As part of Northwestern’s Queer Pride Graduate Student Association’s annual Queertopia! academic festival, we present a fabulous cabaret of Chicago-based queer performers: QUEERGASM! We are purposely hosting this event at a cafe so that those under 21 are able to attend. Our cast of performers comes from various walks of life, as well as a variety of performance traditions; we are so excited to invite you to such a spectacular night!
Featuring performances by: Andrew Brown, Rae Langes, White Rainbows, DAAN, the Puterbaugh Sisters, Rebecca Kling, Dion Walton, Sapna Kumar, and more! RSVP on facebook
When I interviewed Adam Rose for TPR, I was left with the impression that his performances are a genuine reaction to the world around him, and the dark forces channelled through Antibody Dance, his dance company, are very real to him. A rejection of irony from a young, engaging artist is like a cool, tall boy on a hot day, and (I’ve said it before) Chicago is blessed to have him. In person and out of costume, Rose is gentle with a shy brow, and it goes without saying that someone serving anti-christ realness in a jet-black bob and tights has my undivided attention. Antibody’s latest, Vaca Sacra (Sacred Cow), was premiered in Mexico this winter, this will be Chicago’s first opportunity to see it. From the press release:
Vaca Sacra is a work for three dancers who embody a nun, a cowboy, and a businessman. The sound design and choreography steal elements from Mexican and American culture to describe neither, instead creating a separate world from distorted fragments of each. The result is something like a southwest noir. The Antibody mirrors processes of cultural exchange and fragmentation initiated by the global market, devouring cultures in order to feed itself. In this destructive and creative process, occult connections emerge, between Hollywood and Bollywood, Christianity and cannibalism, Baroque master/slave relationships and contemporary politics.
Titty Perkins, Silvita Diaz Brown, Lisa Frank, Aisha Bell, Craig Donavin and Ishtar Bukkake are also on the bill. The April showing will be at The Op Shop, 1530 E. 53rd Street, on Friday, April 23rd, at 7pm.
The chaotic disappointment in recent weather, legislation and job prospects has been building up – these days, bad news is shrugged off as another in a long line. Within that environment, maintaining an outlook that keeps motivation high gets more challenging and it’s only the thick skinned that can stand another bruise – more and more it’s common to make sarcasm and snark the bitter lemonade that refreshes us out of depressive thoughts. So when Taylor Mac dared to tackle the idea of loving the world and everyone in it through a five-part, five-hour performance entitled The Lily’s Revenge, I was excited but still skeptical about the entertainment value of an entire evening devoted to positive thinking. Though, immersing my physical body in a queer creative space with him at the helm was probably a good bet: more than 40 performers integrated vaudeville, dance, live music, film and audience participation into a story so ambitious it’s daunting to attempt a summary. But by the first intermission, it was clear that Taylor has made what could be his magnum opus, converting the entire HERE Arts Center into a world of kiosks and mini stages where the audience is assumed to be intelligent and engaged with the transformative power of art. Show and tell would be nothing if it was all talk, and in The Lily’s Revenge, Taylor leads by example in his quest to rid us of romance fatigue and reinvigorate efforts to ask ourselves hard questions about what we really want.
Which is not to say that he didn’t have HELP. Each of the five part extravaganza had its own director, burlesque legend Julie Atlas Muz and Faye Driscoll were on to choreograph, voice over work by Justin Bond and an endless list of players were having a great time while obviously working SO hard. There are three intermissions, but the first two are fully structured, designed to maintain engagement: World Famous *Bob* plays host and we were instructed to stay off of our phones and participate in the Kyogens–performances and activities during intermission addressing nuances of the larger production. Aside from being posited as serious conversation starters, these shorter pieces are as clever as they were fun. Taylor sang songs by himself in the bathrooms that were “flushed from the show,” in the dressing room was “Discussion Disco” — a dance party with the actors where you can talk to and booty bounce with them. There are mini-burlesque nooks, the “Context Corner” is an out of the way library with all the textbooks the play referenced and a computer logged onto a site about the plays conception (link here). There’s a bride and groom photo booth, marriage-themed dummies you can beat with a stick and proposal installation where a man in a tux and with a giant ring will get down on one knee and propose to you. Needless to say there was no rest for the weary, so what is The Lily’s Revenge so worried about?
*Photo by Ves Pitts
Considering the breadth of issues that were addressed, it seems a lot. I couldn’t possibly recount every revelatory moment or laugh out loud minute (this is probably the longest TPR post ever). However Act II, arguably the strongest section, features a parade of flower costumes so on point, designer Machine Dazzle WILL get his pink wings in thespian heaven for his work (side note: I overheard someone say the costumer has only one assistant for the love of jeebus). Written in iambic pentameter, this portion was executed with such confidence and ease, the Shakespearean layers of literal and figurative profundity had me audibly saying “wow.” Playing the Master Sunflower, Daphne Gaines wields talent like a gymnast–tough as an ultimate fighter but with a benevolent grace. Addressing identity, agriculture politics, notions of beauty and personal fears of independence, “Act II: Ghost Warrior” could in itself be a crowning achievement.
*Photo by Lucien Samaha
The story arc follows an lonesome flower and its quest to marry a real human bride. In order to do so, the Lily must become a man and yes, hour by hour all the heavy, politically queer connotations of that premise fall into place. However, the allegory here was not just in the big concepts represented by the passing of time, the meaning of love or the paralyzing effects of nostalgia, but also in the significance of committing to an all-day art experience. The purposeful inclusion of many collaborators and the thoughtful methods outlined to keep the audience involved is a statement concerned with the speed of our present culture and the coldness of virtual communication. The questions it asks are bold and confrontational, but the generous and kind place they come from are in the interest of preservation of community. Notable writers and performers usually have a signature, and Taylor’s is when he breaks character and looks at everyone right in the eye to express a sincere interest in your personal journey. Scores of techniques, a huge cast and constant movement of the action make most remarkable that whenever he bubbled up, Taylor Mac had the audience hanging on his every word. His facility for easing in and out of serious and comedy, sincere and sarcastic, actor and himself are the qualities that not only exemplify greatness, but inspire others to be so. In the 5th act, where the Lily’s journey was almost over he says, “If you live long enough, you play every part.” The truth is, not everyone is trying to play every part, but the infinite varieties of hurt and accomplishment prove that you wind up doing it anyway. Taylor’s way is to embrace your role as it changes and use it bring others closer. He certainly is.
The run is SOLD OUT but you can get last minute tickets. Thursday – Sunday, through November 22nd at HERE Arts Center, 145 6th Avenue, (between Spring and Broome, entrance on Dominick) New York, 212-352-3101.
I told you about ‘My Fellow Americans,’ the modern performance piece about Ronald Reagan by Peter Carpenter a while ago, as it was supposed to debut in May. Unfortunate delays now wrapped up, October 8,9, 15 and 16 will be special nights in Chicago as the show will go on as originally intended. My Fellow Americans will be performed at Hamlin Park Studio Theater located at 3035 N. Hoyne-2nd floor, Chicago. From the press release: Carpenter’s gift for deftly weaving movement and text shines in this work which explores the shifting identity of Ronald Reagan from the perspectives of the “special interest groups” that his rhetoric and policies consistently admonished. Seriously, if you are in any way interested in why your post-queer, post-racial, post-feminist life has all the road blocks it does, you need to see this.
In the last 6 years, Chicago’s queer scene has evolved into an enviable beast. FKA, the Chances crew, Stardust, GenderJUST, the Windy City Times and all of you independent thinkers that sometimes come together to just fucking express yourselves have created a truly mobile, hip and accepting culture. So when some NYC drag queen rides into the Chi on fast-unfastening cred, calls us a 2nd tier city and proceeds to BEG to go back to a time when it was okay to hate vaginas, the irony is more disappointing than offensive.
Fish Out of Water, a Chicago-based film seeking to further the current civil rights movement by addressing the bible and homosexuality, is the complete antithesis to Lady Bunny’s ignorance extravaganza. I’m not privy to the details that led to the fund raiser last night at Berlin, but Stardust and FOOW could not have been prepared. For sure, I love the work that Stardust does and Berlin Nightclub is my safe-bet good time, but by the time Lady Bunny was mid-through her show, all the women in the audience had left and I was ashamed to still be there. The work that we have put in to achieve a community that talks to itself, loves one another and educates the ignorant was willfully farted upon by a HAS BEEN, and you bet your ass I was booing and screaming until we cut that tired queen off the stage. Some were mumbling about elders, and the work that ol’ girl did with Wigstock, but you know what? THIS IS NOT THEN AND HAVE MOVED WAY PAST BEING STUPID, IGNORANT FAGGOTS. I don’t care if you are wearing a dress or wearing out your thrift store sneaks, if you identify as queer and make retard jokes or are willfully under-educated about gender theory, you are NOT fierce or funny and not deserving the respect and adoration of our up and coming baby-gays. We are currently [ ] this close to getting equality on the books for Gays and Lesbians, but not week goes by where I see people stare at and whisper about the tranny on the train. Infinitely more frustrating than correcting straights with their pronouns is telling a gay man that his male privilege is REAL.
Lady Bunny, take your nasty back to NYC, a place that’s anonymous enough and with sufficient cash to put up with your stank ass. Chicago doesn’t want you! Our community is learning to love each other and we don’t need you fucking it up with dated BULLSHIT. I’m glad we USED your name to raise some $$ for FOOW, but sorry to say that we gave you a platform.
About Face Theatre is producing a queer, vaudevillianish variety show to bring together disparate performance artists, theatre artists, visual artists and musicians who all fall under the category of “Homo” (for whatever reason). The night will culminate in a dance party with our fav homosexual djs. We are looking for clowns, baton twirlers, choreographers (for a live rehearsal), dancers, emcees, musical acts, video artists (who have live performance elements), bands, drag artists, gymnasts, stand-up comics, improv artists, short, short plays, boy-lesque, performance artists, politicians, singers, etc. Bring your favorite past acts, or a proposal for an act to our auditions on the evenings of July 1st and July 2nd (5pm-9pm). All acts should be 5 mins or less, preferably less. To schedule an appointment time, please contact Erica at emsartini@gmail.com. The show will be held on Monday, July 27th/8pm, @ Subterranean (2011 North Ave) and will be hosted by Leslie Hall. Auditions will be held at About Face Theatre, 1222 W. Wilson, 2nd Floor West.
2nd Story is a hybrid performance event combining storytelling, wine, and music that is produced by the Serendipity Theater Collective as both a Monthly Performance Series and an annual festival. A typical 2nd Story evening is: you hang out with your friends, drink, four or five times during the night, the lights go down, a spot comes up on somebody and they tell you a story.
2nd Story: PRIDE on June 21st at @mosphere in Andersonville. Our storytellers for the night are: Byron Flitsch, April Newman, Deb Lewis, J. Adams Oaks, with a special guest story by Stephen Rader (Executive Director, Season of Concern) J. Adams Oaks and myself will be co-hosting the evening Stories drop at 7pm, and there’s a suggested donation of $10. Proceeds from the evening will go towards Season of Concern. www.storiesandwine.com
Oh man it’s time for another Poonie’s Cabaret, and if you think you missing it, you are mistaken. A special appearance by TPR pal Lez Bobo the Clown will be the creepy icing on this eclectic cake. If you’ve been wanting to see what else this fab city has to offer, this is it. Also featuring trailerpilot and Sarah Weidmann, there is queerness abound on this quality stage. It’ll be the best $5 you’ll spend all month, guaranteed. Monday, June 15, 8:00 pm $5 or pay-what-you-can. www.linkshall.org 3435 N. Sheffield Ave. Chicago, IL 60657. Full line up after the jump. Read the rest of this entry ?
It was right after his performance at the last Poonie’s that Adam Rose was crowned the new IT-boy in Chicago’s performance scene. I say that thankfully and without tongue in my cheek, as (with good reason) he has had the most startling bump in work opportunities since. His style is immediately recognizable and he has access to a clean, clear skill level not usually seen in modern. So it’s with great excitement that I post his contribution to Lucky Plush‘s experiment in intellectual property. This video is Rose’s Elena character hitting a bizarre mash of Butoh and Cheerleading while Stefen Robinson‘s musical editing chops kill Britney with some Japanese flutes. The real power of cheer, right here…DOPE!
Are you a kinky girl that wishes there were more fetish parties for you and yours? Want to openly consider flogging without that pesky, leering man-troll killing your buzz? Vespertine may be the party for you. A members-only club night that is women-only and in the lair of a sex shop is guaranteed to be a safe space, get your pink-ass over there! Membership for Vespertine will be available at Leather 6410/Paul C Leathers from May 1st through May 15th ONLY. CASH CAN NOT BE TAKEN AT THE DOOR. The store is located at 6410 N. Clark St. (Clark and Devon) and Membership may be purchased during regular store hours. (Tuesday and Wednesday Noon-8pm, Thursday Noon – 10pm, Friday and Saturday Noon – 4am)
Membership fees may only be paid in cash, a membership agreement must be signed and proof of age is required, as VESPERTINE IS A PRIVATE CLUB. If you have any questions, please e-mail directly skymephistona((@y))ahoo.com.
The event begins at 9pm and the club will be open until 3am. Lots of great demos planned to run throughout the night! Watch and learn from CANDY XXX, Miss Ammo and the rest of the beautiful VESPERTINE TEAM about play piercing, medical role play, rope bondage, spanking and flogging.
Individual memberships may be purchased beginning May 1st at 6410 Leathers, located at 6410 N. Clark St.
ADVANCE MEMBERSHIP DISCOUNTS APPLY
FROM MAY 1ST TO MAY 15TH ONLY-COUPLES MAY PURCHASE MEMBERSHIP FOR $40-INDIVIDUAL MEMBERSHIPS ARE $25