Sexion Q_3-14 - To Parent Directory
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Sexion Q_3-14 - To Parent Directory
www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q1 Cover Cover Story Story Even though her astonishing voice makes it seem predestined, stardom has been a long time coming for Anastacia. The Chicago-born diva went through many start-and-stop career moments before her chops were recognized. She traipsed along the edge of the music world as a backup dancer and upscale hair salon receptionist for years with her biggest talent going unrecognized, mostly because nobody could quite figure out what to do with her. She was ready to give up until an appearance on the now-defunct MTV talent show The Cut gave her the chance to shine. Although she didn’t win top prize on the show, the budding vocalist did scoop up a record deal and recognition from the likes of pop superstar Michael Jackson and megaproducer David Foster. Now, she has finally earned her stripes after years of honing her sound and gaining a massive European following. Her debut album, Not That Kind, (See ANASTACIA on page Q9) Q2 www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK In In Review Review The first clue that Nixon’s Nixon is not fact that the Kennedys were assassinated or supposed to be historically accurate is that else they would be stuck with the whole there are 68 stars on the American flag that Vietnam mess and toy with the idea of starting World War III in order to distract people from rises from behind the set. The play, which is the latest production that little Watergate and impeachment at the GableStage Theatre, takes place the night headache. before President Richard M. Nixon’s resignation. As legend has it, the soon-tobe-ex-pres met with his secretary of state, Henry Kissinger, in the Lincoln Room of the White House. No one knows what the two men talked about, but playwright Russell Lees wrote Nixon’s Nixon to give his version. And what a version it is. Kissinger is portrayed as a man desperate to keep his job, and Nixon is portrayed as a man who’s just plain desperate, and a little nuts too. Together, they worry about how history will remember them, lament the Peter Haig, Nixon, and John Felix, Kissinger The funniest scenes are when Nixon goads Kissinger into playacting conversations with Brezhnev and Mao Tse Tung. Watching John Felix, who plays Kissinger, taking on Mao’s persona and language is hysterical. Nixon’s Nixon paints a picture of two men who are just that—men. The play provides an opportunity to look beyond the history to see that it all boils down to problems anyone can have, trying to hold onto a job and trying to leave one gracefully. While an author’s note in the program tells the audience that it’s not important that the actors look like Nixon and Kissinger, and that too great a resemblance would border on parody, John Felix nails Kissinger. Make-up helps Felix look like Kissinger, but it’s his mannerisms, posture and accent that make one feel that they are watching the real thing. His performance is so dead on that it makes you wonder if Kissinger had given up politics for theater—admittedly not a big jump. Peter Haig does an equally good job as Nixon, though he has a much tougher task on his hands. Nixon’s own mannerisms have already become such a staple of American parody that Haig must walk a very fine line between portrayal and imitation. He rarely falters, though Nixon does come off as kind of nutty, maybe even nutty enough to add another 18 states when nobody was looking. Nixon’s Nixon runs through July 7 at the GableStage Theatre, 1200 Anastasia Avenue, at the Biltmore Hotel, Coral Gables. For information and tickets, call 305.445.1119. Former Nixon Council John Dean Talks about 30th Anniversary of Watergate See Page 28 of This Week’s ‘Express’ www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q3 The Art of the Dance Florida Dance Festival Gives Miami Whirl By Mary Damiano Dance—what magical images the word conjures up. Dance is a rite of passage. A little girl standing on her father’s shoes as he whirls her around a dance floor. The sock hop in the junior high gym with the battle lines drawn, the girls on one side and the boys on the other. The prom. A couple’s first dance after being betrothed. Dance is romantic. It’s two lovers claiming the first song they danced to as their song, as a way to capture and relive that moment. It’s asking a stranger to dance in order to hold that special someone against you, so you can feel their heat and their hearts and discover them within the intimacy of an embrace. Dance is sexy. How does the old joke go? Why don’t Baptists have sex standing up? Because people will think they’re dancing. Mating Dance. Dance with the devil. The horizontal bop. Go-go girls and go-go boys and strippers who bump and gyrate their way into our minds and loins. Dance is ingrained in our celluloid psyches. How many of us fell in love with the dance at the movies, or watching old black and white films on TV? Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers—he was great, but remember: She did everything he did, but backwards and in heels. John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever or Grease or Urban Cowboy, Pulp Fiction, even—every time the man danced onscreen, he started a nationwide trend and kick-started a different genre of music. Has anyone ever been out in the rain and not had a Gene Kelly moment that made us want to splash in puddles and spin around a lamp post? Dance is movement, poetry in motion. It’s ballet dancers who train and train to be able to support their bodies on the edges of their toes. It’s contorting a body into pretzeled positions and leaps that turn a human being into a human projectile. It’s a dedication to art, a devotion to grace, a creation of beauty. Dance is life. Whatever kind of dance you love or crave, you’re sure to find it at the Florida Dance Festival, which runs through June 29 at different venues in Miami. Ballet, modern dance, traditional folk dancing from various countries—all of these facets of dance are represented. So do yourself a favor. Go to a performance. Watch dancers do what they do best. Get swept away. Experience the glory of dance. Seán Curran—From Boston to Broadway Dancer/Choreographer Brings His Troupe to Miami Beach By Mary Damiano Seán Curran describes his dance company as accessibility with an edge. “I want to make poetry,” says the 40-year-old dancer/choreographer, “but I also want to dazzle and entertain.” The Seán Curran Company will perform Friday, June 21, at the Colony Theatre on Lincoln Road as part of the Florida Dance Festival. Audiences who catch the performance will be treated to the full range of Curran’s diverse repertoire, from the melancholy of Sonata and From the Ether, With Instinct to the flashiness of Abstract Concrete, Metal Garden. Curran likes to keep things fresh; the first two works have never been performed on the road. Curran became interested in dance early. He grew up in Boston, the son of parents who were both from Ireland. His parents were determined to instill in him and his sisters a sense of cultural identity, so the Curran children were trained in all things Irish— language, theatre, music and step dancing. The dancing is what made the biggest impression, and in high school, a teacher encouraged Curran to try his hand at choreography. “I’d never taken a jazz class or a modern dance class, so there were productions of Bye Bye Birdie and Carousel with lots of Irish step dancing,” Curran says. Curran attended New York University (NYU) with the intention of becoming the next Ben Vereen or Joel Grey, specializing in musical comedy. There, he discovered modern dance and switched from theater to the dance department. At NYU, dancers were encouraged to also create dances, and that whetted Curran’s appetite for choreography. He spent 10 years with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, which shaped his foundation as a choreographer, and four years in Stomp, where he created his own solos and improvisation. “It’s always been in my nature to make dances,” he says. One of his pieces, Folk Dance for the Future, became what Curran calls his reluctant hit. The dance involves three Q4 interracial couples, “homo, hetero and lesbian,” each with a baby. The piece, which deals with the issue of gay parents, has given Curran some of his most satisfying moments. A few months ago, while performing in Portland, Oregon, Curran invited the Steve Lofton/Roger Croteau family, who were featured in the Primetime Thursday special on gay adoption, to attend a performance of the piece. He was able to meet the family, who later sent Curran a family photo. It is posted on his fridge along with other photos of gay parents and their children, who have written letters to Curran after seeing the piece. “Basically, the letters say thank you for putting us onstage,” he says. Curran is also a teacher, traveling to different universities to give dance classes in technique and body percussion, and to create a dance piece for a large cast in a short amount of time. Curran’s company has also been in residence at NYU for the past three summers. “It’s my teaching that makes having a dance company possible,” says Curran. One of the greatest influences on his work has been the silent movies of Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton, which he grew up watching on TV. “All of those silent movie comedians are dancers, in a way, because they’re telling a story through movement and reaction,” Curran says. “They didn’t have language or words. I love the physicalized comedy they portray.” He once toured with a series of short dances that he later realized were heavily influenced by Chaplin and Keaton films, right down to the black and white costumes, prompting a Boston Globe critic to declare him the dance world’s answer to Buster Keaton. “It was a great compliment,” Curran says. “It clicked for me then that somewhere I absorbed some influence or through osmosis was channeling back out my love for these films.” Curran’s love of film and his training in all things Irish synthesized when he was asked to choreograph the Broadway musical The Dead, based on James Joyce’s short story and the film starring Anjelica Huston, www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK about a turn of the 20th century Irish Christmas party. One of the producers told Curran that he wanted The Dead to feature historically accurate Irish dance but with Curran’s eccentric twist. “I went into it with all these highfaluting ideas about Broadway, and when it came right down to it, what got onstage were the dances that my aunts taught me at Christmas parties and weddings,” he says. Next year, Curran begins rehearsals with the same team who did The Dead, this time a musical based on Marcel Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past. But right now, Curran is looking forward to the Florida Dance Festival and presenting the audience with new dance pieces. “I think I’m in the theater because no two performances or audiences are ever alike,” he says. “As frustrating as that can be, it’s also very exciting.” Curran lets his dance pieces evolve to work in harmony with his dancers. As dancers come and go, already established pieces are fine-tuned to capitalize on the new dancer’s strengths. “It’s not like a novel or a painting or a sculpture or a movie, where there’s that point when you finish it and you put it on the wall or the bookshelf,” Curran says. “A dance is so fleeting that in a way, it’s never done.” “I went into it with all these high-faluting ideas about Broadway and when it came right down to it, what got onstage were the dances that my aunts taught me at Christmas parties and weddings.” —Seán Curran Florida Dance Festival Schedule June 16-29, 2002 - Miami/Miami Beach Photo by Steven Caras Photo by Eric Saulitis Florida Dances Together & Alone June 20, 2002, 8pm Colony Theater Compania Marta Carrasco June 16, 2002, 8pm Colony Theater Tuesday, June 18, 8pm, Wednesday, June 19, 8pm, and Monday, June 24, 8pm. New World School of the Arts Dance Theater, 25 NE 2nd Street, 8th Floor, downtown Miami Tickets: $10; student and senior rates available This series of three different programs celebrates the work of Florida-based dance artists, companies and schools. The mixed programs showcase works from performing groups and artists from across Florida including Orlando’s VOCI Dance Group, Tampa’s Moving Current, Miami’s La Rosa Flamenco Theater and Karen Peterson & Dancers, the dance programs of New World School of the Arts, University of Florida and Florida State University, and the works of independent choreographers. Together and Alone An evening of solo and duet works by festival guest artists Chris Aiken, Cathy Young, Michael Foley, Raymond Sullivan, Octavio Campos (Improvisation, Modern and Contemporary dance) Thursday, June 20, 8pm. Colony Theatre, 1040 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach Tickets: $25, student and senior rates available Married dancers Chris Aiken and Cathy Young combine her choreographic virtuosity and his improvisational mastery in a duet work of ingenious and intricate partnering. Michael Foley’s complicated, lighthearted and intellectual solo and duet works beguile and captivate. Raymond Sullivan’s work casts both hope and uncertainty on a young couple’s turbulent relationship, and Octavio Campos’ dramatic Pina Bausch-esque dance-theatre style will keep you guessing. Seán Curran Company (New York) Friday, June 21, 8pm Colony Theatre, 1040 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach Tickets: $25, student and senior rates available Dubbed a “choreographer’s choreographer” by Backstage Magazine, Seán Curran was a favorite dancer of the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company for 10 years and an original cast member of Stomp. Curran’s young, contemporary company presents works featuring his signature virtuosity, complex musicality and powerful emotion. Says Curran: “I am a choreographer who depends heavily on my dancers as collaborators. The Seán Curran Company will perform three new works, Absract Concrete, Metal Garden; From the Ether, With Instinct and Sonata. Ballet Florida Photo by Jo Kirchherr DIN A 13 The Colours of Longing June 27, 2002, 8pm New World School of the Arts Dance Theatre Contemporary Ballet (West Palm Beach) Saturday, June 22, 8pm Colony Theatre, 1040 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach Tickets: $25, student and senior rates available Maximo Damian Scissors Dancers Traditional folkloric dance and music (Peru) Sunday, June 24, 7pm New World School of the Arts Dance Theater, 25 NE 2nd Street, 8th Floor, downtown Miami Tickets: $10; student and senior rates available A figure of nearly mythical stature among Andean traditional artists, professional musician and teacher Maximo Damian brings music, culture and tradition from his tiny home village of Ayacucho in the central highlands of Peru. Danza de las Tijeras (the scissors dance) is an acrobatic dance competition most often performed at patron saint festivals and other celebrations. In this folkloric dance, two dancers challenge and compete with one another for the finest and most athletic steps, the longest physical endurance and the most astonishing slight of hand and magic. Photo by Lois Greenfield Monday, June 17, 7-9pm The Wolfsonian-FIU, 1001 Washington Avenue, Miami Beach Tickets: Free event Co-presented with Dance/USA and the National Initiative to Preserve America’s Dance (NIPAD), this evening is dedicated to the work of dance artists and filmmakers who have created full-length and short films, and film documentaries, for and about dance or icons of the dance field. Modern Daydreams, by Mitchell Rose, is a suite of three dances for the camera with which incorporates heavy construction equipment and office furniture into the dance, has seen wide distribution and won numerous awards since its 2000 premiere. Returning Home, by Andy Abrahams Wilson, combines a documentary style with improvisatory dance for the camera to show the musings, thoughts and philosophies of living dance legend Anna Halprin as she explores her eighth decade of life. From the Horse’s Mouth: The Documentary Director Sharon Kinney reveals, through interviews with Jamie Cunningham, Tina Croll and the dancers, the inspiration and structure of From the Horses Mouth at its premiere in 1998. The film follows the performers and choreographers through the rehearsal process to the performances, juxtaposing and interlacing the events and their interviews leading up to opening night, against their performances in the piece. The film captures reality as the artists reveal their passion for their art form and for each other at that moment in time. Sean Curran Company June 21, 2002, 8pm Colony Theater Looking at Dance Informal showing and audience feedback session Monday, June 25, 7-9pm New World School of the Arts Dance Theater, 25 NE 2nd Street, 8th Floor, downtown Miami Tickets: Free event. This session, loosely based on choreographer Liz Lerman’s Critical Response format, shows excerpts of works-in-progress or completed works by local emerging or established choreographers followed by audience response and discussion. Conducted in a positive and supportive environment, the facilitated session serves to enlighten audience members, helps educate dancers and young choreographers in elements of composition, and gives the presenting choreographer important feedback and insight into their own creative process. Pascal Rioult Dance Theatre Maximo Damian Scissors Dancers Photo by PAMAR Dance Film and Documentary June 23, 2002, 7pm New World School of the Arts Dance Theatre Pascal Rioult Dance Theatre June 26, 2002, 8pm Colony Theater Modern dance (New York) Wednesday, June 26, 8pm Colony Theatre, 1040 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach Tickets: $25; student and senior rates available French choreographer Pascal Rioult brings his own unique choreographic style and heritage as a former principal dancer with the Martha Graham Dance Company. The company presents Rioult’s Ravel Project, combining his choreographic genius and a deep, shared sensibility with fellow Frenchman and late romantic composer Maurice Ravel. Photo by Charles-Turner O’Neal June 22, 2002, 8pm Colony Theater Guided by the inspired vision of artistic director Marie Hale, this troupe of 22 exceptionally talented dancers is one of Florida’s most dynamic and versatile ballet companies, featuring a repertoire of fulllength classical ballets and contemporary works of choreographers ranging from Peter Martins and Ben Stevenson to Lar Lubovitch. DIN A 13 The Colours of Longing Contemporary modern dance (Cologne, Germany) Quasar Thursday, June 27, 8pm New World School of the Arts Dance Theater, 25 NE 2nd Street, 8th Floor, downtown Miami Tickets: $20; student and senior rates available Beauty, fear, individuality and desire are the central themes in artistic director Gerda König’s provocative work, The Colours of Longing. Expressed through dance, music and video projection the work creates a dreamlike environment that exposes people’s innermost desires, puts so-called normality into question and makes taboos an open issue. June 28 & 29, 2002, 8pm Colony Theater Quasar Dance Company Dividuo, Contemporary Modern dance (Goiânia, Brazil) Friday, June 28 and Saturday, June 29, 8pm Colony Theatre, 1040 Lincoln Road, Miami Beach Tickets: $25; student and senior rates available Jointly presented by Tigertail Productions FLA/ BRA Festival and the Florida Dance Festival, Brazil’s Quasar Dance Company is known for its quirky dark humor, youth culture sensibility and extraordinary dancing. Choreographer Henrique Rodovalho describes his Dividual, a musing on the real versus the visual, as an exploration of how people are highly connected with the rest of the world and, at the same time, isolated in their homes or rooms. Photo by Mila Petrillo Dance and Dancemakers on Film Ballet Florida www.fldance.org www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q5 Maximum Volume By Ian Drew Avril Lavigne The Ones Let Go (Arista) Flawless (Groovilicious) Always looking for an easy box to tape up, the music industry has finally decided to add some girl power to the current teen punkpop movement. With bands like Blink-182, New Found Glory, Sum 41 and their ever-present forefather, Green Day, clobbering rap in the suburban teen consciousness, out pops the Fiona Apple of the pack. Coming out like a skater-punk Alanis Morrissette minus several iotas of punch, 17-year-old Avril Lavigne wrote all 13 tracks on her debut album, Let Go, and pounds out the chords on her electric guitar just like the boys. What she adds is the haunting neo-realism of lovelorn lyrics in a way that only a girl can kick it. What harms her is taking the easy way out with cheap sentimentality during several stops along the way. The pop sensibility of the record is unquestionable, and it can only be attributed to Lavigne’s experienced writing partners and producers. On the hit candidate “Complicated,” she strums out a Natalie Imbruglia-esque ode to a relationship she is not old enough to understand, a waywardness she displays again on similar tracks such as “Unwanted” and “Nobody’s Fool.” Lavigne can pull all of this off somewhat eloquently because the album doesn’t try too hard to outweigh its intentions. While the phrasing seems somewhat studied and the lyrics rock in and out of cliché territory—as on the sappy ballad “Too Much to Ask”—this girl has obviously learned from others that the hits need to be established before things can get more experimental. Overall, the teen angst thing and simplified hooks work for Lavigne here because, much like her punk and wanna-be emo contemporaries, it reflects the charming innocence and growth spurts of her misguided age bracket. Here we go again. Downtown Manhattan is making another statement. From the area that has brought out an endless stream of fashion trends and underground personalities, The Ones emerge with one of the biggest dance hits of the year, even though it was produced over two years ago. Three of the the Village’s most notable personalities – Jackie 60 DJ Paul Alexander, Patricia Field mascot JoJo Americo and Nashom (a.k.a. drag queen amazon Mona Foot) – combine their fierceness for Flawless, a single that has overtaken dance floors with its ’90s-throwback nod to the runways and fashion inspired rhyming. Nashom and Alexander originally wrote the song for the 1999 Robert De Niro flick of the same name, in which Nashom also appeared in drag regalia. The track wasn’t finished in time for the soundtrack, and it spent the following two years appearing on several bootlegged compilations. It was eventually picked up by Positiva Records and became a huge summer smash in Ibiza, even making it to number seven on the U.K. Pop charts and hitting number one on Canada’s dance chart. The trio is busy completing their first full-length CD, but in the meantime, they give us this pumping ditty in five different versions just ripe for the picking. The best of these, for those that have the time, is Sono’s lengthy Tuxedo Main Mix, a coasting classic that busts the full journey out of the song. For true fashion fabulousness, the snip clacking of the original is also hard to beat. David Knapp Motorball (Centaur) The prince of pumping circuit noise returns with another addition to his mix discology, this one gliding by on familiar voices with a decidedly lighter feel. Motorball is named after the annual Detroit circuit party that benefits Motor City HIV/AIDS organizations. The CD is the latest in a series that attempts to capture the sounds of the parties, from Miami’s White and Winter soirees to Philadelphia’s Blue Ball. Knapp is a known bandleader at these events, and he knows what he’s talking about. He is an expert at bringing out the boys, which means supplying endless hours of uplifting and throbbing tracks that keep it going into the wee hours. Current vocal queen Inaya Day opens it all up with the catchy “I Will,” while the rest of the album stays airy and bouncy with traces of darkness thrown in for kicks. Knapp relies heavily on catchy vocal hooks throughout, particularly on the unforgettable Purple God by Anny. He uses such noted divas as Pepper Mashay and Sevana Stone to bring his vision into reality. Still, the album leaves open the question of whether we need yet another mix album with Kim English’s Everyday on it. The song has become the most overused dance single of the year and it isn’t even that good. Whatever the analysis, the disc is made to represent that special sound that keeps them coming back for more. It gives a great taste of one of the sweetest nights of the year. Q6 Pumping It Up with New Album Releases www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Kreo burn for you (Groovilicious) Miami’s Winter Music Conference can often be just a bunch of hubbub for wanna-be music industry pushers looking for something to get crazy about, but it can also help to introduce some interesting stuff. One import track that scooped up considerable buzz this year was Kreo’s “burn for you.” With its minimalist, retro-inspired synth lines and paired-down vocals reminiscent of Everything But the Girl meets Enya, the song uses familiar emotive elements to tell a new story. The single is set to start burning up the charts when it is released on June 18, but it will first have to suffer through obvious production comparisons to Kylie Minogue’s latest reclaiming of the American charts. Regardless, its somber subterfuge will surely gather steam among trendier mixed audiences. Readonline www.ExpressGayNews.com Concert Review Theatre Review Little Miss Rock and Roller An Evening of Winners—Sort of Melissa Etheridge Thrills South Florida Local Playwrights Get a Taste of Fame By Mary Damiano At one point during her concert at Mars Music Ampitheatre June 9, Melissa Etheridge introduced herself to the crowd. “My name is Melissa Etheridge.” Then she pondered, “Melissa.... It’s just not a very rock and roll name.” That may have been true once, but not anymore. Thanks to Etheridge, Melissa is now the rock and roll name, conjuring up the image of a raw-voiced rocker whose rhythm and soul spills out her fingers and soars from her gut. Her voice filled the sultry night before she appeared onstage, with lyrics from “I Want To Be in Love,” from last summer’s Skin. That song kicked off a spare, pared down rock and roll show. There were no dancers, no backup singers, no costumes, no MTV camera ready dance moves—just Etheridge and her band playing their hearts out. When you’re this good, you don’t need frills in order to thrill. She sang her litany of hits: “Come to My Window,” “Similar Features,” an incredible heartfelt acoustic version of “Nowhere to Go” and “I’m the Only One.” She proved why she’s every inch a rock and roll goddess and brought the house down with an extended version of her first hit, “Bring Me Some Water,” a version so palpably hot and sexy that it probably left more than a few women in the audience needing a cold shower afterward, or perhaps in need of another kind of drenching. Etheridge reveled in her audience. They showed their love for her with signs, posters, flowers—some ladies even tossed their bras onstage. Photo By Pompano Bill Full Company of “Evening of Winners” By Mary Damiano At 40, Etheridge wears her age and her attitude well. She wore black and white, a classic combo for a classic rocker. These days, she looks and sounds better than ever, as if she’s had a chance to grow into herself and her music. She switched off between piano and guitar throughout the show, and capped off her two-hour, solid-as-a-rock set with three encores, including the lovely “Please Forgive Me” and the raucous “Like the Way I Do.” Yes, Melissa, we definitely like the way you do. The recent Public Theatre offering was called An Evening of Winners because the one-act plays presented all won the organization’s local play contest. In that sense, each play was a winner. In reality, it should have been called An Evening of Hits and Misses. While the acting was for the most part excellent—sometimes astounding given what the actors had to work with—the quality of the plays was not. The standout plays fell into two categories—simple ideas that people could relate to and clever ideas that people could laugh at. When the more abstract, surreal ideas were explored, the plays failed. There was no real cohesion or order to the program, though it began on a promising note. Bill Yule’s The Game, about a man and a woman having a few drinks in a bar, had some nice banter and a great punchline to boot. Say Goodbye to Paula, by Jo-Aynne von Born, was a pleasant comedy about a woman who prowls funerals trying to pick up men. The Ladies’ Home Companion, by Roger Martin, was a broad but funny story about a widow purchasing some very satisfying underwear. The dramas were more uneven. The Galileo Prize by Jim Tommaney, about a professor being questioned about his ideas, was an example of style over substance. Is There Anyone There? by Roger Martin was a pedestrian and formulaic tale of a powerhungry, immoral priest judging another priest who’s not exactly pure himself. Combatting Terrorism, by Charles Aye and Bonnie Benson, was the topical play of the group, a satirical look at what would happen if all airline passengers were required to arm themselves with a personal terrorist deterrent device. The standout was The Beginning, by Dan Clancy, about an older gay couple at a wedding. One man wants to be open about their long relationship, but the other is too closeted and too worried about what his family will say. The dialogue was fresh and believable and helped create real flesh and blood characters in a short time. The Beginning managed to be funny, touching and insightful, a nice triple play to pull off in one act. The biggest miss was Vodkalogue, by Inez Geller, which seemed to serve no other purpose than to provide a bravura showcase for its actress. The result, unfortunately, was disjointed shrillness. www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK CYMK Q7 Heard It Through the Gayvine Queers, Quotes and Quips of Interest MTV Keeps Pushing Out Flamers and Dead Bodies Angry Mantle Still Clucking Away The MTV cable network is going gay… again! The network is rolling out a new documentary about young gays as part of their True Life series on June 27. True Life: I’m Coming Out will feature five coming out stories of gay and lesbian young people, focusing on both the strides in acceptance made during the last decade and the anguish young people go through when revealing their sexuality. The network has a history of showing and promoting gay issues. Gay people have been featured prominently in its The Real World reality series and in numerous ads. MTV is also working with Showtime to put together a gay cable network that will air later this year. In not-so-good news for the network, a Washington, D.C. couple has filed an invasion-ofprivacy lawsuit against them and Las Vegas’s Hard Rock Hotel and Casino for planting a mutilated corpse in a hotel room as part of a new show. The pair is suing the network and hotel for $10 million because they say they were unwittingly involved Andy Dick in a new series called Harassment. relieves stress According to the Las Vegas Review-Journal, the on an couple checked-in to the hotel in January for a Vegas MTV set vacation only to find their room equipped with hidden cameras and the corpse rotting in the bathtub. The couple tried to leave the room, but were stopped by two actors dressed as security guards who held them until That ’70s Show star Ashton Kutcher could jump out and reveal that they were caught on MTV’s sordid candid camera. This kind of trouble is not new for the edgy channel. Last April, two 14-year-old girls sued the network after they were showered with human feces on the show Jackass. At around the same time, an 86-year-old woman filed suit against MTV and comedian Andy Dick, claiming that she suffered emotional stress while taping an episode of Dick’s comedy show. Temperamental Express coverboy Arthur Mantle is back in town and getting naked! The manic photographer was front-page news in February after he terrorized the nonprofit organization ArtsUnited with a series of threatening e-mails. His dramatic exhibition of female nude photographs was pulled from a Stonewall Library and Archives exhibit by the group after he referred to the intended audience as “old faggots who have had too much intake of combination therapy,” among other epithets. He then threatened The Express with a “lawsiut” [sic] for running the article in a series of linguistically challenged e-mails. Arthur Mantle Even though the lensman repeatedly crowed about how he was leaving South Florida for more elite European shores (as if nasty, self-hating black queens are somehow more popular in London or Moscow), he has apparently decided to scrape the bottom of the barrel again by returning to South Florida to show of his newest series of male nudes. Somehow the little devil managed to finagle his images into the current issue of Australia’s BLUE magazine, and he has come back to South Florida, where he has received the most attention, to show it off. The snapshots are also on display until August 3 at Plantation’s Schacknow Museum of Fine Arts. For those wishing to take a peek at Mantle in the flesh, the snapper will appear at Fort Lauderdale’s Cathode Ray Club on Wednesday, June 26, at 9pm to sign some posters with some of his models. Who knows? He might even score at Pick-a-Trick, the club’s smoking dating gayme that has certainly seen some more attractive picks on its stages before. Despite his internalized homophobia, Mantle is smooching up to the community by also holding a silent auction with proceeds going to a local gay and lesbian charity. He is also negotiating with an unnamed gay merchandising company to license selected images on posters, postcards and calendars. Ladies Take Their Hats Off for Charity The first annual Bachelorette Bash will take place on June 22. It will be the Official Women’s Event of this year’s Stonewall Pride weekend and the Mad Hatters Ball with celebrity bartenders and go-go girls going on the auction block for charity. Some of the bachelorettes up for auction include: Nikki, Geiset, Dani, Julian and the Ultra GoGo girls (Michelle, Nicole and Crystal). Dream date packages include dinners, limousine rides, concerts and picnics. After the auction, DJ Alex H will spin an explosive mix of the hottest dance, house and salsa music on the main floor featuring special performances by the Ultra Go-Go dancers. DJ Annie will spin hip-hop on the patio. The celebrity host for the evening is Elaine Lancaster, who will MC the auction and perform. The whole she-bang will take place on Ultra Saturday’s at the Sea Monster. Proceeds from the Bachelorette Bash will benefit Gilda’s Club, Pride of Greater Fort Lauderdale and Pride South Florida. The Sea Monster is located at 2 South New River Drive in Fort Lauderdale. Doors open at 9 pm and the auction starts at 10 pm. For more information, call 954.424.0070. Q8 www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Girls Gone Crazy A new weekly party for women has just opened at one of Miami’s hottest nightspots. On Friday, June 14, Ultra and Pandora Events opened their newest venture, Tease Fridays. The new party for the estrogen-only set brings together pumping music, gorgeous go-go girls, a funky and friendly staff and innovative themes, shows and events. Tease Fridays finds its home at the new club STEEL (formerly Splash), located at 5922 South Dixie Highway in Miami. The legendary space has been completely renovated and boasts a new stateof-the-art sound and lighting system, a tropical garden terrace, an exclusive VIP room and a sexy décor. Ultra Events and Pandora Events have been bringing parties to South Florida for over four years and have had their hands in some of the most successful women’s events and fundraisers, including Aqua Girl, Women’s White Party, Bang at Bongos, Pandora, Ultra Saturdays and Girls In Wonderland. “We have wanted to bring a quality weekly party to the women of Miami and we finally feel we have all the elements together to accomplish that,” says promoter Yesi Leon. “ Tease Fridays will have that sexy, elegant Miami feel to it with a focus on a great variety of music and sexy visuals. We will play a mix of dance, salsa, lounge, hip-hop and disco. From music to pool tables to shows to gogo girls, there will definitely be something for everyone.” Doors open at 9pm every Friday. The cover is $8 before 11 pm and $10 after. For more information, visit www.ultra-events.com or www.pandoraevents.com, or call the Tease hotline at 954.424.0070. ANASTACIA (from Q2) earned her record sales in over a dozen countries and awards around the globe. Her new album, Freak of Nature, has already soared to the number one spot on Billboard’s European Hot 100 charts and has sold more than 2 million copies. While so much of the world has already caught on to “that voice,” American success has continued to elude her. However, she is now primed to change all of that with an aggressive plan to wake up the country and show what kind of artist she really is. With a voice that is equal parts Chaka Khan and Tina Turner smeared with huge dollops of Taylor Dayne, Anastacia has again returned to work with Grammy-winning producer Rick Wake with an album that spans rock, disco and R&B genres and cannot be pinned down—just like the voice. Although she has performed all over the world with the likes of Elton John, Luciano Pavarotti and the Prince of Pop himself, it was a show-stealing American appearance on the recent VH1 Divas Live Las Vegas special that perhaps made the boldest statement of the hold she is destined to have. It might have taken awhile, but this is one diva who is live, kicking and ready to show us all that she’s got it. Ian Drew: We have a history together, baby. I was actually working for your record label when the tape came in of you on The Cut. The impression of your talent was so immediate, yet it has taken you some time to break out here. Anastacia: Epic has shown me nothing but love ever since, and it didn’t change. I really give them credit for going wherever the coals were hot. We decided not to put pressure on America because Europe was where it was hot first. The majority of my last two years has been overseas because the success was there and so I built that up. In order to break in America, you really do have to be here for a period of time. So the company and I set aside six months on this album for the majority of my time to be in America. ID: Part of that exposure came recently on that incredible Divas Live appearance. How do you think you managed to upstage all of those music legends? A: I think because I was the most unknown is why people were just like ‘wow.’ If they knew who I was, it wouldn’t have mattered. I didn’t give the best performance that I know I am capable of giving, but, in my heart, I was trying not to be bigger than what I believed those ladies deserved. I am very glad that VH-1 believed in me enough to give me that much on the show. I was the unknown name on the bill and they honored me with special guest status and gave me so much airtime, my own solo and a duet with Celine Dion. It was such a pleasure. ID: To what do you attribute your phenomenal European success as opposed to your lack of recognition here? A: First of all, we didn’t put the first record out here the way that we are with Freak of Nature. You gotta think about what it takes to break a record in America. You can’t just put it out in the stores. It requires a huge marketing and publicity launch. On the other hand, I didn’t do anything special to make the first album sell so much overseas. I have not done anything else on the second album for it to do the numbers that it did off the bat. I think I just finally have a fan base that I never had before, and I have the chance to put a record out and to just be myself. That is more endearing to an audience – knowing that your performance is not manufactured. My fans would be the best ones to ask because they tell me that it is because I keep it real and they don’t feel like they are being jipped as fans. ‘Freak doesn’t have to be a negative word. It can be an entirely positive word about the embrace of one’s self.’ ID: But don’t you think a part of the problem in getting American audiences to bite is that you are hard to pin down as an artist? First of all, you are this little white girl with a booming, soulful voice, and your music doesn’t fit into one category. A: Before I got the deal, it was hard to get anyone to believe in what they could do with me. Now, though, they did what they needed to do, which is to put me out as myself. Epic believed in me, allowed me to write music that I felt and allowed me to sing it as I felt. They also put out nice, conservative pictures that didn’t punch on the sexpot thing too much on the first album. ID: I notice that you are just busting out with the sexuality now. A: Now I am just showing it off before it falls to the ground! Seriously, they are very sweet because they are going along with my journey. I was more conservative on the first album and then, as I found myself as an artist, my second album became me more. It’s completely me, from the outfits to the package design to the title — Freak of Nature — that is about celebrating individuality because we are all freaks. Freak doesn’t have to be a negative word. It can be an entirely positive word about the embrace of one’s self. ID: Has that included coming out publicly about your Crohn’s Disease? A: Yes. It is one of the biggest blessings I ever got. I compare my journey as one of AIDS or cancer because it really forces you to be very present in your existence. I treat every day as if it’s the last and with a kind heart. Crohn’s has been a growing experience, and I wear my scar like a medal because I am here. I just felt like I needed to let my fans know that I am a girl with a disease and I’m proud of it. ID: You have so many different sounds on both of your albums. Do you think that has stood in your way because the music industry is so centered on categorization? A: To me, I have a universal sound and an infusion of music that balances what my voice is. My voice has a lot of different elements while maintaining its own character. It is an instrument that balances well with both rock or dance, but it doesn’t balance 100 percent with one kind of music. I can’t do an only rock album, for example. My voice has so much to offer; it’s not one-dimensional. That’s why my music is not one-dimensional. My music can go to pop, rock or funk, and it can also go to all those things in one song. What makes music beautiful is to bring together different types of music. My fans like my music because it gives elements of what they like with a different taste. I think that my audience is the type of audience that, even though one type of music might be their favorite, they can fit me into their CD selections. ID: And that voice makes it possible. It defies boundaries. Did it just come out like that from day one? A: Yep, and that is why I didn’t really understand that it was a gift, and it took me so long to make it. If I had worked at it and went to singing classes, I would have understood what I had and what I had developed. I always had it, although I never attempted to be a singer until I was 18. That was because I started dancing and producers asked me if I sang. I then started developing and finding out what I was as a singer throughout the years. The first time that I really realized what I liked to do singing-wise was on The Cut, which is how we connected. That was the first time that I ever really got to sing the way that I wanted to sing with my own look. Some judges didn’t like what I was wearing but said my voice blew them away. I think I was very intimidated to show my sexuality because I didn’t think they would listen to me sing. Now I am comfortable with my art, and I am comfortable to show more of my womanhood. ID: Do you feel any pressure as a female artist that you have to do that? A: No. It is the opposite. Now I feel comfortable that I don’t have to hide it. I felt like I had to hide it because it was such a factor that I didn’t want it to be a deterrent, as strange as that may sound. I wanted to be an artist, and that was my struggle coming out. In time, I realized that I could do both. Every day it took more of me realizing more about myself as it started taking off. ID: Do you feel that self-acceptance has become a bigger part of the music? A: My main premise to the whole album is about inner strength. My own daily struggle to stay in self, and my biggest method is, without sounding programmed, to take things one day at a time. It is about being present at every moment, whether at home or on the red carpet. If I could share one message, it’s about the beauty of what I love to do. I am not shy to say I really love to sing. If I can share anything with people, listen to my words and hear my journey. ID: What have you learned the most from your success after the long road to get there? A: Nobody wears their own hair [laughs]. I am so in shock. I look at everything differently now! www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q9 Q10 www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q11 Expressions Naked Curiosity Let’s Pretend By Dennis Scott-Bush “The Horse likes it stinky,” James announced. “And kinky, too,” he added. The Horse was what James called the man he’d been dating for nearly three weeks. He was very well hung, as the nickname implied, and James enjoyed riding him. “Not stinky like body odor all the time,” James clarified. “But he loves to get sweaty and smelly and have sex that way.” The Horse wasn’t alone. I know many gay men who prefer the primal aroma to a cleaner, antiseptic alternative. James had always been among the latter group. He wanted his bedmates to be freshly scrubbed and soap-scented before they crawled between his sheets. But, now, James was pretending to relish the musky mansex. “Last week, he suggested that we do it in the shower and I was thrilled at the idea of getting clean, first,” James related. “Then, he proceeded to pee on me, while I was washing his chest.” James pretended to like that, too. Q12 I wondered what happened to the James that I knew — the man who would launch a tirade about the simplest infractions of behavior from a boyfriend or trick. That James would have said, “I am what I am. I’ve got to be me. I’m not fond of your funk and I don’t like the pee.” Instead, he was taking his would-be boyfriend’s kinks in stride. He was mellow. And yellow. What had gotten into him? The Horse. And not just in the way one immediately assumes. Of course, The Horse was a forceful source of jam-packed pleasure. But it was the attention his equine appendage brought to James in other situations that made the difference. www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK “He went with me to a hot tub party and I was the envy of every guy there!” “He went with me to a hot tub party and I was the envy of every guy there!” James boasted. “They were literally drooling when they got a look at him naked.” So, for the time being, James was willing to stomach stinky and kinky in order to mesh with horseflesh and squire him around. My friend Cameron would have completely understood James’ mind-set. Cam referred to himself as a sexual chameleon because he subjugated his own likes and dislikes to those of whomever he was sleeping with at the time. It’s not that he didn’t have preferences of his own. Cam just believed that he would be more appealing to tricks if he was able to buy into their fantasies rather than impose his druthers on others. At what point, though, do we stop pretending and show our playmates the real us? How much do we suppress our own desires to fit into someone else’s idea of good sex. For Cam, after two or three times of faking fascination with other people’s predilections, his interest in playing let’s pretend began to wane. He would try to add some of his favorites to their sexual menu and would get annoyed when the tricks weren’t accommodating. The problem was even more pronounced, when Cam got serious with a guy. Typically, he’d put his whole hard and soul into whatever floated his sexual skipper’s boat. He’d rave about how much he loved the bondage, armpit sniffing, intense nipple work or whatever else the other guy was into. And he’d wax rhapsodic about how well everything was going between him and the potential partner. Bliss was fleeting. Soon, Cam began to resent being stuck in the role of gleeful follower, especially when the terrain got especially twisted. He whined that he wasn’t being appreciated for who his was. Eventually, even the most zealous child loses interest in pretending and wants to just be. Yet, Cam was the one who put aside his personal preferences and played the bogus part with such selfless gusto from the start. Possible love connections usually went the way of quick tricks. And Cam was left with the question, “Did they only like me because I pretended to like what they like?” He never took the next step to try and answer that question. He figured that someone would have stayed around, by then, if the real Cam had real value. To a certain degree, most of us are guilty of trying to be who someone else wants us to be—at least for a while. And, if it’s a shortterm situation, it often feels like it’s worth it. But, when the possibility of a longer linking exists, all the masquerading does is lay a faux foundation for a shaky future. Let’s pretend? Let’s not. Dennis Scott-Bush’s work appears in publications throughout the country. E-mail may be directed to him at [email protected] www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q13 Theatre Preview A Black Dyke’s Journey from the Projects to the Pulpit Bishop Ma-Hee Presents One Woman Show The vignettes incorporate spoken word Bishop S.F. Ma-Hee has an interesting performance, a capella singing and African way of describing her one woman show: “If I drumming to illustrate messages of affirmation. had to pin it down, it would be elements of For While the piece is about Ma-Heé’s own Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide personal journey, she believes that Sistah from the Hood deals with issues When the Rainbow Is Enuf that are universal—love, meets Stomp.” acceptance, family, patriotism Ma-Heé’s original and a person’s relationship performance piece, Sistah with God. from the Hood, will be “When I came out, I didn’t presented June 21-23, and just have to question my July 5-7 at the Gay and sexuality with the church, I had Lesbian Community Center in to question the church’s Fort Lauderdale. The July 5 stance on sexism, classism and performance will be done as a I had to question their fundraiser for the efforts being contribution to racism,” she waged to preserve Miamisays. “I had to figure out Dade’s human rights Bishop S.F. Ma-Hee where I fit in to the whole ordinance. Sistah from the Hood is a series of program.” Each performance will feature a autobiographical vignettes about what it was like for a black lesbian from a single parent question an answer session afterwards, household to grow up in the Pentecostal which Ma-Heé feels helps people understand the issues raised in the show. community. The idea started out as a book Ma-Hee She says that for her, the rehearsals and the wrote about her life. When she completed the feedback has been free therapy. “We take book, she dictated it into a tape recorder so it you for a ride,” she says, laughing. “But the could be transcribed in proper manuscript form. fact is, I had to be willing to take the ride “It hit me that this would be an awesome first.” Sistah from the Hood runs June 21-23 performance art piece,” she says. Performing comes naturally to Ma-Hee; and July 5-7 at the Gay and Lesbian she belonged to theatrical troupes before Community Center, 1717 N. Andrews attending seminary and beginning her ministry. Avenue in Fort Lauderdale. Showtimes are “It was an interesting, emotionally challenging Friday and Saturday, 8pm, with a special process to transpose the piece form a piece of Pride Service on Sundays at 6pm. Tickets literature to something that people could feel, are $10; tickets for the July 5 fundraiser are $20. see and connect with,” Ma-Hee says. By Mary Damiano Q14 www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK By Mary Damiano Jim Caruso is the kind of guy whose birthday party gets a three-page spread in In Style magazine. Of course, when your birthday party takes place at actress Linda Lavin’s fabulous Manhattan apartment and guests include pal Liza Minnelli, who wouldn’t want to do a three-page spread on you? For those of you not up on such Broadway fetes, Jim Caruso is a top cabaret entertainer. He has toured with Liza, performed at Carnegie Hall Rosemary Clooney and has played some of the most fabled New York hotspots—the Oak Room, Michael’s Pub and the Russian Tea Room. He is also a correspondent for E!, manning the red carpet at the recent Tony Awards and doing sit-down interviews with Mary Tyler Moore and John Leguizamo. Caruso, who’s known for both his crooning and comedy, will bring his show to West Palm Beach’s Colony Hotel for his Florida debut. He will perform in the hotel’s Royal Room two weekends, June 20-22 and June 27-29. Tickets are $25 for the show only; $59 for dinner and show packages. Dinner begins at 6:15; all shows begin at 8pm. For more information and to purchase tickets, call the Colony Hotel at 561.655.5430. Live Theater • Dance Music • Art Exhibitions Radio • Television Q CulturalEvents Events Through July 18: Turtle Walk - Learn about sea turtles at John D. MacArthur Beach State Park, 10900 State Road 703/A1A in North Palm Beach. This one of the area’s most popular sites for viewing turtle nesting. The viewing will be done from a distance so that the mother will not be disturbed. Flash photography is not permitted. $5 per person. Mondays and Thursdays at 9 p.m. For Information and Reservations call (561) 6246952. Tuesday, June 18: Miami SOL vs. Houston Comets – The game starts at 7 p.m. at American Airlines Arena. For information or to purchase tickets call (786) 777-4765 or visit www.miamisol.com. Thursday – Sunday, June 20 – 23: Mad Hatters Ball 2002 Four days of events and specials offered around Fort Lauderdale benefiting four local charity organizations: The Poverello Center, Gildas Club of South Florida, Wansiki AIDS Foundation and the GLCCSF. For information go to www.MadHattersBall.com or call (954) 567-4489. Friday, June 21: Miami SOL vs. Washington Mystics - The game starts at 12:30 p.m. at American Airlines Arena. For information or to purchase tickets call (786) 777-4765 or visit www.miami-sol.com. Saturday, June 22: Mangos, Mangos, Mangos - Everything about mangos: how to grow them, their insect and disease problems, recipes and the many varieties. Sample fruits until the juice drips from your elbows. Visit the more than 100 varieties growing in the Fruit & Spice Park. 10 AM to 1 PM, Instructor: Chris Rollins, Fee: $25. Fruit and Spice Park, 24801 SW 187th Ave. in Homestead. Reservations are required. Please call (305) 247-5727. June 22: Miami Fury vs. Tennessee – The Miami Fury, is a Professional Women’s Football team that plays full-contact NFL rules football. All home games are played at the legendary Orange Bowl Stadium located at 1501 NW 3rd Street in Miami. Game Time is at 5 p.m. and parking is free. For more information or to order tickets contact team owner, Lisa McAllister, at (305)-631-1164 or visit www.miamifury.com. Saturday - Sunday, June 22 - 23: 4th Annual Wise Women Weekend – An empowering weekend of health and wellness created by and for women, with keynote speaker, Marianne Williamson and special guest, Rosie O’Donnell. Plus global peace activist Naomi Tutu, songweaver Amy Carol Webb and a team of South Florida’s expert facilitators. 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. at the Radisson Deauville Resort Hotel, 6701 Collins Ave, Miami Beach. Admission is $225. For information call (305)-865-8511. Sunday, June 23: 2002 Stonewall Street Festival & Parade – The parade will start off at 11 a.m. from Ft. Lauderdale High School on N.E. 4th Ave and will proceed along 4th (becomes Wilton Dr.). The street festival begins at noon on Wilton Drive. For more information call (954) 566-7876 or visit www.pgftl.org. Monday – Wednesday, June 24 – 26: SAA Dry Tortugas Dive – This dive is for skill level “Experienced Open Water” or above. Cost for liveaboard dive trip is $675/ person. Nitrox is available at an extra cost of $75 otherwise everything else is supplied. Contact Bernardo at [email protected] for full details. Tuesday, June 25: South Middle River Civic Association – The SMRCA monthly general membership meeting will be held at 7:15 p.m. at the GLCC, 1717 North Andrews Ave. For more information call the SMRCA Hotline at (954) 523-6900, or e-mail: [email protected]. Wednesday, June 26: Renowned Relationship Psychic, Jill Dahne – Jill is ranked in America’s top 100 psychics. She was recently featured on Lifetime television for her prediction of 756 marriages. Join her for an open reading from 7:30 – 10 p.m. at Borders, 2240 E. Sunrise Blvd, Ft. Lauderdale. For more information call (954) 566-6335. Thursday, June 27: “TimeBomb” – Dr. Lee Reichman is a professor of Medicine, Professor of Preventive Medicine and Community Health, the Executive Director of New Jersey School of Medicine’s Tuberulosis Center and author of “TimeBomb.” Dr. Reichman will discuss and sign copies of his book. 10 a.m. at Borders, 2240 E. Sunrise Blvd, Ft. Lauderdale. For more information call (954) 566-6335. Live Theatre and Dance Through June 23: “Victor/Victoria” – Matinees are Wed, Thurs, Sat & Sun at 2 p.m. Evening performances are Thurs, Fri & Sat at 8 p.m. and Sun at 7 p.m. Tickets are $27. To order contact the Stage Door Theatre at (954) 344-7765. The Coral Springs Stage Door Theatre is located at 8036 W. Sample Rd. Through June 30: “Jesus Hopped the ‘A’ Train” – A hard-hitting portrayal of prison life at New York’s Rikers Island, where an inmate is confronted by a religious fanatic. Performances are Sundays, 2 p.m., 7 p.m.; Thursdays, 8 p.m.; Fridays, 8 p.m. and Saturdays, 8 p.m. GableStage , 1200 Anastasia Ave., Coral Gables. Tickets are $32. For information and tickets call the Box office: (305)-445-1119. Through July 5: “Summer Shorts” Even the theater puts on shorts for the Florida summer. The seventh annual series features 14 brief comedies and dramas that last under 20 minutes each. Nine Southeastern premieres and five world premieres will debut in the new play festival. Two mini-musicals — one set in a restaurant, the other on a park bench — join in the festival lineup for the first time. Performances through June 30 are at Ring Theater, 1380 Miller Drive, Miami. For information and tickets call (305) 3655400. Performances from July 5 – 21 are at Broward Center for the Performing Arts, 201 Southwest Fifth Avenue. For information and tickets call (954) 462-0222 or 1-800 564-9539. Through July 6: “Retch” - Miami Light Project Presents “Retch,” written by Ivonne Azurdia and directed by Ivonne Azurdia and Ricky Martinez. Azurdia is the resident playwright of the Mad Cat Theatre Company and Retch is her directorial/producing debut. Five women play multiple characters in this collection of raw, uncensored monologues about modern life and relationships. Performances are Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. at The Light Box, 3000 Biscayne Boulevard. Special Opening Night Gala June 14th - $25. General admission is $12 and students are $7 with valid I.D. Call (786) 201-0615 for more information. Through July 7: “Nixon’s Nixon” – This play by Russell Lees is at the Gable Stage, 1200 Anastasia Ave. in Coral Gables. Performances are Thursday – Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 2 & 7 p.m. For information and tickets call (305) 446-1116. Tuesday – Saturday, June 18 – 22: Mr. A’s Sizzling Summer Magic - Think summer is hot? Mr. A’s magic is hotter! In fact it sizzles! Experience the heat as four-time Florida State Magic Champion Richard Adler dazzles you with magic, ventriloquism and just plain fun. Shows are at the Puppetry Arts Center, 1200 S. Congress Ave., West Palm Beach. June 18 – 21 at 10:30 a.m. and June 22 at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Admission is $4. For information call (561) 967-3231. Saturday, June 22: Ellen DeGeneres – Catch Ellen in Concert! The curtain rises at 8 p.m. at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts, 201 Southwest Fifth Avenue. For information and tickets call (954) 462-0222 or 1-800 564-9539. http://www.curtainup.org/ Saturday, June 22: Cinderella – Classic ballet performed by the South Broward Ballet Company at Hollywood Central Performing Arts Center, 1770 Monroe Street in Hollywood. Performances are at 2 and 8 p.m. Tickets are $25 and VIP seating is $50. For information and tickets call (954) 924-8175. Fridays: “Separate Checks”- This Comedy Improv Troupe performs every Friday night at 9:30 p.m. at the Hollywood Playhouse, 2640 Washington St., (954) 922-0404. Music Saturday & Sunday, June 22 & 23: “Rhythm of Life” - Join the Gay Men’s Chorus for this tuneful celebration of pride as we kick off the summer with your favorite selections. Sunday, June 16: 2:00 p.m. at the Metropolitan Community Church of the Palm Beaches, 4857 Northlake Boulevard, Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. All tickets are $20 for general admission seating. Saturday, June 22: 8 p.m. at the Broward Center’s Amaturo Theatre, 210 S.W. 5th Ave., Ft. Lauderdale. Tickets are $15, $21 & $25. Sunday, June 23: 2 p.m. Art & Culture Center of Hollywood, 1650 Harrison St., Hollywood. All tickets are $20 for general admission seating. For tickets go to https:// www.pride-shoppe.com. Friday, June 28: Hot Brass Monkey - Live at Holiday Park, located at Sunrise Boulevard & Federal Highway in Sunrise. 7:30 – 9:30 p.m. For information call (954) 828-6500. Saturday, June 29: RoughRiders Variety Show - The RoughRiders present their most elaborate, most wild and most anticipated Variety Show. Included as entertainment are: RoughRiders, Gay Men’s Chorus of South Florida, The Julie Christies, Lambda Chorale, The Return of The Weather Girls, The Abba Queens, and many more. It’s an evening not to be missed! The curtain rises at 8 p.m. at the Broward Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets are $23 and $18. For information and tickets call Mike Banfield at (954) 977-5257 or the Broward Center’s Box Office at (954) 4620222. Sunday, June 30: Tramaine Hawkins – This KCLLWS Foundation Benefit concert is at 5 p.m. at Coral Springs Center for the Arts, 2855 Coral Springs Drive in Coral Springs. Admission is $26.50. For tickets and information call (954) 344-5990. Saturday, July 13th: Britney Spears concert. 7:30 p.m. at National Car Rental Center To order tickets go to Ticketmaster.com. Art Exhibitions Through June 28: “United and Proud!” - An exhibition in Celebration of Gay and Lesbian Pride Month will be on display at four libraries. The exhibits are designed to promote local artists who present a positive message about gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people in the community. The “United and Proud!” exhibits will be on display at: Main Library, 100 S. Andrews Avenue, Fort Lauderdale; Fort Lauderdale Branch, 1300 E. Sunrise Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale; North Regional/BCC Library, 1100 Coconut Creek Blvd., Coconut Creek; South Regional/BCC Library, 7300 Pines Blvd., Pembroke Pines. Free and open to the public. Through July 7: “Florida Photographers: The Ordinary to the Extraordinary” - The nature of photography is one of description. However the goal is not only to describe the world but to transform it as well. An eclectic group of south Florida photographers come together and exhibit works that explore the mundane, a surrogate record of an ordinary experience, place or person that becomes heightened and exaggerated through perception. The Art and Culture Center of Hollywood, 1650 Harrison Street in Hollywood. Admission is free to members; $5 adults; $3 students; free to children 13 or younger with adult. Free family day on the third Sunday of every month. Through July 28: Maria MartinezCanas: A Retrospective - This retrospective of Cuban-born, Miami resident photographer, Maria Martinez-Canas, will feature many of her most notable photographs, as well as recent work. Ms. Martinez-Canas has been widely exhibited nationally and internationally; however, this will be the artist’s first solo show in South Florida. This exhibition is at the Museum of Art, 1 East Las Olas Boulevard. For information call (954) 525-5500. The Espanola Way FESTIVART- Every Friday and Saturday, 7 p.m.- midnight at Washington Ave. and Espanola Way, Miami Beach. Live music. For more information call (305) 673-4166. Radio The Alternative Radio Show - The only GLBT Talk and Entertainment radio program in South Florida, the Keys and the Bahamas. Live every Thursday evening at 9 p.m. on WAXY 790 AM and worldwide on the Internet at www.radioalternative.com. The Norm Kent Show – He’s Back! Interviews and commentary with Norm Kent, weekday mornings at 10 a.m. on WFTL 1400 AM radio. Issues Over the Rainbow - MarkyG hosts this new gay and lesbian early morning talk show. Sunday mornings at 6:30 a.m. on PARTY 93.1 FM. www.Party931.com Television SoFla Q TV- Television for the alternative lifestyle. For information call (305) 534-3975 or visit www.soflaqtv.com. www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q15 Concert Preview I’ve Got Rhythm, I’ve Got Music Gay Men’s Chorus Presents Pride Concert By Mary Damiano The things people have in common rather than the things that make them different will be the theme of this year’s Pride concert by the Gay Men’s Chorus South Florida. The concerts, called “The Rhythm of Life,” will combine jazz, Broadway show tunes, ballads, and poetry set to music, with a little camp thrown into the mix. According to Artistic Director Todd Wiley, the theme was chosen because the essence of the concert is summed up in the lyrics to the song, The Rhythm of Life. “What the song is saying is that no matter how different we are, we all go through the same experiences—searching for love, happiness and fulfillment, dealing with the `-* -- Q16 www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK ebbs and flows and highs and lows of our own lives.” “The Rhythm of Life” will be presented on Saturday, June 22, at the Amaturo Theatre, Broward Center for the Performing Arts, 201 SW 5 Avenue, Fort Lauderdale. Showtime is 8pm. Tickets are $25, $20, and $15. For more information and to purchase tickets, call 954.462.0222. The next afternoon, Sunday, June 23, the Gay Men’s Chorus will present their show at the Hollywood Central Performing Arts Center, 1770 Monroe Street, Hollywood. Showtime is 2pm. Tickets are $20. For more information or to purchase tickets, call 954.924.8175. To find out more about the Gay Men’s Chorus South Florida, visit www.gmcsf.net. Artistic Expression Erotic Exhibition Opens at Miami Gallery ‘Art and Lust’ Show Is First at Wild Seduction Space By Ian Drew A landmark exhibit of erotic art has helped to establish a new home for the underground in a Miami gallery. The Wild Seduction Gallery has mounted the Art & Lust exhibition since early April, bringing erotic art in a variety of media to the newly opened avantgarde art space. The exhibit embodies the gallery’s mission, which is to exhibit lowbrow, outside and erotic art. It is the first show to be put up in the space, showcasing drawings, sculpture and photographs by artists from several continents along with classic erotica and works by respected artists not usually associated with erotic art. “Erotic art has been considered a second- or even third-class art form, prescribed to underground cult status,” says gallery co-founder Pili Cano. “We want to provide a prominent place for erotic and underground artists who have been neglected for too long by official cultural organizations.” The exhibit features rare pieces by the fetish art master Eric Stanton and gay erotica mainstay Tom of Finland. Also included in the show are works by Swiss Surrealist painter and sculptor H.R. Giger, visionary painter Joe Coleman, Smithsonian artist Alfredo Ceibal and Eduard Duval Carrié, a prominent artist in the Miami art scene. Among the contemporary figures in the show are fetish photographer Eric Kroll, Los Angeles performer Ron Athey, Japanese illustrator Toshio Saeki, Italian comic artist Giovanna Casotto and painters Michael Manning and John John Jesse. In addition to the visual submissions, the gallery will present related videos, lectures and performances throughout the summer by Guillermo Gomez Pena, Ron Athey, Annie Sprinkle and others during the exhibit dates. The exhibit will be on view until August 31. It will run from Tuesdays to Saturdays, 11am to 3pm. Following the Miami debut, it will tour Spain. The Wild Seduction Gallery is located at 2762 NW 22nd Street in Miami. For more information, call 305.633.8951 or visit www.wildseduction.com. www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q17 By Charlene Lichtenstein For the week of 6/03/02 Randy retrograde Mercury fully redirects now and sends our plaintive missives into the stratosphere. At the same time, sexy Venus pushes into lusty Leo. Finally we mean what we say and say what we mean. So what EXACTLY are you saying compadre?? ARIES (MARCH 21 - APRIL 20) Proud Rambos get the word Out in no uncertain terms. Mercury goes direct and so do you. Have a little fun, courtesy of flirty Venus. The planets will find a way to deliver the perfect social companion to your soiree. Hmm, just how social are you?? TAURUS (APRIL 21 - MAY 21) Have you been standing under an economic raincloud? As Mercury redirects, queer Bulls shed their raincoats and bask in the sun. Venus in Leo and encourages you to nestle in your nest. Don’t nestle alone. Venus shares the love and so should you. GEMINI (MAY 22 - JUNE 21) Redeem yourself this week as Mercury redirects and charming Venus transits generous Leo. Spread the good cheer and pass on a few love notes while you are at it. Pink Twins will need quite a few cheery exchanges to get back in the social graces. CANCER (JUNE 22 - JULY 23) Gay Crabs might have conjured all sorts of wooly scenarios during retro Mercury but are now back to rock solid earth and ready to rock and roll. And Venus in Leo pours on the good times with a vengeance. How about making that chocolate sauce instead.... LEO (JULY 24 - AUGUST 23) As Mercury redirects you have the opportunity to reconstruct friendships that might have deconstructed. Venus in your own sign helps by giving you an extra dollop of charm. Package it and sell it on the street while it is still fresh, you fresh thing! VIRGO (AUGUST 24 - SEPTEMBER 23) If retro Mercury caused some potholes in your professional superhighway in May, direct Mercury helps fill them in and avoid more roadkill in June. Try again queer Virgo. Venus gives you a reprieve if you can state your case. Do you want a reprieve? LIBRA (SEPTEMBER 24 - OCTOBER 23) Travel might have been more trouble than it was worth but now, as Mercury redirects, proud Libras should dip a toe into the global pond. But don’t dog paddle alone; Venus in Leo provides the wilde party for your pool. Don’t forget your bathing cap.... SCORPIO (OCTOBER 24 - NOVEMBER 22) Gay Scorps might have slipped up in the romance department with retro Mercury. Make up for lost time now. Good timing; lusty Venus ambles into robust Leo and casts your spell in the corporate arena. Mixing business with pleasure? Oh why not! SAGITTARIUS (NOVEMBER 23 - DECEMBER 22) If partnerships have lost their luster, direct Mercury can now mop and glow. Gay Archers make their randy intentions known. Venus in Leo gets into the matchmaking act offering the two of you a romantic launch. Explore every coastline and cavern with your dingy. CAPRICORN (DECEMBER 23 - JANUARY 20) Pink Caps are usually fairly politic but this past month might have made you more pouty than usual on the job. Make your best move now. As sexy Venus enters Leo, your desire to push your pencil is heightened.... but not anywhere near the office! AQUARIUS (JANUARY 21 - FEBRUARY 19) As Mercury redirects, party hearty Aqueerians are ripe and ready for almost anything. Charismatic Venus is moving into Leo and turns your attention and desire to one particular lucky person. Let your actions speak louder and prouder than words. PISCES (FEBRUARY 20 - MARCH 20) Mercury redirects and helps you get a handle on domestic situations. Things have been said that rocked the boat but now Guppies know just what to say to calm the turgid waters. Mean what you say and say what you mean, especially to relatives. © 2002 MADAM LICHTENSTEIN, LLC., All Rights Reserved.For Entertainment Purposes Only. Check out her site www.AccessNewAge.com/Stargayzer for egreetings, horoscopes and Pride jewelry. Her book “HerScopes; A Guide To Astrology For Lesbians” from Simon & Schuster is available at bookstores and major booksites. Q18 www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK Q19 Q20 www.ExpressGayNews.com • June 17, 2002 CYMK