Arts & Entertainment
Oscars recap: Sam Smith is ‘proud gay man’; Leo DiCaprio wins first Oscar
“Spotlight” wins Best Picture, Lady Gaga gives tearful performance
The 88th annual Academy Awards awarded the best in the film industry with a major shout out to the LGBT community by Best Original Song winner Sam Smith, multiple wins for “Mad Max: Fury Road,” Best Picture win for “Spotlight” and a first time Oscar win for Leonardo DiCaprio.
Smith, along with co-writer Jimmy Napes, won for Best Original Song for the “Spectre” theme song “Writing’s on the Wall.” He used his speech to acknowledge the LGBT community.
“I read an article a few months ago by Sir Ian McKellen and he said that no openly gay man had ever won an oscar,” Smith said. “And if this is the case, even if it isn’t the case, I want to dedicate this to the LGBT community all around the world. I stand here tonight as a proud gay man and I hope we can all stand together as equals one day.”
In fact, Smith now joins the group of gay men who have won Oscars including Elton John, George Cukor, Alan Ball and Dustin Lance Black.
Host Chris Rock brought the comic relief while discussing the serious #OscarsSoWhite controversy during his opening monologue.
“You’re damn right Hollywood is racist. But it ain’t that racist that you’ve grown accustomed to. Hollywood is sorority racist. It’s like, ‘We like you Rhonda, but you’re not a Kappa,'” Rock quipped at the start of the awards.
Stacey Dash appeared on stage to a confused audience to wish America a Happy Black History Month. Dash has been vocal in the past about wishing to abolish Black History Month and the BET Awards.
Poking fun at the lack of diversity in the show continued with a spoof on what the Oscars would look like starring black people. Tracey Morgan appeared as Eddie Redmayne’s role of Einar Wegener in “The Danish Girl” “The Martian” and “Joy” were also given the diversity treatment with Rock and Whoopi Goldberg.
Leonardo DiCaprio received the first Oscar of his career winning Best Actor for “The Revenant.” He used his on stage time to address climate change, a philanthropy effort DiCaprio has advocated his time towards for years.
“Climate change is real. It’s happening right now,” DiCaprio said in his acceptance speech. “Let us not take this planet for granted. I do not take tonight for granted.”
“Spotlight” won the highest award of the night for Best Picture. Alicia Vikander was awarded Best Supporting Actress for “The Danish Girl.”
“Mad Max: Fury Road” was the top earner of the Oscars, winning six awards including Best Production Design, Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing, Best Film Editing, Best Makeup and Hairstyling and Best Costume Design.
Lady Gaga gave an emotional performance for her song ‘Til It Happens to You,” co-written by Diane Warren, from the documentary on campus sexual assault “Higher Ground.” Vice President Joe Biden introduced the rousing performance. Accompanied by a string orchestra, Lady Gaga played the piano eventually joined on stage by fellow sexual assault survivors leading to a standing ovation at the Dolby Theatre.
Best Picture: “Spotlight”
Director: Alejandro G. Iñárritu for “The Revenant”
Actor: Leonardo DiCaprio for “The Revenant”
Actress: Brie Larson for “Room”
Supporting Actor: Mark Rylance for “Bridge of Spies”
Supporting Actress: Alicia Vikander for “The Danish Girl”
Adapted Screenplay: “The Big Short” by Charles Randolph and Adam McKay
Original Screenplay: “Spotlight” by Josh Singer and Tom McCarthy
Cinematography: Emmanuel Lubezki for “The Revenant”
Foreign Language Film: “Son of Saul”
Animated Feature: “Inside Out”
Documentary Feature: “Amy”
Documentary Short Subject: “A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness”
Live Action Short Film: “Stutterer”
Original Score: “The Hateful Eight” by Ennio Morricone
Celebrity News
D.C. goes gaga for Gaga
Bisexual icon brought ‘The Mayhem Ball’ tour to Washington this week
Lady Gaga this week took D.C. by storm.
The bisexual icon and LGBTQ rights champion brought “The Mayhem Ball” tour to Capital One Arena on Monday and Tuesday.
“Abracadabra,” “Paparazzi,” “Applause,” and “Bad Romance” are among the songs Lady Gaga performed during the 2 1/2-hour long concert. Lady Gaga also celebrated her many queer fans.
“You are precious to us,” she said on Tuesday night before she performed “Born This Way.”
Photos
PHOTOS: Capital Stonewall Democrats 50th anniversary
D.C. LGBTQ political group celebrates milestone at Pepco Edison Place Gallery
The Capital Stonewall Democrats held a 50th anniversary celebration at Pepco Edison Place Gallery on Friday. Rayceen Pendarvis served as the emcee.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)
























Theater
‘Inherit the Wind’ isn’t about science vs. religion, but the right to think
Holly Twyford on new role and importance of listening to different opinions
‘Inherit the Wind’
Through April 5
Arena Stage
1101 Sixth St., S.W.
Tickets start at $73
Arenastage.org
When “Inherit the Wind” premiered on Broadway in 1955 with a cast of 50, its fictional setting of Hillsboro, an obscure country town described as the buckle on the Bible Belt, was filled with townspeople. And now at Arena Stage, director Ryan Guzzo Purcell has somehow crowded Arena’s large Fichandler space with just 10 actors, five principals and a delightful ensemble of five playing multiple roles.
Inspired by the real-life Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925, Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee’s fictionalized work pits intellectual freedom against McCarthyism via the imagined trial of Bertram Cates (Noah Plomgren), a Tennessee educator charged with teaching evolution. Drawn into the fracas are big shot lawyers, defense attorney Henry Drummond (Billy Eugene Jones), and conservative prosecutor, Matthew Harrison Brady (Dakin Matthew). On hand to cover the closely watched story is wisecracking city slicker and Baltimore reporter E.K. Horneck (played by nonbinary actor Alyssa Keegan).
Out actor Holly Twyford, a four-time Helen Hayes Award winner who has appeared in more than 80 Washington area plays, is part of the ensemble. In jeans and boots, she memorably plays Meeker, the bailiff at the Hillsboro courthouse and the jailer responsible for holding Cates in the days leading to his trial.
Twyford also plays Sillers, a slack jawed earnest employee at the local feed store who’s called to serve on the jury. And more importantly she plays Brady’s quietly strong wife Sarah whom he affectionately calls “Mother.”
When Twyford makes her memorable first entrance as Meeker, she’s wiping shaving cream from her face with a hand towel. With shades of Mayberry R.F.D., the jail is run casually. Meeker says Cates isn’t the criminal type, and he’s not.
“There’s a joke among actors,” says Twyford. “When an actor gets his shoes, they know who their character is. And it’s sort of true. When you put on boots, heels, or flip flops, there’s a different feeling, and you walk differently.”
Similarly, shares Twyford, it goes for clothes too: “When Mother slips a pink coat dress over her cowboy boots, dons a little hat and ties her scarf, or Meeker puts on his work shirt, I know where I am. And all of that is thanks to a remarkable wardrobe crew.
“Additionally, some of the ensemble characters are played broadly which is helpful to the actors and super identifying for the audience too.”
During intermission, an audience member loudly described the production as “a proper play” filled with beautifully written passages. And it’s true. Twyford agrees, adding “That’s all true, and it’s also been was fun for us to be a part of the Arena legacy as well. Arena took ‘Inherit the Wind’ to the Soviet Union in the early ‘70s when the respective governments did a cultural exchange. At the time, the iron curtain was very much in place, and they traveled with a play about a man with his own thoughts.”
When the ensemble was cast, actors didn’t know which tracts exactly they were going to play. “What came together was a cast, diverse in different ways. Some directors, including myself when I direct, are interested in assembling a cast that’s a good group. No time for egos. It’s more about who will make the best group to help me tell this story.”
At one point during rehearsal, ensemble members began to help one another with minor onstage costume changes, like jackets and hats: “We just started doing it and Ryan [Guzzo Purcell] picked up on it, saying things really began to come alive when we helped each other, so we went with that.”
“For me, it was reminiscent of ‘The Laramie Project’ [Ford’s Theatre in 2013] when we played five different parts and we’d help each other with a vest or jacket in a similar way. It worked so well then too,” says Twyford.
“Inherit the Wind” isn’t about science versus religion. It’s about the right to think, playwright Jerome Lawrrence has been quoted as saying. And it’s a quote that makes the play that much more relevant today.
Twford remembers a chat in a hair salon: “I was getting my hair cut and the woman next to me shared that she was tired of message plays. Understandably there are theater makers who believe that message plays are the point, while others think it’s all about entertainment. I feel like ‘Inherit the Wind’ sits in a nice place in the middle.”
She adds “the work is a creative way of showing different opinions and that, I think, is what we should be paying attention to right now. Clearly, it’s not right or wrong to express what you think.”

