26-30

Transcription

26-30
a community within communities
by The Rev. Bill Terry, Rector St. Anna’s Episcopal Church,
New Orleans
Email: [email protected]
Diversity at its Best
It’s a school gym. One can only do so much with a school gym for a fundraiser.
No matter how hard you try there will be retracted basketball goals, there will be
the time clock, there will be lines on the floor and maybe folded bleachers. It’s
a gym! A few nights ago several gentlemen walked into the gym wearing leather,
black leather with motor cycle type caps, standing tall the Lord’s of Leather
walked into the gym. The people at the desk welcomed them and the bar was
open for business, in the gym.
They were followed by two or three
nuns who would come into the gym,
well these Sisters were of Perpetual
Indulgence and they were welcomed
and came into the gym. They sat in their
usual contemplative manner and watch
the old queen.
The self described “old queen” is a
brilliant artist who designs Victorian era
furnishings, finishing’s, and church appointments. He is also responsible in
years gone by for a great bacchanal
and excuse to dress up and misbehave. That excuse was called The
Queen’s Birthday (no not THOSE
Queens THE Queen – of England). And
so, with bagpipes (men ins skirts)
drums, British Flags, a Portrait of THE
Queen, they marched down Harrison
Avenue. They were dressed in white
with blue sashes (The Society of St.
George) and came into the gym. The
sisters and leather boys looked on.
Gathering with the miscreant crew
with pipes and all were a dozen or more
children. These children had not seen a
bagpipe, had not seen a Sister of Perpetual Indulgence, nor a Lord of Leather.
These kids are our kids from the Treme,
generally they have seen a lot more
than most kids but not the Sisters nor
the Lords nor “The Old Queen” toasting
“THE real Queen” in true British fashion.
Kids, adults, Society and members of
the Treme Community Choir sang on.
Sitting here and there was a wealthy
trodding the boards
...from 25
Paice, in the Nina Foch role, a wealthy
American who has designs on Jerry, may
be starchy and soigne but avoids coming
off as mean or evil, a smart move.
Old-fashioned, pure entertainment, An
American in Paris is the kind of show you
can bring your mother to. But be aware—
my Mom felt the same way about it as I did.
(***)
I wish you could still second-act shows
the way I once did before security tightened
up. For that would be the perfect way to
enjoy Disaster! (Nederlander Theatre),
a spoof of 1970s disaster movies, which
finally perks up after a s-l-o-w Act One.
I had expected more from Disaster! as
Seth Rudetsky, the marvelous, sharp host
of the Broadway@NOCCA series, came
up with the concept (with Drew Geraci) and
wrote it with Jack Plotnick.
Yes, it’s got the overall form and style
of those celebrity-packed films, especially
The Poseidon Adventure, and it features
an assortment of Tony winners and nominees, but it’s not quite the same as when the
lives of Gene Hackman, Faye Dunaway,
Ernest Borgnine, Paul Newman, Jennifer
Jones or Fred Astaire were in danger.
Yes, the period songs that are
repurposed for the score (Come to Me,
Theme from Mahogany, Muskrat Love,
etc.) are fun, but often they seem obvious
choices as though the plot was built around
them (Knock Three Times for a signal, a
character named Ben).
And yes, it namechecks familiar products of the era (Sanka, Fresca, shag carpets, etc.) but it needs much more humor
and wit to sustain it for well over two hours.
It’s after the disaster strikes and Tobin
Ost’s set comes tumbling down that Disaster!, like the doofus who becomes a hero,
who won an Oscar for his screenplay, is not
acknowledged in the Playbill), is workable;
if its attempts to add some depth to the
narrative by recognizing sacrifices made
during World War II are admirable, it lacks
the film’s fizzy spirit.
Natasha Katz’s lighting, at times Impressionistic, at others abstract, and Bob
Crowley’s set which morphs from one scene
to the next, aided by 59 Productions’ sleek
projections, are beautiful to look at; both
deservedly won Tony Awards.
Acclaimed dancer/choreographer
Christopher Wheeldon’s direction brings
out the show’s charm but offers no surprises and delivers too few moments that
touch the heart. His dances, though, are
lovely and advance the narrative; the American in Paris number, especially the lead
characters’ duet, particularly stands out as
a fabulous creative work unto itself.
Those lead characters, Jerry Mulligan
and Lise Dassin, were played by Robert
Fairchild and Sara Esty at the performance
I saw. That both are wonderful dancers is
not surprising; he’s since returned to NYC
Ballet as a principal dancer, she is a former
soloist with the Miami City Ballet. He radiated decency and an elegant playfulness;
she a poised sweetness and wary gracefulness.
But, as I heard an audience member
saying, “He’s good but no Gene Kelly.” And
she’s not quite Leslie Caron. (Tony nominee Leanne Cope continues in most performances as Lise while Garen Scribner now
stars as Jerry.)
Brandon Uranowitz is marvelously astringent in the Oscar Levant role while Jill
good ol boy and their extended family
from Lake Charles and there about
with the ever appreciated Miss Mary
for which the Gala is named. They
smiled and laughed and applauded.
Retired clergy, straight folk, black folk,
bi-racial folk, LGBT folk, old and young
folk and all manner of folk ate, talked,
laughed, bid on bric- a-brac. All man-
ner of folk enjoyed the wit and wisdom
of Tony Leggio and the divine Miss
Elizabeth Bouvier whilst Rip and Marsha
shot pictures and visited for a time.
This is church my friends. This is
church. I hosted a group of church
types that came to Louisiana in a con-
shows a different side and turns truly entertaining. Faith Prince channels her inner
Shelley Winters for a Morse code tap dance
(don’t ask!) that is hilarious. Young Baylee
Littrell quickly switches between a pair of
twins, a boy and a girl, for a hysterical When
Will I Be Loved.
Best of all is Jennifer Simard whose
Sister Mary (shades of Helen Reddy in
Airport 1975), a former gambling addict, is
the most fully realized comic creation. Given
the show’s best lines, Disaster! is a triumph every time Simard takes control of the
stage. (**)
With a mere three performers, Reed
creates lovely stage images, and her simple
but expansive staging takes advantage of
the entire auditorium. Heidi Malnar’s astute
choreography precisely evokes the period’s
style as do the fabulous costumes by Reed
and Judy Claverie that encompass casual
and evening wear as well as WWII work
outfits.
Songs That Won the War concludes
with Irving Berlin’s White Christmas which,
as an anthem of WWII, we’re told was
considered a song of peace and is, of
course, still hugely popular. Sadly, it made
me realize how few war songs have been
written in the last 12 years; I found one
website that listed 27, none popular hits.
Though no war is good, at least World War
II gave us some lasting cultural gems.
[The Stage Door Canteen will be coproducing, with New Orleans Opera,
Brundibár on May 14 and 15. Brundibár,
a children’s opera by Jewish Czech composer Hans Krasa, was performed 55 times
during World War II at Theresienstadt, the
Czech concentration camp. Ela
Weissberger, an original cast member and
Holocaust survivor, will be a guest of honor
at the performances.]
Songs That Won the
War at the WWII
Museum’s BB’s Stage
Door Canteen through
Aug. 24
[Songs That Won the War has returned to the WWII Museum; the following
is an edited version of my review which ran
in our Oct. 27, 2015 issue.]
We’re told at the start of Songs That
Won the War, the terrific new entertainment at the WWII Museum’s Stage Door
Canteen, that “popular songs had an important part in building morale.” If that initially provokes an “Oh, really?”, by the end,
the show convinces any doubters just how
integral music was to winning the war.
Sure, you’re probably familiar with
Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy and Lili Marlene,
but Writer/Director Victoria Reed has unearthed a bunch of great songs, most not
heard at the Canteen before, with such
titles as We’re Going to Hang out the
Washing on the Siegfried Line and Milkman, Keep Those Bottles Quiet.
Starting with What Do You Do in the
Infantry?, Songs That Won the War is
intelligently crafted and, appropriately for
its museum setting, offers historical tidbits
that enhance our appreciation of the numbers. For example, the Germans thought
The Lambeth Walk was Jewish propaganda because it had “Oy” in its refrain
(oy!). And if The Victory Belles perform
Comin’ In On a Wing and a Prayer a capella
it’s because it was originally done that way
due to a 1943 musicians’ strike.
Wisely, Reed doesn’t overdo such
factoids but lets the songs speak for themselves. And speak (sing?) for themselves
they do, some with beauty and elegance,
others with bouncy wit, all of which still
holds up 70+ years later.
Andrea Pizza, Sara Benjamin and
Mandi Ridgdell, each with 1940’s movie
star looks, are the Belles for Songs. Their
voices harmonize superbly, casting a hypnotic spell over the audience during I’ll Be
Seeing You.
All three come together to make Rosie
the Riveter a rousing stand-out in a show
that rolls smoothly along for its entire 65
minutes, each number highly polished without ever becoming cruise ship plasticky
thanks to the Belles’ warmth and charm.
[continued on 29]
Coming Soon
The legendary Loretta Lynn returns
to the IP Casino Resort in Biloxi on May 13;
I expect she’ll be featuring songs from her
new CD, Full Circle. When I saw her there
last year, I wrote “At nearly 83, Loretta Lynn
still sounds stellar, looks wonderful, and
displays a feisty wit.” Now, at 84, she’s still
going strong.
Closer to home, Slidell Little Theatre
will stage Spamalot April 29-May 15. Lovingly ripped off from Monty Python and
the Holy Grail, Spamalot retells the legend of King Arthur & his Knights of the
Round Table, deliciously sends up musical
comedies, and features a bevy of beautiful
show girls, not to mention cows, French
people, & killer rabbits.
And right here in the Marigny, ArtSpot
Productions presents Jeff Becker’s Sea
of Common Catastrophe, a site-specific
prelude to a new touring show about displacement, detritus, and designer food (May
4-8 at Catapult, 609 St. Ferdinand).
Well-Strung, the hunky singing string
quartet, will debut its newest show, Party in
the USA, at Café Istanbul (2372 St. Claude)
May 6 - 8. Directed by NOLA’s own Jeffery
Roberson (aka Varla Jean Merman), the
New Orleans run will be followed by a week
residence in NYC at 54 Below and then an
extended engagement in Provincetown.
See it here to get bragging rights all summer
long for seeing its world premiere.
And Conversations with Body Language offers Mike Spara in a wordless solo
sketch comedy, a homage to Charlie Chaplin
and Buster Keaton, which combines silent
film sensibility, modern music and absurdity
(May 14 at The New Movement, 2706 St.
Claude).
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QUARTERMASTER DELI, THE NELLIE
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hair salons
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New Orleans, LA [504]
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New Orleans, LA [504]
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museum/arts
New Orleans, LA [504]
BEAUREGARD-KEYES HOUSE, 1113
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CABILDO, 701 Chartres, Jackson Square,
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Esplanade Avenue, tours by appointment:
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WORLD WAR 2 MUSEUM, 945 Magazine,
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music
New Orleans [504]
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organizations
New Orleans, LA [504]
ACLU and ACLU Foundation of Louisiana,
P.O. Box 56157, New Orleans, LA 70156,
504.522.0628 x25, Fax: 888.537.0384,
laaclu.org
AIDS HOTLINE, 821.6050 in New Orleans, 1.800.99.AIDS[2437]-9 toll free statewide
AIDSLaw of Louisiana, 3801 Canal St.,
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ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS, 838.3399
BIG EASY STOMPERS, Country & Western line dancing. Weekly lessons and monthly
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COMMUNITY ACTION NETWORK, a
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COPS 8 (Citizens' Organization for Police
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#51, 70116; 588.COPS (2677), cops8.org
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LGBT+ Archives Project of Louisiana,
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LORDS OF LEATHER, 1631 Elysian
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Louisiana Equality Foundation, serving
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activism,
and
awareness.
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Metropolitan Community Church of New
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MYSTIC KREWE OF SATYRICON, 2443
Halsey Ave., New Orleans, LA 70114,
504.906.7990 Todd J. Blauvelt / Secretary,
[email protected],
MysticKreweOfSatyricon.COM
NEW ORLEANS BEAR AND BEAR
TRAPPER SOCIAL CLUB, P.O. Box 57756,
New Orleans, LA 70157-7756, 504.298.0061,
theneworleansbears.com
NEW ORLEANS GAY MEN’S CHORUS,
322.7007, nogmc.com; [email protected]
NEW ORLEANS JAZZ & HERITAGE FESTIVAL, nojazzfest.com
NO/AIDS TASK FORCE, 2601 Tulane Ave.,
Suite
500,
70119;
821.2601;
NOAIDSTaskForce.COM
PFLAG/NO [Parents & Friends of Lesbians
& Gays/ New Orleans], PO Box 15515, 70175;
895.3936,
392.0001,
pflagno.org,
[email protected]
PRIDE, NOLAPride.ORG
PROJECT LAZARUS, A Residence for
PWAs, PO Box 3906, 70177-3906; 949.3609
REGIONALAIDS INTERFAITH NETWORK
[RAIN], 523.3755
RENEGADE BEARS OF LOUISIANA, PO
Box 3083, New Orleans, LA 70177;
[email protected]
SOUTHERN DECADENCE, 828-A Bourbon St., 70116-3137, 504.522.8049,
SouthernDecadence.COM
ST. ANNA'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 1313
Esplanade Avenue New Orleans, LA 70116
947.2121, stannanola.org
VOLLEYBALL NEW ORLEANS, PO Box
13306, 70185-3306; volleyballneworleans.com,
[email protected]
pets
New Orleans, LA [504]
DR. MIKE'S ANIMAL HOUSE, 1120 N.
Rampart, 523.4455
pharmacy
Baton Rouge, LA [225]
AVITA PHARMACY, offers personalized,
convenient care to those affected by chronic illnesses. Avita offers free delivery, co-pay assistance, benefit coordination, and refill reminder
calls as well as access to a pharmacist 24/7.
Every prescription filled today helps Avita give
back to the community tomorrow.
www.avitapharmacy.com
New Orleans, LA [504]
AVITA PHARMACY, offers personalized,
convenient care to those affected by chronic illnesses. Avita offers free delivery, co-pay assistance, benefit coordination, and refill reminder
calls as well as access to a pharmacist 24/7.
Every prescription filled today helps Avita give
back to the community tomorrow.
www.avitapharmacy.com
MUMFREY'S PHARMACY, 1021 W. Judge
Perez Dr., Chalmette, LA 70043, 504.279.6312,
www.MumfreysPharmacy.COM. Supporting &
serving the LGBT Community for over 20 years.
Local pharmacy offering personalized family-like
service, automatic refills & free metro wide confidential pickup & delivery. Also offering shipping
for out-side our delivery area. When you call us
you speak to a person, not a machine. See our ad.
photography
New Orleans, LA [504]
GRAHAM/STUDIO ONE NEW ORLEANS, by appointment, grahamstudioone.com
restaurants
Metairie, LA [504]
Chef Ron's Gumbo Stop & Pub, 2309 N.
Causeway Blvd., 835.2022, GumboStop.com
New Orleans, LA [504]
The Bombay Club, 830 Rue Conti,
577.2237, www.bombayclubneworleans.com
Broussard’s Restaurant & Courtyard,
819 Rue Conti, 581.3866, http://broussards.com
Cheezy Cajun, 3325 St. Claude Ave.,
265.0045, www.TheCheezyCajun.com
Clover Grill, 900 Bourbon St., 598.1010,
www.CloverGrill.com
Country Club Restaurant, 634 Louisa St.,
www.TheCountryClubNewOrleans.com,
945.0742
Deanie's Seafood, French Quarter: 841
Iberville, 581.4141; Bucktown: 1713 Lake Ave.,
Metairie, 831.1316; www.Deanies.com
Gene's Po-Boys & Daquiris, 1040 Elysian
Fields
Ave.,
943.3861,
www.genespoboys.com
Ilys Bistro, 1040 Elysian Fields Ave.,
947.8341, www.Facebook.com/ILYSBistro
Kingfish Kitchen & Cocktails, 337
Chartres
St.
598.5005,
www.KinfishNewOrleans.com
Little Vic’s Rosticceria, 719 Toulouse,
304.1238, www.littlevics.com
Mona Lisa Restaurant, 1212 Royal St.,
522.6746
Orleans Grapevine Wine Bar & Bistro,
720
Orleans,
523.1930,
www.OrleansGrapevine.com
Quartermaster: The Nellie Deli, 1100
Bourbon
St.
,
529.1416,
www.QuartermasterDeli.net
Royal House Oyster Bar, 441 Royal
St.,
528.2601,
www.RoyalHouseRestaurant.com
Stanley, 547 St. Ann St., 587.0093,
www.StanleyRestaurant.com
St., 302.2095, MrBinkys.com
PANDA BEAR, 415 Bourbon St., 529.8064
QT PIE BOUTIQUE - 241 Dauphine St.,
581. 6633
RAB DAB CLOTHING AND GIFTS, 918
Royal St., 525.6662
services
New Orleans, LA [504]
ABC Title Services, www.abctitle.com
Formal Connection, 299 Belle Terre Blvd.
LaPlace, LA, 985.652.1195
Milavo, www.milavospray.com
theatres
New Orleans, LA [504]
CAFE ISTANBUL, 2372 St. Claude Ave.,
#140, 504.974.0786, CafeIstanbulNOLA.COM
tours
New Orleans, LA [504]
Gay New Orleans Walking Tour, Crescent City Tour Booking Agency, (LGBT Business of the Year) 638 St. Ann St., 568.0717. follow
Gay New Orleans Walking Tour @ Facebook.COM
communities ...from 26
ference to learn how to do “Asset
based mission.” I’m not sure what that
means in the grand logistical church
planning world. But what it means to
me and to St. Anna’s and a very few
other churches is this: Asset based
mission is inviting all manner of folk to
participate and rejoice in who or what
they are. To meet the people generally
where they are not where you (the
church) think they should be. If I do
nothing again I can only say that the
event that you just spent a few moments of your valuable time reading
about is what church is and should be.
If it is not and if you go to church ask
your contemporaries why not?! The
church should never be confined to a
building. It’s nature and form of worship
should and must be found outside its
walls.
We at St. Anna’s are humbled and
so grateful for the full participation of
these Communities within a Community. THANK YOU ONE AND ALL. You
help us define who we are by who you
are. In so doing we are empowered to
reach out and make a difference in the
world and to make it a little kinder and
certainly more interesting.
real estate
New Orleans, LA [504]
Latter & Blum, Steven Vaughn Realtor,
Cell 504.810.4646, Office 504.948.3011,
St e v e n Va u g h a n P r o p e r t i e s . c o m ,
[email protected]
New Orleans Relocation, Realtors — gayowned boutique real estate agency for locals and
newcomers. 504.273.0088 www.NOLArelo.com
retail/shopping
New Orleans, LA [504]
BOURBON PRIDE, 909 Bourbon,
566.1570
COK (Clothing or Kinkl), 941 Elysian
Fields, 945.9264
LEATHER VOODOO, 708 Toulouse St.,
249.5603
MARY'S FRENCH QUARTER KITCHEN
& BATH, 732 N. Rampart, 529.4465
MR. BINKY'S BOUTIQUE, 107 Chartres
Official Pride Guide • NOLAPride.org • April 26-May 9, 2016 • Facebook.com/AmbushMag • The Official Mag©
©: AmbushMag.com • 29
matters of health
Although the word has gotten out that
young women need to be vaccinated about
the Human Papillomavirus (HPV), young
men have not gotten the message to seek
out the vaccine. This is especially important for young gay men. Research has
shown that HIV negative men who have sex
with men (MSM) are 20 times more likely to
be diagnosed with anal cancer than the
general population, with a rate of about 40
cases per 100,000 people. HIV-positive
MSM are up to 40 times more likely to be
diagnosed with the disease.
Binge Drinking High
Among Bisexual
Students
According to a study conducted by the
University of Pittsburg Graduate School of
Public Health, LGBTQ-affirming environments are ineffective in protecting bisexual
students from already higher rates of alcohol abuse. Researchers found that while
binge drinking by their heterosexual and
homosexual peers decreased as school
support for LGBTQ students increased,
bisexual students were left unaffected,
suggesting that their needs aren’t being
adequately addressed by policies and programs.
PrEP Adherence High
In a recent study presented at the
Society of Behavioral Medicine’s Annual
Meeting, researchers at Hunter College
found that gay and bisexual men taking
PrEP had ver high levels of adherence.
The survey include 1,000 men from around
the country. 60 percent reported not having
missed any doses in the last 30 days; of
those that had missed a dose, 88 percent
reported missing three doses or fewer. The
most common reasons reported for missing
a dose were forgetting, being somewhere
other than home, and having run out of
medication.
A Solution to High Rates
of Depression & Suicide
Among Transgender
Youth
Past research has shown that
transgender and gender non-conforming
youth have higher rates of depression and
suicide compared to other youth. In a study,
conducted by researchers at the University
of Washington and published in a recent
issue of the journal Pediatrics, a very simple
solution was suggested…support and accept transgender people. The project studied 73 youth between 3 and 12 years old.
The researchers asked their parents if their
children had experienced symptoms of
depression or anxiety. The result was that
the kids in the study had rates about the
same as the general population. What they
found is the key was that the kids were
accepted.
national survey by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, a growing number
of men and women say they are bisexual.
Many of the findings about sexual behavior,
attraction and orientation were similar between the current survey and the previous
(2006-2010) family growth survey. Similar
to previous surveys the group conducted,
1.3% of women and 1.9% of men said they
were homosexual. A few trends stood out.
More women reported having had sexual
contact with other women: 17.4% in the
current survey compared with 14.2% in the
2006-2010 survey. And higher numbers of
both women and men identified as bisexual,
5.5% of women and 2% of men, compared
with 3.9% and 1.2% respectively in the last
survey.
Happy Birthday Cory
Gay & Straight Parents
Have Equally Healthy
Kids
Timothy & Joel
Contrary to what many conservative
politicians would have us believe, a study
in a recent edition of the Journal of Developmental Behavioral Pediatrics shows that
the children of both same-sex parents and
different-sex parents are equally healthy,
emotionally, behaviorally, and otherwise.
Gavin & Miss Cie @ B-Bob’s
First Case of Sexually
Transmitted Zika in Gay
Men Reported
In a recent issue of the CDC Morbidity
and Mortality Weekly report, CDC officials
reported that the Zika virus can be sexuallytransmitted between men. The transmission occurred when one man returned to
Dallas, Texas, after a weeklong trip in Venezuela. Two days after arriving back in the
U.S., the man developed classic symptoms
of Zika virus including rash, fever and conjunctivitis. The man’s partner of 10 years
developed symptoms five days later, including fever, fatigue and headache. Medical officials confirmed both men had the
Zika virus through blood tests. They determined that sexual contact was the most
likely cause for the second man’s infection
since he had not been in a country where
the virus was being transmitted from mosquitoes to people. Symptoms for both men
cleared up in approximately a week, according to the report.
Jack Carrel, MPH has worked in HIV,
STD, and LGBTQ health for over 30 years.
Currently he is a doctoral student at Walden
University, a consultant in grant writing. He
can be reached at [email protected].
Nick & Miss Cie
Jayme & Delta
Happy Birthday Brent
Leon & The Boys @ B-Bob’s
mobile
paparazzi
Mark, Judson & Chris
Bisexuality On the Rise
According to the results of a recent
Jody, Gina & friends
Miss Cie, Matt & Chase @ B-Bob’s
Happy Birthday Skylar
30 • The Official Mag©
©: AmbushMag.com • April 26-May 9, 2016 • Of
ficial Souther
n Decadence Guide • Souther
nDecadence.com
Official
Southern
SouthernDecadence.com
Birthdays & Celebrations ~ Mobile, Alabama ~ Photos by Miss Cie
Young Gay Men Need
HPV Vaccine