Posts Tagged ‘chicago’

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Tania Unzueta: Chicana.Chicagoan.Warrior.

May 21, 2010

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It was earlier this year that a tweet from Tania Unzueta let me know something big was happening. “My name is Tania Unzueta, and I am undocumented. #comingout #fb” is pretty much how it went. As one of the organizers of Chicago’s Dyke March and a major force in Chicago’s place in immigration reform, I knew that this wasn’t an empty post, and soon enough the  momentum coincided with Arizona’s hateful, backtracking law. Fast forward to May 17th and I read from Tania’s twitter, “Just watched four courageous dreamers get arrested #cantstopwontstop. My job just began.” Tania and other students had travelled to Arizona and were engaged in a sit-in at Senator McCain’s office; The Dream Act was now going to be national news. The New York Times ran this unfortunately titled article about the protest, the students were eventually released, and TPR got a pingback from Conservative Hideout, a blog dedicated to intellectualized Tea Party ideals for those that don’t care to do any research or think about ideas in a realistic way. In the post, Conservative Hideout questions the status of the protestors as actual students, assumes some liberal corporation has funded their trip and also paid someone to make the Dream Act’s website. It also attempts to “uncover” information about Tania as investigative journalism. Dummies.

A fundamental oversight by CH is that Tania is out of the closet. Being “out,” in the traditional sense for queer people is telling your friends, family and c0-workers about your identity. Outness is a polical act – it forces dialogue through awareness, and has always been the primary impetus for progress. To apply this principle to your undocumented status is not only remarkable in its simplicity, it’s also brilliant in it effectiveness. Latinos, being the largest growing (and frequently cited to be the largest by percentage) ethnic minority in the United States are potentially a powerful force. To be out as undocumented means that most everyone could know someone who is on the path towards citizenship, and will unavoidably bring support to individuals and the larger movement. Up until now, someone getting deported was hushed up. Or unnoticed. Or part of a headline grabbing, anonymous raid. Outness as part of immigration reform this the largest step towards awareness and change that I have seen in my lifetime.

Another blatantly ignorant generalization that Conservative Hideout makes is that since these protestors are undocumented, they have no skills, education, individual drive or, in a nutshell, humanity. CH questions ”who their funders are,” “who made their website” and challenges the validity of their student status using quotation marks and mocking their caps and gowns. Perhaps the only thing CH gets right is calling this a emotional plea. Indeed, if you have a heart, you can see how fucking emotional this is. However, if you are racist and misguided, you would ONLY see this as an emotional ploy.


*Video by Mohammed, one of the sit-in protestors. See more videos about The Dream Act at his youtube page, Dream Activist Dot Org

So, after I got the alert that CH has linked to Tania’s 2009 Top Ten list on TPR, I sent her an email. I just wanted to let her know about the online momentum that her actions had caused, and if she wanted me to change the post or take anything down, I would. She responded with what could be described as satisfied, and commented on the post herself. This is what she wrote at CH:

Hey this is Tania Unzueta, as you can see, I’m the person in the pictures above. Just to clarify, I am indeed a student, and will be starting my masters degree in Chicago next fall. Yay! Also, just a clarification: none of us participating in this organizing are getting paid. We are all doing this by being volunteers and fund-raising from our own families and friends. This is as real as organizing gets. Thanks for promoting our website! Aren’t we undocumented immigrants talented web designers and organizers?

Not only was she unafraid of this “uncovering” (SHE HAS A WEBSITE!!), she thanked them. I would also like to thank them. Thank you CH, for furthering immigration reform by covering the beginning steps of La Revolucion. Not only did you participate in Tania’s outness effort, not only did you plainly expose your fundie ”journalism,” you also helped document the fact that change is coming by the hands of one of the fiercest women I have ever had the pleasure of working with! Tania Unzueta: Chicana. Chicagoan. Warrior.

Click  to keep up with the DREAM Act and the Immigrant Youth Justice League. Or make a donation here. You can request to follow Tania’s tweets at http://twitter.com/ilehlainat . If you want to know up to the minute news on what’s happening in Arizona, keep up with http://altoarizona.com/. Another good read is a  recent post by Carlos in DC about the sit-in at McCain’s office.

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Queergasm This Friday

May 19, 2010

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From the email I just got:

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

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Interview With E. Patrick Johnson for About Face Theatre’s “Sweet Tea”

May 19, 2010

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*Purchase the book at Women and Children First

About Face Theatre continues to break fresh queer ground  with its latest play Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South. It’s about time we have some colorful stage plays on this side of the city! Adapted from his  book of the same name, author E. Patrick Johnson is a respite from the usual entertainment-only, Mardi Gras box that this part of the country gets when it comes to work about southern culture. Scribe and star of  Sweet Tea, Johnson is a queer scholar living and working in Chicago. His play, running through May 29th at the Viaduct Theater, 3111 N. Western and directed by Daniel Alexander Jones, is a reflection on his life growing up in the South and how the complex culture has shaped his life up north. TPR was able to have an e-chat with this charming smarty pants, and his answers to my questions were SO inspiring. Tickets  to the play here.

 Sweet Tea tackles the topic of southern black culture and homosexuality. What kinds of things have you seen/experienced that inspired you to make this play?

The question should be more about what I haven’t seen, actually. And that is, I haven’t seen black gay southern life depicted. There have been a couple of films that have had a black gay southern character, but there has not been a film, play, or even a book, that captured the community of black gay men in the South. So, my book, Sweet Tea, and now the play is about trying to bring these stories to the fore and to give the world a glimpse into this vibrant community of black gay men in the South.

People from different regions prefer different words to describe their sexuality. I’ve found that the word “queer” is rejected by people who know it to be a derogatory term, regardless of its reclaimed status. Your play’s title also reclaims the word “Sweet,” used to refer to gay men in the south. Can you talk about these words, which you identify with and why specificity in language is important?

It’s interesting because my grandmother used the word “queer” all the time, but pronounced it “quare” (like the word “square”), but she used it to comment on someone or something that she felt was strange or odd. I then used her pronunciation of the word to write an article about queer theory to critique its myopic focus on white gay men and only issues of sexuality rather than sexuality in relation to race and class. So, I reappropriated the term “queer” from my grandmother who, incidentally, was homophobic, to critique queer theory. All that to say that I think words have meanings, but their meanings change in various contexts and according to people’s particular set of politics. I do believe that in some instances reclaiming words that were once derogatory can be empowering. “Sweet” is one of them because unlike a word like “Faggot,” which has a particular sting to it, “sweet” has so many wonderful connotations that register alongside the negative ones. But more importantly, when combined with the term, “tea,” which means “gossip” in black gay vernacular, the meaning changes completely. The South in particular is the land of euphemisms and indirection–nothing is said in a direct way, especially about subjects that are taboo. You really have to be a part of the culture to catch everything that a person is saying; otherwise, you will miss something.

The church and its culture are highly influential in the United States, both in law making and interpersonal relationships. Can you describe how the church has shaped your life, or placed limitations on your life-experience? Conversely, how has it allowed you to experience things that others might not?

I often tell people that I started going to church in mother’s womb–and that would not be hyperbole. The church was a part of every aspect of my life growing up in western North Carolina. It was where I made my first friends; where I had my first kiss; where I learned how to paint; where I was encouraged to develop my singing; it infiltrated every facet of my life until I left for college. And even then, I continued to go to a local church in the town where my university was and I also joined the gospel choir at college. It wasn’t just about worshiping God, though that was a big part of it; it was about this communal life that was always teetering between the sacred and the secular. Rather than limitations, I believe the church actually catapulted me into actualizing all that I am today, especially since we children were rewarded for doing well in school, taught to be the very best at whatever we did, and were encouraged and nurtured as young artists and citizens.

As I got older, however, I had to step back from some of the not-so-pleasant things about the church. Although my pastor never preached a homophobic sermon when I was a child (at least that I can remember), there were plenty of such sermons in other churches and I just decided not to put myself through that. There are still many aspects of the church that I miss, however. Nonetheless, I choose to worship in my own way without all of the baggage that comes with belonging to “a” church.

You’ve spoken about gender expression, and how varied it can be/should be. Can you speak to anything specific about African-American culture that you think makes it particularly open to/able to express gender and sexuality in ways different that other cultures?

Just based on the interviews I conducted with some of the men in my book, it seems to me that some of the most flamboyant and gender non-conforming men were the most accepted in their communities. One example is Chaz/Chastity, a pre-operative MTF transgendered person in my hometown who, at the time of the interview, lived as a man on Sunday to sing in the choir and as a female the rest of the week and worked as a hairdresser. Everyone in my hometown accepted Chaz/Chastity without much comment at all. So, there’s something to be said about small black communities in particular, where the focus is more on survival and keeping the community together than on ostracizing folks for their “eccentricity,” which some feel gayness is.

Your play depicts characters that span a few generations. How has identifying as gay changed over time in the south? What do you think has influenced these changes?

In the African American community the term “gay” has only become a part of the parlance I’d say in the last 40 years. Before then, I think “sissy” or other euphemisms like “that way” or “funny” were most common. In the South there are still black communities that don’t use the term “gay,” but still rely on the euphemisms because, as I said before, indirection and circumvention are a part of southern culture. “Gay” as a term is used more now because of how much it’s used in popular culture and in our everyday life. Its use now has much to do with current politics, especially gay marriage and “don’t ask, don’t tell.”

Chicago has been your home for years now. What is still exciting to you about the Windy City, and how does it help shape your work?

I think of Chicago as “up South,” because there are so many southern transplants here like myself. Because I live on the South Side of Chicago in particular I feel like I’m living in an extension of the South because the community here is so close and the people are so warm and friendly like those in the South. Chicago has also been a great place for me to create performance because the arts community here is so vibrant. With over 200 theaters here and being at a university like Northwestern that supports the arts and having the opportunity to develop SWEET TEA as a fellow at the Ellen Stone Belic Institute for the Study of Women and Gender in Arts and Media at Columbia College, has bolstered my career in ways unimaginable. I can’t think of a better place to live or create art than in Chicago. It is my South.

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Alt Q’s 10th Anniversary – Best of Edition

May 7, 2010

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NEVER forget. In 2003, when Think Pink was a fresh-faced radio show with two lil DJ’s that could, the first person to give us any official nod or kudo was Scott Free. Not only did it feel nice, but since I already knew the work that he did with (what was then) Queer is Folk and the weekly queer showcase Homolatte, it was like validation. To this day, running into Scott always brings a reassurance that Chicago is a hot-bed of activism and artistic support, and his giantess frame is balanced by his snuggle-bear demeanor. Alt Q has jump started so many queer musicians including Actor Slash Model, Chris Garneau, and Coyote Grace; it’s also featured established out-performers such as Phranc and Grant Hart. This 10th anniversary show is a testament to Chicago’s desire for its own queer Lollapalooza and one of the many examples of Scott Free’s love of the Windy City. Hats off, Scott!!

From the press release:

ALT Q (formerly Queer Is Folk Festival) is celebrating it’s 10th year as a showcase for GLBT musicians and performers at the Old Town School of Folk Music. This year’s festival features some of our favorite performers from over the past 10 years. ALT Q is a celebration of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered experience through music and performance. Featuring an evening of five performing acts, the event’s mission is to raise awareness of out performers among the general public and the LGBT community. A meet-the-artists reception will follow the event. This year, proceeds from the event will be donated to given to the International Gay & Lesbian Human Rights Commission for relief efforts in Haiti. Funds go directly to two organizations –SEROvie, which provides HIV services and counseling, and Colectiva Mujer y Salud, a lesbian Dominican group that has crossed the border to Haiti to assist in the relief efforts. http://www.iglhrc.org

Scott Free presents:
ALT Q’s 10TH ANNIVERSARY ‘BEST IN SHOW’
Saturday, May 15th,  2010 7pm
The Old Town School of Folk Music
4544 N. Lincoln Ave, Chicago IL 60625
 
featuring Coyote Grace, Wishing Chair, The Heat Birds, Namoli Brennet, and Actor Slash Model. Tickets are available at the Old Town School of Folk Music website.

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John Parot: Hobbies

May 7, 2010

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John Parot’s in town for his new opening, Hobbies, at Western Exhibitions, 119 North Peoria Street #2A, this Saturday the 8th at 5pm. His stuff could be considered “pop art,” however his references are even more about identity than your average dissatisfied consumer. Passing digs, seemingly random thoughts and up-front abstractions of expression create a deliberate sentiment, a tone that evokes pounds of personality and coaxes more than just a pop-up thought. I haven’t previewed the show but the press images show lots of red, his signature marker lines and polaroids. Not too much of a visual deviation from his past shows, it’s interesting to see how his style has remained while addressing new topics, even if theme still revolves around himself. This stuff’s gay, no doubt, but thankfully there’s a queering of mainstream politics and an examination of web self-absorption coming from a smart guy. SO glad he’s keeping his connection to Chicago!

From the press release:

In “Hobbies,” Parot continues his poetic investigation into gay urban living, this time training his eye on the attributes with which identities are built and publicly declared in the age of Internet dating and profiles. Under the auspices of Web 2.0, our identities are increasingly constructed through smiling snapshots and lists of preferences and favored activities. Parot humorously sums up this state of affairs with multi-hued pie charts that display likes and dislikes: “hot fudge sundae,” “fireworks,” “tequila please,” “enough with the man-scarves,” “no beige!” Signifiers of personal taste and style abound elsewhere: fragments of album art from presumably favorite records, polaroids of vodka bottles posed on the beach, packs of Parliament cigarettes, and plaid patterns. Handsome male face preside over the disparate imagery like profile pics.

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TPR’s In Guide Mag

May 6, 2010

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It was a nice surprise to get a phone call from Joe Erbentraut the other week, as he wanted to have an on-the-record for an article he was doing for Guide Mag. Joe’s a budding gay journalist, keeping his own blog and writing for Edge Chicago, Guide Mag and he hinted at something in the works for a major East Coast pub that rhymes with Chillage Choice. My quotes don’t sound too brassy, do they? I like CLAIMING brassy, I just don’t like it when I see it on paper. Here’s the article, follow Joe on twitter! He’s hip, cute and my newest friendly gayborhood colleague.

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50 Faggots

May 6, 2010

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Way to reclaim it, girls! I’ve actually had this conversation a lot lately with my buddies Davey B and Amy Nicole about how masculinity is always prioritized in gay/queer culture. Even “edgey” pubs such as BUTT and don’t showcase femme dudes flaunting their curves, and it can get a little boring. I’m still learning about 50 Faggots, but if done right, this could be really groundbreaking–I’m particularly excited about Darell Jones’s contribution. The flyer above is for the benefit party at Hydrate on Thursday the 13th, there is also a screening of the first episode on Friday, May 14th at The Center on Halsted (6-10pm, $10) with cast Q&A afterwards!
 

Watch the preview over at  www.50faggots.com SO MUCH CHICAGO LOVING IT!!!!!!

From the FB group:

50 Faggots is a new, online documentary series educating, exploring and celebrating how individual effeminate gay men survive and thrive in today’s American queer communities. It uses longitudinal, auto-ethnographic documentary filming and educates audiences with the unprecedented access to the lives and experiences of effeminate male activists, artists, professionals and educators perspectives rarely discussed within most cultures. The series addresses the dearth of self-acceptance among effeminate men, young and old, with humorous anecdotes, important wisdom, and inspiring models of resilience. By offering individual alternatives to dominant constructions of American masculinity and heteronormative gay lifestyles, this film illuminates the on-going issues relevant to queer communities.

The first season, located in the urban neighborhoods of Chicago, Washington D.C., and New York City, dedicates two years to documenting the stories of ten effeminate gay men. These men discuss their professional and personal lives, often in contradiction to communities that demand a rigid and binary definition of gender, particularly valuing patriarchy and an appropriate presentation of straight-acting masculinity.

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Ethan A White – Professional Artist

May 4, 2010

As an artist statement, Ethan A White’s Professional Artist video gets better with every minute. At first, it seems like an elaboration on a conversation between friends in a bar: “I’m getting my MFA soon, and living as an artist is plagued with the machinations of business, so much so that surviving, marketing and claiming existence as an artist requires a creativity in and of itself. THIS BLOWS.” A fey flaunt and a den of cats, “Professional Artist” takes aim at free time and how creative minds foster imaginative space as instinct; increasingly, however, they need to use that free time to wear a PR hat. The self-serving success of facebook events and twitter feeds are the new DIY publicist, and if you can figure out a way to market yourself, not only will your initial creative products get more attention, but your “artistry” has made itself a new face. White, at least in this brink-of-graduation phase, focuses on this millennial negative space and how technology and networking have changed the way creative-types present themselves. As a character, he blurs himself into the mix, cultivating a diva persona around a working cat lady. How far he can take it depends on how savvy he is at innovation, a clear statement of purpose and perhaps a transparent, public desire to work through it.

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FKA This Thursday – Hanky Code

May 4, 2010

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I’m flagging black on the left and dark pink on the right. You?

FKA is my favorite monthly queer dance party in Chicago, for many reasons. Mostly because the vibe is simultaneously hype and unpretentious. The people are fashionable, the level of attractive attendees reaches critical proportions, and yet friendliness prevails. I’ve met countless new people at FKA, and it always feels like a reunion of like minded proactive individuals. Kate Sosin wrote a thorough piece of journalism aboug FKA’s history and place in Chicago’s queer culture over at Chicago Now. Come by this Thursday, no cover and cheap drinks!

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Get Ready! Vespertine, Women-Only Play Party This Memorial Day Weekend

April 28, 2010

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You know how easily gay men talk about going to a bar with a back room? Or basement? (If you don’t know gay guys that easily talk about back rooms or basements, you need to get some more gay friends, just sayin’). I’ve always thought it was a shame that my queer lady pals don’t have the ability to joke about that awkard underwear hug or funny run-in at the urinal that is also a bath tub. Culturally, it’s a unique space for male homosexualists, and as long as you play safe, I think it can be a healthy experience and “fresh” perspective.

SO glad my mother doesn’t use the internet BTW.

Enter Verspertine, a private club that only comes around once in a blue moon. Women get to learn and explore their kinks and desires in an environment free from potential creeps and gropers, and I can only IMAGINE how liberating that must feel. Just last month Chicago comic and perrenial cutie Cameron Esposito was showing off her Steamworks membership card that she got when she was featured in a taping of Feast of Fun. She can’t go to the Boystown bath house to play, but she was surely excited about being a member and the first woman to hold that distinction. Congrats, Cameron! If you are serious about being in that kind of environment, Vespertine is the place to start. The next one falls on International Mr. Leather Weekend, or Memorial Day Weekend.

Vespertine is being held on May 30TH 2010. Tickets will be available at Leather 6410/Paul C Leather 6410 N. Clark in Chicago starting May 1st. You may also order by phone, 773-508-0900.

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