Arts & Entertainment
Pastor ‘prays the gay away’ on ‘What Would You Do?”
customers’ reactions vary on the hidden camera show

(Screenshot via YouTube)
People dining at an Atlanta restaurant encountered the tough situation of a pastor attempting to “pray the gay away” on a teenage boy on the latest episode of “What Would You Do?”
ABC’s hidden-camera reality show placed two parents, a pastor and a teenage boy at a table near unsuspecting customers. The actors created a scenario where a teenage son had come out to his parents, and in an act of denial the parents bring in a pastor to solve their problem.
Reactions varied with many approaching the boy and offering him soothing words and advice. One woman said she agreed with the parents’ beliefs, but did not agree with bombarding him with a pastor in a restaurant. Another woman turns out to be a minister and takes time to pray with the parents.
At the end, a woman confronts the pastor himself and goes head-to-head to defend her belief that it’s not possible to “pray the gay away.”
Books
āMighty Realā explores history of LGBTQ music
From Judas Priest to Whitney, something for every taste
āMighty Real: A History of LGBTQ Music, 1969-2000ā
By Barry Walters
c.2026, Viking
$35/496 pages
Step, step, tap, back step.
Shimmy in a circle, left hand waving over your head, shake your tail feathers, repeat to the beat. Once there was a time when you could do any dance in your sleep, but itās been a while. So readĀ āMighty Realā by Barry Walters,Ā and see if your toes donāt tap.

Fifty-seven years after Stonewall, and here we are: LGBTQ musicians still face scrutiny for their sexuality because, says Walters, music isnāt created for gay listeners. No problem: LGBTQ artists and writers have often penned lyrics carefully in order to say what canāt be said, ācodingā songs for gay audiences that straight (and ignorant) listeners can dance to and enjoy with apparent obliviousness.
Walters offers ājust a fewā examples.
Lou Reed sang about trans people in the late ā60s and offered a rallying song for the Gay Liberation Front in 1972, the latter of which felt like a message to a then-11-year-old Walters. Janis Joplin claimed she was straight, but she had several girlfriends. Motown singers often offered sometimes-ambiguous lyrics.
John Lennonās hand placement on the back cover of Sgt. Pepperās Lonely Hearts Club Band made Walters begin to understand that he was different from other boys.
David Bowie is on his list, of course, as is Bette Midler, Elton John, Donna Summer, and Queen. Youāll find Judas Priest here, Green Day, and punk music. The Village People are included in this book, also Grace Jones, Duran Duran, and Cher, Whitney, Melissa, Latifah, and the lyrics from several blockbuster movies.
Two of Princeās band members were lesbians, and they heavily influenced his albums. Diana Rossās āIām Coming Outā cemented her position in LGBTQ culture, and Michael Jacksonās inclusion here takes much careful consideration.
Read about Olivia Newton-John and the B52s. And then thereās Sylvester, for whom Walters has a soft spot in his heart. Sylvesterās death still makes Walters cry.
In his preface, author and music writer Barry Walters points out that music is what you make it and that itās interpreted differently by each individual. To that end, this book naturally consists of preferential history and personal opinions about singers, bands, albums, and songs.
Agree or disagree. Thatās where much of the appeal lies in āMighty Real.ā
Here, Walters wraps his memories around his choices, giving readers room for their own views, memories, and list making. Music-loving readers might also be surprised to note whoās not on Waltersā list ā there arenāt many country performers here, for example, and the overall list focuses entirely on music from roughly 1968 to the year 2000, mostly on the kinds of songs youāll want at the club or party. Again, discuss, and curate your own playlist.
This is a hefty book, but the chapters are browse-able and generally short enough to read in under five minutes. Itās nostalgic, yet also serious in the history it presents. This is the kind of book you want to leave near your album collection, or wherever you get your tunes. But finding āMighty Realā is your first step.
The Blade may receive commissions from qualifying purchases made via this post.
The Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington performed “Soul Divas” at the Lincoln Theatre over the weekend. The show featured songs popularized by Tina Turner, Aretha Franklin, Diana Ross, Gladys Knight, Whitney Houston and more.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)


















































Theater
Timothy Nelson on the premiere of his opera āSong of Sakuntalaā
Story of love, loss, redemption unfolds amid Indian classical music
āThe Song of Sakuntalaā
IN Series
In Washington and Baltimore
Atlas Performing Arts Center, 1333 H St., N.E.
(Selected dates June 6-14)
Baltimore Theatre Project, 45 W. Preston St., Baltimore
(June 19-21)
$25-35
Inseries.org
As the artistic director of IN Series, Timothy Nelson rarely blows his own horn, but for the world premiere of his own opera āThe Song of Sakuntala,ā heāll make an exception.
During a recent interview squeezed in between afternoon and evenings rehearsals, Nelson took time to talk about his opera (while nearby his āblessing of a husbandā prepared a giant dinner for the entire cast and crew).
As smart and gracious as ever, Nelson explains that he wrote the opera a decade ago at a low point in his life: He was divorcing and wanted to immerse himself into something musical, all-consuming, a project tantamount to writing a thick novel.
At the time, Nelsonās mentor, the influential American stage and opera director Peter Sellers, pushed him to write again. Nelson recalls, āI hadnāt composed for some time. I wanted to see if I could do it, and I wanted to revisit Indian classical music.ā
He adds, āThere was never any anticipation of it being produced. It was a way of processing and dealing with life in a healthy way.ā
Adapted from KÄlidÄsaās 5th-century dramatic masterpiece, āThe Song of Sakuntalaā brings together Western baroque and Indian classical musical traditions into a story of ālove, loss, memory, and redemption.ā His libretto, a reflection of South Asian storytelling, includes the words of the great Indian poets Tagore, Naidu, and Vidyapati.
The story follows āa prince and a woman of the forest who fall in love and wed in secret. He departs, and she later seeks him out, only to have him deny all recognition of her. She disappears in sorrow; he spends the rest of his life searching. At the end, in the same forest where they first met, they find each other again and are transfigured.ā
At 90 minutes, the uninterrupted piece features three singers (Aryssa Leigh Burrs, Teresa Ferrara, Marvin Wayne Allen) accompanied by an instrumental ensemble led by acclaimed sitarist Rajib Karmakar, who specializes in bridging Indian and Western classical traditions, and conducted by Nelson who also joins the music making on drone and harmonium.
Burrs plays the prince. Originally written for a countertenor, Nelson imagined a man singing the role but ultimately cast a woman to play the part.
Because the piece is āfiendishly difficult in almost unnecessary ways,ā Nelson explains with a wicked chuckle, he knew that Burrs had the talent and sharp brain required for the role.
The prince is cruel without explanation. Despite that, 40-something Nelson admits to relating to the operaās prince: āIn midlife, you reflect on your mistakes. At least for now thatās how I feel. I might have felt different earlier and it could change later on.ā
Nelson lived in India for nine months, backpacking and studying in different places, absorbing different musical styles and playing pieces as varied and complex as any Western music.
And while based in D.C., IN Series performs in both Washington and Baltimore using various borrowed venues. āThe Song of Sakuntalaā is playing at both the Atlas Performing Center in D.C. (6/6-6/14) and Baltimoreās beloved Baltimore Theatre Project (6/19-6/21) with its terrific acoustics.
In a past conversation, Nelson who lives in Adams Morgan, shared that all audiences bring something specific to the table. Baltimore tends to attract more risk taking while D.C. audiences often lean into the intellectual side of what the company does.
At the helm of IN Series for eight years, Nelson has relished reimagining opera and musical theater, but only recently did he decide to program his latest work. The way in which āThe Song of Sakuntalaā blends Western and non-Western music is very much a part of the IN Series music brand, so it seemed the perfect selection to close the season.
āI do this humbly with great hesitancy. And I know it feels a little unseemly to cheer on your own work, but I will say, itās a piece that is successful in sitting in both places (Western and South Asia) and the Indian musicians on board are responding to it.ā
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