Arts & Entertainment
This Week’s Arts Hot Hits & Hidden Jewels (Feb. 10)
Alan Cummings at Strathmore, Mark Morris Dance Group and more

Alan Cumming Sings Sappy Songs
Feb 14. Strathmore.
For more information click HERE.
Iconic performer Alan Cumming transforms Valentine’s Day into a cabaret, with the sappy silly love songs everyone secretly adores. With a superb side order of an Adele-Gaga-Katy Perry mash-up he likes to call Someone on the Edge of Firework, Cumming offers a smart, fun, and absolutely melodic tribute to love in the time of pop culture.
The Glass Menagerie
Thru Feb 21. Ford’s Theatre.
For more information click HERE.
This iconic, emotional and enduring family drama made Tennessee Williams famous and has become a classic of the American repertoire.
Eye Pop: The Celebrity Gaze
Thru Jul 10. National Portrait Gallery.
For more information click HERE.
This exhibition features 53 portraits of luminaries who have been at the top of their fields, such as: Brad Pitt, Oprah Winfrey, Katy Perry, Britney Spears, Michelle Obama, Serena Williams & Kobe Bryant. Taken together, these portraits allow us to question celebrity and peel back its layers.
Mark Morris Dance Group
Feb 19-20. GMU Center for the Arts.
For more information click HERE.
In celebration of its 35th anniversary season, Mark Morris Dance Group presents new works and treasured gems from Mark Morris’s expansive repertoire performed by the company’s talented dancers and musicians.
Photos
PHOTOS: Helen Hayes Awards
Gay Men’s Chorus, local drag artists have featured performance at ceremony

The 41st Helen Hayes Awards were held at The Anthem on Monday, May 19. Felicia Curry and Mike Millan served as the hosts.
A performance featuring members of the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington and local drag artists was held at the end of the first act of the program to celebrate WorldPride 2025.
The annual awards ceremony honors achievement in D.C.-area theater productions and is produced by Theatre Washington.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)



























2025 D.C. Trans Pride was held at Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Library on Saturday, May 17. The day was filled with panel discussions, art, social events, speakers, a resource fair and the Engendered Spirit Awards. Awardees included Lyra McMillan, Pip Baitinger, Steph Niaupari and Hayden Gise. The keynote address was delivered by athlete and advocate Schuyler Bailar.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)











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.




