I loved interviewing the lesbian conductor of the South Florida Symphony, and her partner. (See how the comma after symphony is really important there? Sebrina does not conduct Jacqueline!)
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Monday, January 07, 2013
Christopher Brosius Perfume God
Please check out page 8 of the newest issue of The Mirror for my profile of Christopher Brosius.
I don't think he'll mind that the editor calls him out as a "perfume god" on the cover.
The Mirror is a nationally distributed publication of sfgn.com but you can read it online.
I don't think he'll mind that the editor calls him out as a "perfume god" on the cover.
The Mirror is a nationally distributed publication of sfgn.com but you can read it online.
Thursday, January 03, 2013
Gay Press Gay Power
Check out my SFGN review of Tracy Baim's book Gay Press Gay Power. I enjoyed my conversation with her. She speaks with authority and insight.
Tuesday, January 01, 2013
2013—The Year To Be Perfectly Queer
They asked for my predictions for 2013.
(I'm particularly pleased with my "From Abercrombie & Fitch to Maclarens-for-hitched" line.)
Tuesday, October 02, 2012
You Got Power?
I rarely open the mail. Instead, I let it make a big pile of
itself until it sloshes to one side or the other. Today we had a long
purposeful rain to which I responded by scooping up the top third of a mound of
envelopes and sitting down with it. (If a
check comes in the mail, I can feel it before I see it. That I’ll open like an
addict. The rest? Why bother? Not like in the days of Jane Austin or Charles Dickens
when revelations of inheritance or unforeseen cousins or declinations of affection came in the mail.)
I must have fallen asleep while opening these. My head jerked
up and my eyes beheld a darker room. I heard the lady next door
shouting in the hall, “You got power? You got power?” as she knocked on doors. She knocked
on mine. “You got power in there?” I ignored her. She has no life. The lights zapped themselves on. I saw
the microwave and the alarm clock flashing in that eerie way that will
continue after our race is extinct and no one is left to reset them. I had
slept through an event. In my hand was a card from Starbucks offering me any
drink for free because I have used my gold card so frequently. It is more than
a month old but I know they will honor it. I need it now. Why wait? I put on
clothes and go down the elevator mumbling to myself, “I got power. I got power.
I got power.” I cross the lobby and burst through the door and onto the
sidewalk where I come face to face with Olympia Dukakis who looks at me as if I
were about to accost her. She holds onto her stylish shoulder bag with the wary
reflex of a New Yorker. I draw in a startled breath and blurt, “I got power.”
She looks at the card in my hands, and casts her eyes down with a slight smile
as she steps around me and regains her stride.
I cross the street and push my way into Starbucks where I order a “grande bold no room black
eye.” I take it home and the rain has stopped. I put the mound away and make
plans to do the laundry tomorrow. I rarely do the laundry. Instead, I let it make a big pile of itself until it sloshes to one side or the other.
Monday, September 03, 2012
Brett
Brett Capone’s name popped into my head today and I lit up
with smiles remembering our times together. How many years has it been? Wonder
where he is. Still in Rhode Island? What an accent that man has. An inflection
as tough as the waterfronts of New Bedford, Providence and Fall River combined,
infused with just enough of his grandparents’ Italian to hold his own in an
argument at table.
Brett was hot. Hazel eyes alternating between mischief and kindness over a
thick biker stash. A short lean build that never acquired the paunch that is
everyone else’s destiny. I wondered if he’s still got the butch little body
that drove the boys wild at that dive on Weybosset Street. I realized as I
opened the Mac that I never had any idea of Brett’s age. Probably in his late
40s by now. Didn’t he stay with us more than once at our place in Montreal? Of
course he did. How could I forget? As I tell Chris that I am about to google
him, he reminds me of the time when Brett was our guest in Montreal and spent an
entire morning sipping coffee while meticulously and ritualistically ironing
his thickly ribbed wooly socks that comprised the keynote of the costume of that
season. Black baseball cap. Dogtags over white wifebeater. Tight denim shorts
rolled up to mid thigh, and hellishly heavy black work boots over those tall gray socks. We had
never heard of anyone ironing his socks! Brett looked beyond us and blissfully
ignored us while we laughed our heads off at the spectacle of the princess
revealed at the ironing board obsessively preparing her gown for yet another crazed
night out at K.O.X., the Aigle Noir or Le Stud and ending up in just a short
white towel at the St. Marc’s with a bottle of Rush in his hand and sitting
next to me in the sauna, where we whispered into each other’s ears the
hilarious accounts of the fantastic men we had just encountered. I counted on
Brett for those moments. We both shared a delight in the telling of the story
that far surpassed the actual adventures in which we trespassed, often just to
acquire new material and newer more lurid details. We were like little boys
embellishing ghost stories by flashlight in the backyard tents of our
childhood. Sometimes, in the discharge of our supporting roles in the course of
a night’s revelry, we would tag team unsuspecting men. We’d pull a script out
of thin air. Brett would do this. I would say that. We’d pretend to be strangers. We’d work in someone named
Sylvain or Serge or Stephan, and we’d always leave them laughing. That is, we’d
leave laughing. Hyper-attuned to the sweaty slapstick of men in heat, Brett and
I would sometimes break into giggles at inopportune moments. I suspect we
derailed many an otherwise erotic passage of choreography just because neither
of us could ignore the humor of what men do and say when inflamed with desire.
As you may have suspected by now, a quick search of his name
informed me that Brett died several years ago. A memorial post was embellished
with great photos and mentioned a partner, a search of whose name led me to the
fact that he died not long after Brett.
I wish I did not know this. I wish I had not searched for
him. What is the point of knowing someone’s current status when you haven’t
felt strongly enough about him to keep in touch? Is there some injury to thinking
a man is still alive when he is not? Wouldn’t it be better to assume he was
still in Rhode Island? Still bitching about some employer who wouldn’t approve
enough time off? Still bubbling over about some amazing guy he encountered just
yesterday? Still carefully ironing his socks for the thrilling night to come?
Sunday, September 02, 2012
Kevin Cathcart is All About The Future At Lambda Legal
From the 19th floor of 120 Wall Street, the waterfront view of New York City is spectacular and never taken for granted by the occupant of the corner office, Lambda Legal’s Executive Director Kevin Cathcart.
Lambda Legal is the nation’s oldest and largest civil rights group working for the LGBTQ community. Under Cathcart’s direction, it has become powerful with significant increases in inquiries and impact in 2011.
According to Cathcart who grew up in New Jersey just 35 miles from his office, there are two types of people.
“There are those who say they can’t wait to move to New York City, and those who say they can’t wait to move out of Jersey. I was part of the latter group. I didn’t even dream of becoming a lawyer, no, I grew up in a working class world. I didn’t know what a lawyer was. I came of age at a time when civil rights law was a driving force, in the late 60s early 70s. I began thinking about law in college, because I was interested in politics and because that is when I had come out. Maybe I was in a lucky time slot. Stonewall had just happened. I had nothing to lose by coming out. No job or family. I settled in Boston where I was the Executive Director of GLAD [Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders] for eight years. I got a call from a friend who told me about the Lambda job. I thought ‘I could live in NYC for a couple of years’ That was 20 years ago.”
According to Cathcart who grew up in New Jersey just 35 miles from his office, there are two types of people.
“There are those who say they can’t wait to move to New York City, and those who say they can’t wait to move out of Jersey. I was part of the latter group. I didn’t even dream of becoming a lawyer, no, I grew up in a working class world. I didn’t know what a lawyer was. I came of age at a time when civil rights law was a driving force, in the late 60s early 70s. I began thinking about law in college, because I was interested in politics and because that is when I had come out. Maybe I was in a lucky time slot. Stonewall had just happened. I had nothing to lose by coming out. No job or family. I settled in Boston where I was the Executive Director of GLAD [Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders] for eight years. I got a call from a friend who told me about the Lambda job. I thought ‘I could live in NYC for a couple of years’ That was 20 years ago.”
[Read the rest of my Kevin Cathcart profile at sfgn.com.]
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Gay Camp
I arrived a few minutes late for the final night’s performance
of the popular, successful and sold-out Gay Camp at HERE Mainstage Theater. The usher said “Ordinarily I would never seat anyone
late, but there’s only one empty seat on the far side, front row. You’ll have
to walk by the stage to get there.” Then he opened the door for me. In a small
theater with only three feet separating the players from the knees in the front
row, I didn’t dare trespass. Instead, I stood in the side aisle and began to
absorb the rapid fire jokes thrown at the audience with an agility that far
surpassed their merit.
Gay Camp is a
cotton candy comedy about a summer camp designed to turn gay kids straight, but
staffed by silly characters who are secretly gay. It includes every one-liner and bit of queeny schtick that
has escaped the mouths of the urban gay in the past few years and has already
been processed into sandwich meat on Glee.
With its heavy reliance on Santorum as the frequent source
of its humor, Gay Camp is seriously
dated. I suspect that when it was new, there was need for the moment in which
the closeted lesbian who wants to ascend to the top job at the camp makes the
audience recite the Google definition of Santorum. Today, and for this
audience, Santorum is either old news or forgotten. I kept wondering how the
playwright could remedy this. Who might he substitute for Santorum? No name
came to mind.
While the exuberant and skillful cast (uniformly skinny
Williamsburg hipster types who seemed to be brothers?) brought forth a pink
vibrator that wouldn’t shut off, a feather boa, an eroticized banana and some
really bad wigs, I began to think that this play might work in fly-over country
and for a very straight/suburban or rural audience with no gay friends who had
already schooled them in modern gay humor. Also, I began to wonder what the
venerable Charles Busch might have done with the topic.
I left before the end, and in the heat of the subway, I
studied the weary faces of the unentertained. I think Gay Camp would be a hit in a subway car with its energetic cast
delivering their lurching kaleidoscope of gaiety for the tired folks riding out
the dirt and humidity of their passage home. In a theater, not so much.
In all fairness, many people laughed loudly and repeatedly
throughout the play. From where I was standing in the aisle, I could clearly
see the faces of the laughers. I don’t know those people and their tribe. I’m
sure they are fine and smart folks, but I just do not know them. Therefore, my
lack of amusement may be more my fault and less the quality of Gay Camp. Or maybe I just wanted to end this
on a kind note, having myself written some lines that turned out not to be
funny.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Monday, June 25, 2012
Saturday, May 12, 2012
The Countess Bedelia As I Recall Her
She is coming to the reading of my play. Four years ago, I said this:
O Les Faux Jours
I sat with the Countess beneath the pink and violet striped
canopy of her cabana overlooking the dancers. With tarnished silver struzzi
cadenti, I jabbed at cubes of American cheese floating in the murky absinth of
a Deruta ware bowl as she worried her jewels. I remarked about the heat.
“Ah yes” she said. “It is a white hot day, like that one in
Cabeza de Lobo. Who can live?” She produced a silk fan painted with the sweet
Infant of Prague but rather than open it, she swatted a small dog that had been
sniffing her ankle. It belonged to someone who owed her a favor, she imparted
sotto voce. Fan or dog? Pointless to ask her.
A young and hairless man in a starved yellow Speedo was
introduced to us. “I’m from Lenox!” he proclaimed. The Countess had been about
to ignore him until his proclamation caused her to fill her lungs and empty
them slowly with a litany of landmarks from that region of her home state.
I said to both of them “I once had a cabin in Becket not far
from there. Do you know it?”
They spoke over each other with praise for that tiny mill town
deserted by industry. I therefore continued.
“We summered there. Every Sunday morning, my mother insisted
that the family drive into Becket proper to attend Mass at a shabby Catholic
Church named non-specifically for one of the Saints Thomas. Can you name some?”
They could. The Apostle, Ã Kempis, More. “On Donner and Dancer , Aquinas and
Vixen!” There was no holding their minds, so I continued to speak without
regard for their attention.
“I didn’t want to go to Church. I wanted to swim and fish and
find blueberries and murder snakes. And then one Sunday, I saw a boy in the pew
behind me. He had crystal blue eyes and shiny true black hair that fell over
his forehead. He was my age. We became lovers in our thirteenth year of age. In
a metal row boat from Sears. Sometimes there is God, but not often in church.”
The Countess gathered herself up and stood. I walked with her to
the balustrade where we looked down at the thousands of shirtless dancers
making a wavy aura of flesh about the pool. They looked up at the Countess and
cheered “Ave Imperatrix, we about to dance salute you.”
She spied a particularly muscular and deeply tanned Cuban who
raised his powerful arms to her. She leaned over the balustrade, fingering her
gas blue beads and crying out “My son! My son! He’s come back from the war!”
I handed her the last of the white roses. She tore it apart and
flung its petals over the crowd. “Horrid children. Following Sebastian down
every street.” She hissed.
“No where to run to, nowhere to hide” they chanted mercilessly.
“Flores para los muertos” muttered the Countess who seemed to
wobble a bit. “Les fleurs de mal” I added. “Fleur de sel” she responded,
returning to the bowl and splashing its liquid on her brow as she sat down and
recited
“Oh fons Bandusiae,
Splendidior vitro,
Dulce digne mero
Non sine floribus
Cras donaberis haedo
Cui frons turgida cornibus.”
“That’s all very well today while the blossom still clings to
the vine, Countess, but my daddy was a gambler down in Georgia. He wound up on
the wrong end of a gun and I was born in the back seat of a….”
“Don’t speak!” she interrupted. She held my hand and said “S’ils
sont des jours amers, il y ont de si doux. Helas, quel miel n’a jamais laisse
de degouts?”
I pulled away from her grasp and said “Yeah, well nobody knows
the trouble I’ve seen. Nobody knows but Jesus.” But the Countess was
lost in some happy thought and crowed “O les Beaux Jours”. She repeated this
phrase louder and louder until I knew the moment had been reached, and I
slapped her to make her stop. She closed her eyes and I suspect she slept briefly.
When she opened her eyes, she claimed to have lost her ability
to see all colors except sepia.
Several feet away, the Lenocian salamander began to laugh even
while nothing was said. He had been accepting drinks from suitors. The Countess
and I became wary of his immediate future. I ventured “In the course of an
afternoon, one should visit a bar exactly as many times as one would visit
Cairo in one’s entire life.”
The Countess said “Hmph. Ved Napoli e mori.” And after a few
seconds, she faux-spit at some spot a few feet away and added “They’ll steal
the ring off your finger.”
“Imagine” she brightened, “If lightening should strike that
pool, on a clear day, when you can see for miles, nel blu depinto di blu.” She
summoned a tall Mexican in a white suit who fetched a pen and cocktail napkin,
and when he stooped to hand her these things, he pulled open his shirt for my
benefit and flashed me the wide smile of a dentist who has done time. The
Countess scribbled a few words in Russian, which, when read by the DJ, Roland
Belmares, stationed fifty feet away, elicited an obedient nod and a spontaneous
remix of Lou Christie.
The Countess rocked back and forth, singing “Again and again and
again”.
The boyfriend of the Mexican asked if I would be at Jackhammer later
in the evening for WHIP: A Leather Fantasy. I said that it was indeed my
fullest intention and that I had planned nothing else for my life beyond that
point. He said that he had once dressed as Jackie in leather and that his
boyfriend had loved it. I responded that the owner of a guest house in
Provincetown once dressed me as Jackie and put me in the back seat of his limo,
circling Commercial Street and stopping to proposition young men with me as
bait. I had no idea what to do with the ones who got in. Stay in character?
Remove the gloves? Show them the ketchup stains on the dress?
As we spoke of hats and men and places gone to seed, we did not
notice that the Countess, reaching for the only cloud in the brilliant sky, a
small confection shaped like Belize, had leaned too far over the balustrade.
The roar of the men below reached us too late as we turned to see the
red-lacquered undersides of her tiny sandals follow her over the ledge. We ran
to it, and looking down twenty feet, saw that she had landed squarely on the
Bacardi logo of the tent over the bar below. Claiming comfort, she waved away
our clamoring, and rested there with her kaftan splayed like the webery of a
flying squirrel. The sun went down. The boys ran into the night, and her
dismount was not recorded.
Thursday, May 10, 2012
When Your Lover Comes Back As A Bird
Sy (Seymour) Lemler, who lives in Hollywood, Florida, loves
the nearby nude beach at Haulover where he has been a regular for many years.
In 2008, when Bobby, his partner, died, Sy, who is now 80 years old, forced
himself to return to that beach alone, continuing the almost daily ritual he
had shared with Bobby during their years together. On that day, Bobby came back
to Sy. At the nude beach. As a pigeon.
With rare exception, Bobby has perched on Sy’s knee every day at
Haulover for almost four years.
Read the rest of the story on sfgn.com
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
April 10, 1977
From the diary, April 10, 1977: " The city is freezing cold but we had a great outdoor Papal Easter Mass on the piazza. We kept everything molto semplice. I did the second reading and then the English intentions. The goddam bells started chiming during my reading. I considered stopping until they were done, but that would have been a bit troppo and even the pope wouldn't stop if the bells went off during his sermon, besides, the sound system when we do televised, is really sensitive. When I looked at the crowd, I thought about the fact that this will be my last Easter in Rome for who knows how long. Later, Steve knocked on my door. His friend in SF sent him some weed which we smoked and then went to the Ukrainian minor seminary where they were showing The Shoes of The Fisherman which we had to leave because we were laughing our heads off. Then we drank Vermouth in Mark's room and played cards on the roof till 3AM and no one knew that I was looking at their faces and wondering where we all would end up and if we would ever have these days in Rome again. I don't think anyone is allowed a second go around of a life this wonderful."
Friday, February 17, 2012
What They Don't Tell You
I assumed from the moment I first saw him, that he and I
would grow old together. I figured we’d lose our looks apace, and that
affection in our hearts would supplant inspection by our eyes once we became
old.
I assumed that physical attraction was like those fuel
barrels that boost a rocket through the heat of the atmosphere and then are
detached and are cast off to orbit the earth. Like debris. Like memories.
Why didn’t anyone tell me 28 years ago, that when the man I
mustered the courage to approach and talk to at that dismal bar in that
wretched little city would turn 50, I would see only the man I first saw on the
night we met.
That is what no one tells you. That your lover doesn’t age in your eyes! When I look at him on this, his 50th,
I see exactly the same face I saw then. Why didn’t anyone tell me this amazing
truth? My guess is that this truth is economically inconvenient. If we assume that the passage of time
will render us as undesirable as an old dishtowel, we will lay out cash to
fight the imagined enemy. We will
be anxious about the future of our faces.
I always knew they say that love is blind, but I thought
they meant to youthful details. I didn’t think I’d be blinded by the sight of
my beautiful husband forever, but I am. That’s what they don’t tell you.
Thursday, December 01, 2011
Who Would You Pick For HRC President?
The search is underway. In this piece for 10thousandcouples.com, I review the job description, talk with some LGBT bloggers and highlight a few LGBT leaders who would be good choices. Agree? Disagree? Got a favorite?
Wednesday, November 09, 2011
Thursday, November 03, 2011
Bronson Lemer - On our first post-DADT Veterans Day
Just your ordinary gay vet. One of many. Devoid of sound bites, Bronson was not my typical interview. Read about him and on Veterans Day, let's keep in mind that there are so many invisible gay vets to be thanked for their years of service under Don't Ask Don't Tell.
Monday, September 19, 2011
Thursday, September 08, 2011
Alyson Adventures' "Splash" gay tour of the Grand Canyon
I had a blast. A dozen gay men, including a priest, rabbi, minister, banker and TWO dentists! Ages 30s-60s. I behaved like a Gabor sister throughout the 8 days, but I nightly stood naked in the cold Colorado River washing out my clothing before putting on a sarong for happy hour at the campsite. SFGN will publish my diary account in installments.
When you book your tour—and you seriously should—tell them who sent you.
Labels:
alysonadventures.com,
gay tour,
grand canyon,
Splash
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