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SPRING ARTS 2019 CLASSICAL: Symphonies, opera, Gay Men’s Chorus and more on spring slate

Gay-helmed Washington Bach Consort presents Italian-themed program March 10

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classical concerts, gay news, Washington Blade
Michael Tilson Thomas returns to the region with the San Francisco Symphony for a March 23 concert. (WPA file photo)

LGBT personnel in the classical arts tend to downplay their sexual orientations and gender identities. It’s usually not that anyone in those circles has the slightest issue with it — they tend to focus almost wholly on the art itself. 

The personal travails of the artists — of seemingly endless interest to followers of pop culture figures — is almost wholly absent in the classical arts and LGBT thematic content remains rare. 

That said, there are a few figures who are out. Openly gay musical director Michael Tilson Thomas will conduct The San Francisco Symphony on Saturday, March 23 at 8 p.m. at the Kennedy Center (2700 F St., N.W.). They’ll perform Mozart’s “Violin Concerto No. 3” and Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 3 ‘Eroica.’” Tickets are $60-135 at washingtonperformingarts.org

Washington National Opera, under lesbian leadership, presents “Eugene Onegin” March 9-29 and “Faust” March 16-30. “Tosca” will be presented May 11-25. Details at kennedy-center.org/wno

Also of note, opera diva Jessye Norman will appear for a discussion of her career at the Thomas Jefferson Building (10 1st St., S.E.) on Thursday, May 16 at 7 p.m. in a presentation from the Performing Arts at the Library of Congress. It’s free and there are no tickets. Seating is first-come, first-served. Look for the event on Facebook or eventbrite.com for details. 

Young singers unspecified perform as classical divas Marian Anderson and Leontyne Price in “The Me I Want to Sing,” on Saturday, April 13 in the Family Theater at the Kennedy Center. Tickets are $20 at kennedy-center.org

Washington Concert Opera performs Rossini’s “Zelmira” on Friday, April 5 at 7 p.m. at Linser Auditorium (730 21st St., N.W.). Tickets are $40-110 at concertopera.org

The Washington Bach Consort (under gay leadership) presents “Bach, Vivaldi & the Italian Influence” on Sunday, March 10 at 3 p.m. and “Sounds of Spring” on Friday, April 5 at 7 p.m. Tickets are $10-69 at bachconsort.org

Way more pop leaning but still of note, The Gay Men’s Chorus of Washington will perform “Let Freedom Sing” on Saturday, March 16 at 4 and 8 p.m. at Lincoln Theatre (1215 U St., N.W.) with performances by black artists such as Prince, Whitney Houston, The Temptations, Duke Ellington and more. Tickets are $25-65.

GenOUT Chorus, Potomac Fever and Rock Creek Singers, smaller ensembles of the Gay Men’s Chorus, will perform in the Small Ensembles Extravaganza with songs from pop and Broadway at Theater of the Arts (4200 Connecticut Ave., N.W.) on Saturday, April 6.

The Chorus’s Spring Affair is Saturday, May 11. A Stonewall 50 concert and one-act musical “Quiet No More” will be performed at the Lincoln June 1-2. Details and tickets are gmcw.org

Queer organist Cameron Carpenter plans a spring release of new album with the Berlin Concert Orchestra under the direction of Christoph Eschenbach featuring works by Rachmaninoff and Poulenc on the Sony Classical label. Its Carpenter’s first with orchestra and is slated for an April 5 release. 

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Photos

PHOTOS: Night of Champions

Team DC holds annual awards gala

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Team DC President Miguel Ayala speaks at the 2024 Night of Champions Awards on Saturday. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Team DC, the umbrella organization for LGBTQ-friendly sports teams and leagues in the D.C. area, held its annual Night of Champions Awards Gala on Saturday, April 20 at the Hilton National Mall. The organization gave out scholarships to area LGBTQ student athletes as well as awards to the Different Drummers, Kelly Laczko of Duplex Diner, Stacy Smith of the Edmund Burke School, Bryan Frank of Triout, JC Adams of DCG Basketball and the DC Gay Flag Football League.

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

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PHOTOS: National Cannabis Festival

Annual event draws thousands to RFK

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Growers show their strains at The National Cannabis Festival on Saturday. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

The 2024 National Cannabis Festival was held at the Fields at RFK Stadium on April 19-20.

(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)

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Theater

‘Amm(i)gone’ explores family, queerness, and faith

A ‘fully autobiographical’ work from out artist Adil Mansoor

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Adil Mansoor in ‘Amm(i)gone’ at Woolly Mammoth Theatre. (Photo by Kitoko Chargois)

‘Amm(i)gone’
Thorough May 12
Woolly Mammoth Theatre
641 D St., N.W. 
$60-$70
Woollymammoth.net

“Fully and utterly autobiographical.” That’s how Adil Mansoor describes “Amm(i)gone,” his one-man work currently playing at Woolly Mammoth Theatre. 

Both created and performed by out artist Mansoor, it’s his story about inviting his Pakistani mother to translate Sophocles’s Greek tragedy “Antigone” into Urdu. Throughout the journey, there’s an exploration of family, queerness, and faith,as well as references to teachings from the Quran, and audio conversations with his Muslim mother. 

Mansoor, 38, grew up in the suburbs of Chicago and is now based in Pittsburgh where he’s a busy theater maker. He’s also the founding member of Pittsburgh’s Hatch Arts Collective and the former artistic director of Dreams of Hope, an LGBTQ youth arts organization.

WASHINGTON BLADE: What spurred you to create “Amm(i)gone”? 

ADIL MANSOOR: I was reading a translation of “Antigone” a few years back and found myself emotionally overwhelmed. A Theban princess buries her brother knowing it will cost her, her own life. It’s about a person for whom all aspirations are in the afterlife. And what does that do to the living when all of your hopes and dreams have to be reserved for the afterlife?

I found grant funding to pay my mom to do the translation. I wanted to engage in learning. I wanted to share theater but especially this ancient tragedy. My mother appreciated the characters were struggling between loving one another and their beliefs. 

BLADE: Are you more director than actor?

MANSOOR: I’m primarily a director with an MFA in directing from Carnegie Mellon. I wrote, directed, and performed in this show, and had been working on it for four years. I’ve done different versions including Zoom. Woolly’s is a new production with the same team who’ve been involved since the beginning. 

I love solo performance. I’ve produced and now teach solo performance and believe in its power. And I definitely lean toward “performance” and I haven’t “acted” since I was in college. I feel good on stage. I was a tour guide and do a lot of public speaking. I enjoy the attention. 

BLADE: Describe your mom. 

MANSOOR: My mom is a wonderfully devout Muslim, single mother, social worker who discovered my queerness on Google. And she prays for me. 

She and I are similar, the way we look at things, the way we laugh. But different too. And those are among the questions I ask in this show. Our relationship is both beautiful and complicated.

BLADE: So, you weren’t exactly hiding your sexuality? 

MANSOOR: In my mid-20s, I took time to talk with friends about our being queer with relation to our careers. My sexuality is essential to the work. As the artistic director at Dreams of Hope, part of the work was to model what it means to be public. If I’m in a room with queer and trans teenagers, part of what I’m doing is modeling queer adulthood. The way they see me in the world is part of what I’m putting out there. And I want that to be expansive and full. 

So much of my work involves fundraising and being a face in schools. Being out is about making safe space for queer young folks.

BLADE: Have you encountered much Islamophobia? 

MANSOOR: When 9/11 happened, I was a sophomore in high school, so yes. I faced a lot then and now. I’ve been egged on the street in the last four months. I see it in the classroom. It shows up in all sorts of ways. 

BLADE: What prompted you to lead your creative life in Pittsburgh? 

MANSOOR: I’ve been here for 14 years. I breathe with ease in Pittsburgh. The hills and the valleys and the rust of the city do something to me. It’s beautiful, it’ affordable, and there is support for local artists. There’s a lot of opportunity. 

Still, the plan was to move to New York in September of 2020 but that was cancelled. Then the pandemic showed me that I could live in Pittsburgh and still have a nationally viable career. 

BLADE: What are you trying to achieve with “Amm(i)gone”? 

MANSOOR: What I’m sharing in the show is so very specific but I hear people from other backgrounds say I totally see my mom in that. My partner is Catholic and we share so much in relation to this. 

 I hope the work is embracing the fullness of queerness and how means so many things. And I hope the show makes audiences want to call their parents or squeeze their partners.

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