Arts & Entertainment
Local events in brief
Gay Men’s Chorus concert opens next weekend, Georgetown Jingle and more
Gay Men’s Chorus plans ‘Nutcracker’ holiday show
The Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington begins its 30th anniversary season with its holiday production “Men in Tights: A Pink Nutcracker” on Dec. 17 at 8 p.m. at the Lisner Auditorium at George Washington University (730 21st St., N.W.).
“This year’s holiday extravaganza begins with glorious choral music performed by over 200 singers filling the stage and for the first time in GMCW history we are bringing in an organ of grand proportions for an even more majestic sound,” says Jeff Buhrman, artistic director, in a press release.
The second half of the performance is the chorus’s take on the Nutcracker suite, opening with a holiday party in which the two principal dancers meet and fall in love.
Tickets range from $20 to $50 and can be purchased at gmcw.org or at the door.
Other performances will be Dec. 18 at 3 and 8 p.m. and Dec. 19 at 3 p.m. with ASL interpretation. Look in next week’s edition for more information about this show.
Singer Pamala Stanley plans two weekend performances
Pamala Stanley will be in town this weekend performing at Cobalt (1639 R St., N.W.) and as part of Georgetown Jingle.
Stanley, who often performs at Blue Moon in Rehoboth, is coming back to Cobalt for a performance Saturday at 9 p.m.
Stanley will also be the main entertainment at Georgetown Jingle Sunday night. The event starts at 5 p.m. and goes until 8 at the Four Seasons Hotel Washington (2800 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.).
Created by the Four Seasons Hotel Washington, JDS Designs, Inc., the Washington Design Center and the Georgetown BID, the Georgetown Jingle is an event to celebrate fashions of the holiday season and support families battling cancer.
Funds raised will benefit Georgetown University Hospital and their Pediatric Hematology, Oncology, Blood and Marrow Transplantation Program as well as their Childhood Cancer Survivorship Program.
Proud Bookstore hosts book signing
On Saturday, the Proud Bookstore on Baltimore Avenue in Rehoboth, Del., will have five authors signing books from 3 to 5 p.m.
Three of the authors, Renee Bess, Lisa Gitlin and Sheri Reynolds will be visiting the bookstore for the first time.
Reynolds latest book, “The Sweet In-Between,” is about a gender-confused teenage girl whose mother is dead and father is in jail, growing up a Virginia tidewater town. She also authored “The Rapture of Caanan,” an Oprah Book Club selection and “New York Times” bestseller.
Gitlin’s debut novel, “I Came Out for This?” is a comic coming out tale written like a journal. It was published by Bywater Books.
Bess, whose latest book is “The Butterfly Moments” from Regal Crest publishers, writes about African-American lesbians. Moments is about a Philadelphia parole officer with a homophobic daughter who is given the task of supervising a “renegade” probation and parole officer.
Also appearing at the signing will be Stefani Deoul and Fay Jacobs from Rehoboth.
Jacobs will be reading from her newest book “For Frying Out Loud,” a collection of her latest columns plus some new, never-before-published material.
Deoul will be reading from “The Carousel,” about a woman who stops in a small northeast town to refuel and notices a pile of discarded carousel horses, bringing gossip, mystery and a restorative journey for the horses, the townspeople and herself.
Just as humans have always had meals, queer humans, too, have enjoyed meals. Yet what is it that makes “queer food” distinct?
At the beginning of May in Montreal, the Queer Food Conference 2026 sought not to answer that question, but to further interrogate it. The conference united scholars, activists, artists, journalists, farmers, chefs, and other food industry professionals for three days of panels, workshops, discussions, and, yes, meals, in an inclusive, thoughtful, contemplative-yet-whimsical environment, taking a comprehensive view of the landscape of queer food.
The two organizers – Professor Alex Ketchum, at the Institute for Gender, Sexuality, and Feminist Studies of McGill University in Montreal, and Professor Megan Elias, Director of Food Studies & Gastronomy at Boston University – met in 2022 when Elias acted as a peer reviewer for Ketchum’s second book, “Ingredients for a Revolution,” a wide-ranging history of more than 230 feminist and lesbian-feminist restaurants, cafes, and coffeehouses from 1972 to the present in the US.
Elias, taken by the book and its exploration, invited Ketchum to speak at one of Elias’s courses, at which pastries were served and feminist bread making was baked into conversation. Elias floated the idea of co-organizing a queer food conference – and a hot 24 hours later, Ketchum said yes, with plans sketched out, from grants to topics to speakers. In parallel, the duo started to conceptualize “Queers at the Table,” a book based on their work (published last year).
The conference, the book, the research: their work is, in part, grounded in the question: What is queer food? True to queer theory, each has her own nuanced response as drivers of their research, challenging the traditional and looking beyond norms of food studies. Ketchum’s view is that it is grounded on food by and for the queer community, in specific histories, and especially in the labor behind the food. Elias posits that queer food is at the intersection of queerness and culinary studies, beyond gender norms and binaries, back to the societal basics of queer food as part of queer humans always having meals. “Queer food destabilizes assumptions about food, gender and sexuality, making space for a wider range of relationships to food,” she says.
The academics’ professed enthusiasm, however, rarely reached beyond small circles.
“I regularly attended big food studies conferences, but almost never saw presentations about gender identity beyond women’s roles,” says Elias about her prior work, and when her students would ask for additional literature about sexuality and food, results had been sparse. Ketchum echoed this gap: When she was in graduate studies, she received hesitation from leadership about her chosen field of study. By 2024, however, queer food as an area of study and practice had grown, whether in popular culture or well as in publishing, setting the stage for the first Queer Food Conference in 2024 in Boston. Their aim at that even was to launch the subfield of queer food studies into the mainstream, so that fellow academics, students, and those interested in the space could convene, “creating space for others to build,” says Ketchum. “People were enthusiastic.”
Once Ketchum and Elias published “Queers at the Table” in 2025 (notably, gay author John Birdsall also published a book examining queer identity through food last year, “What Is Queer Food?”), they laid the foundation for the 2026 conference in Montreal. This edition was an “embodied” conference, inclusive of various ontologies in queer food studies: theory, labor, art, taste, an interdisciplinary, expansive grounding.
Topics ranged from cookbooks and influencers to farming and land movements, bars and cafes, brewing and baking, history and sociology, writing and printmaking, healthcare and community, and centering marginalized – especially trans – voices.
Naturally, food was centered. The conference’s keynotes were not academics, but the chefs themselves who created the food with their own hands that attendees ate over the three days. “Not to disregard a pure academic space,” says Ketchum, “but to not have food in a room when we talk about food would be wild.”
Jackson Tucker, a Distinguished Graduate Fellow at the University of Delaware, said that “What I found [at the conference] was a genuinely diverse gathering: scholars who did grounded social research but also practitioners, organizers, and people who had never thought about an academic conference in their lives and didn’t need to. That mix is the soul of this whole project for me. Without the people who are out in the world doing queer food, the conference wouldn’t exist.”
Ketchum – her home being Montreal – also worked to fold in community-driven events so that attendees could get a taste of queer food in the city outside of classroom walls; for example, attendees participated in a collaborative evening pizza-making class at a queer-owned pizzeria.
The interdisciplinary nature of the conference led to sharing of research, thoughts, activities, and planning. There was a “value of bringing people together of different backgrounds, which leads to richer discussion,” she says.
Elias picked up on this theme: “I saw people bonding and connecting and believing in Queer Food Studies,” – one of the central goals that Ketchum noted, further legitimizing a nascent field. As both professors continue their research and leadership, they envision a continued layering of centering the queer experience and community through the shared value and study of food.
a&e features
Gay Men’s Chorus celebrates 45 years at annual gala
‘Sapphire & Sparkle’ Spring Affair held at the Ritz Carlton
The Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington held the annual Spring Affair gala at the Ritz Carlton Washington, D.C. on Saturday. The theme for this year’s fete was “Sapphire & Sparkle.” The chorus celebrated 45 years in D.C. with musical performances, food, entertainment, and an awards ceremony.
Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington Executive Director Justin Fyala and Artistic Director Thea Kano gave welcoming speeches. Opening remarks were delivered by Spring Affair co-chairs Tracy Barlow and Tomeika Bowden. Uproariously funny comedian Murray Hill performed a stand-up set and served as the emcee.
There were performances by Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington groups Potomac Fever, 17th Street Dance, the Rock Creek Singers, Seasons of Love, and the GenOUT Youth Chorus.

Anjali Murthy, a member of the chorus and a graduate of the GenOUT Youth Chorus, addressed the attendees of the gala.
“The LGBTQ+ community isn’t bound by blood ties: we are brought together by shared experience,” Murthy said. “Being Gen Z, I grew up with Ellen [DeGeneres] telling me through the TV screen that it gets better: that one day, it’ll all be okay. The sentiment isn’t wrong, but it’s passive. What I’ve learned from GMCW is that our future is something we practice together. It exists because people like you continue to show up for it, to believe in the possibilities of what we’re still becoming”
The event concluded with the presentation of the annual Harmony Awards. This year’s awardees included local drag artist and activist Tara Hoot, the human rights organization Rainbow Railroad as well as Rocky Mountain Arts Association Executive Director, Dr. Chipper Dean.
(Washington Blade photos and videos by Michael Key)































Equality Prince William Pride was held at the Harris Pavilion in Manassas, Va. on Saturday, May 16.
(Washington Blade photos by Landon Shackelford)















