight vigil in Dupont Circle today from 6 to 9 p.m. in connection with the national Facebook effort to wear purple on Oct. 20 to “show support for LGBT people and protest/mourn the youth suicides.”Ā  Attendees are asked to bring their own candles and cups.

Thursday, Oct. 28

Gays & Lesbians Opposing Violence will have its monthly meeting tonight at the D.C. Center (1318 U St., N.W.) from 7 to 9 p.m.

Ganymede Arts presents Gerald Duvalā€™s ā€œEdie Beale Live at Reno Sweeneyā€ starring Jeffrey Johnson, tonight at Noiā€™s Nook at go mama go! (1809 14th St., N.W.) at 8 p.m. For more information and to purchase tickets, visit ganymedearts.org.

LAMBDA SCI-FI book discussion group meets today at 7 p.m at 1425 S Street NW. This month’s book is “Soulless,” by Gail Carriger. For more information or to RSVP, call Peter and Rob at 202-483-6369 or James at 202-232-3141 or e-mailĀ  [email protected] or visit lambdasf.org.

Friday, Oct. 29

Margaret Cho will be at the Warner Theatre (513 13th St., N.W.) tonight at 7:30 p.m. with her show, “Cho Dependent.” Tickets are $40.50 or $57.60 and can be purchased at livenation.com.

Zoom Urban Lesbian Excursions hosts “Night at the Museum” tonight at 8:30 p.m. at the Museum of Crime and Punishment (575 7th St., N.W.) as it turns into a haunted torture chamber. Attendees are welcome to wear costumes but masks are prohibited. Tickets are $23 and can be purchased at zoomexcursions.com.

The D.C. Kings will be at Apex tonight at 11 p.m. as part a special ladies night featuring a few Halloween-themed performances.

Saturday, Oct. 30

Douche Bag City, an exhibition of video animation, painting and sculpture by Federico Solmi, opens today with a reception from 6 to 8 p.m. at Conner Contemporary Art (1358 Florida Ave., N.E.).

Jimmy Valentine’s Lonely Hearts Club (1103 Bladensburg Rd., N.E.) is hosting its Halloween Homecoming tonight from 9 p.m. to 3 a.m. featuring DJs Junebullet of She.Rex, Natty Boom of Anthology of Booty, and vANNIEty Kills of Anniething Goes. Costumes are required for entry. Tickets are $15 and must be purchased online. Visit jimmyvalentineslhc.com for more information and tickets.

Tom Paxton and Janis Ian, “Together at Last,” will be at the Birchmere (3701 Mt. Vernon Ave.) in Alexandia, tonight at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $45 and can be purchased at ticketmaster.com. Ian is a lesbian.

Phase 1 (525 8th St., S.E.) is having its annual Halloween costume contest tonight. Best costume will win $100 and there will be other prizes for sexiest and mot hilarious. Doors open at 7 p.m. and attendees must be 21 or older to enter.

Sunday, Oct. 31

Nellie’s (900 U St., N.W.) is having a Halloween costume party tonight from 8 p.m. to midnight. First place wins $250 cash, second place wins a $100 Nellie’s tab and third place wins a $50 Cubano’s dinner. There’s no cover for this event.

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Theater

Celebrating the 2024 Helen Hayes Awards nominees

38th annual event returns next week ā€˜building on last yearā€™s successā€™

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Justin Weaks as Belize and Nick Westrate as Prior in ā€˜Angels in America, Part One: Millennium Approachesā€™ at Arena Stage. (Photo by Margot Schulman)

2024 Helen Hayes Award
May 20, 2024
For tickets go to theatrewashington.org

Itā€™s that time of year again when the DMVā€™s theater pros and those who love them getdolled up and show up to celebrate the best of last yearā€™s work. 

On Monday (May 20), Theatre Washingtonā€™s Helen Hayes Awards marks its 38th year with a splashy ceremony at The Anthem on the District Wharf. With two parts, a non-rushed intermission, and a lively after party, the program is long but the format allows time to celebrate award recipients, enjoy the entertainment, and talk about some serious issues without racing to the end.

Co-directed by Will Gartshore and Raymond O. Caldwell, the show features four terrific hosts ā€” out actor Tom Story, Felicia Curry, Maria Rizzo, and Rayanne Gonzales along with an ensemble of five singer/dancers (dubbed the Fab Five) peppering the show with some fun numbers.Ā 

ā€œWeā€™re building on last yearā€™s success,ā€ says Amy Austin, Theatre Washingtonā€™s out president and CEO. ā€œAgain, dinner will be served during the show Ć  la Golden Globes on the first floor for mostly nominees and their guests, and the second floor offers lots more affordable stadium seating.ā€ 

Austinā€™s approach harks back to the sumptuous Helen Hayes Awards of yesteryear, which she cleverly remembers as the ā€œice sculpture age.ā€ Ultimately, the goal is to create something fun, memorable, and meaningful: ā€œItā€™s such a collaborative community and thatā€™s why the Helen Hayes Awards are special; itā€™s a reunion of people whoā€™ve worked together.ā€ 

Still, the doling out of awards remains the focus of the long evening. And that leaves a lot of nominees waiting on tenterhooks to see just who will go home with prizes named for the legendary first lady of American theater, Miss Helen Hayes. 

The awards selection process is no simple task, she adds. Recognizing work from 151 eligible productions presented in the 2023 calendar year, nominations were made in 41 categories and grouped in ā€œHelenā€ or ā€œHayesā€ cohorts, depending on the number of Equity members involved in the production with Hayes counting more. 

The nods are the result of 49 carefully vetted judges considering 2005 individual pieces of work, such as design, direction, choreography, performances, and more. Productions under consideration in 2023 included 44 musicals, 107 plays, and 36 world premieres.

As one of this yearā€™s nominees, out actor Justin Weaks says he isnā€™t about beating the competition. He concedes it may sound clichĆ©, but itā€™s a privilege simply to be nominated, especially with all the work done in the DMV. And certainly, with three wins and multiple nominations under his belt, heā€™s in a position to know. 

And now, heā€™s nominated for Outstanding Supporting Performer in a Play, for his notable turn as Belize/Mr. Lies in Arena Stageā€™s production of Tony Kushnerā€™s seminal masterwork ā€œAngels in America, Part One: Millennium Approaches.ā€

For Weaks, a longtime D.C. actor who relocated to New York in 2021, the ā€œAngelsā€ experience was singular: ā€œItā€™s one of those great, very American plays that remains relevant, and that itā€™s centered on the gay experience and HIV/ AIDS makes it especially impactful for the queer community.ā€

Often noted for creating roles in new plays, Weaks enjoyed being part of a piece that so many hands have touched since its premiere more than 30 years ago. He was thrilled to work with the productionā€™s Hungarian director JĆ”nos SzĆ”sz who, Weak says, approached the piece as a new work, treating it like fresh text.

And does Weaks have a speech prepared? 

ā€œThe morning of the awards, Iā€™ll journal about my experience with ā€˜Angels,ā€™ and if my name is called, Iā€™ll get up and give an abbreviated version of what I wrote. But mostly for me, itā€™s a reunion, a chance to be cute, get dressed up and celebrate the work.ā€ 

In the Outstanding Lighting Design category, Brooklyn-based Venus Gulbranson is nominated for Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company & The Wilma Theaterā€™s ā€œMy Mama and the Full-scale Invasionā€. Itā€™s the proud and out Filipino designerā€™s second nomination (last year she received a nod for Monumental Theatreā€™s ā€œtick, tick… BOOM!ā€). 

ā€œLighting design is underrated in the eye of theatergoers,ā€ explains Gulbranson who earned her lighting stripes as an Arena Stage fellow. ā€œScenic and costume design are somehow more tangible to them; they donā€™t often realize that itā€™s lighting designers who navigate the mood of the story. 

ā€œItā€™s a very empathetic skill, and a good designer can take you there emotionally.  When youā€™re tearing up watching a scene, the lighting has a lot to do with it. We also spend a lot of time making scenes transition smoothly,ā€ she adds. 

ā€œWe half-jokingly say ā€˜a compliment to set design is a compliment to us.ā€™ We are the reason there are beautiful colors on stage. Scenery is our canvas.ā€ 

Other queer nominees include Bobby Smith (Studio Theatreā€™s ā€œFun Houseā€), Billie Krishawn (Arenaā€™s ā€œAngels in Americaā€), Miss Kitty (Spooky Action Theatreā€™s ā€œAgresteā€), Michael Urie (The Kennedy Centerā€™s ā€œMonty Pythonā€™s Spamalotā€), costume designer Frank Labovitz (Constellation Theatre Companyā€™s ā€œThe School for Liesā€), director Jason Loewith and set designer Tony Cisek (Round House Theatre & Olney Theatre Centerā€™s ā€œInkā€), and most likely more.  

Both the Helen Hayes Awardsā€™ choreographer and a nominee, David Singleton is up for Outstanding Choreography in a Musical for NextStop Theatre Companyā€™s ā€œRide the Cyclone,ā€ a wildly entertaining dark comedy.

ā€œThe showā€™s score is eclectic, so I could do a little bit of everything. I had to find anchor points for each number where I draw most inspiration, and go with it. I have a strong jazz background, both street and musical theater jazz, but Iā€™m also really into tap and some ballet.ā€  

Singleton began performing professionally in ā€œDreamgirlsā€ at Tobyā€™s Dinner Theatre in 2017, but he hit his stride with ā€œreally fierceā€ choreography post pandemic. 

A dancer first, Singleton says his energies are divided into thirds: performer, choreographer, and drag queen (Tiara Missou, an ā€œincredibly vain but kind queenā€ whoā€™s regularly featured at D.C. bars Pitchers and Shakers). When Singleton was 18, he volunteered to work the Helen Hayes Awards. He recalls thinking ā€œIā€™ll be part of this one day, for what exactly Iā€™m not sureā€ and now he says, ā€œIā€™m here and I feel honored.ā€  

And what about a prepared speech? ā€œOh, definitely. Iā€™m a rambler.ā€  

Break legs nominees! 

A full list of award recipients will be available at theatrewashington.org on Tuesday, May 23.

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Television

ā€˜Interview with the Vampireā€™ returns in triumph

Long-awaited season 2 continues to get story exactly right

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Assad Zaman and Jacob Anderson star in 'Interview with the Vampire.' (Photo courtesy of AMC)

When AMC debuted its long-awaited series adaptation of ā€œInterview With the Vampireā€ – Anne Riceā€™s seminal proto-postmodern horror novel that set the stage and paved the way for a decades-long literary franchise that has kept millions of readers, queer and straight alike, passionately engaged since first reading its thinly veiled allegorical document of life as a being with heightened awareness on the edge of human existence – in 2022, we were among the first to sing its praises as a triumph of narrative storytelling,

We were not the last. The series, created by Rolin Jones in collaboration with Christopher Rice ā€“ the original authorā€™s son and a successful horror novelist in his own right ā€“ and the late Anne Rice herself, was one of its seasonā€™s best-reviewed shows, earning particular praise for its writing, in which the queer ā€œsubtextā€ of Riceā€™s original works was given the kind of unequivocal full weight denied to it in the Brad Pitt/Tom Cruise-starring Neil Jordan-helmed film adaptation from 1994. 

Though purist fans of the original boom series took occasional umbrage to some of the showā€™s leaps ā€“ changing the historical period of the story to illuminate themes of racism and deepen its resonance for those living as ā€œothersā€ on the fringe of society, and making the bookā€™s protagonist, Louis Pointe du Lac (Jacob Anderson), a closeted Black Creole man in early 20th-century New Orleans ā€“ the series won most of its naysayers over by its season finale. It delivered a deliciously subversive, unapologetically queer interpretation that remained true to Riceā€™s original gothic re-imaginings while expanding the scope to encompass social and cultural factors that have become central to the moral and ideological conflicts that plague us in the first quarter of the 21st century.

To put it bluntly, the showā€™s willingness to embrace the storyā€™s countercultural queer eroticism and place its transgressively amoral ā€œmoral compassā€ front and center was more than enough to smooth over any nitpicking over faithfulness to narrative detail or tone that might otherwise have kept Riceā€™s legion of acolytes from signing on to the new-and-contemporized vision of the book that Rollins built as the foundation for his daunting project.

Now, after a buzz-tempering delay borne of last yearā€™s actorā€™s strike, the series has returned for its second season. And weā€™re happy to assure you that its feet hit the ground running, keeping up both passion and narrative momentum to pick up the story with electrifying energy after leaving off (at the end of season one) with the shocking murder and seeming elimination of Lestat (Sam Reid), the exquisitely amoral ā€œrock starā€ vampire who served as both protector and lover of Louis, and the departure of the latter and his perpetually juvenile ā€œdaughter,ā€ Claudia (Bailey Bass) on s quest to find others like themselves.

Fans of the book might, in fact, find new reasons to take exception to the showā€™s adaptation, which, as in season one, makes significant departures from the original narrative. After moving the storyā€™s setting forward by roughly half a century, Louis and Claudiaā€™s secretive sojourn now takes place in the traumatized landscape of post-WWII Europe, and spins a scenario in which the two ex-pat vampires, navigating their way through the perils of Soviet-occupied Central Europe after the fall of the Nazi regime, spend time in a refugee shelter while investigating rumors of old-world vampires who might provide a link to their ā€œfamily history.ā€

When we rejoin this pair of relative fledgling vampires, their undead existence is a far cry from the decadent elegance they enjoyed in the New Orleans setting of season one. Enduring a near-feral existence as they make their way through a war-ravaged landscape, they find no shortage of prey in the aftermath of the Third Reich, but the ā€œcreature comfortsā€ of their former ā€œafterlivesā€ are now only a memory. Louis is devoted, as always, to Claudia (now portrayed by Delainey Hayles, presumably due to scheduling conflicts for original actor Bass, who is set to reprise her role from ā€œAvatar: The Way of Waterā€ in the next installment of filmmaker James Cameronā€™s high-dollar sci-fi franchise), but remains haunted by his vampire maker and former lover Lestat, whose undead corpse remains buried on another continent but whose charismatic presence manifests itself in his private moments, nonetheless. In the first episode, the pair have used their supernatural wiles to journey into the ā€œold countryā€ long associated with their kind, tracking human tales of monstrous terrors in the night in hope of connecting with more of their kind. Louis, as always, struggles with his compassion for the mortal beings around him, while the more savage Claudia simply sees them as prey, and holds little hope of finding other vampires, if they even exist. For her part, Claudia has forgiven ā€“ but not forgotten ā€“ his refusal to ensure Lestatā€™s demise by burning his body, and is now solely focused on finding others like her.

Of course, the adventures of these two undead companions are only half the equation in ā€œInterview With the Vampire.ā€ The past is, as always, merely a flashback, as Louis relates the story of his afterlife experiences to mortal journalist Daniel Molloy (Eric Bogosian). In the present, the skeptical Molloy casts doubt on the truth of his memories, forcing the vampire to re-examine them as he goes. Perhaps more interestingly, in the long game of a series which, if it comes to full fruition, will eventually encompass the entire Rice vampire saga, these contemporary scenes give us a look at the relationship between Louis and Armand (Assad Zaman), revealed in the season one finale to be not a mere servant in Louisā€™ household but a centuries-old fellow vampire who is now Louisā€™ lover and companion.

Fans of the books, of course, know that Armand plays a significant role in the story of the past, too, and while we wonā€™t spoil anything, we can say that history begins to unspool as season two progresses ā€“ but thatā€™s getting ahead of ourselves. For now, what we can say is that season twoā€™s first episode, while it may veer away from the familiarity of Riceā€™s original tale in service of reimagining it for 21st-century audiences, continues the first seasonā€™s dedication to breathing thrilling new life into this now-iconic, deeply queer saga; superb performances all around, an elegantly cinematic presentation and literate writing, and a lush musical score by Daniel Hart all combine to sweep us quickly and irresistibly into the story, making us not just fall in love with these vampires, but want to be one of them. 

That, of course, is the gloriously sexy and subversive point of Riceā€™s ā€œVampire Chronicles,ā€ and this long-awaited series continues to get it exactly right.

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Out & About

Pride Run 5K nearly sold out

Front Runners annual event to be held at Congressional Cemetery

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Front Runners Pride Run 5K (Washington Blade file photo by Michael Key)

Sign up now to join the annual Front Runners Pride Run 5K. The event is 85 percent sold out. The event is Friday, June 7 at Historic Congressional Cemetery.

Join more than 1,000 runners and walkers as they kick off Pride weekend 2024. When registering please consider donating to one of the eventā€™s charity partners. This year’s race proceeds benefit local LGBTQ and disenfranchised youth organizations, including the Team DC Student-Athlete Scholarship, Wanda Alston Foundation, Blade Foundation, Ainsley’s Angels of America (National Capital Region), Pride365 and SMYAL. Visit DCPriderun.com to register or to donate.

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