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Singer/actor Levi Kreis on his D.C. return cabaret concert April 3

Out performer happy to reunite with fellow ‘Smokey Joe’ alum Nova Payton

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Levi Kreis, gay news, Washington Blade
Levi Kreis considers himself a pioneer of openly gay fin de siecle-era performers. (Photo courtesy AGD Entertainment)

Levi Kreis
With guest Nova Payton
An Evening of Jazz, Soul and Storytelling
City Winery
1350 Okie St., N.E.
Wednesday, April 3
8 p.m.
$20-30 (VIP)

Americana singer/songwriter and actor Levi Kreis has fond memories of working in Washington. In 2014, he led the Arena Stage cast of “Smokey Joe’s Cafe” along with actress/singer Nova Payton.

They reunite Wednesday, April 3 at City Winery for “an evening of jazz, soul and storytelling.” 

Kreis, perhaps best known for his Tony-winning role as Jerry Lee Lewis in “Million Dollar Quartet,” spoke to the Blade by phone last week from Nashville. His comments have been edited for length.

WASHINGTON BLADE: What are you doing in Nashville?

LEVI KREIS: I’m from Tennessee so a lot of my musical connections are here. I’m developing and working on new music I’ll be recording in Los Angeles next week.

BLADE: How and why did you come to make Chicago your home base?

KREIS: That’s the second city where we played “Million Dollar Quartet.” I found a home there for about a year and a half while we continued to further the story and prepare for Broadway. I just fell in love with the city so much. I also found my husband there which is pretty amazing so it holds a lot of really wonderful moments for me — the beginning of “Million Dollar Quartet,” meeting my husband, getting sober, I’ll be 10 years sober in May. Chicago has a great soul to it.

BLADE: You said you consider yourself a “pioneer of the out music movement” of the early 2000s. What do you mean?

KREIS: There weren’t many of us beginning our careers as out. I got kicked out of my conservative Southern Baptist college in Nashville and dropped from a gospel music label. It took a lot of painful turns to come to terms with who I am and what my platform as an LGBT performer, especially one of the first people to contribute to the out music movement in the early 2000s. If it hadn’t been for the challenges I encountered in Nashville, I don’t know that I would have had the boldness to take the platform that I eventually took.

BLADE: What gospel label were you signed with?

KREIS: Myrrh

BLADE: Had you released anything with them?

KREIS: We were recording.

BLADE: Did you realize the ripple effect coming out would have?

KREIS: I didn’t come out, actually. I had been in my sixth year of conversion therapy and I was sitting in my dorm room looking at different translations of scripture and Strong’s concordance at every scripture that deals either directly or indirectly with homosexuality. My roommate was curious and he went to the student union to request prayer for me. 

BLADE: Did you see “Boy Erased”?

KREIS: No, but I read the book.

BLADE: How did your primary scriptural research line up with others who’ve studied those passages?

KREIS: I have my own opinions about it but at the end of the day, I don’t care what people believe about the scriptures. … For me, I have a clean conscience and no inkling of being broken, a mistake or needing any type of healing.

BLADE: Have you stayed in touch with Nova since “Smokey Joe’s”?

KREIS: Yeah, we have. We’ve had a couple performances together. I have such respect for her talent. There’s a real genuineness from her and that’s rare in this world.

BLADE: What do you have planned for City Winery?

KREIS: I’m excited to bring a show that was voted by L.A. critics as the no. 1 cabaret show of 2017 and I can’t put the show down because people continue to ask for it. I haven’t had an opportunity to share it with D.C. but a lot of it chronicles what we’re talking about — how does a small-town Tennessee boy navigate all these challenges and find himself in Times Square on Broadway with a very different life than what he grew up with? I reimagine Broadway classics and I do my originals too. … Also, I bonded with the musical theater world in D.C. so it’s great to come back and I wish I could do it more.

BLADE: How was (your 2018 album of originals) “Liberated” received?

KREIS: That was a CD dedicated to my Kickstarter backers, my passion people who have been there for me since the beginning. A lot of it was super personal. We talk a lot about gay marriage but not much about gay divorce and I had a pretty brutal one. It was sort of wanting to take a microscope and look at all the bullshit and just find a patyway to forgiveness because I don’t think we can really get rid of that stuff if you don’t find a way of making sense of it that allows you to let go.

BLADE: Where are you musically and spiritually now?

KREIS: Spiritually, I feel like there’s a common thread with everything so that’s what I’ve been diving into now and asking how can I find the consistencies in that which I believe and make that a unifying force? Musically, I’m really excited this year to have a relaunch, a rebranding of sorts of stuff that takes me back to my roots of the gospel church music of the South, everything that I grew up listening to having had my start in black churches. We’r releasing some singles in July, then after that an EP but it’s everything from early Southern, piano-centric music to early Ray Charles-type stuff that feels like coming home to me.

BLADE: How did you get all those names on your body on your “Imagine Paradise” album cover? 

KREIS: My girlfriend Carrie, who took the photo, she painstakingly checked and double checked every name and wrote them on me in erasable Sharpie. We had to wash it all off and do it a second time to get it right. That was a lot.

BLADE: Did your family have a lot of gospel records in the house when you were growing up? 

KREIS: Oh gosh, a ton. My grandaddy was my hero. He passed away not long ago and I’ve been going through a lot of his old records. One I rediscovered recently was Sister Rosetta Tharpe. …. She’s the sweet spot for me between gospel and rockabilly. Growing up Brenda Lee was a friend of my family, so I got to be on the bus with her for several tours. She is a class act, always super professional. We had a lot of Mahalia Jackson and Andrae Crouch. Those were on repeat on a weekly basis. 

BLADE: Black and white gospel didn’t overlap much in the ‘50s, ‘60s and ‘70s. How did you end up singing in black churches and having all these gospel records?

KREIS: My grandfather worked at the post office with his best friend, Alice. I was just a kid and she said, “Leroy — you gotta get that boy singing in church,” and she took me over to Mt. Sinai Missionary Baptist Church in Oak Ridge, Tenn., and that was my first time singing in church and other black churches followed. I was the only towheaded kid in the whole building.

BLADE: How did you and (partner) Jason (Antone) meet? Are you married? 

KREIS: We’ve been together 10 years and we were married in November. We had the same publicist in Chicago. He was also an out artist. I knew of him from the Pride circuit but I’d never met him. At the time we met, he was leaving a 15-year relationship and I was divorcing and we just hit it off as friends but then like a month later we were like, “Wow, this is super easy and I like you a lot.”

BLADE: You look so buff in some of your videos. Do you put on weight between projects?

KREIS: Oh gosh, I’m not in tip-top shape these days. Have you been on my Instagram lately? But as long as I’m under 185 and can fit into my suits, I’m OK to operate. My weakness is Keebler Grasshoppers. They’re like crack.

BLADE: Having played Jerry Lee Lewis (who at age 22 married a 13-year-old cousin to much controversy), what do you think of the trend of reassessing historical figures and judging them by #MeToo/2019 standards?

KREIS: I don’t think it’s fair. I think it’s dangerous, actually. I think it’s more important to focus on our current responsibilities in shifting the consciousness of our culture. I believe we’re all too ready to demonize every single person we possibly can. We’ve become like a bunch of church ladies. We enjoy looking for fault in people when more love is needed, more compassion is needed, more understanding is needed. I do think we need personal accountability too, I’m not saying that, but it’s a balance, a spiritual balance.

BLADE: It sounds like Jerry Lee was really cool with you. What was it like hanging out with him?

KREIS: Well “Great Balls of Fire,” was like my family reunion trick when I was 12 years old so he’s kind of been the conversation around my household for my whole life. … He used to use a Bible verse, I wish I could remember it, to make the point to people who said he was doing the devil’s music, so I had him sign my Bible right next to that verse. He was very funny and told me I was the best actor who’d ever played him. I’ll never forget that. 

BLADE: How’s the rest of 2019 shaping up for you?

KREIS: I’m excited about this new music and a brand new team who is ready to introduce a new yet old side of me to the rest of the world. … I’ve been workshopping some new stuff. It’s gonna be a year on the road. I’m excited. 

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Music & Concerts

Musical icons and newer stars to rock D.C. this spring

Brandi Carlile, Bad Bunny, Nicki Minaj, and more headed our way

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Brandi Carlile plays the Anthem this month.

Bands and solo artists of all different genres are visiting D.C. this spring. Patti LaBelle and Gladys Knight will team up to perform at the Wolf Trap in June, and girl in red will play at the Anthem in April. Some artists and bands aren’t paying a visit until the summer, like Janet Jackson and Usher, but there are still plenty of acts to see as the weather warms up. 

MARCH 

Brandi Carlile plays at the Anthem on March 21; Arlo Parks will perform at 9:30 Club on March 23; Girlschool will take the stage at Blackcat on March 28.

APRIL 

Nicki Minaj stops in D.C. at Capital One Arena as part of her North American tour on April 1; Bad Bunny plays at Capital One Arena on April 9 as part of his Most Wanted tour; girl in red performs at the Anthem on April 20 and 21; Brandy Clark plays at the Birchmere on April 25; Laufey comes to town to play at the Anthem on April 25 and 26. 

MAY 

Belle and Sebastian play at the Anthem on May 2; Chastity Belt performs at Blackcat on May 4; Madeleine Peyroux stops at the Birchmere on May 5; The Decemberists play at the Anthem on May 10; the rock band Mannequin Pussy performs at the Atlantis on May 17 and 18; Hozier plays at Merriweather Post Pavilion on May 17 as part of the Unreal Unearth tour. 

JUNE 

Patti LaBelle and Gladys Knight will sing soulful melodies at Wolf Trap on June 8; Joe Jackson performs at the Lincoln Theatre on June 10; the Pixies and Modest Mouse are teaming up to play at Merriweather Post Pavilion on June 14; Maggie Rogers plays at Merriweather Post Pavilion on June 16 as part of The Don’t Forget Me tour; Brittany Howard headlines the Out & About Festival at Wolf Trap on June 22; Sarah McLachlan plays at Merriweather Post Pavilion on June 27; Alanis Morissette performs at Merriweather Post Pavilion on June 29 and 30

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Music & Concerts

Grammys: Queer women and their sisters took down the house

Taylor Swift won Album of the Year

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When the late, great Ruth Bader Ginsburg was asked when there will be enough women on the Supreme Court, her answer was simple: Nine. She stated: “I say when there are nine, people are shocked. But there’d been nine men, and nobody’s ever raised a question about that.” RBG did not attend the Grammy’s last night, but her spirit sure did. Women, at long last, dominated, ruled and killed the night.

Cher, in song a decade ago, declared that “this is a woman’s world,” but there was little evidence that was true, Grammy, and entertainment awards, speaking. In 2018, the Grammys were heavily criticized for lack of female representation across all categories and organizers’ response was for women to “step up.”

Be careful what you wish for boys.

The biggest star of the 2024 Grammys was the collective power of women. They made history, they claimed legacy and they danced and lip sang to each other’s work. Standing victorious was Miley Cyrus, Billie Eilish, SZA (the most nominated person of the year), Lainey Wilson, Karol G, boygenius, Kylie Minogue and Victoria Monét. Oh, yes, and powerhouse Taylor Swift, the superstar from whom Fox News cowers in fear, made history to become the first performer of any gender to win four Best Album of the Year trophies.

In the throng of these powerful women stand a number of both LGBTQ advocates and queer identifying artists. Cyrus has identified as pansexual, SZA has said lesbian rumors “ain’t wrong,” Phoebe Bridgers (winner of four trophies during the night, most of any artist) is lesbian, Monét is bi and Eilish likes women but doesn’t want to talk about it. Plus, ask any queer person about Swift or Minogue and you are likely to get a love-gush.

Women power was not just owned by the lady award winners. There were the ladies and then there were the Legends. The first Legend to appear was a surprise. Country singer Luke Combs has a cross-generational hit this year with a cover of Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car.” When originally released, the song was embraced as a lesbian anthem. When performing “Fast Car,” surprise, there was Chapman herself, singing the duet with Combs. The rendition was stunning, sentimental and historic.

Chapman, like many of the night’s female dignitaries, has not been public with her sexuality. Author Alice Walker has spoken of the two of them being lovers, however.

The legend among legends of the night, however, was the one and only Joni Mitchell. Not gay herself, she embodies the concept of an LGBTQ icon, and was accompanied by the very out Brandi Carlile on stage. On her website, Mitchell’s statement to the LGBTQ community reads, “The trick is if you listen to that music and you see me, you’re not getting anything out of it. If you listen to that music and you see yourself, it will probably make you cry and you’ll learn something about yourself and now you’re getting something out of it.”

Mitchell performed her longtime classic “Both Sides Now.” The emotion, insight and delivery from the now 80-year old artist, survivor of an aneurism, was nothing short of profound. (To fully appreciate the nuance time can bring, check out the YouTube video of a Swift lookalike Mitchell singing the same song to Mama Cass and Mary Travers in 1969.) In this latest rendition, Mitchell clearly had an impact on Meryl Streep who was sitting in the audience. Talk about the arc of female talent and power.

That arc extended from a today’s lady, Cyrus, to legend Celine Dion as well. Cyrus declared Dion as one of her icons and inspirations early in the evening. Dion appeared, graceful and looking healthy, to present the final, and historic, award of the night at the end of the show.

Legends did not even need to be living to have had an effect on the night. Tributes to Tina Turner and Sinead O’Conner by Oprah, Fantasia Barrino-Taylor and Annie Lennox respectively, proved that not even death could stop these women. As Lennox has musically and famously put it, “Sisters are doing it for themselves.”

Even the content of performances by today’s legends-in-the-making spoke to feminine power. Eilish was honored for, and performed “What Was I Made For?,” a haunting and searching song that speaks to the soul of womanhood and redefinition in today’s fight for gender rights and expression, while Dua Lipa laid down the gauntlet for mind blowing performance with her rendition of “Houdini” at the top of the show, Cyrus asserted the power of her anthem “Flowers” and pretty much stole the show.

Cyrus had not performed the song on television before, and only three times publicly. She declared in her intro that she was thrilled over the business numbers the song garnered, but she refused to let them define her. As she sang the hit, she scolded the audience, “you guys act like you don’t know the words to this song.” Soon the woman power of the room was singing along with her, from Swift to Oprah.

They can buy themselves flowers from now on. They don’t need anyone else. Cyrus made that point with the mic drop to cap all mic drops, “And I just won my first Grammy!” she declared as she danced off stage.

Even the squirmiest moment of the night still did not diminish the light of women power, and in fact, underscored it. During his acceptance of the Dr. Dre Global Impact Award, Jay-Z had a bone to pick with the Grammy voters. He called out the irony that his wife Beyoncé had won more Grammys than any other human, but had never won the Best Album of the Year. Yeah, what’s with that?

But then, it brought additional context ultimately to the fact that the winner of the most Grammys individually … is a woman. And to the fact that the winner of the most Best Album of the Year awards … is a woman.

Hopefully this was the night that the Grammys “got it.” Women are the epicenter of The Creative Force.

Will the other entertainment awards get it soon as well? We can hope.

Most importantly, in a political world where women’s healthcare is under siege. Will the American voters get it?

A little known band named Little Mix put it this way in their 2019 song “A Woman’s World.”

“If you can’t see that it’s gotta change
Only want the body but not the brains
If you really think that’s the way it works
You ain’t lived in a woman’s world

Just look at how far that we’ve got
And don’t think that we’ll ever stop…”

From Grammy’s mouth to the world’s ear.

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Music & Concerts

Janet Jackson returning to D.C, Baltimore

‘Together Again Tour’ comes to Capital One Arena, CFG Bank Arena

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Janet Jackson is coming back to D.C. this summer.

Pop icon Janet Jackson announced this week an extension of her 2023 “Together Again Tour.” A new leg of the tour will bring Jackson back to the area for two shows, one at D.C.’s Capital One Arena on Friday, July 12 and another at Baltimore’s CFG Bank Arena on Saturday, July 13.  

Tickets are on sale now via TicketMaster. LiveNation announced the 2023 leg of the tour consisted of 36 shows, each of which was sold out. The 2024 leg has 35 stops planned so far; R&B star Nelly will open for Jackson on the new leg. 

Jackson made the tour announcement Tuesday on social media: “Hey u guys! By popular demand, we’re bringing the Together Again Tour back to North America this summer with special guest Nelly! It’ll be so much fun!”

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