Anti-gay persecution, corruption cloud Sochi Winter Olympics
Transcription
Anti-gay persecution, corruption cloud Sochi Winter Olympics
Equality lawsuit filed in Wisconsin The ACLU charges that state law banning samesex marriage violates the U.S. Constitution. full coverage, pages 8–11 February 6, 2014 | Vol. 5 No. 6 Anti-gay persecution, corruption cloud Sochi Winter Olympics page 4 10 Meet the couples Wisconsin couples suing for marriage equality simply want recognition and security for their families. 18 High concept Milwaukee’s auto show will roll out concept cars en route to success or speeding toward failure. 19 Playing gods Actor Kellan Lutz’s Greekgod body explains why he keeps getting cast as one, most recently as Hercules. 24 Entertainment briefs Check out what’s happening in the world of entertainment here in Wisconsin and beyond. 27 Wine & chocolate WiG offers a guide on pairing the two most cherished — and healthful — foods of love. 2 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM News with a twist STAND YOUR COOKIES In California, a man was arrested for pulling a gun on a Girl Scout who was selling cookies as anti-choice groups launch yet another boycott because the youth organization’s “national leadership continues to show its attachment to pro-abortion leaders and organizations,” said John Pisciotta, director of ProLife Waco. “I am offended that the Girl Scouts honor pro-abortion activists like Wendy Davis and Kathleen Sebelius and hold them up as leaders to be emulated by our young women and girls,” he added. WiGWAG O b a m a : Marijuana, “as you noted A longtime state DemoMr. President, cratic Party consultant says is less dangerpop singer Clay Aiken is ous than alcoconsidering a run for Congress. The American Idol hol ‘in terms of its individrunner-up from 2003 has ual impact on consumers.’” talked with the Democratic Congressional Campaign STATE OF THE OOPS During his state of the Committee about whether to challenge Republican state address on Jan. 22, Rep. Renee Ellmers for the Wisconsin Gov. Scott seat representing North Walker praised a registered Carolina’s 2nd District. The sex offender with three 35-year-old Aiken is gay drunk-driving convictions and has a son, Parker, who as a symbol of his adminwas born through in-vitro istration’s success. “Each of these people were (sic) fertilization. looking for a job, or a better opportunity, over the POT REP U.S. Rep. Jared Polis, past three years,” Walker D-Colo., wants to show off said, referring to a group his state’s newest indus- of people standing with try — retail marijuana — to him onstage. One of them, President Barack Obama Christopher Barber, 32, has and Senate Majority Lead- had his probation revoked er Harry Reid. Polis sent for two separate convicboth men an invite to tour tions, including a 2005 his state and see how new conviction on third-degree marijuana regulations are sexual assault charges. He being implemented. Polis, has also been convicted of who is openly gay, pointed forgery, battery and drunk out in his letter to Barack driving. SINGING REP? Februar y 6, 2014 ‘THE HAPPY LADY DANCE HOUR’ By Lisa Neff & Louis Weisberg but … she has allowed me to sing and deliver a mesEllen DeGeneres now sage in the Holy Ghost and has viewers in China for tongues.” her celebrity-focused, light-hearted daytime talk MIXING IT UP Tune into the telecast of show. Warner Brothers announced the deal with the Westminster Kennel Sohu.com in mid-January. Club Dog Show this month The Ellen DeGeneres Show and you just might see will be streaming on the some all-American mutts video site about 48 hours mixing it up with the Labafter it airs in the United rador retrievers and the States. DeGeneres tweet- French bulldogs. The show ed: “My show’s now on in is opening to mixed-breed China! You can retweet competitors for the first this, or tattoo it on your time. The whatever pups can compete in a new agillower back.” ity trial, but Best in Show remains reserved for the POLITICAL TONGUE A woman who’s seek- purebreds. ing to become Alaska’s next U.S. senator recently STILL SOUNDING OFF The voice of late actor uploaded a video of herself on YouTube speaking in and gun advocate Charltongues while fully clothed ton Heston is being used in a steam room. “I’m at the in a Republican’s run for Alaska Club West and I’m the Michigan House. Gary spending a little time in the Glenn said he’s using steam room with Suzie,” excerpts from two ads Republican candidate Kath- Heston recorded — one leen Tonn said to the cam- for a 1986 campaign to era. “Suzie doesn’t know pass right-to-work legislaJesus Christ as her savior, tion in Idaho and another from Glenn’s unsuccessful run for Congress in that state in 1992. Glenn told The Saginaw News that he and Heston kept in touch. Glenn also has a son named Heston. NOT QUITE SUNDANCE Well, there just haven’t been many good roles since Erik Estrada portrayed Officer Frank “Ponch” Poncharello in ChiPs. Early this month, the actor was invited to the Thomas Road Baptist Church In Lynchburg, Va., for the premiere of his latest film. Uncommon is about fictional Rosewood High School and teens who “struggle against political correctness to defend their privilege to worship, meet and perform.” Produced with the help of the ultraright Liberty Counsel, the film also stars LC founder Mat Staver as himself. Can we say direct to DVD? Find more WiGWAG at www.wisconsingazette.com. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Februar y 6, 2014 3 4 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 Playing games in Putin’s Russia By Lisa Neff Staff writer “Faster – Higher – Stronger” — that’s the Olympic motto. But for the Winter Olympics set to begin on Feb. 7 in Sochi, Russia, add “controversial,” “risky,” “corrupt,” “environmentally bankrupt” — and “anti-gay.” Coverage of the Sochi Games has been eclipsed by the outrage unleashed last year when Russian lawmakers enacted a measure allowing authorities to arrest, detain and fine people who deliver “propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations” to minors. Russian President Vladimir Putin has repeatedly defended the law, which essentially forbids any public display of same-sex affection or public statement of pro-gay support. Within Russia, the provision has sanctioned an official crackdown on LGBT civil rights work and cultural celebrations such as Pride. It also has spurred hate-motivated violence, including sexual assaults and bashings, some of them fatal, by right-wing extremists. Outside Russia, human rights advocates have condemned the legislation and its attendant violence through a variety of protests and actions. They launched a series of campaigns to raise money for LGBT causes in Russia, foster global awareness of Russia’s civil rights abuses, press Olympic leaders to speak out against intolerance and rally athletes to embrace the Olympic Spirit, which embodies mutual understanding, friendship, solidarity and fair play. Even before the Olympic torch arrived in Sochi, those campaigns had achieved results — some of them large, some small. On Jan. 31, a coalition of 40 groups — including Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and the Human Rights Campaign — sent an open letter to Olympic sponsors urging them to denounce Russia’s anti-gay law and to run ads promoting LGBT equality during the Games. P H O T O : A P/ S E R G E I G R I T S OLYMPIC DELUSIONS: Drag queens change costumes during a break in their show in Mayak, one of two gay clubs in the Black Sea summer resort of Sochi, Russia. Sochi Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov insists that there are no LGBT people in his city of 343,000 residents. President Vladimir Putin’s harsh crackdown on gays has provoked an international outcry that threatens to overshadow the Games. “LGBT people must not be targeted with violence or deprived of their ability to advocate for their own equality,” the letter said. “As all eyes turn toward Sochi, we ask you to stand with us.” A day earlier, a ballerina in handcuffs took an Amnesty petition — signed by more than 330,000 people — to Moscow. The petition called for a repeal of the law. A week ahead of the opening ceremony, the German Olympic Sports Confederation released photographs of its athletes’ wearing rainbow-themed uniforms, although there was some confusion concerning the motives behind the fashion statement. In New Zealand, the parliament passed an unprecedented, unanimous resolution that read: We “wish our athletes competing in the Winter Olympics in Sochi well, and note Russia’s recent passing of antihomosexual legislation, and ask the New Zealand Government to urge other governments and the Winter Olympics Organizing Committee to protect the rights of all people in Rus- sia regardless of their sexual orientation.” In Sweden, a “Live and Let Live” video featured thousands of Swedes singing the Russian national anthem in the Stockholm Olympic Stadium in support of LGBT people in Russia. Organizer Sean Kelly suggested “protesting using the Russian national anthem, making it a proud song for people of all colors and orientations. Singing for those who can’t.” The sports ministers of Sweden and Finland announced they would not attend the opening ceremony, and German President Joachim Gauck, French President Francois Hollande and European Union Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding are skipping the games altogether. President Barack Obama said he would not lead the U.S. delegation to Sochi, and neither would the first lady — who attended the Summer Olympics in London — nor the vice president or second lady. Instead, the president sent former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano to lead a delegation that includes three openly gay athletes — tennis legend Billie Jean King and former Olympians Caitlin Cahow and Brian Boitano. “President Obama is extremely proud of our U.S. athletes and looks forward to cheering them on from Washington,” a White House statement said. “He knows they will showcase to the world the best of America — diversity, determination and teamwork.” Meanwhile, mayors of U.S. sister cities with Russian cities called for repeal of the anti-gay law: “This law represents a disconcerting violation of basic human and civil rights and does not reflect the ideals or beliefs of our citizens, nor do we believe that it reflects the values of the citizens of the Russian sister counterparts.” Also, the Human Rights Campaign, the largest gay rights group in the United States, continued to grow its Love Conquers Hate campaign, with celebrities helping to generate more than $100,000 to support the LGBT movement in Russia, where Sochi might become a Stonewall. Anastasia Smirnova, coordinator of the coalition of Russian LGBT organizations, accepted a recent contribution from the campaign: “While the safety of our community continues to be put at risk, more and more individuals and groups stand up to defend and promote equality.” The continued support, she added, “will help this energy last and will contribute to a safer and better life for LGBT people in Russia.” OTHER CONTROVERSIES Seven years go, Vladimir Putin aggressively courted Olympic officials to select the summer resort of Sochi — one of the Russian despot’s favorite places — as the site of the 2014 Winter Olympics. From the beginning, there were concerns about the climate of the region. Two test events in Sochi had to be cancelled in February 2013 because of a lack of snow and rainy weather. The resort city on the Black Sea is un the only subtropical region of Russia. Palm trees line the streets. Part of the $51 billion price tag for the Games — by far the most expensive Winter Games in Oympic history — is the result of the most massive snow-making project ever undertaken. About 230 million gallons of water have been deployed to cover an area equivalent to 500 football fields with two feet of artificial snow. The Games are also overshadowed by the threat of terrorism. The Islamist militant group Vilayat Dagestan has promised “a present” for visitors to Sochi. At the end of December, the group claimed rsponsibility for two suicide bombings that killed 34 people in the city of Volgograd, 420 miles from Sochi. A U.S. Navy command ship and guided missile frigate have been stationed in the Black Sea to respond to possible emergencies. Corruption further clouds the Winter Games. CBS Sports reported recently that Gafur Rakhimov, one of the “four or five most important people in the heroin trade in the world,” was instrumental in swaying the IOC’s decision to stage the games in Sochi. The head of the Russian Olympic Committee publicly praised Rakhimov, who’s currently under criminal indictment in Uzbekistan, for his “single-minded work” in sealing the deal for Sochi by obtaining needed votes from some Asian countries involved in the slection process. Also, numerous complaints have been lodged by Olympic contractors and vendors who allege they were forced to pay bribes and kickbacks to Russian officials overseeing the construction of venues. (See editorial, page 16.) ON THE COVER London activists hold mocking placards of Russian President Vladimir Putin to protest his country’s draconian anti-gay law and demand a change of venue for the Winter Games. Photo by AP/ Lefteris Pitarakis BRING YOUR NIGHT TO LIFE. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM WiG’s Olympic Guide P H O T O : A P/ VA D I M G H I R D A PUTIN ON THE GAMES: Russian President Vladimir Putin arrives at the welcome ceremony for Russia’s Olympic team on Feb. 5, in Sochi, Russia. Athletes will compete for 98 gold medals at Sochi, including in 12 new events. The United States has sent 230 athletes — 105 women and 125 men and a strong representation from Wisconsin — to compete. That’s the largest athlete delegation of any nation in the history of the Winter Olympics. At the last Winter Games, Team USA brought home 37 medals, including nine gold. Mikaela Shiffrin, competing in the women’s slalom, is one U.S. favorite, along with snowboarding sensation Shaun White and five-time Olympians Billy Demong and Bode Miller. Australian snowboarder Belle Brockhoff, who is openly gay, has been one of the most outspoken critics of Putin and Russia’s antigay policy. She said she’s been cautioned against waving a rainbow flag, but says that she’ll hold up six fingers for Principle 6, the anti-discrimination provision in the Olympic Charter. Expect a lot of attention for the Jamaican bobsled team, which raised money for its trip to Russia at the Sundance Film Festival earlier this year. SEEING IS BELIEVING NBCUniversal holds the broadcast rights in the United States and plans to offer 230 hours of coverage on NBCSN, 185 hours on NBC, 45 on MSNBC, 43 on USA Network, 36 on CNBC. It will also stream about 1,000 hours on nbcolympics.com, where viewers will find lots of live footage. Former Olympians Ato Boldon, Tara Lipinski and openly gay skater Johnny Weir will provide commentary. Bob Costas, who has said he plans to ask Putin about gay rights, will host the network’s coverage for the 10th time. PROTESTING PUTIN Russian authorities hope to corral political protesters — who must get permits to demonstrate — in the village of Khost, about 7 miles from Olympic venues. Athletes, under the International Olympic Committee Charter, cannot engage in any demonstration of “political, religious or racial propaganda.” The Committee to Protect Journalists has expressed concerns that Russian authorities have harassed and prevented journalists from covering sensitive stories in Sochi, leading to concerns about free speech at the Games. BUYING AND BOYCOTTING Olympic sponsorship already has brought trouble for some companies. CocaCola has been dropped from a gay magazine’s Brand of the Year contest due to its sponsorship of the Sochi games. Queer Nation targeted Coca-Cola using Coke’s 1970s TV ad featuring the song “I’d Like to Teach the World to Sing” containing images of antigay violence in Russia. Sponsors Atos, Dow Chemical, General Electric, McDonald’s, Omega, Panasonic, Procter & Gamble, Samsung and Visa also have faced criticism. “Corporations with a track record of support for equality should not shy away from their espoused values by staying silent as Russia wages an attack on its LGBT community,” said Ty Cobb, director of global engagement for the Human Rights Campaign. WHAT ARE THE ODDS? The Nevada Gaming Control Board is working with the International Olympic Committee to prevent fixing. Casinos in Nevada can’t take bets on Olympic events, but regulators plan to monitor offshore sports betting and other activity. 5 WIGWAGGY Sochi Mayor Anatoly Pakhomov has proven he isn’t ready for the close-ups certain to come with his city being illuminated under a global spotlight. In an interview with BBC Panorama, the mayor boasted, “Our hospitality will be extended to everyone who respects the laws of the Russian Federation and doesn’t impose their habits on others.” Asked about Russia’s antigay law and gays living in Sochi, Pakhomov said, “We do not have them in our city.” Nonetheless, the city has several gay bars. MILWAUKEE’S BEST DINING, BARS, LIVE MUSIC AND HIGH-ENERGY GAMING ALL UNDER ONE ROOF. BRING YOUR NIGHT TO LIFE AT POTAWATOMI. PAYSBIG.COM • MILWAUKEE • 1-800-PAYSBIG • MAKE A SURE BET— KNOW YOUR LIMIT. ©2014 2014 FOREST COUNTY POTAWATOMI COMMUNITY, WISCONSIN MINING MEDALS | Februar y 6, 2014 6 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 Obama’s SOTU thrills fans, disappoints others DID YOU KNOW? Ronald Reagan started the shout out tradition at the State of the Union in 1982. Reagan paid tribute to Lenny Skutnik, a federal worker who dove into the freezing Potomac River to rescue an Air Florida crash victim. Since then, it has become tradition for the president to recognize special guests who join the first lady in the viewing box. This year, the guests included basketball player Jason Collins, who came out as gay last spring, and Army Sgt. 1st Class Cory Remsburg, who is recovering from serious injuries suffered in a roadside bomb blast in Afghanistan. — L.N. against income inequality and for economic justice for the working poor,” said Christine Neumann-Ortiz, executive director of the Wisconsin-based Voces de la Frontera. This, she said, shows the president can use executive action to “achieve victories for the people who elected him in the face of obstruction by the most unpopular Congress in history.” P H OTO : A P She called on Obama to “do the same President Barack Obama is greeted by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, along with, from left, Milwaukee County Executive Chris Abele with today’s deportation crisis, and use his and Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, after stepping from Air Force One upon his arrival in Milwaukee on Jan. 30. The president visited legal executive authority to provide real General Electric’s Waukesha Gas Engines facility to speak about job training. The visit was part of his post-State of the Union tour. relief for America’s immigrant families, who Speaker John Boehner repeatedly has said ing concrete steps to help address income are being torn apart at historic levels since By Lisa Neff there’s no way the bill will advance in the inequality,” said Heather Cronk of the he took office campaigning on federal immiStaff writer direct-action group GetEqual. “However, I’m gration reform.” President Barack Obama promised in his House. Environmentalists also said the president Human Rights Campaign president Chad disappointed, saddened and offended that State of the Union a year of action on the economy and environment, equality and Griffin said Obama’s SOTU message “failed the president … refuses to take similar exec- fell short in his pledges. “President Obama immigration — and he said he’s ready to to address the needs of LGBT workers look- utive action to end discrimination based says he recognizes the threat of climate leave Congress in the dust to reach the ing for a fair shake in this economy. Not on sexual orientation or gender identity by change, but he sure doesn’t act like it,” said May Boeve, executive director of 350.org, only was there no call for the House to federal contractors.” administration’s goals. Others in the progressive community also the green group that has organized mas“America does not stand still, and neither pass a federal law to protect LGBT workers will I,” the president said on Jan. 28. “So nationwide, President Obama also side- said they were thrilled but disappointed. sive demonstrations against the proposed whatever and whenever I can take steps stepped his commitment to take action Why, for example, won’t the president take Keystone XL pipeline from the tar sands of without legislation to expand opportunity where Congress has left off, leaving out an executive action to halt deportations, which Canada to the Gulf of Mexico. “You can’t say you care about ending canfor more American families, that’s what I’m order prohibiting discrimination by federal skyrocketed during his first term, leading contractors.” some immigration reform advocates to refer cer and then go buy a carton of cigarettes — going to do.” and you can’t say you care about the climate “I’m thrilled that President Obama is rais- to him as deporter-in-chief. Progressives responded with enthusiasm, “We applaud President Obama’s pro- and then go dig up more fossil fuels,” Boeve but criticized Obama’s decision not to do ing the minimum wage for federal contraceven more with executive orders. The long tors, finally leading by example and tak- posed minimum wage hike in the fight said. “We need real leadership from this president, not more lip service. Rejecting list of planned executive actions isn’t long the Keystone XL would be the perfect place enough, said civil rights advocates, who for to start.” years have called on the president to sign an Congress and in more than 30 states, At the Center for Biological Diversity, order protecting gay, lesbian, bisexual and including Wisconsin, to raise the miniKieran Suckling said the president’s “‘year transgender workers employed under federmum wage to a livable one. of action’ rightly includes climate change, al contracts. In 2008, when he campaigned Democrat Kelly Westlund, a candidate but his plans for fighting carbon pollution for the White House, Obama promised such for the 7th Congressional seat held by just aren’t bold enough or big enough to an order. Republican Sean Duffy, recently launched head off disaster. Unless President Obama In his speech, the president vowed execua petition urging Duffy to back a hike in changes course, he will help usher in an era tive action to raise the minimum wage from the minimum wage. “People of northern of climate chaos.” $7.25 to $10.10 for those employed under Wisconsin deserve a representative who Leaders in the Republican Party, meanP H OTO : CO U RT E SY new federal contracts, but a White House will be an ally and strong voice for workwhile, said Obama would create a different Democrat Kelly Westlund. outline on the State of the Union listed LGBT ing people, and that means increasing the type of chaos if he attempted to do too workplace discrimination under “continuing minimum wage that will lift families out much with executive action. “The president WORKING FOR WAGES to work with Congress.” of poverty,” Westlund said during a news must understand his power is limited by The president in late January said he’ll conference call hosted by the Progressive That’s not likely to be successful unless our Constitution, and the authority he has sign an executive order raising the mini- Change Campaign Committee. the midterm elections send a majority of doesn’t add up to much for those without mum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 for those Democrats to the House. The Employment Recent polls show at least 55 percent opportunity in this economy,” Boehner said. employed under new — not existing or of Americans support raising the miniNon-Discrimination Act, a bill that would renewed — federal contracts. ban job discrimination based on sexual orimum wage. Editor’s note: The Associated Press contribMeanwhile, legislation is pending in entation and gender identity, passed in the — L.N. uted to this story. U.S. Senate last fall, but Republican House WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Februar y 6, 2014 myART myIDENTITY myPECKSCHOOL “The Peck School is a supportive community that has allowed me to be myself without judgement, and has allowed me to grow as a person and as an artist.” See Levi’s work in the upcoming Mainstage Theatre productions of Laughing Stock (Mar 5-9) and Urinetown (Apr 30-May 4)! Levi Miles, BFA Costume Production for Theatre BA History and Religious Studies Anticipated graduation Spring 2015 arts.uwm.edu 7 8 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 Wisconsin couples sue for marriage equality By Lisa Neff Staff writer The American Civil Liberties Union delivered an early valentine to gay and lesbian couples in Wisconsin. The ACLU, representing four same-sex couples, filed a federal lawsuit in Madison on Feb. 3 that demands marriage equality in the state. The couples and ACLU of Wisconsin legal director Larry Dupuis announced the move at the Madison Concourse Hotel in a midday news conference. “These families simply want the security and recognition that only marriage provides,” Dupuis said. “They have built their lives and raised children here.” The couples are: • Judi Trampf and Katy Heyning of Madison. • Roy Badger and Garth Wangemann of Milwaukee. • Charvonne Kemp and Marie Carlson of Milwaukee. • Carol Schumacher and Virginia Wolf of Eau Claire. Three of the couples want to get married in Wisconsin and a fourth couple wants the state to recognize their marriage from Minnesota. In Wisconsin, same-sex couples can enter into registered domestic partnerships, which provide limited protections. But same-sex couples cannot marry. Voters in 2006 approved a constitutional amendment barring marriage between two people of the same sex, as well as legal recognition of same-sex relationships substantially similar to marriage. State law also refers to marriage as the union of a “husband and wife.” The equality lawsuit names Republican Gov. Scott Walker as a defendant, along with state Attorney General J.B. Van Hollen, Revenue Secretary Richard G. Chandler, State Registrar Oskar Anderson, Eau Claire County District Attorney Gary King, Milwaukee County Clerk Joseph Czarnezki and Dane County Clerk Scott McDonnell. The ACLU of Wisconsin, the national ACLU and the law firm of Mayer Brown filed the suit —Wolf v. Walker — in U.S. District P H O T O : A P/J O H N H A R T John Knight, of the national American Civil Liberties Union’s Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Project, speaks during a news conference announcing the filing of a federal lawsuit on behalf of four Wisconsin couples challenging the legality of Wisconsin's ban on same-sex marriage Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. The attorneys want the court to declare the state’s amendment and laws barring gays and lesbians from marrying in violation of the Equal Protection and Due Process clauses of the U.S. Constitution. In the preliminary statement, the equality brief states, “Marriage is universally recognized and celebrated as the hallmark of a couple’s love for and commitment to each other. When two people marry, they commit personally and publicly to build a life together, and they ask their families, friends, communities and government to respect, honor, and support that commitment. Marriage has long been recognized and valued for its beneficial contribution to the welfare of society and to individual happiness. Lesbians and gay men in Wisconsin are denied the freedom afforded to different-sex couples in this state to have their loving, committed relationships recognized through marriage.” The filing came about a month after fed- eral judges in Oklahoma and Utah overturned state constitutional amendments barring recognition of same-sex marriages. It came the day before a two-hour federal court hearing in a challenge to Virginia’s anti-equality amendment. The filing also came less than eight months after the U.S. Supreme Court, in U.S. v. Windsor, overturned the federal provision barring the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages. In another COUPLES next page WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM COUPLES from prior page ruling, the high court cleared the way for the overturning of an anti-gay marriage amendment in California. Since the high court decisions, federal agencies have released rules for same-sex couples to access the more than 1,100 federal benefits and rights associated with marriage. Meanwhile, the number of lawsuits seeking marriage equality has ballooned to more than 40 in 20 states and the number of states where gays can marry has grown to 17 plus the District of Columbia. The Wisconsin brief notes the advances elsewhere in the country: “Yet Wisconsin, a historic leader in marriage equality, maintains one of the most restrictive bans on marriage for same-sex couples in the nation. Wisconsin’s constitutional amendment barring same-sex couples from marrying not only denies loving, committed, same-sex couples the dignity and status that only marriage can confer on their relationships and their families, it also prohibits the extension to same-sex couples of the same legal protections, duties, and benefits that married couples are allowed by law. The State deprives same-sex couples of these rights and freedoms for no other reason than their sexual orientation and their sex.” John Knight, a staff attorney with the ACLU Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Project, said, “More and more Americans over the past few years accept the idea that same-sex couples and their families shouldn’t be treated differently than other families. It is our hope that Wisconsin will soon join the other 17 states in granting the freedom to marry.” Now, for gay and lesbian residents of Wisconsin to marry, they must leave the state. Yet Wisconsin law makes even that a crime, punishable by up to nine months in jail and a $10,000 fine. “It is wrong for the state to treat these loving and committed couples as secondclass citizens, and it is cruel to place them in a catch-22 where they can’t even travel elsewhere to obtain federal protections without their marriage being labeled a crime,” said Dupuis. Van Hollen on Feb. 3 pledged to defend the amendment in court. “This constitutional amendment was approved by a large The filing came less than eight months after the U.S. Supreme Court, in U.S. v. Windsor, overturned the federal government’s provision barring same-sex marriages. Wisconsin has one of the most restrictive bans on same-sex couples in the nation. majority of Wisconsin residents. I believe the amendment is constitutional, and I will vigorously defend it,” he said in a statement released by his office. Democratic state Rep. Jon Richards, who is running for attorney general, issued a statement backing marriage equality: “Like so many loving families across the state, my wife Andrea and I are pleased that the federal court here, as it has in so many other states, will have a chance to rule that the U.S. Constitution ensures that every loving couple should be treated equally.” “As attorney general, it will be my obligation to the citizens of Wisconsin to defend their constitutional rights — rights that I believe are currently being violated for same-sex couples,” Richards continued. “I support marriage equality, and under my leadership, the Department of Justice will be an ally of those seeking equality for all individuals in Wisconsin.” In January, Virginia’s new attorney general, a Democrat, reversed his Republican predecessor’s position on equality and sided with plaintiffs in a major push to overturn that state’s anti-gay marriage amendment. facebook.com/ChocobellainWI (414) 747-9007 www.chocobella.net 2474 S. Kinnickinnic Ave, Milwaukee Ar�isanal chocolates, t��ffles, barks & more with a unique f�sion combination of flavors. Perfect giſts or favors for any event! | Februar y 6, 2014 9 FOR THE RECORD The American Civil Liberties Union, in the marriage equality brief filed on Feb. 3, FOR THE RECORD in Madison, argues: The American Civil Union, in subjected the marriage equality briefpeople filed ontoFeb. 3, in • “Wisconsin and Liberties this country have lesbian and gay scorn Madison, argues: and discrimination for many years, and they have done so because lesbians and • “Wisconsin this country have subjected lesbianofand people scorn and gay men formand intimate relationships with a person thegay same sex.toAlthough discrimination for many years, and havesome donesteps so because lesbians and gay men Wisconsin and this country havethey taken to reduce discrimination form intimate relationships a person of sex. Although Wisconsin and against lesbians and gays,with Wisconsin’s banthe onsame marriage for same-sex couples this taken somevestige steps of to the reduce against lesbians and is acountry strikinghave and continuing long discrimination history of discrimination towards gays, Wisconsin’s on marriage for same-sex couples is a striking and continuing lesbians and gayban men.” vestige of the long history of discrimination lesbians and gayfrom men.” • “Wisconsin’s discriminatory exclusiontowards of same-sex couples marriage • “Wisconsin’s discriminatory of or same-sex couples government from marriage does does not serve any compelling,exclusion important, even legitimate internot serve any compelling, important, or even legitimate government interest.” est.” • “Providing to only only a • “Providingsame-sex same-sexcouples couplesaccess, access,via viadomestic domestic partnership partnership status, status, to portion of the protections andand responsibilities of of marriage, while denying a portion of the protections responsibilities marriage, while denyingthem themthe esteem and universal recognition of marriage, can only explained as an effort the esteem and universal recognition of marriage, canbeonly be explained as an to denigrate andlesbian gay persons.” effort tolesbian denigrate and gay persons.” • “The the fundamental fundamentalright righttotomarry marrythe the person • “TheDue DueProcess ProcessClause Clause protects protects the person of of one’s liberty, dignity, dignity, autonomy, autonomy,famfamily one’schoice choiceand andrelated relatedconstitutional constitutionalrights rights to to liberty, integrity, and association. Wisconsin’s marriage banban does notnot permit same-sex couily integrity, and association. Wisconsin’s marriage does permit same-sex ples to marry nor does permit the recognition of theof marriages of same-sex couples couples to marry nor itdoes it permit the recognition the marriages of same-sex lawfully entered into outside of outside Wisconsin.” couples lawfully entered into of Wisconsin.” 10 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 State’s same-sex couples seek security for their families Meet the same-sex couples leading the drive for marriage equality in Wisconsin: Judi Trampf and Katy Heyning of Madison: Trampf, 53, and Heyning, 51, met in college at the Girl Scout National Center in Wyoming. They were part of a group of women from the Midwest who would get together outside of summer camp. “We were interested in each other, but fate would have it that one of us wouldn’t be free to date,” Trampf said. “After four years, we finally started dating long distance, and eventually we both wound up in Madison.” In July, the women will celebrate their 25th anniversary. Both work at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, where Trampf is director of human resources and diversity, and Heyning is dean of the College of Education and Professional Studies. After they had been together 15 years, P H OTO : CO U RT E SY T H E AC LU O F W I SCO N S I N Trampf’s family insisted the women have a Plaintiffs and partners: Charvonne Kemp, left, and Marie Carlson live in Milwaukee. ceremony to recognize and celebrate their commitment. Also, in 2009, they became hospital staff provided emergency care, but cy, and his doctors put him into a medically domestic partners. However, the registered deferred further health care decisions to induced coma to allow his body to stabilize. Wangemann’s coma lasted more than partnership does not provide the same Heyning’s brother. And although Heyning rights, let alone societal status, as marriage. had trouble concentrating and responding three weeks. During that time, Badger In 2002, Heyning suffered a seizure after the seizure, medical providers contin- included Wangemann’s father in meetings while traveling with Trampf. The women ued to question her, failing to address any with the medical team to discuss treatment. The surgeon felt confident Wangemann had drafted power-of-attorney documents, questions to Trampf. “If we were legally married, we’d know would recover, and he was right — Wangebut they weren’t carrying the papers. So we have the same protections as other mann is living cancer-free. couples,” Trampf said. “We would have But the couple later learned that while property, visitation and other rights. We Wangemann was in the coma, his father wouldn’t have to wonder what was covered tried to override Badger’s power of attorney if one of us is ill or dies.” to take Wangemann off life support. Father “We want to know that if someone is in and son no longer speak to one another. the hospital, we can see each other and “What upset me most wasn’t that he have the right to make decisions for each wanted to take me off life support,” Wangeother,” Heyning added. “Judi is the love of mann said. “What hurt the most was that my life, and we’ve been together in sickness my father still didn’t see Roy as my spouse and in health. We want recognition of that.” after all this time.” Roy Badger and Garth Wangemann of Charvonne Kemp and Marie Carlson of Milwaukee: Badger, 56, and Wangemann, Milwaukee: Kemp, 43, and Carlson, 48, 58, have been together 37 years. They met have been partners more than seven years through mutual friends when they were and raised two sons. Kemp is an accountant students at the University of Wisconsin- and Carlson is a raw material handler for Milwaukee and got together on Election a manufacturing company. They want to Day in November 1976. get married — and they want to do it in the “Garth voted Carter and I voted Ford,” state they call home. Badger said. “I was really rooting for Betty.” “We’ve thought about going to MasBadger, who’s lived in Wisconsin since sachusetts or Canada, but we decided that age 12, has worked as an editor at UWM if nobody else is going to recognize it, it for 32 years. Wangemann, a native Wis- doesn’t mean what it’s supposed to mean,” consinite, was laid off last spring from his Carlson said. “I want to call Charvonne my customer service position, but is temping wife and have people understand what that for his old employer while looking for a new means.” job. The couple attends a UCC church and Kemp and Carlson are involved parents. has two dogs — Daisy and Winston. Together they’ve raised Alexander, 21, and “We have a lot in common, and we always Christopher, 11, who are Kemp’s sons from have a lot to talk about,” Wangemann said. previous relationships. Kemp and Carlson “Roy is very gentle and giving, and he’s were active in the PTA at Christopher’s always been very honest and forthright.” school, holding offices. Kemp served twice A few years ago, Wangemann was diag- on search committees to pick new princinosed with lung cancer and had most of pals. The boys would like to see their moms his right lung removed. At the suggestion get married. of Wangemann’s surgeon, the men had “I feel that the commitment I’ve made papers drawn up, granting Badger power of to Charvonne and the boys, and the one attorney. Following Wangemann’s surgery FAMILIES next page in August 2011, he had a medical emergen- WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Februar y 6, 2014 P H OTO : CO U RT E SY T H E AC LU O F W I SCO N S I N Judi Trampf, left, and Katy Heyning live in Madison. They are one of four same-sex couples suing the state for marriage equality. FAMILIES from prior page they’ve made to me, should be allowed to be legal,” Carlson said. “I want to proudly walk with my family. I want to do it the right way and the right way is marriage.” Carol Schumacher and Virginia Wolf of Eau Claire: Schumacher, 60, and Wolf, 74, grew up in Kansas and moved to Wisconsin in 1977. Schumacher worked as an elections administrator and city clerk, and is retired. Wolf is a retired Unitarian Universalist minister and a professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Stout. They have been together 38 years, since their very first date in 1975. They were the first couple to join the Eau Claire domestic partner registry in 2009, and they got married on their anniversary in December by a judge in Minnesota. Schumacher and Wolf raised a son and daughter together — Wolf’s children from a previous relationship — and now have four grandchildren. Their granddaughters, in particular, very much want the couple’s marriage to be recognized in Wisconsin. Schumacher and Wolf routinely have been denied benefits afforded to legally married couples. When Schumacher worked for the city of Eau Claire, she was denied family medical leave many times when Wolf had surgeries, illnesses and injuries. They’ve also even been denied a family membership at a local health club. “The protections and benefits we’re missing out on are still really important to us,” Wolf said. Editor’s note: Compiled from ACLU profiles. MCC is a World Wide Christian Denomination founded by and for the LGBT Community. Our message? GOD’S LOVE IS FOR ALL Milwaukee Metropolitan Community Church 1239 West Mineral Street, Milwaukee • 414 – 383 – 1100 www.milmcc.org • www.mccchurch.org 11 12 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 Virginia changes course on gay equality ‘Virginia has been on the wrong side of desegregation, interracial marriage and single-gender education. It’s time to be on the right side of the law.’ P H O T O : A P/ B O B B R O W N Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring speaks at a news conference at his office in Richmond, Va., where he stated he reversed the state’s legal position on marriage equality. By Lisa Neff Staff writer When Eric Thompson first heard new license plates would include his state’s “Virginia is for lovers” slogan, he immediately thought, “Only for the straight ones.” But Virginia’s new leadership is taking a different course on marriage equality and Thompson and his boyfriend might some day proudly display a “Virginia is for lovers” plate on their car as they drive around Arlington. Republican Bob McDonnell is out and Democrat Terry McAuliffe is in at the governor’s mansion; Republican Ken Cuccinelli is out and Democrat Mark Herring is in as attorney general. One of Herring’s first official actions after taking his oath in January was to announce that the state would drop its defense of a constitutional amendment defining marriage as the union of a man and a woman. Instead, he joined the same-sex couples and civil rights advocates trying to overturn the measure in federal courts. “Virginia has argued on the wrong side of some of our nation’s landmark cases — in school desegregation in 1954, on interracial marriage with the 1967 Loving decision, and in 1996 on state-supported single-gender education at VMI,” Herring said. “It’s time for the Commonwealth to be on the right side of history and the right side of the law.” There are two marriage equality suits pending in Virginia — Bostic v. Rainey was filed in federal court in Norfolk and Harris v. McDonnell was filed in Harrisonburg. In both cases, same-sex couples sued the state registrar of vital records, who carries out the constitutional and statutory bans on same-sex marriage. The lawsuits obligated the attorney general to appear on Rainey’s behalf to present the Commonwealth’s legal position and to make a constitutional judgment on whether Virginia’s laws conflict with the U.S. Constitution. Cuccinelli was defending the anti-gay amendment. But Herring, like a growing number of elected officials across the United States, said the prohibition conflicts with the Constitution. “I swore an oath to both the U.S. Constitution and the Virginia Constitution,” he said. “After thorough legal review, I have now concluded that Virginia’s ban on marriage between same-sex couples violates the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution on two grounds: Marriage is a fundamental right being denied to some Virginians, and the ban unlawfully discriminates on the basis of both sexual orientation and gender.” FREEDOM TO MARRY Did you know? National Freedom to Marry Day is celebrated on Feb. 12. The observance dates back to 1998 and was founded by the National Freedom to Marry Coalition of civil rights advocacy groups. Marriage equality states: State law allows same-sex couples to marry in California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Iowa, Illinois (June 2014), Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington, as well as the District of Columbia. Getting closer: Federal judges overturned constitutional amendments prohibiting gays from marrying in Utah and Oklahoma but the states are appealing. Meanwhile, Nevada’s attorney general is reviewing the validity of the state’s defense of its anti-gay ban against a legal challenge. Estimating equality: More than 38 percent of the U.S. population lives in a state that either has the freedom to Gay rights advocates cheered the decision with frequent mentions that a federal case out of Virginia — Loving — had led to overturning bans on interracial marriage in 1967. But anti-equality forces accused Herring of shirking his obligations. The head of the ultra-right National Organization for Marriage said he should be impeached. Herring, however, said he would be shirking his duties if he defended an unconstitutional measure. And his voters knew who they were sending to Richmond: Though Herring voted against marriage rights for gay couples as a state senator eight years ago, he campaigned for equality in 2013. A hearing took place Feb. 4 in the Bostic case, which is being argued by attorneys with the American Foundation for Equal Rights, the same team that successfully marry or honors out-of-state marriages of same-sex couples. About 41 percent of the population lives in a state with either marriage or a broad legal status such as civil union or domestic partnership. About 43 percent of the U.S. population lives in a state that provides some form of protections for gay couples. In the majority: A poll conducted by Anzalone Liszt Grove Research found 59 percent of respondents in the central region of the U.S. — including in Wisconsin — support marriage equality. In the courts: About 40 marriage equality lawsuits are pending in state and federal courts, including, as of early February, Wisconsin. On the agenda: Jim Bennett, the Midwest region director for Lambda Legal, and Chris Clark, Lambda’s attorney in the Midwest office, will talk about winning the freedom to marry and federal marriage law at the Wisconsin LGBT Leadership Conference in Milwaukee. The conference takes place Feb. 7–9. — L.N. challenged California’s anti-gay Proposition 8. When the court convened, AFER almost immediately asked the judge to rule in favor of equality, a request taken into consideration along with the arguments against the amendment. “Every day these discriminatory laws remain in effect is another day gay and lesbian Virginians and their families are harmed and treated as second-class citizens,” said AFER executive director Adam Umhoefer. Thompson said the state’s change of course leaves him optimistic that he and his boyfriend will be cruising to the Arlington County Circuit Court Clerk’s office to apply for a marriage license later this year. “We know we can marry in D.C.,” Thompson said. “But Virginia is where we live and want to marry. Virginia is where we fell in love.” WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM 13 | Februar y 6, 2014 NATIONAL BRIEFS P H OTO : W I K I CO M M O N S DWINDLING POPULATION U.S. conservationists, such as those with the National Resources Defense Council, are concerned about the record low number of monarch butterflies that returned this year to wintering grounds in the mountains of Mexico. They say the annual butterfly migration is at “serious risk of disappearing.” Monarchs, which migrate from Mexico across North America and back every year, have been in serious decline since the 1990s. COURT: JURORS CAN’T BE EXCLUDED BASED ON SEXUAL ORIENTATION The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in January that people cannot be removed from a jury due solely to their sexual orientation or gender identity. The National LGBT Bar Association said in a statement that the ruling ensures the scope of “Batson challenges” will now extend to LGBT people. In Batson v. Kentucky, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 1986 that peremptory challenges could not be used to remove a juror based solely on race. The decision stems from a 2011 case between GlaxoSmithKline and Abbott Laboratories. GlaxoSmithKline argued that Abbott unfairly increased the price of Norvir, a drug that combats HIV. The court ultimately ruled in favor of Abbott, but GSK appealed on the grounds that Abbott unfairly removed a juror based on sexual orientation, arguing that the removal should have been disallowed due to Batson. In other national news … • TransCanada began delivering oil from a hub in Cushing, Okla., to customers in Nederland, Texas, early Jan. 22. The $2.3 billion pipeline is the Gulf Coast — or southern portion — of TransCanada’s proposed Keystone XL pipeline. The longer Keystone XL, which would transport heavy tar sands crude from Canada and oil from North Dakota’s Bakken shale, requires a permit from the Obama administration, because it crosses an international bor- C E L E B R A T I N G L E A D E R S H I P & der. In late January, the State Department released a review of the pipeline proposal but the Obama administration is waiting for more information. • Union membership in the U.S. held steady at 11.3 percent in 2013, but losses among state and government workers suggest an ominous trend for organized labor. Unions added about 282,000 new members in the private sector as the economy improved. But that was partly offset by the loss of 118,000 members in the public sector. In Wisconsin, union membership in the public sector fell from 53.4 percent in 2011 to just 37.6 percent in 2013. emergency injunction request to the court of appeals to get Idaho to halt this illegal program, and we hope that the federal government in the future will take more seriously its public trust responsibility to protect the wilderness from state efforts to exterminate native wildlife.” • Public Policy Polling in a recent survey found a plurality of Florida voters — about 47 percent — favor legalizing same-sex marriage in the Sunshine State; 44 percent oppose gay marriage. A sizable percentage also endorses medical marijuana — and they’ll get the chance to vote for it in November. • The National Coalition of American Nuns, in an open letter, questioned why Catholic institutions such as the University of Notre Dame are challenging the federal Affordable Care Act. The nuns said, “Spurred on by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, these organizations are attempting to hold hostage all women by refusing insurance to them for contraceptives.” • South Dakota state Sen. Ernie Otten introduced two bills that would allow businesses to refuse service to LGBT people, specifically same-sex couples seeking to hire professional services for their weddings. Similar legislation is pending in Kansas. • The Idaho Department of Fish and Game said it was halting its wolf extermination program in the Middle Fork region of the Frank Church–River of No Return Wilderness. Earthjustice attorney Tim Preso responded, “We are sorry it took an wisconsingazette.com H O N O R I N G B A Y A R D — from WiG reports updated all day. R U S T I N Thursday evening, March 20, 2014 ! e t a D e h T e Sav 5:30-8pm at the Marcus Center for The Performing Arts Bradley Pavilion 929 N Water Street, Milwaukee Diverse Diverse & & Resilient’s Resilient’s 2nd 2nd Annual Annual Reviving the Dream Celebration Including the presentation of the 2014 Bayard Rustin Leadership Award REVIVING THE DREAM SPONSOR: DIVERSITY SPONSORS: GUEST SPEAKER: Walter Naegle, longtime partner of Bayard Rustin. Bayard Rustin, a beloved American leader in social movements for civil rights and LGBT rights, was honored last year with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Join Diverse and Resilient to celebrate his legacy and to honor LGBT leaders working to make Wisconsin—and the world—a better place. IL A BL E! TI C K ET S AVA More at diverseandresilient.org/reviving Diverse and Resilient, Inc. 2439 N. Holton Street, Milwaukee, WI 53212 414.390.0444 | www.diverseandresilient.org 14 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 REGIONAL BRIEFS BURKE WOULD RAISE MINIMUM WAGE TO $10.10 Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mary Burke said she supports raising Wisconsin’s minimum wage up to as much as $10.10 an hour, putting her at direct odds with incumbent Republican Scott Walker. Burke made the comments in an interview that aired Feb. 2 on UpFront with Mike Gousha. “I think increasing the minimum wage leads to people being able to support themselves and their families, and we can do it in a way that’s not going to hurt job creation,” Burke said. The state’s minimum wage is currently $7.25 an hour. Walker has spoken out against legislation that would gradually raise the minimum wage, calling the proposals “political grandstanding.” The Democratic bills are in committees in both chambers, which are controlled by Republicans. Burke had earlier said she favored a smaller increase of about 35 cents an hour. But she now endorses the Democrats’ plan to raise the minimum wage in three increments, up to $10.10 an hour in two years. Burke said: “The research shows in states that have raised the minimum wage above the federal wage that it has absolutely no impact on unemployment rates.” — AP DEMOCRATS ACE, REPUBLICANS FLUNK CIVIL RIGHTS TEST Wisconsin Democrats Tammy Baldwin, Mark Pocan, Gwen Moore and Ron Kind received perfect scores in the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights ratings for the first session of the 113th Congress. The Republicans in the state’s congressional delegation didn’t score so well: U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson and U.S. Rep. Reid Ribble received zeros. U.S. Reps. Sean Duffy, Paul Ryan and Jim Sensenbrenner received scores of 8 percent. Tom Petri received a 15. The coalition used 13 votes in the House and 19 votes in the Senate that dealt with civil rights protections, jobs, the budget, education, immigration reform, presidential nominations, violence against women and other issues. The coalition’s report began with a critical look at the first session of the 113th Congress, one of the least productive on record: “Even routine business — such as keeping government doors open, raising the debt ceiling, and confirming highly qualified judicial and executive branch nominees — fell victim to obstruction, brinkmanship and political posturing. On more complex issues like jobs, housing and immigration, the obstacles were even greater. As a result, the 113th Congress was one of the least productive on record — and one of the least popular — as Congress’ approval rating plummeted to an all-time low of 9 percent and Obama’s approval ratings sank to their lowest point as well.” While the Republicans did poorly on the civil rights test, they scored high on another test — that of loyalty to the extremist tea party agenda, according to Americans United, a liberal advocacy group. In other news… • Illinois gay rights advocates are pre- paring to protect lawmakers who voted for the state’s marriage equality law at the polls. Equality Illinois, a statewide civil rights group, said in a call for support: “A number of legislators who courageously supported marriage equality now find themselves under threat from serious primary challengers due to their vote for equal marriage. In fact, many of these challengers are not only anti-marriage equality, but they also pledged to roll back the new marriage law if elected.” • The Iowa Supreme Court agreed to review the conviction of Nick Rhoades, an HIV-positive man, under a law criminalizing HIV exposure. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison and required to register as a sex offender after having a one-time sexual encounter with another man during which they used a condom. “The facts here don’t add up to a conviction, and we are confident that the Iowa Supreme Court will agree,” said Christopher Clark, Senior Staff Attorney for Lambda Legal. “A person who engages in safe sex, as Nick did, does not have the intent required to support a conviction under Iowa’s law concerning the criminal transmission of HIV.” • Hillary Rodham Clinton supporters in early voting Iowa are organizing, even though she hasn’t said she’ll run in 2016. Top Iowa Democrats gathered in January in Des Moines to build support for a potential Clinton White House bid. The event’s hosts include the state chairs for Clinton’s 2008 campaign and President Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign. • Wisconsin Congressman Paul Ryan hasn’t said whether he’ll be running for president in 2016, but he recently identified one job he won’t be seeking: Speaker of the House. Ryan said the job would take away too much time from his family. — from WiG and AP reports WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM ORGANIZATION BRIEFS ber.com. In other news … • Diverse & Resilient and Fair Wisconsin are co-hosting the Wisconsin LGBT Leadership Conference taking place at the Hyatt Regency Milwaukee Feb. 7–9. The conference includes workshops on advocacy, health care, politics, philanthropy, education, faith and other topics. Kris Hermanns, executive director of the Pride Foundation, and Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality, deliver the keynote remarks. For more, go to wilgbtleadership.org. P H O T O : W W W.W I S LG B T C H A M B E R . C O M Jason Rae, founder and executive director of the Wisconsin LGBT Chamber of Commerce, is the chair of the Milwaukee County Human Rights Commission. • CODEPINK wants to know if you HEART whistleblowers. The activist group is joining V-Day in its 1 Billion Rising for Justice campaign and encouraging people to proclaim their passion for the truth on Valentine’s Day. Write a whistleblower, submit an “I Heart the Truth” photo on Tumblr and sign up for the cause. For more, go to www.codepinkalert.org. T ... RAE RE-ELECTED CHAIR OF HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION Jason Rae, founder and executive director of the Wisconsin LGBT Chamber of Commerce, was re-elected in January as the chair of the Milwaukee County Human Rights Commission. “It’s an honor to represent and advocate for the people of Milwaukee County as chair of the Human Rights Commission,” Rae said. “It’s important that people from different perspectives and backgrounds come together to address the most pressing issues of human rights in Milwaukee County. I look forward to continuing to serve the people of Milwaukee County in this role.” County Executive Chris Abele appointed Rae to serve on the commission in 2012. Rae was first elected the commission’s chair in December 2012. “It is my hope that during this next year as chair we can continue making Milwaukee County a welcoming and diverse community for all people,” he said. For more, go online to www.wislgbtcham- • Human Rights Campaign’s Time to Thrive conference to protect and encourage LGBT youth features more than 50 workshops. The event takes place Feb. 14–16 in Las Vegas. For more, go to timetothrive.org. • LGBT civil rights advocates gathered in Houston in late January and early February for the annual National Conference on LGBT Equality: Creating Change. More than 4,000 people participated in more than 350 workshops and seminars. For more, go to www.creatingchange.org. • Equality Illinois says U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk is the recipient of the civil rights group’s annual Freedom Award. Kirk, a Republican, receives the award at EI’s gala in Chicago on Feb. 8. Kirk has championed workplace protections for LGBT people and, as the battle over marriage equality intensified in his state, came out for equality. For more, go to www.equalityillinois.us. P ROGRESSIVE . A LTERNATIVE . | Februar y 6, 2014 15 16 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM { Editorial } No medals for Olympic Committee When the International Olympic Committee chose Sochi to host the 2014 Winter Games, it inadvertently put a spotlight on one of the world’s most unapologetically corrupt, bigoted and despotic nations. If committee members thought the event would have a civilizing effect on Russia, they should have looked to the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. The choice of Vladimir Putin’s favorite semitropical resort to host the Winter Games is proving to be an unparalleled disaster on several fronts in addition to the iffy weather. The IOC’s selection of Sochi was a slap in the face of LGBT people everywhere. Russia has criminalized public displays of non-heterosexual behavior and expressions of pro-equality sentiment. Putin’s government openly encourages and coddles gay bashers and killers. With a price tag of $51 billion, the Sochi Games are already the most expensive in history — five times as costly as the Vancouver Games. The outrageous cost overruns are largely due to bribes, payoffs and kickbacks to Putin’s cronies, who run the government in the same fashion as the Mafia. A report by Boris Nemtsov, a former deputy prime minister, and Leonid Martynyuk, a member of the Solidarity movement, claims Russian officials have stolen nearly three times Putin’s original estimate of $12 billion to produce the games. Olympic contractor Valery Morozov is one of many to be stung by public officials. He says he was told by local Olympic officials to add about $30 million to his bill, which he was instructed to turn over to them through phantom companies. Februar y 6, 2014 WiG’s WEB PICKS Some of our favorite recent pictorials from cyberspace After going public with the scam, Morozov learned that a hit was ordered on him. He’s living, for now at least, under asylum in the United Kingdom. Meanwhile, the state company Olympstroi, which is in charge of Sochi construction, is the subject of three criminal investigations. Of course, it’s not likely that any of them will reach a courtroom, much less that anyone will face punishment. Russia’s deplorable prison camps are filled with political dissenters like the recently released punk rockers Pussy Riot, not with the criminals who generate much of the nation’s economic activity. Russia’s ruthless treatment of the former Soviet Union’s satellite nations has unleashed a backlash that makes the nation among the most despised on earth — and consequently one of the most vulnerable to terrorist attacks. Bombings in Volgograd timed in connection with the passing of the Olympic torch through the city on Dec. 30 killed 34 people. Muslim groups have issued a chilling warning to expect more of the same. The Pentagon has assured the press that the U.S. Navy has stationed a destroyer and an amphibious ship in the Black Sea near Sochi in case a crisis arises. We believe that a crisis arose on the day the IOC chose Sochi for the Winter Games. The Olympics were created to stand for a “universal quest for peace, moral integrity and an exalted mix of mind, body, and spirit that transcends culture.” Nothing about the savage, corrupt nation of Russia embodies that standard. If disaster should strike the Games, IOC members who pushed to have them held in Sochi must be held accountable. CEO/PRINCIPAL SALES INFORMATION DISTRIBUTION Leonard Sobczak [email protected] or call 414-961-3240 Robert Wright [email protected] PUBLISHER/ EDITOR IN CHIEF The Wisconsin Gazette is published every other week and distributed throughout the Milwaukee area, Madison, Racine, Kenosha, and 40 other cities statewide. To have WiG delivered to your address, contact [email protected] or call 414-961-3240, ext. 101 WiG Publishing, LLC. © 2013 Please recirculate and recycle this publication. Louis Weisberg [email protected] NATIONAL EDITOR Lisa Neff [email protected] GRAPHIC DESIGNERS Eric Van Egeren, Maureen M. Kane SALES EXECUTIVE Samantha Luper [email protected] OFFICE ASSISTANT MARKETING COORDINATOR CONTRIBUTORS Kaitlyn Weisensel [email protected] Anita Gielow Katie Belanger, Stephanie Beecher, Jamakaya, Mike Muckian, Jay Rath, Matthew Reddin, Anne Siegel, Gregg Shapiro WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM The triumph of love ON THE RECORD “I’m so embarrassed because people are taking pictures of me and I don’t know how to smile, and just be awkward, so I stick my tongue out, because I don’t know what else to do.” — Troubled teen idol MILEY CYRUS explaining to Barbara Walters why she’s always photographed with her tongue hanging out of her mouth like a dog suffering from the heat. “I don’t hate him at all. I still think he’s cute. — Out singer LANCE BASS saying that he forgives Juan Pablo Galavis, of ABC’s “The Bachelor,” for telling a journalist that he didn’t think a gay or bisexual bachelor would set a good example for kids. Galavis also said gays are perverts. “To state as a fact that a scientist dishonestly molests or tortures data to serve a political agenda would have a strong likelihood of damaging his reputation within his profession, which is the very essence of defamation.” — JUDGE FREDERICK H. WEISBERG ruling that a defamation suit brought by climatologist Michael Mann against the far-right publication National Review can proceed. The publication had compared Mann to child molester Jerry Sandusky for writing that global warming is real. The far right is heavily funded by the fossil fuel industry. “(Homosexuality) is not accepted here in the Caucasus where we live. We do not have them in our city.” — Sochi Mayor ANATOLY PAKHOMOV insisting there are no gay people in Sochi, a town of 343,000 residents that has several gay bars. “Woody Allen is a living testament to the way our society fails the survivors of sexual assault and abuse.” — DYLAN FARROW, daughter of Woody Allen’s ex-partner Mia Farrow, in an open letter graphically describing the sexual abuse she endured from Allen, whom she regarded as her father. Farrow called out the stars who have worked with Allen for their silence on the issue. “Today, the American people saw two very different visions for America. President Obama laid out a bold, proactive plan to improve the lives of millions, while the Republican Party in the House of Representatives spent the day rolling back basic freedoms for women across this country.” — ILYSE HOGUE, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, reacting to President Obama’s State of the Union address on the same day that House Republicans voted to prohibit the use of federal funds, including tax credits, to subsidize premiums for insurance policies that include abortion coverage. “If Mr. Putin listens to my album for an entire week and can still pee standing up, then this Sochi business has been for nothing!” — Singer BOY GEORGE tweeting about the impact that Russia’s new anti-gay law has had on the upcoming Winter Olympics in Sochi. | Februar y 6, 2014 Opinion JAMAKAYA Valentine’s Day 2014 is shaping up to be one of the happiest for many gay and lesbian couples in America. Abetted by the 2013 Supreme Court decision that repealed part of the Defense of Marriage Act, nine more states legalized same sex marriage in the past year, bringing the total to 17 states and D.C. The movement has been buoyed by pop culture endorsements, most notably the award-winning megahit “Same Love” by Macklemore & Ryan Lewis. The song’s performance at the Grammy Awards was followed by the kind of joyfully chaotic mass nuptials celebrated for years at Pride festivals, this time broadcast to a billion people. A glowing, specially deputized Queen Latifah presided over the ceremony. HBO just debuted a new Opinion TIM DAHLBERG The countdown to Sochi was supposed to be joyous, a celebration of all things Russian and Olympic. Instead it’s been nothing but a grim reminder that Olympic officials had no idea what they were getting when they bought into Vladimir Putin’s visions of surf and snow and handed him a Winter Olympics to call his own. Every day seems to bring a new threat or another warning. Every day strains the nerves more, to the point where some athletes are telling family and friends it’s not worth the risk to go, even for the most important moment of their lives. Suicide bombings a few hundred miles away, with threats of more to come in Sochi itself. A militant group nearby with an immense hatred of Putin’s Russia and little regard for human life. And a general uneasiness series called Looking. about gay friends and lovers. The commercial networks also are increasing their gay characters and storylines in comedies and dramas. How lovely that we’re not just lesbian psychos, gay serial killers and suicidal depressives anymore! Now we get to fall in love, get married, screw up our kids and break each other’s hearts just like straight people do! Although political action is essential to expand marriage equality (which is still banned in 33 states, including Wisconsin), pop culture is playing a critical role in normalizing same-sex love. With same-sex marriage an increasing fact of life, the censoriousness that denied and distorted our emotional and sexual lives is giving way to greater openness and more complex portraits. The most effective element in the political campaign and popular messaging is love. Emphasizing the love and commitment same-sex couples feel for each other is a powerful way to humanize and build empathy for people who have been perceived as different and transgressive, if not downright evil. Power structures have not been kind to gay and transgender people. Historically, most religions declared us sinful, the law made us criminals and the medical establishment labeled us mentally ill. Rejection, imprisonment and torturous experiments to change our natures were once the norm. Coming out, creating communities and organizing for change have destroyed these defamatory perceptions and cruel practices. Progress has been swift in comparison to other movements for social justice, some of which entailed centuries of struggle. We never would have advanced as we have without the movements for racial equality and women’s liberation lighting our way. But our strongest motivation has been love. I’ve seen 17 it expressed continuously over the four decades I’ve been involved in Wisconsin’s LGBT community. I’ve seen love in the commitment of many long-term couples to their partners and children in the absence of legal, social and financial supports for their families. I’ve seen love in the countless unpaid hours activists have put into organizing support groups, Pride events and lobbying campaigns. I’ve seen love in the extraordinary leadership LGBT people have displayed in responding to HIV/AIDS, raising money and awareness, and tending to the personal needs of those affected. I’ve seen love in the efforts to ease the burdens on LGBT youth, to protect them from hatred and rejection, and to guide them to a healthy adulthood. It’s all about love. This Valentine’s Day, kiss your sweetie and give a collective hug to the community that helps sustain your love and your life. An Olympics on edge that no matter how many billions they’ve spent, the Russians really aren’t ready for this at all. Consider: The same Islamic militants who in 2004 assassinated the Russian-backed leader of Chechnya — the father of the current president — have not only declared their intention to attack the games but also demonstrated they have the creativity and means to do it. “There is precedence to this,” warned Lt. Col. Robert Schaefer, a Green Beret who literally wrote the book about the brutal conflict in the North Caucasus region. “It’s important to think about how (Chechen president Ramzan) Kadyrov’s father was killed at a stadium rally. During construction at the stadium they buried two 155 mm artillery shells in the concrete below the VIP bleachers. Then they waited until the elder Kadyrov attended and they detonated it.” Think about that as you watch the opening ceremo- nies unfold in all their grandeur on television. Yes, Olympics have been a target of terrorists ever since the 1972 massacre of Israeli athletes and team members in Munich. A lone wolf bombing in Atlanta killed one person in 1996, and the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City was clouded by fears of the 9/11 attacks that had taken place just months earlier. But never have the threats seemed so real as they do in Putin’s playground by the Black Sea, just on the other side of the mountains from an area steeped in blood and years of conflict that include two recent wars between Russia and Chechnya unmatched for the brutality on both sides. “It doesn’t take an expert to look at that region and say the Olympics will be such a large target that insurgents will not try to do something,” said Schaefer, who will be in Sochi as a security analyst for NBC. “There has been an average of 10 to 15 attacks in North Caucasus every month in recent years. It’s just now the press is paying more attention to it.” That’s more than can be said about the IOC delegates who decide where every Olympics will go. They were won over in 2007 by a personal appearance by Putin, voting for his Olympics over Pyeongchang, South Korea, and Salzburg, Austria, after being assured that the coastal area of Sochi and the snow-capped mountains behind it would provide a spectacular backdrop for the games. Apparently, the delegates never read the history about a region long in turmoil. Or maybe they were too busy having cocktails and getting pictures taken with Putin to look at a map that shows Dagestan, now the most volatile part of the area, is just 300 miles east of Sochi. Now the best hope for an Olympics that never should have been in Sochi is that this is one more time that Putin gets what he wants. Tim Dahlberg is an AP sports columnist. 18 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 AUTO GAZE Concept cars that made it — or didn’t By Dee-Ann Durbin AP auto writer Prototype cars — also called “concepts” — appear at every auto show, including the greater Milwaukee event set for February. They’re a way for companies to test ideas and they hint at future design concepts. Audi, Nissan, Kia, Volkswagen and others had concept cars at this year’s Detroit auto show, which opened to the public Jan. 18. Some will be nearly identical to the cars that wind up in dealerships; others will be more outlandish. Here are some past prototypes that debuted in Detroit over the last decade, and what happened to them. FIVE THAT MADE IT CHEVROLET VOLT (2007) — GM’s revolutionary electric car with a backup gas engine debuted as a sexy concept car in 2007. So fans were disappointed with the dull looks of the production version revealed a year later. The car required significant design changes to improve its efficiency. But at least the idea made it to market. The Volt went on sale in 2010. FISKER KARMA (2008) — The hybrid sports car, with its long hood and flowing lines, wowed crowds as a concept car in 2008. The $95,000 Karma went on sale three years later. But it was plagued with safety recalls, and Fisker eventually halted production and filed for bankruptcy protection. That wasn’t the Karma’s final chapter, however. At last year’s auto show, a company called VL Automotive showed the Destino — a Karma body with a Corvette engine under the hood. This year, VL Automotive is expected to show off a convertible Destino. CADILLAC CONVERJ (2009) — A rakish Cadillac with the Chevy Volt’s plug-in hybrid powertrain wowed crowds in 2009, a recession year when there was little to cheer about in the auto industry. The Converj, renamed the ELR, re-emerged in production form at the 2013 show, and is set to go on sale early this year. FORD VERTREK (2011) — There’s no Vertrek on the lot at your local Ford dealer. But there is a Ford Escape, the small crossover SUV that the sleek Vertrek foreshadowed in its 2011 Detroit debut. The new Escape was a radical departure from the boxy old version, and customers welcomed it. The Escape was the 9th best-selling vehicle in the U.S. last year. HYUNDAI HCD-14 (2013) — The elegant HCD-14 previewed the new Genesis, which Hyundai revealed this year. Some details P H O T O : F O R D M O T O R C O M PA N Y The Vertrek concept car, shown at the auto shows in 2011, foreshadowed the Ford Escape. from the concept, like the rear-hinged rear doors and the giant grille, didn’t survive. But the Genesis teems with new technology, including automatic parking and compatibility with the Google Glass wearable computer. FIVE THAT DIDN’T DODGE KAHUNA (2003) — Aimed at surfers, the Kahuna was a cross between a Woodie wagon and a minivan. It did have one feature that eventually made it into Chrysler’s minivans: flexible seats that were a forerunner to the Stow ’N’ Go seating introduced in 2005. INFINITI KURAZA (2005) — With the boxy, wagon-like Kuraza, Infiniti was exploring how to give equal seating space to six passengers. It never made it to Infiniti showrooms. But the concept bears an uncanny resemblance to the seven-passenger Ford Flex. CHRYSLER IMPERIAL (2006) — The beautiful and imposing Imperial sedan was more Rolls Royce than Chrysler. An homage to Imperial sedans of the 1930s and 1940s, the Chrysler Imperial was rumored to be headed for market in 2010. But before that could happen, Chrysler filed for bankruptcy protection, and the Imperial disappeared. MAZDA FURAI (2008) — A super car with wildly undulating lines was the apex of Mazda’s nagare — or “flow” in design language. A fire accidentally destroyed the lone model that same year. But before its demise, the Furai helped Mazda prove its sporting chops. TOYOTA A-BAT (2008) — The funky A-Bat pickup truck had a 4-foot bed that could be extended to 6 feet, as well as a fourpassenger compartment. Toyota shelved it when the recession slowed demand for pickups — especially weird-looking ones. ! T U O WiG WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Februar y 6, 2014 19 WISCONSIN GAZETTE ENTERTAINMENT Kellan Lutz lives childhood fantasies By Izumi Hasegawa The Interview People Actor/model Kellan Lutz might look familiar for his roles as Emmett Cullen in the Twilight movies or as Poseidon in 2011’s Immortals. Or you might recognize him as one of the models featured in the 2010 Calvin Klein X underwear campaign. The buff 28-year-old is currently on screen in The Legend of Hercules, in which he plays the title role. When he’s not playing gods, Lutz is supporting PETA and efforts to rebuild New Orleans. He also endorsed the documentary film The Paw Project, which discourages the cruelty of declawing cats. Izumi Hasegawa: Let me remind you that after “Immortals” I told you that you would be resurrected and be immortal again. Kevin Lutz: And look, here I am as another god. You go from one god to being another god. Have you been able to distinguish all of the scars and injuries yet on your body? I do, I do. They are my tattoos. I have no tattoos. I view my scars as my memories. I’m not a journalist, but my body tells a story. As people ask, “Where is that from?” there is a good story with it. What is your best scar from this project? Uh … (Laughs.) You had to go there. Riding a horse, you get a lot of chaffing, which I learned, and it’s not quite fun when you’re wearing a skirt and you don’t have jeans on. So, I have, on my ass, two lines of scars (laughs) that I had to put a lot of bio-oil on to heal as fast as I could. So, there’s my most iconic scars. You work out a lot, so what was going through your mind when you were working out for this film? I live an active lifestyle. I really enjoy being outdoors, and I’d rather play basketball or snowboard. I have fun in the gym. I get creative. I compete against myself. As soon as it feels like work — I don’t like working. That’s why I choose these projects that are fun to me. As a little kid, I had middle-child syndrome. I grew up on a lot of land, with a lot of farm animals, and I had a lot of alone time. I was able to use my imagination and create the world of Tarzan, of HeMan, of Hercules, of Ninja Turtles. It was a lonely time that I filled with my fantasy world. Hercules was always that original hero for me, and now that I’m an actor — I never had the dream to be an actor — I found this passion that I get to re-live and fulfill this childhood dream of bringing this character to the big screen. I was very well prepared for it, because of my education and my knowledge of Greek mythology. I really loved The Iliad and The Odyssey. I read those before they were mandatory in school. With preparing to ride the horse and the sword fighting, I had Liam McIntyre, as my brother in arms, who played Spartacus. I love that show. Everyone on this film was family. I’m proud of everyone’s hard work. But Liam, being the fighter that he is — I came to him as humbly as I could and I was like, “Look. I don’t have time to really learn. Will you help me?” And he was like, “Yeah, brother.” You know, he’s Australian, and he’s all happy. We would just battle each other. I was living my childhood dream. I fully embraced it. This is the most diverse, physically, that you’ve done in terms of the disciplines — with the battle sequences and the horse riding. How much did you work with your stunt coordinator in terms of training for the individual disciplines? God, that man — he’s like Indiana Jones. He’s our main stunt coordinator and just such a great lad. You can either have a stunt coordinator who knows his stuff but doesn’t know how to work with actors, much like directors, and I was blessed on this movie because Renny (Harlin) is such a visually stunning director who knows how to work with actors. Raleigh (the stunt coordinator) is the same way. He’s done James Bond. He did Alexander and was telling me stories about him riding a horse, and he lost control of the horse and had to bail and flew right into a tree. The rigorous hours that I had to learn how to ride a horse, as fast as I did within the scenes — he made me feel like an all-star. Toward the end of the movie, he was like, “I don’t know how you did it!” How many of the stunts did you get to do yourself? Or did you have a stuntman do them for you? I had a stuntman named Danko that looked like me and had the most boring time on the set because I did everything. There were a few times when, due to my rigorous schedule, I had Kurry, who was my horse rider, and Danko, who was my fight double. I was working double units, six-day weeks — whenever I couldn’t work, they would step in, because I was in every single shot, which I loved. A big difference from Twilight days where I wanted more, but script-wise this was all I was doing. I love working, I love being on set, and time goes by the fastest when you’re on set. Sixteen hours just fly by. What’s it like for you watching the movie? I’ve never felt such a sense of accomplishment. I’m so proud of the work that I did and for me, for the inner child that’s always in all of us. 20 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 Latest music releases by groups with upcoming Wisconsin performances By Gregg Shapiro Jamie Stewart. Contributing writer PENTATONIX PERFORMS ON FEB. 11 AT THE RIVERSIDE IN MILWAUKEE The 2011 winners of NBC’s talent show The Sing-Off, a cappella group Pentatonix, featuring out founding member Mitch Grassi, returns with PTX Vol. II. The disc includes three Pentatonix originals, including “Natural Disaster,” “Run To You” and “Love Again” (which has club hit written all over it). As with the group’s previous EP, Pentatonix exhibits great taste when it comes to cover material, including Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’ “Can’t Hold Us,” Jessie Ware and Sampha’s “Valentine” and Calvin Harris and Ellie Goulding’s “Need Your Love.” They save the best for last with a delirious Daft Punk medley, which incorporates seven of the Grammy-winning electronic dance duo’s tunes, ranging from early (“One More Time”) to late (“Get Lucky”). Sky Ferreira. the modern pop of “I Blame Myself” and “Love in Stereo,” the tracks on this album prove that Sky Ferreira’s time has come. Pentatonix. DALE EARNHARDT JR. JR. PERFORMS ON MARCH 13 AT TURNER HALL BALLROOM IN MILWAUKEE XIU XIU PERFORMS ON MARCH 3 AT THE FREQUENCY IN MADISON Lucius. LUCIUS PERFORMS ON FEB. 22 AT HIGH NOON SALOON IN MADISON Mixed-gender quintet Lucius is nothing short of luscious on the tasty, assortedflavors debut album Wildewoman. The title cut suggests vintage country influences, with its “howdy pardner” tip of the cowboy hat. “Turn It Around” turns it around, spicing things up with a post-modern girl group vibe about a woman “looking through the wrong end of a telescope.” Lucius changes it up again with the folksy blues of “Go Home” (just wait for the “I don’t need you anymore” wail) and “Hey, Doreen” is a pop delight. Just when you get comfortable, Lucius conjures tUnE-yArDs in the rhythmic tribal cacophony of the aptly named “Nothing Ordinary.” Just as swiftly, Lucius returns to acoustic territory on the pretty “Two of Us on the Run.” “Monsters” could be the soundtrack to your night terrors, while “How Loud Your Heart Gets” returns your pulse rate to normal. As much homage to Nina Simone as it is a deconstruction, Nina by Xiu Xiu, led by queer frontman Jamie Stewart, may not only change the way you listen to Simone, but also the way you listen to Xiu Xiu. With so much from which to choose, Nina also says something about Stewart’s choice of songs (why, for instance, did he choose to forego “Mississippi Goddamn” and “Feeling Good”?) Stewart sounds as though he’s been smoking filterless cigarettes on the scorched and still smoldering “Don’t Smoke in Bed.” “Pirate Jenny” is suitably Brechtian and as dramatic as you might expect. “See Line Woman” picks up the pace considerably, and Stewart rises to the occasion, whereas “Wild Is the Wind” blows in on the subtlest of breezes. Not entirely abandoning the Brian Wilson surfer influence and kissing everything with Flaming Lips-style flair, dynamic Detroit duo Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. revs up the electro dance music effects on the aptly titled The Speed of Things. Restarting their engines and driving in the electro lane, DEJJ leaves others in its dust on dazzling dance tracks such as “Run,” “Mesopotamia,” “War Zone,” and, of course, “If You Didn’t See Me (Then You Weren’t On The Dancefloor).” Speed kills! SKY FERREIRA PERFORMS ON MARCH 9 AT BMO HARRIS BRADLEY CENTER IN MILWAUKEE Britney Spears, Lady Gaga and Katy Perry better keep a collective eye on Sky Ferreira, whose long-awaited full-length debut Night Time, My Time was one of the best albums of 2013. Edgy and exhilarating, Ferreira, who co-wrote all 12 songs, is an undeniable force, confidently drawing on a range of styles and effortlessly making them her own. From the Suicide-inspired electro on “Omanko” and “Ain’t Your Right” to the timeless retro of “Boys” and “24 Hours” and Dale Earnhardt Jr. Jr. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM 21 | Februar y 6, 2014 ‘Whipping Man’ takes rare look at Confederate Jews By Matthew Reddin Contributing writer The Whipping Man begins like a lot of other fictional works set in the post-Civil War South: The scion of a slave-holding family returns home, wounded in defeat, to find that two of his family’s former slaves are the only remaining residents of the plantation. The three spend the next few days pondering their futures in a radically altered world. But writer Matthew Lopez’s play has a twist that fundamentally shifts the terrain of his story: The plantation-owning soldier and his former slaves are Jewish, and the perplexed trio grapple with their futures amid the ruins while coincidentally preparing for a Passover Seder, a ritual Jewish meal that celebrates the Hebrews’ liberation from slavery in Egypt. Director Brent Hazelton says the coincidence is true to history. In 1865, Passover began within the week of Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court House, and one-third of the United States’ Jewish citizens (about 50,000, he estimates) lived in the South. Hazelton is not aware of any historical evidence that Southern slaves were also raised Jewish, as both the older Simon (James Craven) and the younger John (Ro Boddie) are in the play. But it’s entirely possible, since Jews accounted for 1.25 percent of all Southern slave owners. And it certainly makes for an interesting dramatic setting. “You have this really interesting question: With a belief system that is so firmly grounded in a liberation from slavery, how do these people become slaveholders?” Hazelton asks. “Then, you’ve got people who are actually slaves and actually Jews at the same time, trying to work out the larger theological implications of that.” And work it out they must, from the confining, shadowy wreckage of their former home, a haunting combination of refuge and prison that none of them can escape. Caleb DeLeon (Josh Landay), the returning Confederate soldier, is physically trapped, limping into the home with a gangrenous leg that must eventually be amputated. But neither Simon nor John can leave either, Hazelton says, as they haven’t decided whether to stay and work for DeLeon for wages or embark into the changed world around them. Add in the fact that each possesses a volatile secret, and the room in which they’re trapped becomes even more claustrophobic. Hazelton says the play feels like a mix of Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller and August Wilson — high praise indeed, but praise that he says Lopez earns. “There’s really strong emotional hooks for the individual characters, and everybody’s wrestling with these huge ideas; but there’s also a lot of interesting, really fundamentally American questions in there, about how we let one another into our lives,” he says. “It’s a really smart, really complex play.” Much of the complexity comes from how Lopez’s characters tackle the elephant in the room — the emancipation that has forever changed both the country and the three individuals. Simon and John have different attitudes toward the change. John feels entitled to “equality in the strongest sense of the word,” a perspective that grates against Simon’s cautious pragmatism. Simon believes that freedom can’t be given, but that it must be earned. While Caleb’s enlistment in the Confederate army was based more on defending ON STAGE The Whipping Man opens Feb. 8, and runs through March 16 at the Rep’s Stiemke Studio. Performances are 7:30 p.m. on weeknights, with 1:30 p.m. Wednesday matinees; 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays; and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundays. Tickets start at $25 and can be purchased at 414-224-9490 or milwaukeerep.com. The rebel soldier and his former slaves are Jewish. They grapple with their futures while celebrating the Hebrews’ freedom from bondage in Egypt. his homeland than defending slavery, the institution is still all he’s ever known, and Hazelton says he spends much of the play wrestling with the implications of slavery as his family’s legacy. The three characters’ shared faith colors their opinions and reactions as each tries to determine what his religious and moral obligations demand of him. Hazelton says unanswered questions put the trio in a holding pattern, preventing them from moving forward. “Suddenly the world has changed for these people,” he says. “The world they woke up in that morning bears no resemblance to the one they went to sleep in.” With contemporary America still haunted by the ramifications of slavery, it’s understandable why these three characters at the dawn of emancipation would be so baffled, Hazelton adds. While the play has special cultural significance for Jewish and African-American audiences, the universal human drama at its core will connect with all audience members, according to Hazelton. “You’ve got three people locked in this really big struggle,” he explains. “When we’re hitting it, it’s a pretty compelling thing to watch. … It’s a very easy play to put yourself into.” 22 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra gives us richer lives, but are we giving back? By Thomas Fritsch Special to WiG I can clearly remember my first piano lesson — in a big, gray house in a suburb of Cleveland. It was 1977, and I was 9 years old. Little did I know that I would spend many hours of my life in that place, where music would become a part of me in a very real sense. Classical music is in my DNA. When they moved to this country in the late 1950s, my German parents brought European sensibilities about it with them. WCLV, our classical radio station in Cleveland, played in the background most every day. I was swaddled in its reassuring and familiar sounds. My parents ranked classical music on a par with great literature, painting, architecture and sculpture. My dad believed it provided an acoustic history of the time it was composed. To him, listening to classical music was time travel. As a teen, I attended Cleveland Orchestra concerts with a friend when my parents were too tired from the week’s work to use their season tickets. Even at 13, I knew I was part of something magical. During the 1980s, Christoph von Dohnanyi directed the Cleveland Orchestra. Some of the concerts were so accurate and lyrical that I remember them even now. In my later teens, I entered piano competitions and took part in more recitals than I can count. At age 17, I had the opportunity to play Mozart’s Piano Concerto No. 20 in D minor with the Canton (Ohio) Symphony — an unforgettable experience. Now, at age 46, I still play and practice the piano when I have time. Like countless others, I wish I had practiced more when I was younger. But my ongoing exposure to serious music changed me forever. I know that I would be a lesser person today if I had not been engaged by the works of such masters as Bach, Beethoven and Brahms over my lifetime. The reason I’m sharing my personal journey with classical music is to put a face on the plight of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, which stands at a perilous crossroads. A confluence of events has resulted in a deficit of $5 million that threatens the orchestra’s existence. (For details, listen to an interview with the orchestra CEO Mark Niehaus at wuwm.com/post/reportmilwaukee-symphony-orchestra-needs5-million-avoid-shutdown.) The situation is particularly disturbing because the MSO has never sounded better. The orchestra has been showered with accolades. Following a recent appearance at Carnegie Hall, the MSO was described by The New York Times as “a shiny young exam- P H OTO : T H O M A S F R I STSC H The author practices piano during his boyhood in Cleveland. ple of America’s virtuoso orchestra tradition,” adding: “One rarely has the opportunity to luxuriate in such sonic splendor.” Go to a concert and you’ll understand. You can feel the players’ burning energy as they collaborate with some of the greatest minds in history, producing an acoustical experience that electrifies the mind and pulls at the heart. A live MSO performance has transformative power. I have a vested and practical interest in seeing the MSO survive and flourish. My partner of 17 years plays principal bassoon. But even if Ted were not part of my life, I would be devastated to watch this remarkable ensemble buckle under a weight of debt that has been unfairly attributed to “poor management.” The contributions of the LGBT community to classical music cannot be overemphasized. According to musicologists, likely LGBT composers include Schubert, Schumann, Tchaikovsky, Aaron Copland, Leonard Bernstein, Jennifer Higdon and Wendy Carlos. Born in 1939 as Walter Carlos, Wendy Carlos composed tracks for films such as A Clockwork Orange, The Shining and Tron. And so I ask you, all of my LGBT brothers and sisters and allies, to visit the MSO’s website at www.mso.org and make a contribution. I’ve wondered whether we could even live in Milwaukee without the cultural and economic benefits of a first-rate orchestra. Perhaps we could, but I believe our lives would be diminished. Thomas Fritsch is director of the Parkinson Research Institute of the Wisconsin Parkinson Association. He is at [email protected]. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Florentine Studio artists enchant in ‘Opera’s Greatest Hits’ program By Tom Strini From striniblogspot.com Before Julie Tabash, Erin Gonzalez, Aaron Short and Pablo Siqueiros even sang a note the evening of Feb. 1, happiness filled the Florentine Opera Center. And why not? The four young singers, the S-A-T-B Florentine Studio Artists, stood beaming and eager in full view before the concert. A big crowd of opera fans and friends of the company — many of them know one another and the singers — socialized amiably. The room, the Florentine’s Riverwest rehearsal space, made us feel like insiders. For most of its life, the building was a factory, complete with truck-sized overhead door. A few years ago, owners Cathy and Mario Costantini, who operate the La Lune Collection furniture company in the same complex, leased it to the opera company. Now it’s like a tech start-up’s hip loft. This Opera’s Greatest Hits program was my first chance to hear this edition of the Studio Artists for a full evening. The very capable Ruben Piirainen accompanied. Scott S. Stewart, the Florentine’s chorus master, oversees the studio artists. He arranged the program and served as master of ceremonies. Stewart introduced the 14 numbers, but the singers gave prefaces to set the scene. Smart. All four singers showed great poise and a sense of humor in speaking to the crowd. They’re charmers; just being in the room with them is fun. And what voices! Excellent intonation, full support and projection, clear articulation all around. Gonzalez’s rich, dark mezzo, especially, impressed. The repertoire, quartets and duets aside, comprised the sorts of pieces you might hear at the Metropolitan Opera Auditions: “Una voce poco fa” (Rossini’s Barber), “Una furtiva lagrima”(Donizetti’s Elixir), “Habañera” (Bizet’s Carmen) and so on. But Stewart also chose a few pieces that you don’t hear that often. Either they haven’t quite made the leap from opera to recital, or the operas have fallen out of the P H O T O : K AY L A B R U S S / F LO R E N T I N E O P E R A The S-A-T-B Florentine Studio Artists. rep and the selections live on only in recitals and contests. Siqueiros gave an excellent account of “O vin disspie la tristesse” from Ambroise Thomas’ Hamlet, and Short made every second count in the two-minute “It’s about the way people is made, I reckon,” from Carlisle Floyd’s Susannah. Tabash, Siqueiros, Short, Gonzalez. They were on fire, but only metaphorically. The fire extinguisher stayed in its rack. They balanced and blended beautifully in the ensemble numbers, the women in the barcarolle from Offenbach’s Tales of Hoffmann and the men in “Au fond du temple saint” from Bizet’s The Pearl Fishers. The big finish comprised two quartets, the familiar “Bella figlia dell’amore” from Rigoletto and the unfamiliar but worthy “Take Care of this House” from Leonard Bernstein’s 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, arranged by Arnold Freed. After the concert, people hung around for a while to congratulate the singers and bask in their glow. Next up for the Florentine Studio Artists: Festa Fiorentina, Feb. 14–16 at Marcus Center Vogel Hall. Go; I think you’ll be happy you did. For more of Tom Strini’s reviews and insights into Milwaukee’s cultural scene, go to striniwritesblogspot.com. | Februar y 6, 2014 23 24 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 ENTERTAINMENT BRIEFS National ‘BACK TO THE FUTURE’ MUSICAL PLANNED FOR WEST END Director Robert Zemeckis will return to the Back to the Future franchise — this time on stage, not screen. A musical adaptation of the original 1985 film was announced last month. It will bring Marty McFly, Doc Brown and their time-traveling DeLorean together again on London’s West End. Zemeckis is slated to write the book with Bob Gale and Jamie Lloyd, and Alan Silvestri, who have scored many of Zemeckis’ films, and Glen Ballard will create new music and lyrics. Lloyd will also direct. RUTGERS OFFERS BEYONCÉ COURSE The Department of Women’s and Gender Studies at Rutgers University is now offering a course called “Politicizing Beyoncé.” Kevin Allred, the doctoral student who is teaching the class, tells the university’s online news site that he is using Beyoncé’s career as a way to explore American race, gender and sexual politics. The class will include an analysis of Beyoncé videos and lyrics with readings from black feminists. Rutgers also has a class examining the theology of Bruce Springsteen lyrics. GLAAD ANNOUNCES NOMINEES On Jan. 30, gay advocacy group GLAAD announced 130 nominees, 37 of them Spanish-language nominees, for its 25th annual GLAAD Media Awards. Nominees include performers Elton John and Lady Gaga, the films Dallas Buyers Club and Blue is the Warmest Color, and the online Netflix series Orange is the New Black. The GLAAD Media Awards honor outstanding images of the LGBT community in categories including music, movies, TV and journalism. They’re presented every spring in Los Angeles and New York. Other nominations include Kill Your Darlings, starring Daniel Radcliffe as gay writer Allen Ginsberg, freshman TV series Orphan Black and Brooklyn Nine-Nine, lesbian sisterduo Tegan and Sara, and the Liberace biopic Behind the Candelabra. Local PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN DIES OF OVERDOSE Academy Award-winning actor Philip Seymour Hoffman has died of an apparent drug overdose. The actor, 46, who has spoken publicly about his problems with drug abuse, was found unresponsive on the bathroom floor of his Greenwich Village apartment by police responding to a 911 call on Feb. 2. A police spokesman told Reuters that Hoffman was found with a syringe in his arm and two small plastic bags nearby containing a substance suspected of being heroin. Hoffman, who was considered one of his generation’s best actors, won a best actor Oscar for playing gay writer Truman Capote in the film Capote. He also was nominated for three best supporting actor awards. After making more than a dozen films, Hoffman became famous for playing a lovelorn gay man in 1997’s Boogie Nights, a movie about the porn industry that also made Mark Wahlberg a star. PETE SEEGER DEAD AT 94 MÖTLEY CRÜE TO APPEAR AT SUMMERFEST Hair-metal legend Mötley Crüe has been performing for more than 30 years, but the group’s infamously hedonistic lifestyle is finally coming to an end. The band announced on Jan. 28 that it’s embarking on a final tour this summer. Over the next two years, the group will perform in 72 U.S. markets before traveling abroad for an international leg. Among the dates already announced is a performance at Summerfest on July 4, making Mötley Crüe the fifth Marcus Amphitheatre headliner announced. Formerly announced headliners include Bruno Mars, Lady Gaga, Dave Matthews Band and Zac Brown Band. Mötley Crüe will perform there and elsewhere on the tour with special guest Alice Cooper. MILWAUKEE ARTS BOARD NAMES ARTISTS OF THE YEAR Pete Seeger, the banjo-picking troubadour who introduced generations of Americans to their folk music heritage, died Jan. 27 at age 94. As a harbinger of the period’s national folk revival, Seeger became known in the 1940s for writing or co-writing such songs as “If I Had A Hammer,” “Turn, Turn, Turn” and “Kisses Sweeter Than Wine,” as well as for popularizing “We Shall Overcome,” the anthem of the civil rights movement. He got caught in the Communist witchhunt of the 1950s, when he was called before the House Un-American Activities Committee and ultimately blacklisted from the radio. But he would later call those years, during which he performed at colleges across the country, the high point of his career. Seeger eventually returned to the airwaves on the Smothers Brothers variety show in 1967 and continued performing throughout his life. In 1997, he earned a Grammy for best traditional folk album for his recording Pete. In 2011, supported by two canes, he led an Occupy Wall Street protest through Manhattan. Seeger’s tradition lives on through his artistic descendants, including Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, Dave Matthews and Emmylou Harris. The Milwaukee Arts Board on Jan. 27 named Evelyn Patricia Terry, an artist, educator and curator who has worked to establish historically disenfranchised artists, and Barbara Leigh, co-founder of the Milwaukee Public Theater, as 2014 Artists of the Year. The board has been naming Artists of the Year, who receive awards of $1,500, for 19 years. Terry’s works are represented in more than 400 collections internationally. She’s an influential figure in Milwaukee’s AfricanAmerican artistic community, although her work has inspired artists from all racial backgrounds over the past 40 years. Both artists will be honored at a March reception. DAVID HYDE PIERCE TO HOLD MASTER CLASS AT TEN CHIMNEYS Out actor David Hyde Pierce will serve as the 2014 master teacher at Ten Chimneys’ annual Lunt-Fontanne acting fellowship in Genessee Depot, according to the foundation. The Tony- and Emmy-winning actor, known best for his unique deadpan humor utilized to mirthful effect as Dr. Niles Crane on TV’s Frasier, will help Ten Chimneys develop and focus the curriculum for the weeklong immersion experience, which is offered to 10 of the nation’s top regional actors each year. Previous instructors and BRIEFS next page WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM ‘Shooting Star’ dredges up former lovers’ memories By Matthew Reddin Contributing writer We’ve all done it: You’re minding your own business, walking down the street, and then you see that person from your past — ex-lover, former best friend, old neighbor who hated you — whom you’d do anything to avoid. And because you’re free, just walking down the street, you can brush right past, pretending not to see, avoiding the terrifying prospect of having to dredge up all those old memories. The characters of Shooting Star, onstage at the Boulevard Theatre, don’t have that luxury. They’re two former college sweethearts, decades past their messy breakup, and they’re trapped together in a small airport bar by a cruel, inconvenient snowstorm that’s grounded their respective flights home. And so they’re forced to dredge up those old memories — possibly, as it turns out, for the better. David Oswald is directing actors Anita Domnitz and Jaime Jastrab in this show, a memory play both in subject and structure. Both characters, when not speaking to each other about their lives then and now, interact freely with the audience, providing context and details about their former selves. Those selves, once idealistic students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, are much different than present-day Elena and Reed, an unmarried, still-counter-cultural phone bank employee and a now-conservative businessman with a family, respectively. It’s a distinction not lost on the two. “The realities of life hit them hard,” Oswald says. Elena and Reed haven’t seen each other since breaking up 20-odd years prior, and their re-encounter runs the gamut of emotions, from laughter to pathos. It’s a combination that could be tough to balance, but Oswald says writer Steven Dietz does so easily. “I’ve had that experience, and it’s right,” he says. “There’s a question of whether you can go back.” Oswald says Dietz also handles the plot well, keeping it honest while throwing in a few twists and turns to keep things interesting. With only two characters to carry the BRIEFS from prior page curriculums have included the late Lynn Redgrave on Shakespeare, Olympia Dukakis on Chekhov and Joel Grey on American musical theatre. MILWAUKEEHOME, HOTEL FOSTER RAISE FUNDS FOR SXSW STAGE A group of Milwaukee advocates, including MilwaukeeHome, The Hotel Foster and Festival City, have teamed up to put Milwaukee musicians on the South by Southwest map by financing a stage at the annual Austin music festival in March. Artists will perform on a Milwaukee-only stage during one day of the festival to showcase the Cream City’s musicians. To fund the project, the collaborators have set up an Indiegogo campaign through Feb. 17. More information P H O T O : T R OY F R E U N D Anita Domnitz and Jaime Jastrab in Boulevard Theatre’s Shooting Star. story, it’s more important than usual for Domnitz and Jastrab to both have a strong bond onstage and to make the audience feel invested in their story, Oswald says. “The audience needs to be engaged in this relationship,” he says, adding that he’s asked the actors to make eye contact with people directly during monologues instead of just staring into space. It’s that fourthwall-breaking connection, he says, that’ll make or break the show. Many shows produced at the Boulevard feature minimalist sets more out of necessity than purpose, but Oswald says this isn’t one of them. Keeping the staging reduced to a neutral set — a few benches to stand in for airport seats — is just one more way of keeping the focus on the relationship. (The play) is about these two people,” he says, “and we don’t need anything to distract from that.” Oswald admits the play is designed to appeal slightly more to audience members in the same mid-life stage as Elena and Reed, but certainly doesn’t think only they will find it interesting. Shooting Star might not be the most traditional love story, he says, but it’s the sort of play any romantic should be able to fall in love with. ON STAGE Shooting Star runs at the Boulevard Theatre Feb. 5-16, with performances at 7:30 p.m. weeknights, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2:30 p.m. Sundays. Tickets are $20 and can be purchased at boulevardtheatre.com. about the initiative can be found at facebook.com/milwaukeehomesxsw. PABST ADDS SECOND SHOW FOR ‘THE SING-OFF’ TOUR The Pabst Theater Group announced on Jan. 29 that a second performance by the artists of the The Sing-Off live tour has been scheduled for 5:30 p.m. on March 20, due to overwhelming demand. The tour includes artists from the successful NBC reality TV show, where a cappella groups from across the U.S. compete to be named the best group in the country. Season 4 winners Home Free, a country music-focused quintet, will be featured in the show along with a selection of other contestants. Tickets are $35.50 and are on sale now at 414-2863663 or pabsttheater.org. — Matthew Reddin | Februar y 6, 2014 25 26 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 ‘G.B.F.’ director Darren Stein says gay best friends are a must-have for today’s woman variety By Gregg Shapiro Gay filmmaker Darren Stein takes us back to school with his campy and colorful new comedy G.B.F. This is familiar territory for Stein, who also directed Jawbreaker, the classic 1990s Mean Girls precursor. G.B.F. (“gay best friend, for the uninitiated) cranks up the homo high school hi-jinx with a story about an unintentional outing and the resulting chaos that ensues. Narrator Tanner (Michael J. Willett) transforms from invisible man on campus to the dude in demand as he navigates the choppy waters of the high school shark tank. I spoke with director Darren Stein about G.B.F. shortly before its theatrical release this year. OFF your entire yarn purchase with this flyer (414) 263-1991 Are you still in touch with any of them? I am! I think the relationship between gay men and women is a very special one, and not one that comes easily. It’s not like you can just order up a gay friend — or any PHOTOS BY RICHARD TERMINE 2445 n. holton Gregg Shapiro: Were you someone’s GBF in high school? Darren Stein: I went to an all-boys school, so I didn’t have that experience. I had female friends in college. When I graduated from college, I became very close with a close friend of my mom’s (laughs). So, I always had close female friends. Obviously, this is before the GBF moniker was invented. ENDS SUNDAY! FEBRUARY 4 - 9 • MARCUS CENTER MarcusCenter.org • Ticketmaster.com • 414-273-7206 Groups 10+ Save! Call 414-273-7121 ext 210 friend for that matter. Obviously, there’s a certain absurdity to the trend of the GBF and the idea that these girls today think it’s something on a must-have list. The film makes fun of that notion, but also celebrates the friendships. How would you sum up your high school experience? It wasn’t the most exciting experience of my life (laughs). It was a very sports- and academically-oriented school — and pretty cliquey as well. Most of the guys came from private and prep schools, and I came from a public school. I didn’t really know anyone when I came there. I was there from (grades) 7 to 12, a full six years. Growing up, high school movies such as Valley Girl, Pretty In Pink, Ferris Bueller and Fast Times — all those John Hughes movies especially — presented a world that I personally didn’t get to experience. But for gay (boys) in high school, the girls give you validation, give you self-esteem. They make you relevant to the heterosexual male population, because the straight guys want to know what makes you so special or they want to use you to get to girls. I think it’s a much more normalized world when it’s a coed setting. I think I have a small, special high school wound that I didn’t get to experience this (laughs). G.B.F. has a wonderful cast of new young actors and seasoned pros, including Megan Mullally, Natasha Lyonne and Rebecca Gayheart (who also was in Jawbreaker). For me, casting is the most important part of the filmmaking process. I’m very specific about each and every character. Especially in a film such as G.B.F., where it’s such a huge world of characters. It was a process to find exactly the right person for each role and make the film accessible, not just to kids today, but people in their 20s, 30s, 40s — every generation. I think every great teen P H OTOS : CO U RT E SY Above, a scene from G.B.F. Director Darren Stein’s picture is inset. ‘It’s not like you can just order up a gay friend — or any friend for that matter. ‘ movie should do that. We all went to high school, we all have the wounds (and) the happy memories. I think, for the audience, using Sasha (Pieterse as Fawcett) from Pretty Little Liars is referencing something new in pop culture. Whereas using someone such as Rebecca Gayheart is a wink, because she was in Jawbreaker (as) a teenager, and now she’s a mother. Natasha Lyonne, who was in But I’m a Cheerleader is a reference to one of the pioneering LGBT teen films. I think there was a wink and a nod to every character. It’s an honor to be able to make a film and you want to populate it with all the right choices. ON VIEW G.B.F. is opening in select theaters this month and is available through video ondemand systems. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM 27 | Februar y 6, 2014 Wine and chocolate pairings for your sweetie By Michael Muckian Contributing writer St. Valentine’s Day may not have been created by the chocolate industry, but it certainly helps support it. The day honoring one or more Christian saints named Valentinus ranks fourth in candy-giving holidays, making it a key contributor to the nation’s more than $19.5 billion in chocolate sales each year, according to the National Confectioners Association. That’s a ton of truffles and a king’s ransom in Hershey Kisses. A heart-shaped box of chocolates has become de rigueur for those who want to woo their ladies and gentlemen fair. But what beverage is suitably romantic to wash down the fermented seeds of the Theobroma cacao tree? On Feb. 14, many romancers will chose Champagne and other sparklers. But if bubbly is not your beverage of love, other wines are e v e n more complementary to the various types of chocolate. Following are some suggested pairings. egory. The beautiful pink shade and bright fruit flavors refresh and romance the palate. WITH WHITE CHOCOLATE WITH MILK CHOCOLATE For purists, white chocolate is not chocolate at all, because it lacks the cocoa solids that define the confection. Nevertheless, some people prefer the ivory-colored blend of cocoa butter, sugar, milk solids and salt. Wines of a slightly sweeter nature are called for here. The Mia Dolcea 2011 Moscato d’Asti ($13) fits the bill. Produced from Moscato grapes grown in Italy’s Piedmont region, the wine named “My Sweet” in Italian is characterized by a creamy sweetness and a flavor palate redolent of apricot, honey and pineapple. Subtle acidity and a delicate mouthfeel add to its appeal as a food wine. For something similar, yet completely different, try the Heinz Eifel Eiswein NV ($26 for a 375 ml bottle). It’s 70 percent Sylvaner grapes and 30 percent Riesling grapes frozen on the vine before picking. This dessert wine from Germany’s Rheinhessen region has an intensely sweet flavor palate. Sip and savor the flavors together after each bite of white chocolate. For something a little closer to home, try Cedar Creek Rosé ($21), produced by Cedarburg’s Cedar Creek Winery from 90 percent Marechal Foch and 10 percent Edelweiss grapes. At 18.5 percent alcohol by volume, this rosé fits squarely in the dessert wine cat- Chocolate in one form or another has been around since 1100 B.C., but milk chocolate first emerged in Germany in 1839. Blending cocoa solids with milk powder, liquid milk or condensed milk gives the chocolate a lighter, slightly sweeter flavor. Hershey is the leading U.S. purveyor of milk chocolate. Milk chocolate calls for different wine pairings. Since the movie Sideways, pinot noir has emerged as one of the most provocative, sensual and romantic wines. J Vineyards Estate Grown Pinot Noir ($34) is one of the category’s most rewarding products. Created from pinot clones grown in California’s Russian River Valley, the wine offers spicy dark fruit aromas and flavors of currant, plum and cherry in the glass. The wine’s acidity makes it food-friendly, and its allure contributes to romance. If you’re on a tighter budget — or maybe a little less romance in your heart — try the Cavicchioli 1928 Lambrusco Emila IGT Dolce NV (a mere $7). This ruby red, semi-sweet wine has flavors of black cherry and currants, as well as a slight effervescence. It’s highly approachable for the novice red wine drinker. If you favor Italian sparklers, you might opt for Banfi’s Rosa Regale ($20). Produced WINE next page 28 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM r! e v i l e D We Februar y 6, 2014 Serve St. Supéry 2011 Estate Cabernet Sauvignon with dark chocolate WINE from prior page using the Charmat process rather than Champagne’s traditional, double-fermentation approach, the wine is a collision of cranberry and raspberry aromas and flavors laced with a round finish and crisp acidity that make it a good palate cleanser. It’s deep-pink hue looks good in the glass. WITH DARK CHOCOLATE Entrees, Pizza, Pasta and more! Tuesdays Half price bottles of wine Wednesdays Half price beer Lunch Served Friday through Sunday Holiday Parties! Our house or yours catering menu online DIVINO 2315 N Murray Ave Milwaukee, WI 53211 414-212-2222 Hours: Mon-Thu: 4 pm - 12am Fri-Sun: 12pm - 1am DivinoMKE.com Purists believe that dark chocolate, with its high concentration of fermented cocoa solids and its documented ability to lower blood pressure, is the only chocolate worth eating. Its dark, rich flavors come closest to providing the chocolate “experience” so many crave. With the right red wine, which also provides health benefits, dark chocolate can be part of a meal made in heaven. Start off strong by serving St. Supéry 2011 Estate Cabernet Sauvignon ($27). The Napa Valley wine — a blend of 77 percent Cabernet, 11 percent merlot, 5 percent Cabernet Franc, 5 percent Malbec and 2 percent Petite Verdot — represents the consummate Bordeaux-style blend. With its purplish-red color, blackberry and plum aromas, and the Valley’s unique terroir, this wine is finely framed and elegant in its delivery. For something more “rustic,” as the category is called, few can beat the Frog’s Leap 2011 Zinfandel ($29). Produced from 85 percent of the signature grape, 14.5 percent Petite Syrah and 0.5 percent Carignan, the Napa Valley wine stresses big flavors over high alcohol levels. The wine delivers like a harvest of summer fruits — raspberry, fig and huckleberry for starters — blended not as a jam but with taut refinem e n t . There is more here than often meets the palate. But if your sweetheart already knows California reds from grape to glass, something special may be in order. Try combining your dark chocolate selection with a 2008 Santi Amarone della Valpolicella DOC ($45), one of Italy’s most profound wines. Grown in the country’s Veneto region, Amarone producers take an extra step during the harvest process that makes the wine so extraordinary. Grapes in the blend — 65 percent Corvina, 30 percent Rondinella and 5 percent Molinara — are harvested in October then dried in an open shed for four months. The drying time concentrates the grapes’ natural sugars, resulting in a richly condensed and deliciously powerful profile. Flavors of plum and cherry team up with hints of cloves and cinnamon in this deep garnet-colored wine, with a taste of toasted almonds on the back palate. Amarone is not an everyday wine, so St. Valentine’s Day may just be the day to share it with someone you love. Join WiG on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Februar y 6, 2014 Dishcrawl returns to Milwaukee By Michael Muckian Contributing writer Tired of the same old restaurants and dining companions? How would you like to visit four different restaurants in one night with as many as 30 new friends? Dishcrawl is returning to Milwaukee with a Feb. 11 whirlwind tour of four restaurants in the city’s Third Ward. For $45 (excluding beverages), as many as 30 people are expected to sample four different menus from eateries within a 10-minute walk of each other, according local Dishcrawl “ambassador” Justin Lockridge. “The route is designed to be walkable, but if it’s really cold people can take their cars,” Lockridge says. Planning for the event is done via social media. Diners don’t know which restaurants are included until 48 hours prior to the event. The spontaneity and camaraderie are as key to the event’s success as the food, Lockridge says. A former waiter and chef turned restaurant consultant, Lockridge secured his ambassadorship by applying to an ad posted on Craigslist late last year by Dishcrawl’s national office in San Jose, Calif. The organization sponsors Dishcrawls and other similar dining events in 200 cities across North America, including one last year in Madison. The current Dishcrawl follows on the heels of Neighborfood, an event last May that took participants on a more wide-ranging afternoon “appetizer” tour of eight different restaurants in and around downtown Milwaukee. The city’s first Dishcrawl last March brought 42 people to four restaurants for a tour similar to the one Lockridge has planned for Feb. 11. Lockridge and deputy ambassador Melanie Stenshaug, pastry chef at the Milwaukee Cupcake Co., have chosen the restaurants based on popularity, quality, variety and, most importantly, the capacity to handle the group. Diners will convene at the first restaurant then travel together to the others throughout the night. Lockridge revealed to Wisconsin Gazette that the group will begin the evening at Riverfront Pizzeria Pub & Grill, 509 E. Erie St. The popular eatery on the Milwaukee River, which earned four out of five stars from diners posting evaluations online, offers a wide array of Italian and American specialties in a convivial atmosphere that’s particularly suitable for getting to know fellow diners, the ambassador says. “I won’t disclose the next two locations, but I have said at least one is upscale and will satisfy my craving for Berkshire pork,” Lockridge says. “Since all the restaurants are very close, that clue already has a lot of people guessing.” Thanks to Stenshaug’s participation, it’s a good bet that the evening will end at Milwaukee Cupcake Co., 316 N. Milwaukee St., for a round of sweet treats. There’s undoubtedly a Cream City Vanilla Bean cupcake or a Dreamsicle cupcake, made with Sprecher’s Orange Dream soda, in some lucky diner’s future. Dishcrawl, which defines itself as an online culinary community, is just one of the events that the national office has sponsored in cities from Memphis to Montreal, from Pittsburgh to Portland, Ore. Based on the success of this month’s event, Milwaukee may be in line to host Battledish, a competition among local chefs, and Cocktail Wars, an event in which bartenders attempt to outdo their competition to the benefit of happy imbibers. “I think Milwaukee is really ready for Secret Supper, a six-course prix fixe dinner that offers some of the best food city res- taurants have to offer,” Lockridge says. The ambassador is attempting to set up a Secret Supper for sometime in May. As for the location — well, that’s a secret. ON THE TABLE To sign up for the Feb. 11 Dishcrawl, contact Justin Lockridge at 414-2084663 or email [email protected]. For more information about Milwaukee’s upcoming Dishcrawls, visit dishcrawl.com/milwaukee, check out Facebook or follow on Twitter @DishcrawlMKE. 29 30 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM VALENTINE’S DAY ACROSS 1. *”Love Me Tender” performer 6. “And She ___” by Talking Heads 9. For Whom the ____ Tolls 13. Wall coat 14. B&B, e.g. 15. *He fell in love with a face “that launched a thousand ships” 16. February “People,” e.g. 17. Parental involvement org. 18. Trojan War story 19. *He fell in love with Little Red-Haired Girl 21. ______’s fee 23. Old age, archaic 24. Display displeasure 25. *Bride and groom say their “I ___” 28. Choir voice 30. Part of Yugoslavia 35. Iris holder 37. Paleozoic and Mesozoic 39. The fourth prime number 40. Rigid necklace 41. Of the kidneys 43. Baseball points 44. Was attached 46. Jittery 47. It should be opened when starting a fire 48. Winslow _____ and _____ Simpson 50. Back talk 52. “C’___ la vie!” 53. EU currency 55. *”Just an ___-fashioned love song” 57. *Cyrano de Bergerac’s love interest 60. *Popular Valentine’s delivery 64. Disturbances 65. Get it wrong 67. Spur on 68. Strong adhesive 69. By means of 70. Fragrant resin 71. I, Claudius role 72. Bird-to-be 73. *What Snow White did before Prince Charming’s kiss DOWN 1. Larger-than-life 2. Alfred “____” LaRue 3. Americans need one to enter Australia 4. Accustom 5. Sister to Blanche DuBois 6. Clean the blackboard, e.g. 7. Symbol of industriousness 8. Mix-up 9. Like white-headed eagle 10. Albany-Buffalo canal 11. His pants are on fire? 12. Hallucinogen 15. Slang for communist sympathizers knowledge is power. #gettested Mondays & Tuesdays 6:00pm-8:00pm 1240 East Brady St., Milw. 414.272.2144 [email protected] 20. Lazybones 22. Breed 24. What’s-his-name 25. *Even-Steven kind of date 26. Convex molding 27. Red Cross supply 29. Arborist’s concern 31. Lord’s worker 32. Egg cell 33. *Aphrodite’s Roman counterpart 34. Early stage of sickness, e.g. 36. High school breakout 38. *The Twilight ____, romantic film series 42. Popular disinfectant 45. Like Danny Zuko’s hair 49. *”Your Love is Like the Morning ___” 51. Skiers’ turfs 54. *His character fell in love with Lois Lane 56. Be situated within 57. Tug-of-War equipment 58. Emanation 59. *Kisses and hugs 60. Hand grenade 61. “All for one, one for all” sword 62. Beef cut 63. Rotisserie skewer 64. *Dudley Moore/Bo Derek romantic comedy 66. 18-wheeler Februar y 6, 2014 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM 31 | Februar y 6, 2014 Eastmore’s apartment homes are located exactly where you want to be on Milwaukee’s east side, downtown, Shorewood and Whitefish Bay. Our variety allows you to choose from an eclectic mix of modern and turn of the century styles. We also offer the option to customize your space with a palette of over 300 paint colors. Apartment homes are reasonably priced with most utilities included. Combine that with our 24-hour emergency maintenance, and Eastmore delivers the whole package. East Side, Shorewood, Downtown & Whitefish Bay Apartment Homes eastmore you’re more at home eastmore.com | 414 - 9 6 1-1 8 2 2 32 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 Out on the town Feb.6–Feb. 19 A curated calendar of upcoming events ‘BODY WORLDS & THE CYCLE OF LIFE’ Through June 15 This popular and provocative exhibit depicting real, preserved human bodies returns to the Milwaukee Public Museum, 800 W. Wells St., for the first time since it made quite an impression on the city in 2008. This four-month installation is conceived as a sequel to that show, however, with a focus on the human life cycle — from birth to death. On view will be more than 200 “plastinated” specimens of all ages, in all states of health. Tickets, which include MPM admission, are $25 for adults, $22 for teens and students, and $18 for children and seniors. Museum members get discounted prices of $17, $15 and $13, respectively. Call 414-223-4676 or visit mpm.edu. CONCERT FOR COMMUNITY SHARES 7 p.m. Fri., Feb. 7 ‘GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS’ With so many worthy charities in the city, it’s hard to decide which to support. Community Shares makes it easy, setting up workplace giving campaigns that allow donors to contribute to any of their 50 affiliated social justice, animal welfare and environmental nonprofits through payroll deductions. The Concert for Community Shares raises money for the group with a benefit show featuring the Milwaukee bands MidCoast, the Rumskis, and Burgundy Ties. At Shank Hall, 1434 N. Farwell Ave., Milwaukee. Admission is $10 in advance or $15 at the door. Order tickets at communitysharesmke.org. Mamet’s most famous work gets the Off the Wall treatment for two weeks, directed by Jeremy C. Welter. The Pulitzer Prizewinning play puts four salesmen to the test when they are challenged to a “sales contest” that will end with the victor driving away in a Cadillac and two losers walking away without their jobs. Add in the rapidfire, profane dialogue that Mamet is famous for, and you’ve got an unsparing critique of capitalism and greed. At Off the Wall Theatre, 127 E. Wells St., Milwaukee. Tickets are $25 and can be purchased at 414-4848874 or offthewalltheatre.com. ‘YESTERDAY AND TODAY’ 8 p.m. on Fri., Feb. 7; 2 and 8 p.m. on Sat., Feb. 8; and 2 p.m. on Sun, Feb. 9 Beatles tribute acts are a dime a dozen these days, but Yesterday and Today stands out from the pack. This cast doesn’t just play the tunes of the Fab Four — they offer an interactive Beatles experience that personalizes performances with the stories of audience members, submitted before the beginning of the show, to create an event that’s tailored to the Beatles as you remember them. At Vogel Hall, 929 N. Water St., Milwaukee. Tickets are $43 and can be purchased at 414-273-7206 or marcuscenter.org. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Febr uar y 6, 2014 Through Sun., Feb. 16 Out on the town Feb. 6–Feb. 19 FOURTH ANNUAL WINTER CARNIVAL 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sat., Feb. 8 LOCAL LOVE FEST 9 p.m. on Fri., Feb. 7, and Sat., Feb. 8 You’ve likely spent most of this winter trying to resist the cold and snow, but as they say, “If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.” The place to join ’em is at the Lynden Sculpture Garden’s fourth annual Winter Carnival, a day to embrace the snow in an exquisite setting. New York artist Caleb Engstrom will create an outdoor stopmotion cinema, with the help of visitors, while Ashley Janke will conclude her year’s residency at the nAbr Gallery with one last exhibition that also features the work of Ashley Morgan. In addition, the event includes an outdoor scavenger hunt, tree walks, cookie decorating and outdoor games. The Simmer Truck will ladle out soups to keep you toasty and sandwiches to keep you hardy. At the Lynden Sculpture Garden, 2145 W. Brown Deer Road, Milwaukee. Admission is free to members, or $9 for adults and $7 for children, senior and students. For more information, call 414-4468794 or visit lyndensculpturegarden.org. Love Madison bands? Guess what: so do other Madison bands. That’s why every year since 2011, groups of them have gotten together for Local Love Fest, an annual celebration featuring local artists covering songs by other local artists. On Friday, Droids Attack, Warhawks, Real Knives and Old Buffalo Money appear at the High Noon Saloon, 701 E. Washington Ave. On Saturday, Government Zero, Kill Junior and Damidol are at the Crystal Corner Bar, 1302 Williamson St. Attendees can pick up a free compilation mixtape, featuring recordings from both nights’ artists. Admission is $7 to either show. P H OTO : CO U RT E SY Playing “parachute games” at last year’s carnival. MILWAUKEE HOMELESS VETERANS INITIATIVE BENEFIT 7 p.m. on Sun. Feb. 9 The Coffee House, 631 N. 19th St., Milwaukee, hosts three award-winning singer-songwriters for a concert benefiting the Milwaukee Homeless Veterans Initiative, a nonprofit that helps veterans receive the assistance needed to maintain a high level of independence. Richard Pinney, Barb Webber (accompanied by her husband Tom) and Stephanie Erin Brill will perform songs that took top honors at the 2013 Wisconsin Singer/Songwriter Series, along with other original works. Admission is free, but donations will be accepted at the door. ‘THE DAUGHTER OF THE REGIMENT’ 8 p.m. on Fri., Feb. 7; 2:30 p.m. on Sun., Feb. 9 Parents of young women frequently experience trepidation over their daughter’s first serious boyfriend. The parents in Donizetti’s French opera The Daughter of the Regiment aren’t very different, except that they’re an entire company of soldiers who’ve raised their young charge Marie since finding her on a battlefield. They grow a bit protective when she falls for Tonio, a new recruit. To make matters worse, there’s a long-lost aunt in the bargain, who takes Marie from her family. But never fear, this love story at the Madison Opera comes with a happy ending. At the Overture Center for the Arts, 201 State St., Madison. The opera is sung in French with English supertitles. Tickets range from $25 to $107. To purchase, call 608-258-4141 or visit madisonopera.org. ‘THE WHIPPING MAN’ Sat., Feb. 8 through Sun., March 16 Matthew Lopez’s The Whipping Man opens with a wounded Confederate soldier returning to his ancestral home after the Civil War to find his family gone and two former slaves remaining. The soldier and the now-emancipated slaves are Jewish, and they find themselves celebrating Passover in a world that has changed forever. At the Milwaukee Repertory Theater, 108 E. Wells St. Tickets start at $25 and can be ordered at 414-224-9490 or milwaukeerep. com. ‘WINTER SERIES’ 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 13 to 15; 1:30 p.m. on Feb. 16 The Milwaukee Ballet tells great stories through its narrative ballets, but its contemporary series in the winter and spring provide the opportunity to push the boundaries of dance. In this program, Gabrielle Lamb, the winner of the company’s 2013 international choreographic competition Genesis, returns with a brand-new work, as does choreographer-in-residence Timothy O’Donnell. The talented Luca Veggetti rounds out the trio. This promises to be a moving evening. At the Pabst Theatre, 144 E. P H OTO : J E SS I C A K A M I N S K I Wells St. Tickets range from $30 to $95; for more information or Mayara Pineiro and Mengjun Chen perform in Milwaukee Balto order, call 414-902-2103 or visit milwaukeeballet.org. let’s “Winter Series.” WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM Februar y 6, 2014 A curated calendar of upcoming events ‘SCREWBALL LOVE’ 7:30 p.m. Feb. 13 to 15 Love is a lot of things, and Theatre Gigante is ready and willing to talk about all of them — the sweet, gooey, quirky, zany and ridiculous. Leslie Fitzwater and a group of friends that includes Bo Johnson, Isabelle Kralj, Mark Anderson, Alissa Rhode, Tim Karth and Rip Tenor host this unusual yet delightful evening of love at Kenilworth Studio 508, 1925 E. Kenilworth Place, Milwaukee. Tickets are $25, $20 for seniors and $15 for students. To order, visit theatregigante. org or call 800-838-3006. ‘L’ENFANT ET LES SORTILEGES’ 7:30 p.m. Fri., Feb. 14 and Sat., Feb. 15 Milwaukee Opera Theatre teams up with UWM’s opera program to present Ravel’s L’enfant et les Sortileges (The Child and the Spells), a one-act about a naughty child tormented by objects and animals he’s abused. An army of singers and an array of puppets will be joined on stage by the UWM Symphony Orchestra. Choreography is by Edward Winslow. At Helen Bader Concert Hall, 2419 E. Kenwood Blvd., Milwaukee. Tickets range from $8 to $12, and can be ordered at 414-229-4308 or uwm.edu. MADISON WINTER FESTIVAL Sat., Feb. 15 and Sun., Feb. 16 Once again, the Madison Winter Festival will turn Capitol Square into a winter wonderland, where residents can enjoy two days of frosty fun. More than 90 truckloads of snow will be used building the racing and recreational area — not that they’ll need it, you’d think. Visitors can enjoy sledding hills, ice and snow sculpting, seasonally themed museum tours, a variety of run/ walks for charity and venues for ice hockey, curling and other winter sports. Admission is free. For a full schedule of events, visit winter-fest.com. ‘FESTA FLORENTINA’ 7:30 p.m. on Fri., Feb. 14, and Sat., Feb. 15; 2:30 p.m. on Sun., Feb. 16 The Florentine Opera is celebrating its 80th anniversary, and what better way to commemorate this originally Italianfocused company than with a Valentine’s Day concert full of Italian love songs? For this occasion, general director William Florescu is going beyond the classical repertoire of arias. He’s expanding the program to include Italian opera composers as well as popular music made famous by such Italian-American singers as Frank Sinatra and Tony Bennett. The company’s four talented studio artists will perform the collection of solos and ensemble pieces. At Vogel Hall, 929 N. Water St., Milwaukee. Tickets are $22 to $48, and can be ordered at 414291-5700 or florentineopera.org. ORLANDO CONSORT 5 p.m. on Sat., Feb. 15 Early Music Now brings the Orlando Consort, one of Britain’s most talented vocal ensembles, to Milwaukee for a medieval musical valentine. The group, celebrating its 25th anniversary, will split the performance between the 14th-century narrative poem “Le Voir Dit” (“A True Story”), and a series of 15th- and 16th-century songs. At St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 914 E. Knapp St., Milwaukee. Tickets range from $25 to $40 for adults and seniors and $10 to $20 for students. Order at 414-225-3113 or earlymusicnow.org. COMPLEXIONS CONTEMPORARY BALLET ‘VALENTINE ROMANCE’ 8 p.m. on Fri., Feb. 14, and Sat., Feb. 15; 2:30 p.m. on Sun., Feb. 16 7:30 p.m. on Wed., Feb. 1 Dwight Rhoden and Desmond Richardson founded their Complexions Contemporary Ballet company 19 years ago as a way to explore multiple genres, cultures and styles simultaneously. As a result, they created a synthesized body of work that defies categorization or limitation. Almost two decades later, they’re still pushing the envelope and performing with a level of athleticism that rivals any other touring company. They’ll bring their latest works to Madison’s Overture Center of the Arts, 201 State St., for one night only. Tickets range from $25 to $45. Order at 608-258-4141 or overturecenter.com. The Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra heats things up with a pops concert dedicated to all things romantic. Conductor John Morris Russell leads the symphony in everything from sultry tangos and fire dances to Broadway songs and opera arias. On the program are soloist Lisa Vroman — a veteran Christine from the Broadway run of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Phantom of the Opera — and dancers with Danceworks, who’ll perform with guest artists Edwin Olvera and Jorge Quintero. At Uihlein Hall, 929 N. Water St., Milwaukee. Tickets range from $25 to $105; to order, call 414-291-7605 or visit mso.org. WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Februar y 6, 2014 Out on the town Feb.6–Feb. 19 A curated calendar of upcoming events TAIKO PROJECT 6:30 p.m. on Tues., Feb. 18; 7:30 p.m. on Thurs., Feb. 20 The ancient drum art of taiko has been a part of Japanese culture for at least 1,500 years. Taikoproject, the United States’ premier taiko group, takes that heritage and revitalizes it, blending the classical drums with next-generation choreography and innovation. The result: a fusion of Japanese and American sounds that makes for an electric evening. At the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, 608 New York Ave., Sheboygan. Tickets are $14 for Tuesday’s performance and $29 for Thursday’s. Order at 920-458-6144 or jmkac.org. TODD REYNOLDS 7:30 p.m. on Wed., Feb. 19 Violinist Todd Reynolds calls himself a “hybrid-musician” because he’s a performer from two worlds. While trained in the classical tradition, he’s also a technologist who’s incorporated electronics into his performances. Reynolds performs with contemporary music groups, including the multifaceted Bang on a Can. On Feb. 19, he performs a free evening concert solo at UW-Madison’s School of Music. For more information, visit music.wisc.edu. Sampler Saturday F EB. 8 FALL IN LOVE WITH OUTPOST. 11am to 2pm at all store locations Stop by & try... foods so luscious you’ll be writing sonnets! • Creamy cheese with local preserves • Savory beet risotto • Beverages from red wine to hot chocolate • Plus, meet a local chocolatier and sample some of our area’s best confections! Not an owner of our co-op? Then stop in and ‘Shop Like an Owner’ from Feb. 1 - 15. See stores for details! 100 E. C apitol D rivE M ilwaukEE • 7000 w. S tatE S trEEt w auwatoSa 2826 S. k inniCkinniC a vEnuE B ay v iEw w w w . o u t p o s t . c o o p • o p e n d a i l y • 4 1 4 . 4 3 1 . 3 3 7 7 WISCONSINGAZETTE.COM | Februar y 6, 2014