Arts & Entertainment
Out & About: June 22
Scissor Sisters at 9:30 Club, Folklife Festival features GMCW and more
Faye Lane brings musical comedy show to D.C.
Faye Lane performs on Saturday, June 30 at 8 p.m. at the Atlas Performing Arts Center’s Lang Theater (1333 H St., N.E.).
Faye will tell stories and sing songs from her critically acclaimed “Beauty Shop Stories” show. Her stories about her mother’s beauty shop and growing up in Texas are heart-warming and hysterical, and have garnered her a loyal following of gay men.
Faye has performed all over the country, and can be heard on National Public Radio’s “Cityscapes” and “The Moth Radio Hour.” She won the 2010 New York International Fringe Festival’s Overall Excellence Award for a Solo Show, and the 2011 MAC Award for Special Production.
For more details on Lane’s performance, visit pitchengine.com.
‘Portraits of Life’ celebrates LGBT community
Montgomery College hosts “Portraits of Life: LGBT Stories of Being,” a photography exhibition of local LGBT community members, from June 20-Sept. 1 at the Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation Art Center’s Open Gallery (930 King St., Silver Spring, Md.).
The exhibit highlights members of the LGBT community who have contributed to the well being of Montgomery County, including Montgomery College President DeRionne Pollard.
The gallery is open to the public from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more information about “Portraits of Life” and its previous exhibits in years past, visit montgomerycollege.edu.
Scissor Sisters to play 9:30 club
The Scissor Sisters perform with up-and-coming Rye Rye both Monday and Tuesday nights next week at the 9:30 club. Doors open at 7 p.m. both nights.
Scissor Sisters have been an international electro-pop sensation since their debut album “Comfortably Numb” in 2004. Lead singer Jake Shears is gay. Their latest album, “Night Work,” debuted at No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard Independent Album chart.
Rye Rye is a Baltimore-based 17-year-old rapper heralded as the latest female prodigy in hip-hop. She performed with M.I.A. on the David Letterman Show, and her debut single “Shake it to the Ground” received lots of attention on YouTube after its release.
The Monday night show is sold out, but tickets to the second show are $40 and can be purchased at 930.com.
Folklife Festival features Gay Men’s Chorus
The Smithsonian Folklife Festival features “An Evening of Song with In Process… and the Rock Creek Singers” on the Red Hot stage (near Madison Dr. and 12th St., N.W.) on the National Mall this evening from 6-8 p.m.
In Process… is a women’s vocal group who sing about issues faced by women in the black community, including HIV/AIDS. Many of their songs celebrate the AIDS Memorial Quilt, which will be laid out on the National Mall during the festival by the NAMES Project Foundation.
The Rock Creek Singers are an ensemble of the Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington. They will be singing songs about home and family.
Admission is free. For more details, visit festival.si.edu.
Movies
Ethereal ‘Camp’ a moody allegory for queer shame
An unsentimental yet empathetic exploration of guilt
When one watches movies for a living, it’s as easy to fall into routine as it is with any job. Each movie is different, of course, each with its own characters, its own viewpoint, and its own story – (or at least its own variation on one), but in so many other ways, they have a tendency to be very much the same.
This is because there is an entire “language” of filmmaking, established from the earliest days of cinematic storytelling, a process so subtle that most of us are barely aware of it: the image directs our attention, the script provides the shape and structure of the story, and the actors are our stand-ins, allowing us to “experience” the reality of the film through a transference of identity that occurs so reflexively that we don’t even notice it’s happened.
That’s why it can be such a jolt when we come across a movie that doesn’t follow the expected rules, and we can’t think of a better recent example than Avalon Fast’s “Camp,” which drew attention as it made the rounds at last year’s festival circuit and embarked on a series of screenings in select cities beginning on June 26.
Fast, 26, is a queer Canadian filmmaker who specializes in “Girl Horror” (a genre that centers female experience), and who has already become a prominent force in the “new queer indie” movement. Her first feature, “Honeycomb,” got a Sundance “virtual” screening, and she’s appeared as a performer in films like Alice Maio Mackay’s “The Serpent’s Skin” and leading trans filmmaker Jane Schoenbrun’s yet-to-be-released Cannes hit, “Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma.” With “Camp,” however, she stakes her claim to territory in a burgeoning field of queer/trans/feminist cinema to establish herself as a formidable “brand” of her own.
Rooted in a blend of trope-ish horror conventions and presented in a dreamy, ethereal style that elevates feeling over cognition, it’s the story of Emily (Zola Grimmer), a young woman accidentally responsible for two horrific tragedies, who feels hopelessly trapped by guilt and shame. At the suggestion of her father (Mike Tan), she takes a summer job as a counselor at a camp for “troubled” young people like herself, where she is quickly embraced and assimilated by the core group of female counselors – most of them “hot weirdos” who are more interested in all-night partying and a kind of home-grown witchcraft than they are in the wholesome camp activities they supervise during the day. Her initial response to this new environment is guarded, but as the summer goes on she comes to feel a strong connection to her fellow counselors, beginning to hope that she has – at last – found her place among a “family” that accepts her despite the life-shattering incidents that have come to define her sense of self. Yet at the same time, she becomes ever more aware of a call to confront and quiet the ghosts of her misfortunate past – even if it requires an unthinkable sacrifice.
Dreamy and purposefully opaque when it comes to differentiating between real experience and metaphysical reflection, Fast’s movie draws us in from the start with its edgy mix of visual atmosphere, blending an aesthetic that combines home-movie nostalgia with the ironically whimsical flourishes of the digital age to establish a tone that feels like a half-forgotten memory reconstructed in the form of an Instagram “reel.” It’s a potent effect, creating an overall aesthetic of surreal impressionism in which the plot advances more through mood and fragments of subjective experience than through concrete narrative form; at times, it feels untethered, yes, but it always manages to orchestrate its seemingly disjointed perspective into a shape that makes sense — even if we’re not quite sure how or why, or even what is actually happening.
The effect is cumulative, as the story becomes less bound to logic and realism while leaning further into a perspective that favors the arcane and mysterious over the rational and concrete. And while that might prove frustrating for viewers expecting a more traditional kind of “horror,” it provides for an experience that’s more likely to satisfy the kind of fans who appreciate being left to provide their own interpretations. The most obvious comparison would be with the work of David Lynch; there’s clearly an influence there for Fast’s darkly intuitive approach, which goes beyond the obvious parallels of its “Twin Peaks”-ish setting (the forest is most definitely a character here) to emulate the stream-of-consciousness narrative flow that marked much of Lynch’s late-career work.
“Camp” is far from imitative, however. While it may share some traits with the work of Lynch and other masters of contemporary surreal horror, it creates a unique “vibe” by allowing its own creative feminine energy to take the lead. The traumas it depicts spring from a definitively female space, from first-menstruation nightmares to the absurdities of having to defer to the “leadership” of a mediocre male who has more power than you (in this case, Austyn Van de Kamp as the camp’s supervisor, a naive but endearing yokel whose Jesus-centric worldview is undermined by the “coven” under his tentative command), and the overall treatment of its few male characters is largely less than forgiving. Yet on a deeper level, its subtext of carrying “unforgivable sin” that affects every aspect of one’s interactive life feels ultimately as much an expression of queer trauma as it does feminist ideology. The result is just cryptic enough to leave us pondering what we’ve just seen yet clear enough to deliver a sense of emotional catharsis which feels, if not exactly curative, at least healing enough to pave a way forward.
Admittedly, it’s not a film that will likely tick off all the boxes for hardcore horror fans; while it might deal in dark emotions and a certain witchiness that ties it to the legacy of such pagan-flavored classics as “The Wicker Man” or “Midsommar,” its terrors are more existential than visceral, pondering the difficulties of overcoming self-hatred rather than pitting us against a palpable physical threat, supernatural or otherwise. Indeed, it’s more introspective psychodrama than it is traditional horror – which is less a criticism than it is a disclaimer.
Though it’s Fast’s moody aesthetic that emerges as the “star” attraction of “Camp,” much of its effectiveness hinges on the performances of its cast. Grimmer, especially, is central, and she succeeds admirably not only in winning our empathy but in peeling back the morally murky layers of Emily’s path to redemption in a way that feels like empowerment rather than ethical compromise. However, the ensemble of “soul sisters” that surrounds her (Alice Wordsworth, Cherry Moore, Ella Reece, Lea Rose Sebastianis, and Sophie Bawks-Smith) all play their own particular part in creating the “magic” that makes the whole thing work.
All in all, “Camp” is an exhilaratingly fresh – if sometimes opaque – expression of queer filmmaking from a feminine perspective; that’s a regrettably rare occurrence which makes Fast’s fastidiously unsentimental (yet deeply empathetic) exploration of queer guilt all the more powerful, and makes her movie an essential addition to your watchlist.
The 13th annual Frederick Pride Festival was held at Carroll Creek Park in Frederick, Md. on Saturday, June 27.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)














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PHOTOS: Fredericksburg Pride March and Festival
LGBTQ celebration held in historic Virginia town
The sixth annual Fredericksburg Pride March was held in downtown Fredericksburg, Va. on Saturday, June 27. Stafford County Board of Supervisors Chair Deuntay Diggs led the march alongside Fredericksburg City Council Member Jannan W. Holmes. The Fredericksburg Pride Festival took place at Riverfront Park after the march. Bree Fram was the featured speaker.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)



















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