PDF Issue - Windy City Media Group
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PDF Issue - Windy City Media Group
A DAY WITH HIV IN AMERICA page 14 WINDY CITY TIMES THE VOICE OF CHICAGO’S GAY, LESBIAN, BI AND TRANS COMMUNITY SINCE 1985 Aug. 31, 2011 vol 26, no. 47 www.WindyCityMediaGroup.com Solmonese leaving HRC HALL OF FAME CHANGES MAY COME page 12 ELMHURST COLLEGE MAKES HISTORY By Lisa Keen Keen News Service The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) announced in a press release Aug. 27 that its president, Joe Solmonese, “will not renew his contract, which expires March 31, 2012.” Rebecca Tillet, a co-chair of HRC’s Board of Directors, noted in the press release that the board had asked Solmonese to give them six months notice before leaving his position, “and he’s done that.” Solmonese had not responded to this reporter’s request for an interview by the press deadline but said in the HRC press release, “Leading HRC has been an inspiring experience and a complete privilege.” “I could not be more proud of our staff, our volunteer leadership and of the extraordinary progress we’ve made together as a community. “HRC has never been stronger and after nearly seven years, this is the right moment for me to move on.” Joe Solmonese. Photo by Rex Wockner Solmonese took the helm of the nation’s largest LGBT political organization in 2005, following an 11-month stint by his predecessor, Massachusetts state Sen. Cheryl Jacques. Jacques followed a nine-year tenure by Elizabeth Birch. Prior to Birch, the organization was lead by its founder, Steve Endean; its first executive director, Vic Basile; and Basile’s successor, Tim McFeeley. Solmonese hinted he would be exploring “new professional possibilities” and would continue to be involved in such activities as fighting marriage bans and “ensuring President Obama is reelected for a second term.” That latter comment will almost certainly fuel speculation by some that Solmonese is bucking for a position with the Obama White House or re-election campaign. In HRC’s press release, Anne Fay, a co-chair of the HRC Foundation board of directors, called Solmonese an “outstanding leader” and credited him with putting HRC Turn to page 4 Lesbian icon, ‘Glee’ star talk with WCT page 8 WC&F thrives page 29 world series begins page 34 Kelly McGillis made many hearts flutter when co-starring in such movies as Top Gun (above, left) with Tom Cruise; see her interview on page 27. Meanwhile, Windy City Times also chats with Dot Jones (above, right), who has gone from arm-wrestling champion to being a star in her own right on TV’s Glee; that discussion is on page 31. Right photo by Tyler Golden and Oxygen Media 2 Aug. 31, 2011 WINDY CITY TIMES WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 3 this week in WINDY CITY TIMES NEWS Calif.’s teaching-law opponents LGBT students: Any safer now? Judge asks Prop 8 question Victory Fund’s Robin Brand Lakeview fire; Legacy Project Quigley and ENDA; Lambda event ALMA picnic; Lovefest Hall of Fame; Cocktail sold More departures at HBHC Gay in the Life AIDS @ 30 Views with Monroe; letters 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 12 13 14 22 ENTERTAINMENT/EVENTS Scottish Play Scott Theater reviews Knight: The Debt; Don’t Be... Kelly McGillis interview Dish; Celebrations Women & Children First Dot Jones of ‘Glee’; Bent Nights Billy Masters 23 24 26 27 28 29 31 33 OUTLINES Real estate; classifieds Calendar Q Sports: World Series 30 32 34 Photos on cover (left, from top): Photo of Richard Cordova by John Gress; photo of Kit Duffy by Helen Adamopoulos; photo of Elmhurst College courtesy of Sara Ramseth; photo of Linda Bubon by Kat Fitzgerald; photo of Ben Cohen by Ross Forman CITY WINDYS TIME A DAY HIv indyCityMed www.W es Solmon page 12 vol 26, Keen By Lisa service in a press “will Keen news (HRC) announced Joe Solmonese, 2012.” Rights Campaign president, March 31, The Human 27 that its Aug. which expires Board of Directors, release asked Solof HRC’s his contract, board had not renew Tillet, a co-chair leaving that the before Rebecca press release notice months the noted in give them six that.” request to done reporter’s monese to this “and he’s in the HRC but said his position, had not responded experideadline Solmonese by the press has been an inspiring for an interview“Leading HRC our volunteer press release,complete privilege.”of our staff, we’ve made a progress ence and not be more proud “I could the extraordinary and of nearly seven leadership a community. and after as stronger me to move on.” together for never been “HRC has the right moment is years, this T ELMHURS COLLEGE HISTORY MAKES Lesbian Joe solmonese. Photo by rex wockner DOWNLOAD THIS! g HRC e leavin page 14 FAME HALL OF CHANGES MAY COME GAY, LESBIAN, 1985 OF CHICAGO’S THE VOICE COMMUNITY SINCE BI AND TRANS 2011 Aug. 31, no. 47 p.com iaGrou WITH IN AMERICA LGBT largest the nation’s an 11-month helm of Cheryl took the in 2005, following state Sen. ElizaSolmonese organization Massachusetts tenure by by political a nine-year was lead his predecessor, followed stint by organization director, Vic Jacques Birch, the executive Jacques. Prior to its first beth Birch. Steve Endean; Tim McFeeley. “new profesits founder, Basile’s successor, be exploring be involved and he would continue to Basile; hinted “ensuring and would bans and Solmonese marriage term.” as fighting sional possibilities” a second fuel speculaactivities reelected for is certainly in such position Obama will almost bucking for a President is comment campaign. That latter that Solmonese or re-election of the some a co-chair an tion by White House Anne Fay, Obama called SolmoneseHRC with the press release, putting directors, In HRC’s him with board of page 4 and credited Turn to HRC Foundation leader” “outstanding e’ star talk icon, ‘Gle with WC T page 8 WC&F THRIvES page 29 windy 27. Meanwhile, is on on page discussion interview Glee; that see her on Tv’s Tom cruise; her own right left) with a star in to being Gun (above, as Top champion movies in such arm-wrestling gone from WORLD bEGINS page 34 SERIES Go to www.WindyCityMediaGroup.com to download complete issues of Windy City Times and Nightspots. Then click on any ad and be taken directly to the advertiser’s Web site! when co-starring who has flutter right), hearts (above, Media made many Dot Jones and Oxygen with Kelly McGillis also chats by Tyler Golden city Times right photo page 31. online exclusives at WindyCityMediaGroup www. .com women’s day Read about and see photos of a rally held to mark Women’s Equality Day. Photo by Joe Franco TAKE A QUEER LOOK AT CHICAGO In 1906 police arrested Julius Duc for dressing in women’s clothing in public. At the station, a Daily News photographer snapped a series of photographs that remained unpublished until now. Discover the city through the lens of gender, sexuality and nonconformity at Out in Chicago — a groundbreaking exhibition that explores 150 years of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) Chicagoans and their quests for self-identity, family, community and political action. OPEN THROUGH MARCH 26, 2012 See photos of Equality Utah’s recent Allies Dinner, which featured Calif. Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom (above) OVER THE RAINBOW UIC’s Gender and Sexuality Center recently held its Rainbow Social. See pics from that. Photo from Brandie Balken GENERAL ADMISSION $14 FREE FOR MEMBERS See pics from AIDS Legal Council of Chicago’s “Orient Express.” Photo by Steven Chaitman How you doin’? shop ‘til you drop Clark Street at North Avenue 312.642.4600 www.chicagohistory.org The Magnificent Mile Shopping Festival takes place through Sept. 8. Get the lowdown on the event. PRESENTING SPONSORS: THAT’S ENTERTAINMENT This week’s entertainment round-up includes items on Hugh Jackman, Amy Winehouse and Queen Latifah. plus DAILY BREAKING NEWS Talk-show host Wendy Williams was in Chicagoland recently—and WCT was there to greet her. Photo by Jerry Nunn The Lakeview controversy nightspots Celebrate the end of summer with #1050 • August 31, 2011 with reporter Kate Sosin nightspots Continental divide Labor Day weekend brings Mr. and Miss Continental to town. page 7 AK Miller’s new column, Being Continued. Show #432 Parlour marks one year. page 14 page 26 Find Nightspots on LEAD CORPORATE SPONSOR: www.WindyCityQueercast.com GO BEHIND THE SCENES SCAN THE TAG QR Tag by EventCode.info 4 EQCA: Teaching law opponents are ‘extremists’ by Rex Wockner The people who want to repeal California’s new law requiring teaching of LGBT history are “extremists” who persecute gays, says Roland Palencia, head of Equality California. Palencia’s organization hopes to keep the group “Stop SB 48” from collecting 504,760 valid signatures from registered California voters by mid-October. The signatures would force a voter referendum on the teaching law, also known as Senate Bill 48, on next June’s ballot. California law requires that social-studies curriculum include information on many different minority groups, but LGBT people were just added to the list this year. In signing SB 48, Gov. Jerry Brown said, “History should be honest.” “I think that one of the things that we’re going to take on is defining them (the opponents),” Palencia said Aug. 25 in a telephone interview with five journalists. “Who gets to paint whom?” he asked. “We want to start engaging the conversation about painting them in the corner about how dangerous these people are to the people of California, and really expose their agenda—how these campaigns are persecution. ... We need to define them as the extremists that they are.” Palencia said that despite the opponents’ rhetoric in the new campaign—and in the 2008 campaign to re-ban same-sex marriage in California—schoolchildren are not harmed by hearing about the existence of gay and lesbian people. Indeed, it is people who want to ban gay issues from schools who “are a danger to children and families,” he said. EQCA has suggested that inclusive teaching about LGBT history will reduce anti-gay bullying in schools. On the same telephone call, EQCA’s communications director, Rebekah Orr, said the opposition is using “the same sound bites they’ve been Indiana lawmaker in gay sex scandal Indiana state Rep. Phil Hinkle has admitted that he paid 18-year-old Kameryn Gibson $80 on Aug. 6 for sex, according to the Indianapolis Star. However, not only is Hinkle refusing to say that he is gay, but he is refusing calls for him to step down. Gibson, who said he was looking for a “sugga daddy” on Craigslist posting, told The Star that he attempted to leave the JW Marriott hotel room where they met. Gibson added that Hinkle tried to keep him from leaving, exposed himself and then, after his sister arrived, offered them $100 cash, an iPad and Blackberry to keep quiet. Hinkle disputes Gibson’s version, with the legislator saying that he never exposed himself and that Gibson stole those items when Hinkle was in the bathroom. Both agree that money exchanged hands but no sex act took place. House Speaker Brian Bosma has stripped Hinkle of his committee chairmanships and has joined other GOP officials who have asked him to resign. However, Hinkle said that it’s not up to party leaders to make that decision. Hinkle also said that he’s not gay. playing for 20 years.” Reminded that those old sound bites seem to work, Orr said: “We are going to have a richer set of input in terms of research and how to move communities and speak to them in culturally competent ways.” “We don’t have a silver bullet on the children (meme),” she acknowledged. “We have no illusions about the monumental task before us. ... We’re going to need to do much more robust pieces of research, and we will not be able to say anything definitive, certainly, until we’re done with that.” EQCA’s Andrea Shorter said on the call that signature-gathering on the repeal referendum is taking place “within their base.” “Their activities are largely behind the closed door of their churches,” Shorter said. EQCA and other groups have launched a website to protect SB 48 at faireducationaction. com. The other side’s site is stopsb48.com. Teen dies after alleged hate crime BY KATE SOSIN A 19-year-old Iowan has died from injuries from an altercation during which attackers allegedly yelled anti-gay slurs at him. However, police say the incident likely will not be investigated as a hate crime. Marcellus Andrews, of Waterloo, died Aug. 21 after being removed from life support. Andrews was allegedly beaten by a group of people who yelled anti-gay slurs at him in the early hours of Aug. 19. Lieutenant Michael McNamee of the investigative police division in Waterloo, confirmed that the fight started an exchange of words, but said that any slurs hurled were the result of a daylong dispute between two groups of people, not the start of anti-gay violence. “There were some things that happened there earlier in the day between parties involved in the altercation,” McNamee said. “At this point, I don’t anticipate it being prosecuted as a hate crime.” According to McNamee, approximately 10 people were involved in the altercation at 220 Cottage Street. Police have interviewed several suspects but have yet to make arrests. “We do have people of interest we’re looking at,” McNamee said. A Facebook page in Andrews’ honor had exceeded 1,700 subscribers by Tuesday. Friends expressed their hopes that Andrews would find peace and justice. Others expressed outrage over the alleged anti-gay murder. “I will never forget the laughs and encouraging words you gave me,” wrote on friend. “Everything I do will be in your memory…Love you so much and I’m blessed to have experienced your friendship.” Windy City Times will update as more details become available. SOLMONESE from cover Roland Palencia. Photo by Rex Wockner Gay man takes over Apple WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 Tim Cook, a gay man, is the new CEO of Apple after Steve Jobs resigned Aug. 24, according to Advocate.com. The company said the switch was made during a meeting of the board of directors; Jobs specifically asked for Cook to replace him. “The board has complete confidence that Tim is the right person to be our next CEO,” said Art Levinson, chairman of Genentech, on behalf of Apple’s Board in a statement. Windy City Times reported that Cook was a de facto CEO earlier this year after Jobs went on medical leave. It was also noted that Cook has sold and/or amassed approximately $136 million in corporate shares. He is seen as a quiet workaholic who gets up at 4:30 a.m. and eats energy bars constantly. According to Apple’s website, Cook earned an M.B.A. from Duke University, where he was a Fuqua Scholar, and a bachelor of science degree in industrial engineering from Auburn University. The Chicago Tribune reported that Apple has awarded Cook 1 million restricted stock units that were worth about $383 million at the end of Aug. 26. Cook will get half of the stock after being CEO for five years; he gets the rest after 10 years. in “the best place the organization has ever been.” “Not only has our community secured historic victories,” said Fay, “but our membership is larger and more active than at any time in our history, and our financial health is secure even in these difficult economic times.” The press release also credited Solmonese with leading HRC at a time when the LGBTrights movement has seen many gains—including repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” passage of hate-crimes legislation and the legalization of marriage equality in New York. Critics, no doubt, will also point out that, with Solmonese at the helm of the largest and most influential LGBT political organization in the country, there has been little to no real movement on the Employment Non-Discrimination Act; stinging ballot-box losses on marriage equality in California and Maine; and no prospects for building significant Republican Party support for LGBT issues at a time when control of Congress is split between the two major parties. According to the press release, HRC’s membership grew from 750,000 to “more than 1,000,000” under Solmonese, who took over the helm of the organization from then Executive Director Elizabeth Birch in 2005. The organization issued the press release a day after lesbian blogger Pam Spaulding (at pamshouseblend.com) posted an entry saying that she had learned “from a trusted source in a position to know” that Solmonese would leave in December. The HRC press release indicated the organization has formed a search committee to select a new president. The release does not indicate when Solmonese will leave. ONLINE AT WINDYCITYMEDIAGROUP.COM NATIONAL NEWS —GOP senator resigns over Grindr photos —Rick Santorum (left): Gays are at war with me —Rabbi blames disasters on gays Marcellus Andrews. HRC has a deep bench on staff. Managing Director Susanne Salkind, the organization’s number two, is an experienced attorney with political and management experience. She has served as deputy for the 2004 campaign to defeat the Federal Marriage Amendment; is liaison between the staff and boards; and has been heavily involved in electoral programs. HRC National Field Director Marty Rouse has been responsible for mobilizing the group’s one million supporters and members to take action at the local, state and federal levels. Before joining HRC in 2006, he headed MassEquality. In addition, David Smith served as communications director for the organization from 1995 to 2003, then became vice president for programs, directing policy and strategy for the organization. He has experience on Capitol Hill as a former aide to U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy, and deep ties to other national LGBT groups, including the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation and the Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center. Longtime HRC official and supporter Hilary Rosen said she thinks HRC now needs to be both a “visionary” and a “political strategist.” “Elizabeth [Birch] was a visionary who shone a light to the straight world at a time when we were more invisible,” said Rosen. “Joe was a political strategist at a time when we had a President and a Congress who wanted to work with us to get things done. The next leader,” said Rosen, “will have to be able to do some of both….” The HRC press release says the organization’s four volunteer co-chairs will select the search committee and hire an executive search firm to help with the effort. ©2011 by Keen News Service. All rights reserved. WINDY CITY TIMES LGBT students: Safer this year? Aug. 31, 2011 by Dana Rudolph Keen News Service Anti-LGBT bullying took the national stage last fall after the highly publicized suicides of several teens bullied for being gay or perceived to be. The relentless bullying, many believe, may have been one of the contributing factors in their decisions to attempt suicide, and their deaths led to an surge of anti-bullying awareness campaigns and media coverage. But will LGBT students entering school this fall be any safer after a year of heightened awareness about the issue? Two LGBT leaders are doubtful, although they acknowledge some positive changes. Eliza Byard, executive director of the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN), said, “Last fall, the nation as a whole woke up to the potential consequences of this problem.” This year, “more schools are aware of what they need to do, and there are more resources out there.” However, while “we’ve made progress” in people’s understanding of anti-LGBT bullying and “ideas and policies are getting traction,” Byard said, there is still “a lot of work to be done.” David McFarland, interim executive director/ CEO of The Trevor Project, the leading national organization providing crisis intervention and suicide prevention services to LGBT (and questioning) youth, said, “We’re not there yet because we’re continuing to see anti-LGBT rhetoric and movement across this country that has a negative effect on young people. ... There is greater awareness around this issue, but LGBT students still experience bullying and harassment at an alarming rate.” Research has shown the negative effects of bullying. GLSEN’s 2009 National School Climate Survey found that nearly nine out of 10 LGBT students experienced verbal or physical harassment at school in the previous year, which was related to increased depression and anxiety and decreased self-esteem. Also, a study in the May 2011 Journal of School Health found that anti-LGBT bullying at school “is strongly linked” to negative mental health for its victims, including an increased frequency of suicide attempts and increased risk for engaging in behaviors that can lead to infection with STDs and HIV. The increased risks exist not only while the victim is in adolescence, but also in young adulthood. Federal actions taken over the last year to address anti-LGBT bullying include, most prominently, an anti-bullying conference hosted by the While House in March 2011, at which President Obama told attendees that bullying is “more like- VALEO Eliza Byard (left) with country singer Chely Wright. Photo obtained through Facebook ly to affect kids that are seen as different,” including those who are different because of sexual orientation. The U.S. Department of Education has also issued a number of letters to educators, reminding them: —that federal laws require schools to take action against bullying—including gender-based and sexual harassment of LGBT students. —that schools receiving federal funds must provide equal access to school resources for all student groups, including gay-straight alliances (GSAs), and that GSAs “can help make schools safe and affirming environments for everyone.” —that effective state anti-bullying laws include ones that specify “actual or perceived characteristics of students who have historically been targets of bullying,” such as sexual orientation and gender identity. On the state level, since last fall, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticut and Rhode Island enacted anti-bullying legislation that explicitly prohibits bullying based on sexual orientation and gender identity, as recommended by the Department of Education, making a total of 14 states that do so. The others include California, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington. An additional two, Massachusetts and Wisconsin, specify sexual orientation, but not gender identity. Chicago’s Dedicated and Comprehensive LGBT Program AT CHICAGO LAKESHORE HOSPITAL Valeo at Chicago Lakeshore Hospital provides comprehensive psychiatric and addiction-related treatment for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and questioning (LGBTQ) individuals. The program offers a safe, affirming therapeutic environment for members of the LGBTQ community. The Valeo staff is comprised of well-trained, experienced gay and gay-sensitive behavioral health professionals from a wide variety of disciplines. 4840 N. MARINE DRIVE CHICAGO, IL 60640 1-800-888-0560 www.chicagolakeshorehospital.com North Dakota and Texas enacted anti-bullying laws in the last year, but those laws do not enumerate sexual orientation and gender identity. And Byard said there has been “tremendous activity at district and local levels” across the country to address bullying. McFarland, too, stressed the importance of local action. “Schools and communities need to take concrete steps, creating safe spaces where youth can receive support from caring adults,” he said. Both the Trevor Project and GLSEN are among the organizations that provide training to help them do so. Byard said, however, that, “The biggest problem we have right now is that schools are in crisis because of the economy. We’ve got to make sure schools that want to do the right thing are not prevented because of a lack of resources.” It may be tough going. The federal Fiscal Year 2011 budget drained more than $100 million from the two primary federal grant programs that address bullying. And state education budgets continue to face cuts. McFarland noted that, in some districts, the problem may be attitudinal as well as budgetary, especially in states and school districts with “no promo homo” laws or policies preventing schoolbased instruction that could be interpreted to be positive about homosexuality. Eight states—Alabama, Arizona, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, and Utah—have such laws statewide, according to ‘Civilized Celebrations’ Aug. 31 at The Joynt The Civil Rights Agenda will hold its first in a series of “Civilized Celebrations”—honoring those who were joined in civil unions at the organization’s June 3 ceremony—Wed., Aug. 31, 5:30-9 p.m. at The Joynt, 650 N. Dearborn. The couples Jayson Bernard & Roberto Rosario and Erica & Vanessa Feliciano will be featured. A short program will take place at 6:30 p.m. Tickets (“Roommates” level) are $50 each; there are also “domestic partnership” ($250 host), “civil union” ($500 sponsor) and “marriage” ($1,000 chair) levels. Purchase tickets at http://tinyurl.com/ civilizedcelebration. Send checks to The Civil Rights Agenda, 2129 N. Western Ave., Chicago, Ill., 60647. For more info, email Mia@miaphifer.com or call 773-398-6986. Celebration of life for RJ Chaffin Sept. 10 A celebration of life for longtime community activist, volunteer and businessman RJ Chaffin will take place Saturday, Sept. 10, at the Center on Halsted, 3656 N. Halsted. A reception will be held 12-1 p.m.; the pro- 5 GLSEN. But individual school districts in other states may have similar policies, as does the AnokaHennepin School District in Minnesota, part of which is in the congressional district of presidential candidate Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn. The National Center for Lesbian Rights and the Southern Poverty Law Center recently filed a lawsuit against the district, claiming the policies “exacerbated” anti-gay harassment. This caused some students “serious emotional harm, including anxiety, anger, and depression, which led some of them to consider or attempt suicide.” In the nine months between November 2009 and July 2010, at least four LGBT students within the District died by suicide. Federal anti-bullying legislation “would make an enormous difference,” said Byard. Three pairs of bills in the U.S. House and Senate would address anti-LGBT bullying and harassment in schools and universities but seem unlikely to pass the current Republican-controlled House, despite having a handful of Republican co-sponsors. Still, Byard and McFarland feel the efforts over the past year have had some positive effect. “After last year, more doors are open,” Byard said. “People know this needs to be done.” McFarland added, “For the first time, the challenges of LGBT youth are no longer invisible on a local, state, or national level.” ©2011 by Keen News Service. All rights reserved. gram will be 1-2 p.m.; and a closing reception will take place 2-3:30 p.m. Inducted into the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame in 1997, Chaffin was involved in a wide range of causes and helped raise thousands of dollars for many AIDS and gay groups. He was a well-known business activist with the Northalsted Area Merchants Association ( NAMA ) , as owner of the now-closed RJ’s Video and Rajin’ Rae Jean’s. He was NAMA president from 1998-2004. Chaffin, a native of Ohio, is most associated with International Mr. Leather and its Leather Marketplace, an event he directed for 18 years, including this past Memorial Weekend in Chicago. He is interviewed in the new book Leatherman: The Legend of Chuck Renslow, about his IML and gay community work. Chaffin also served on the boards of Strike Against AIDS, the Chicago AIDS Benefit Committee and NAMA. RJ Chaffin. Judge: What’s the difference between Prop 8 transcript and videotape? By Lisa Keen Keen News Service A federal district court judge in San Francisco Aug. 29 heard vigorous arguments over a request to release for public viewing a videotape of last year’s historic trial on Proposition 8. Public release of the videotapes has been considered barred since January 2010, when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled at the start of the trial that there could be no broadcast of the court proceedings. One question U.S. District Court Chief Judge James Ware posed during Monday’s hearing, according to Twitter reports, was: “Now that the trial is over,” can the prohibition on broadcasting be set aside?” The legal team challenging the ban on marriage for same-sex couples requested the hearing to convince Ware to allow for public release of the videotapes. Ware said, at the end of the proceeding Monday morning, that he would issue a ruling on that request soon. Live reports from the morning’s proceedings in San Francisco were transmitted via Twitter by the American Foundation for Equal Rights, which has sponsored the litigation challenging Proposition 8, and the Courage Campaign, an online organizing group that supports marriage equality. According to those reports, Ware indicated at the top of the hour-long hearing that neither side in the litigation had sought to strike the videotapes from the litigation’s official record. But Yes on 8 did object to the broadcast of today’s hearings and last week, Ware granted that request and barred broadcast of today’s hearing. Ted Boutrous, one of the top attorneys for the team challenging Proposition 8, told Ware that releasing the videotapes will enable the public to “see and hear” why Ware’s predecessor ruled Proposition 8 unconstitutional. A lengthy, written transcript of the full proceeding has been available to the public for some time. “It is difficult for people to accept what they are prohibited from observing,” Boutrous told Ware, according to the AFER Twitter report. Boutrous said the release of the videotapes would also be helpful in addressing concerns raised by Yes on 8 that the trial was somehow unfair to Yes on 8. Boutrous noted that Yes on 8 has also claimed that release of the videotape would leave Yes on 8 witnesses at the trial vulnerable to harassment. But, Boutrous noted, the dual argument— that the trial was unfair but don’t release the videotapes— is trying to “have it both ways.” “The public’s interest would have been best served by the broadcast of the trial,” said Boutrous. According to the Courage Campaign Twitter feed, Ware pressed Boutrous on his motives for seeking release of the videotapes, and noted that federal trials and hearings are not usually broadcast. At the time of the Proposition 8 trial, the 9th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals was just beginning to roll out a new program to consider allowing for broadcast of trials and hearings. Judge Vaughn Walker, who presided over the Proposition 8 trial, asked to allow broadcast of that trial as part of the new program. Ultimately, the U.S. Supreme Court weighed in and said no. Both AFER and Courage Campaign Twitter reports noted that Ware said he was “bothered” WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 6 Judge Vaughn Walker. by the fact that the videotape was in existence because of Judge Walker, and not because of one of the parties to the litigation. “I am bothered by the question of what to do with something that is recorded by the judge’s action,” said Ware, according to the Courage Campaign. However, Boutrous said Ware should look at the videotape as it looks at the written transcript. The videotape, said Boutrous, is just the “transcript-plus …plus audio, plus video.” Boutrous showed Ware a video clip from a reenactment of the trial, a clip starring Academy Award-winning actor Marisa Tomei as plaintiff Kristen Perry. And then the same clip from the actual video recording of the trial. Boutrous also replayed a clip from the actual video recording of the trial in which Yes on 8 expert witness David Blankenhorn agreed with plaintiffs that allowing for marriage equality would make our society “more American.” He followed that with a clip from the re-enactment. Both AFER and Courage Campaign indicate the re-enactment comes across as very different from the actual recording. AFER and Courage Campaign say Ware commented to Boutrous that he does not believe the court has a role in educating the public and asks Boutrous to identify a legal authority to justify release of the videotapes. They did not indicate whether Boutrous was able to identify such an authority but quoted Boutrous as arguing that release of the videotapes is necessary to defend the “integrity of the court.” Christine Van Aken, from the San Francisco City Attorney’s Office, which has also opposed Proposition 8, was also given time before Ware. She said Yes on 8 claims about potential for harassment are unfounded, that there’s been no indication of intimidation, according to the AFER Twitter report. And, says Van Aken, certain actions—such as boycotts—are types of expressions protected by the First Amendment. Van Aken said it should require more than just “hypothesis and conjecture” about harassment to justify keeping the videotapes under seal. Attorney Thomas Burke, representing the “Media Coalition,” a group of mainstream news organization seeking to broadcast the videotapes, agreed. “If you can have the [written] transcripts publicly available,” said Burke, according to the AFER Twitter report, “surely the public cannot be hurt by seeing the actual testimony.” Yes on 8 supporters argued against videotaping the trial and don’t want the tapes in public circulation, claiming it will enable opponents of Proposition 8 to harass Yes on 8 witnesses. In documents filed with the court, they said release of the videotapes will lead to broadcast of the trial proceeding, in violation of a longstanding policy of not broadcasting trials. They also claimed it violated the “spirit” of the U.S. Supreme Court order that the trial not be broadcast live outside the federal courthouse in San Francisco where the trial took place. In court Aug. 29, Yes on 8 attorney David Thompson said his legal team did not object to Judge Walker’s videotaping of the trial because of Walker’s assurances that the video would be used only by him, in chambers, in preparation of his final decision in the case. According to Twitter reports from AFER and Courage Campaign, Thompson said one of Yes on 8’s two witnesses relied on that assurance in deciding to testify. Thompson, in response to a question from Ware, said it would be in violation of the court’s seal for even the 9th Circuit—which has an appeal of Walker’s decision before it—to play the videotapes. To abide by the seal, said Thompson, the 9th Circuit judges would need to view the recording from the San Francisco federal courthouse “in this courtroom.” There can be no electronic transmission of the videotape outside the courtroom, said Thompson. “Our concern is not with the 9th Circuit view it,” said Thompson, according to the AFER Twitter report, “our concern is with it being made public.” Ware, according to the AFER and Courage Campaign reports, expressed some discomfort with Thompson’s argument, saying he was concerned it might “interfere” with the 9th Circuit’s ability to review the record in the case. He reiterated his initial notation that no one had requested ‘We Are Halsted’ Aug. 31 “We Are Halsted”—a special event created to bring the community together; to raise awareness about the challenges LGBTQ homeless youth face; and to help support organizations—will take place Wed., Aug. 31, 7-9 p.m., at Center on Halsted, 3656 N. Halsted. Adam Guerino (Laugh Track at Sidetrack, Nightcaps Cabaret) is hosting the event with the support of the Center and the Lakeview Safety and Inclusion Coalition. Various entertainers will sing, dance and perform comedy. There will also be a raffle and drinks. Tickets start at $5; see “We Are Halsted” on Facebook. Adam Guerino. Photo courtesy of Guerino GLN looks at 9/11, Afghanistan war Sept. 10 The Gay Liberation Network (GLN) will host a re-examination of the war in Afghanistan and the 9/11 tragedy that preceded it Sat- to strike the videotape from the official record of Perry v. Brown. But Thompson said the videotapes are not part of the official record; only the written transcript is. Ware pressed Thompson to explain the difference in harm between public availability of the transcript and availability of the videotapes. “You know what [the witnesses] look like. You know what they sound like,” said Thompson, according to AFER’s Twitter report. However, on rebuttal, AFER attorney Ted Boutrous dismissed Thompson’s concern as “flimsy.” “It would take literally two seconds for someone to see Mr. Blankenhorn talk for hours about [same-sex] marriage,” said Boutrous, an apparent reference to AFER’s claim that Blankenhorn that Yes on 8’s other witness make frequent public appearances to talk about their opposition to marriage equality. Boutrous also said AFER considers the videotape to be part of the official judicial record. In a brief to Ware July 15, Charles Cooper, the lead attorney for Yes on 8 concerns in the litigation, said his client also objects to the court’s returning to Walker a copy of the videotapes for retention as a part of his judicial papers. In June, Ware rejected a request from Proposition 8 supporters to take possession of and sequester the videotapes permanently. He also rejected their request to vacate the August 2010 ruling—that Proposition 8 is unconstitutional— by then U.S. District Court Chief Judge Vaughn Walker. Yes on 8 proponents had argued that, because Walker confirmed in April 2011, two months after he retired from the bench, that he has been in a relationship with a man for the past 10 years, he should have recused himself from presiding over and deciding the Perry v. Brown (formerly Perry v. Schwarzenegger) lawsuit. On Sept. 6, the California Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on whether there is any authority in state law to justify allowing Yes on 8 attorneys appeal Walker’s decision in Perry v. Brown given that state officials have decided against appeal and have asked to abide by Walker’s decision. ©2011 by Keen News Service. All rights reserved. urday, Sept. 10, at the Merlo Public Library, 644 W. Belmont Ave., 2:30-4:30 p.m., with the event “9-11 and the Afghanistan War: Who Was Right?” The event will feature GLN member/anti-war organizer Andy Thayer and Voices for Creative Non-Violence’s Mary Dean, who recently returned from a month-long visit to Afghanistan. GLN’s Bob Schwartz will moderate. For more information, email LGBTliberation@aol.com or visit http://www.GayLiberation.net. Chicago NOW’s ‘Women Who Dare’ Sept. 21 The Chicago chapter of the National Organization for Women will hold its 14th annual “Women Who Dared” cocktail reception and fundraiser Wed., Sept. 21, at Flourish Studios, 3020 N. Lincoln Ave. The chapter will honor Dawn Clark Netsch, professor of law emerita at Northwestern University and a pioneer for women’s rights in Illinois, and Gail T. Smith, executive director of the Chicago Legal Advocacy for Incarcerated Mothers (CLAIM). General admission tickets are $35; see http://womenwhodared2011.eventbrite.com for more options and ticket purchases. Windy City Media Group is one of the event’s sponsors. For more information, contact Melissa Satterlee at melissasatterlee@hotmail.com or 630-254-9809. WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 Victory Fund’s Robin Brand on LGBT politics BY KATE SOSIN As 2012 presidential candidates take to the road, The Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund will be rolling into Chicago Thursday, Sept. 8, to discuss LGBT politics and strategy. Windy City Times caught up with Deputy Executive Director Robin Brand to talk about what issues are at stake in upcoming elections, the changing face of LGBT politics and the Republican role in recent wins for gay rights. Windy City Times: So tell us about your Chicago reception. Robin Brand: It’s really an opportunity to talk about LGBT politics … what are some of the exciting elections coming down the pipe, the internals of how we work as an organization and preparing people to run for office. WCT: I imagine that is going to be a pretty interesting conversation right now with presidential campaigns kicking off. RB: Well, we still have some exciting elections this year. Our only openly gay delegate in the house of delegates in Virginia won his primary for a state Senate seat so he’ll be on the ballot in November, but he could become the first openly gay senator in Virginia’s history. We have Bevan Dufty running for mayor of San Francisco. Most people don’t realize San Francisco has never had an openly gay mayor, even though its known as such a gay-friendly town. We have a gentleman running for an Indianapolis city council race. WCT: Given the number of successes that we’ve enjoyed over the past few years, has the focus of LGBT politics shifted in your view? Are we looking at different issues today than we were even recently? RB: Over the last, say, 10 years, there’s been a shift towards really trying to gain more legislative victories at the national and state levels. From our perspective at the Victory Fund, where we are now is, after recruiting and electing candidates over the last 20 years, we have this incredible bench of leaders around the country who are now poised to move to the next level, Tammy Baldwin being a great example of that— in the House and now positioned to run for U.S. Senate. That’s what I think we’re going to start seeing happening more and more in the next few cycles. WCT: What issues do you think are most at stake politically right now? RB: I think part of the goal is to keep some momentum going at the federal level, the efforts to start challenging DOMA [Defense of Marriage Act] and hopefully start peeling that away, whether it’s through the judicial process or the legislative process. There’s a lot of eagerness to still get ENDA [Employment Non-Discrimination Act] passed. I think those are the burning issues at the federal level. And then we’ve got some states trying to solidify same-sex marriage where they can. Then, you’ve got states like Oregon looking at trying to repeal their constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage. WCT: What do you think we need to be doing right now as individuals locally to make some of these things happen? RB: I think there are a lot of things. Most states have very active state LGBT organizations. I think supporting your state LGBT groups [is] really important. They’re often on the front lines of identifying people who are running for office. And getting engaged with what’s happening in your state, whether that’s helping with these legislative efforts or supporting openly gay candidates. WCT: Funding for LGBT organizations is down in this economy. What is our funding situation, politically? RB: I can’t speak for other organizations but we’re feeling good about our financial situation. But I think that generally, we’ve seen some pretty well-funded efforts that have had success. The effort to win marriage in New York was not an effort that did not have a lot of money behind it. Unfortunately, politics and political activity tends to cost a lot of money, but I also feel like our community is still pretty energized, and when there is a fight, folks stand up. WCT: Will same-sex marriage be the defining LGBT issue in these upcoming elections? RB: I think it depends on where you live. I Robin Brand. Photo courtesy of the Victory Fund think that people in North Carolina and Alabama, when safe schools bills were passed, those were huge victories. I think that the marriage issue probably gets the most national attention but, state by state, I think there are a lot of states that have goals that are much closer to home in terms of what they’re striving to accomplish. WCT: It seems like we have more prominent Republicans coming out for LGBT rights and, 7 at the same time, more moving further away from LGBT rights. What role are Republicans going to play in these legislative battles down the road? RB: That’s a great question. I personally think that bringing more Republicans into the fold around gay and lesbian issues is sort of our greatest area for growth. I think that many of us forget that, and New York really helped highlight it, that many on the state level, and frankly with the repeal of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” We would not have won these battles without Republicans supporting them as well. WCT: Can you envision a time when it will be no longer acceptable to run as an anti-gay candidate? RB: Well, let’s hope so. I think in many places in the country that is the case. There are also places in the country where anti-gay rhetoric still does work and can motivate the types of voters that that person is trying to win over. But yeah, hopefully it’s not too long before DOMA is repealed and we have federal recognition. Then, it’s kind of a done deal and, sadly, our opposition will have to find new wedge issues to cling onto. For more information on the Victory Fund reception Thursday, Sept. 8, check out http:// www.victoryfund.org/get_involved/events. Designer Stone kitchen and bath outlet KITCHENS VANITIES FAUCETS TILE PRODUCTS SUMMER TILE SALE! Ceramic Tiles Porcelain Tiles Glass Mosaics Glass Subways Stone Mosaics From .50 sq’ From 1.75 sq’ From 3.95 sq’ From 5.95 sq’ From 7.95 sq’ Check out our large selection of in-stock 3x6, 12x12, 18x18, 12x24 and mosaic tiles. FREE DESIGN SERVICE! Designer Tiles at Outlet Prices Proudly Serving the Community! Stop by our showroom located at 2743 N. California Ave., Chicago, IL 60647 (Corner of California and Diversey) 773-489-4356 • www.dsotile.com M-F 10am-8pm SAT 10am-6pm SUN 12-5pm FREE PARKING 8 Elmhurst College first to poll LGBT applicants BY KATE SOSIN It may come as a surprise to many that not even the most progressive colleges ask applicants about their sexual orientation. But all of that could change thanks to a decision by Elmhurst College admissions to become the first. The Illinois liberal arts school is directly asking applicants if they are LGBT, making them the first college the country to do so. “Would you consider yourself a member of the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) community?” the question asks. “It’s part of our diversity goals,” said Gary Rold, dean of admissions at Elmhurst. “It very much sits with the philosophy of the college.” The new LGBT questions, lumped into an “optional” section that includes other identitybased questions on the application, could also make many queer students eligible for new scholarships. According to Rold, the college has a strong scholarship program already, but LGBT students will now be eligible for the school’s Enrichment Scholarship. That scholarship, offered to minority students, slashes the tuition price tag by a third. Rold said the decision was made early in the year when counselors decided that LGBT applicants should be offered LGBT resources in the same way that other minority applicants are. “We said, ‘we don’t know who those students are,’” said Rold. “It seemed like the logical thing to do.” WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 Rold said the school looked at other LGBTfriendly schools for guidance but found that none offered such a question on the application. Elmhurst students have the equivalent of a gay straight alliance on campus called S.A.G.E. (Straights and Gays for Equality), which meets weekly and organizes regular campus programs. In addition, the school staff, administrators and faculty offer “SAFE Zone” trainings on LGBT issues to campus community members. LGBT applicants to Elmhurst will now have access to those resources early on. So far, Rold said, his office has only received positive feedback on the move. The administration has also been in support, he said. “Elmhurst admissions is not operating in a vacuum here,” he said. Reactions in the wider LGBT community to the new application question have been hesitant but mostly positive. Some have remarked that the new questions might single out LGBT students for discrimination, while others worried aloud that students who were out as LGBT to family would have an edge over students who didn’t feel as comfortable. Still, many have hailed the move as landmark, and it has attracted national attention in the mainstream and gay media. “We applaud the steps Elmhurst College has taken at the university level to signal their acceptance and support of LGBT people and the inclusion of LGBT people within their social justice mission,” the Illinois Safe Schools Alliance said in a statement. “We further hope that the Elmhurst College. Photo courtesy of Sara Ramseth addition of this optional demographic question is symbolic of more deeply transformative work at the college such as including LGBT topics in curricula.” The college, affiliated with the United Church of Christ, boasts of a progressive history on its website. In October, Elmhurst will host a panel discussion about LGBT people and Christian life as part of an ongoing program to bring LGBT leaders to campus. “Of course, we recognize that this question may signal to applicants that Elmhurst is ‘walking the walk’ of support for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons,” said Elmhurst President S. Alan Ray in a statement. “This is a source of pride for us. It is entirely consistent with our mission and vision to prepare students to “understand and respect the diversity of the world’s cultures and peoples.” More information on LGBT-friendly colleges and universities is currently available through the Center on Halsted. The Center will be hosting a college fair this year for the first time Sept. 24. More information is available at http:// www.centeronhalsted.org/coh/calendar/newevents-details.cfm?ID=1802. Gay Softball World Series opens Images from the Gay Softball World Series opening ceremonies at Navy Pier, August 29. Photos by Anthony Meade. See more online at www.windycitymediagroup.com/series. Turn to page 34 to read Ross Forman’s story on the event. Garden of Eve in 2010. Photo by Kat Fitzgerald ‘Garden of Eve’ Sept. 16 StreetWise’s “Garden of Eve”—an annual gala benefiting ‘A Hand Up’ the Lesbian Community Care Project at Howard Brown Health Center—will take place Friday, gala Sept. 15 Sept. 16, 8-11 p.m., at Carnivale, 702 W. Fulton St. The Jeannie Tanner Quartet, Katie Todd, Diva Kai, Christina Kent, Daniela Sloan and Eileen Censotti will entertain, with DJ Gloria Alers and DJ Teri Bristol spinning dance music. The event also features a raffle, a silent auction, light hors d’oeuvres and drinks. Tickets purchased before Aug. 31 start at $100; see http://www.lccp.org/events. php?ID=228. StreetWise—which aims to assist Chicago area men and women,who are facing homelessness to achieve personal stability—will hold its “A Hand Up” fundraising gala Thursday, Sept. 15, 5:30-10:30 p.m., at the Union League Club, 65 W. Jackson. Guests will be served dinner and singer Charlene Brooks will provide the evening’s entertainment. Entrepreneur, technology venture capitalist and philanthropist J.B. Pritzker will be the keynote speaker; and the honorees are Bruce Crane, Jerry Roper and James W. Mabie. Individuals tickets are $150, and a table of 10 is $1,500. See http://www.streetwise.org/events/ streetwise-gala-2011. WINDY CITY TIMES Lakeview fire destroys home of Grab publisher Aug. 31, 2011 9 Congratulations on your CIVIL UNION The Aug. 27 Lakeview fire. Photo courtesy of Bob Zuley An Aug. 27 fire in Lakeview reportedly destroyed the office of Grab magazine. The blaze took place in the afternoon at an apartment building in the 800 block of West Cornelia Avenue, according to the Chicago SunTimes. The fire reportedly spread to an adjacent building. More than 100 firefighters were at the scene, the Chicago Tribune reported. No residents were injured but one firefighter was reportedly taken to Advocate Illinois Masonic Medical Center after suffering a minor injury. Windy City Times has learned that the home of Stacy Bridges, a publisher of the local LGBT publication Grab magazine, was reportedly destroyed. Bridges operated Grab out of his home. However, ChicagoPride.com reported that Bridges was able to save his computer from the 3-11 fire, and that the publication was expected to be out on time. Legacy Project event to reveal ‘12 honorees In recognition of GLBT History Month, the board of The Legacy Project has announced plans for a celebratory kick-off gala luncheon to initiate the one-year campaign to bring THE LEGACY WALK to Halsted Street. “LEGACY WALK: Bringing GLBT History Home” will take place in the Empire Room of the Palmer House Hilton, 17 E. Monroe, Tuesday, Oct. 25, 121:30 p.m. A VIP reception that previews the organization’s 42-piece display/tribute to the 2012 THE LEGACY WALK honorees will precede the luncheon. Nominees include social justice pioneer Jane Addams; Bayard Rustin, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s speechwriter; Mexican artist Frida Kahlo; and British mathematician Alan Turing. A special video presentation and an address by keynote speaker Cleve Jones, creator of the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt, will be the main features of the luncheon. “It is extremely humbling to have Cleve come to Chicago to talk about The Legacy Walk,” said Victor Salvo, The Legacy Project’s creator and executive director. “As the man behind the NAMES Project Quilt, Cleve will share his unique perspectives on the power of a personal vision, the challenges of bringing to life something destined to change the way GLBT people are perceived and the unique role Chicago will be playing in advancing the national debate about GLBT contributions to history. He has been a remarkable source of inspiration for me.” THE LEGACY WALK will be dedicated Oct. 11, 2012—“National Coming-Out Day.” Located in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood, it will feature 36 bronze memorial plaques affixed to the “Rainbow Pylons” that designate Chicago’s Boystown as the nexus of the local GLBT community. Tickets for the luncheon can be purchased for a tax-deductible contribution of $125. VIP tick- ets for $250 will also include a private reception with Jones and a preview of the exhibit. Tickets are available on-line at http://www.legacyprojectchicago.org/Luncheon_Tickets.html. For more information, contact Victor Salvo at 312608-1198 or victorsalvo@legacyprojectchicago. org. Rendering of how a rainbow pylon on Halsted Street will look. Image provided by Victor Salvo Now that the hard part is over, it’s time to take care of the easy stuff. Exercise your new rights by protecting your property. Update your deed and title insurance policy to ensure you are receiving the full benefits of your property ownership. 847-384-2600 CTHigginsTitle@ctt.com 10 Quigley provides ENDA briefing BY ERICA DEMAREST The Human Rights Campaign (HRC) partnered with OfficeMax and Chicago law firm Jenner & Block to present an Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) briefing Aug. 25. First introduced in 1974, ENDA would make it illegal to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. Despite decades of activist efforts, the bill has never been signed into law, and there are no federal employment protections for the LGBT community. While Illinois does protect its LGBT citizens, it is currently legal to discriminate against sexual orientation in 29 states and gender identity in 35, according to the HRC website. Aug. 31, 2011 man Rights Act, which has provided LGBT discrimination protection since 2005. He cited activist support and a Democratic-led legislature as major boons, and he suggested that having legislators vote on earlier failed iterations of the bill actually helped it succeed later. “It was good for people to vote on it because then there were legislators who saw that God didn’t come down and kill their children, and it wasn’t a situation where their constituents were out to get them,” Claps said. “And it made them more comfortable with the idea of just voting on it.” Similar failed ENDA trials in Congress could pave the way for success. Some Illinois residents might think ENDA wouldn’t affect them since the Illinois Human He continued, “With a national law comes national awareness, national enforcement and national acceptance. The pattern that we’ve seen with discrimination laws in general is that once it goes national, it’s not something that people can ignore quite as easily anymore.” Weeks said that 75 percent of Fortune 500 companies already offer LGBT discrimination protections, and he suggested that Congress use the business world as a model. “It really cuts those who argue against [ENDA and other progressive] measures that so many people in the Fortune 500 world do this,” Quigley said. “It’s just a matter of, ‘Okay, government is behind the times, right?’ Especially for folks who are so pro-business. They say, ‘Wow, how do major universities and major law firms do this?’ It really helps.” Brooks, who was instrumental in developing OfficeMax’s domestic partner benefits policy, said LGBT protections are smart financially. She stressed that progressive companies attract and maintain talented employees. “In the corporate world,” she said, “we’ve got to do business. We’ve got to make money. To be able to sit there and say that you’re going to discriminate in any way and prevent an individual from coming to work and being who they are—it just doesn’t make good business sense.” Promoting LGBT rights as a smart economic choice could help fast-track progressive policies. “I wish we were a country where we didn’t have to have acts passed for people to be treated equally,” Brooks said. “But I do think Congress doesn’t get it. Corporations get it.” House counsel at Lambda luncheon BY ERICA DEMAREST A group of attendees at the ENDA briefing. Congressman Quigley is at the far left. Photo by Erica Demarest “You can’t consider yourself the greatest democracy in the world when discrimination is okay,” said U.S. Rep. Mike Quigley (D) of Illinois’s 5th District. “I don’t want to live in a country where it’s okay to discriminate in the majority of states.” Quigley opened the evening’s panel before leaving to make a prior engagement. Other panelists included Bill Weeks, HRC political chair for Illinois; Rocco Claps, director of the Dept. of Human Relations in Illinois; Jay Schleppenbach, litigation associate at Jenner & Block; and Carolynn Brooks, chief diversity officer at OfficeMax. Claps detailed the history of the Illinois Hu- Rights Act already protects the state’s queer community, Schleppenbach said. But the Illinois law doesn’t cover in-state federal employees, out-of-state travel or lawsuit rights. Schleppenbach said the current Illinois statues rarely allow for cases to be presented in court (they are instead brought to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) and caps damages at $50,000. That would change with ENDA. “Just as people today are able to sue for race discrimination or gender discrimination or sexual harassment, the doors to the federal court house would be open to them,” Schleppenbach said. Heather Sawyer, Democratic counsel for the House Judiciary Committee, spoke Aug. 26 at a luncheon that the Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund and the law firm Mayer Brown hosted. The former Lambda Legal senior attorney shared stories from her time on the Hill and talked about the future of LGBT-related legislation. Despite nursing a painful injury, Sawyer was all smiles at the event. She eagerly greeted former colleagues and Lambda Legal donors, while a group of about 25 guests enjoyed a complimentary lunch at Mayer Brown’s highrise Loop office building at 71 S. Wacker Drive. Lambda Legal Midwest Regional Director Jim Bennett introduced Sawyer, jokingly calling her “the most popular lesbian that has ever come out of Chicago.” He then presented Sawyer with a year’s worth of Lambda Legal T-shirts—one for each event the nonprofit hosted. WINDY CITY TIMES Whoopi Goldberg at Chicago House event Nov. 4 On Friday, Nov. 4, 11:30 a.m.-2 p.m., HIV/AIDS agency Chicago House will host its 3rd Annual Speaker Series Luncheon at the Palmer House Hotel, 17 E. Monroe. Award-winning actress and The View moderator Whoopi Goldberg will serve as keynote speaker alongside Chicago House CEO Stan Sloan. The afternoon, which is slated to have more than 900 attendees, will kick off with a VIP reception, followed by the presentation and Q&A with Goldberg. Past speakers have included President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. Tickets are $150, $300 and $500. For more information, contact Sharla Nolte at 773-248-5200, ext. 303, or visit http:// www.chicagohouse.org. Whoopi Goldberg (right). Photo by Jerry Nunn In her capacity as House counsel, Sawyer oversees the Judiciary Committee’s efforts to challenge the Defense of Marriage Act’s (DOMA’s) constitutionality. She also acts as lead counsel for U.S. Rep. Jerrold Nadler’s Respect for Marriage Act, the bill to repeal DOMA. While Sawyer doesn’t think DOMA will be overturned under the current Congress, she remains optimistic. “The way that people talk about gay families has so changed over the years that it has made the conversation one that it is clearly a matter of ‘when’ not ‘if,’” she said. “I think for a long time there was a question of: Will this ever happen? Now it’s a question of: When?” Sawyer also works to garner congressional support for ENDA (the Employment Non-Discrimination Act) legislation. Citing a poll that says 89 percent of U.S. residents support the bill, Sawyer said it would undoubtedly pass under a different Congress. Since joining the House Judiciary Committee in 2007, Sawyer acted as lead counsel on significant civil-rights legislation, including the 2008 ADA Amendments Act and the 2009 Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act. & are proud to partner with Chicago 2011, the Gay Softball World Series in Chicago. See updated daily coverage at: http://www.windycitymediagroup.com/series During the World Series Aug. 29-Sept. 4 From left: Gail Morse, Heather Sawyer and Brandon Neese talk at the Lambda Legal event. Photo by Erica Demarest WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 11 ‘Lovefest’ at Jackson Park The Chicago Gay Black Men’s Caucus (CBGMC) hosted its 7th Annual Lovefest Celebration at Jackson Park Aug. 28. The free event featured food, live performances from local talent, vendors and a mini-ball. One of the main highlights of the event was the health village, which was a sectioned off area where fest patrons could get tested for HIV/ AIDS, other STIs and meet with health professionals. CBGMC member and Lovefest event planner David Dodd believes that the fest was a great way to entertain, bring the community together while keeping them informed and updated about their health. “The purpose behind Lovefest was to bring together African American gay and bisexual men together for an event that draws awareness and accountability for one’s health. We really wanted to get people tested, connect them with the professionals and treatment they need,” said Dodd. For more on CBGMC, email info@chiblackgaycaucus.org or visit http://www.chiblackgaucaucus.org. Photos and text by Terrence Chappell ALMA’s picnic The Association of Latino Men for Action (ALMA) gathered once again Aug. 28 for a picnic at Hollywood Beach under the trees. This annual event sponsored by Circuit Nightclub supplied the buffet—including hot dogs and beef sandwiches—before they played volleyball and tug-of-war under the sun. The local edition of the Centers for Disease Control dropped in, offering rapid testing and health surveys. ALMA welcomes everyone regardless of age, ethnicity or demographic and provides a support system to worthy recipients with a scholarship every year. The social group has been empowering Latin men in the LGBT community for years with leadership opportunities cultural programming. Before the end of the year, the organization plans to hire a fulltime representative for the organization, form a summit about immigration and collect for a Christmas toy drive. For information, visit http://www.almachicago.org. Text and photos by Jerry Nunn; see more photos at http://www.WindyCityMediaGroup.com EuropEan Luxury Within rEach P R E S E N T E D EuroLuxE interiors B Y Buckingham Fountain Friday, September 9th ~ 4-10pm Saturday, September 10th ~ 3-9pm TICKETS: $27 in advance, $35 at the gate, $10 Designated Driver Alcohol sampling & sales end 30 minutes prior to close. For general information, call 847-382-1480 3066 n. LincoLn avE. chicago Purchase online or by phone: 877-772-5425 (additional fee applies for phone orders) www.windycitywinefestival.com 773-270-0030 www.euroluxeinteriors.com Partial proceeds benefit the Grant Park Conservancy 12 Hall of Fame’s future hangs in the balance Aug. 31, 2011 BY KATE SOSIN The question is as old as the Chicago Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame (GLHF) itself, but never has it been asked with such gravity: Should the City of Chicago keep its ties to the Hall of Fame it started, or is it time for two to split? Long celebrated as the nation’s only government-run LGBT hall of fame, GLHF has honored local LGBT heroes annually, establishing itself as a symbol for many of the city’s commitment to its gay residents. However, city budget cuts stripped the organization of financial support in July, leading some to question if the GLHF should terminate its connection to the Chicago Commission on Human Relations’ Advisory Council on LGBT Issues. The council, which could dissolve its GLHF committee by majority vote, debated the issue at its meeting Aug. 17. Failing to come to an immediate decision, members tabled the conversation until their next meeting on Sept. 21. “I don’t know what the sense of urgency is,” said Israel Wright, an organizer of GLHF. “I want to get through this year. … To make a liberation right at this moment, I don’t know what we’re ready to do that.” Wright and others were sent scrambling to raise thousands for the GLHF induction ceremony on Nov. 9 in the wake of news that funds and staff support had been pulled. Since, many have wondered aloud if the city is reaping undue credit while LGBT community members do all the heavy lifting. “The city benefits from it, but they don’t put a dime into it,” Rick Garcia, a veteran activist and GLHF inductee, told Windy City Times in July. Garcia said that even before the July announcement, he felt that the city got more out of its association with the GLHF than it put into the relationship. However, William Kelley, who sits on the Advisory Council, said GLHF’s connection with the city is important. “It’s prestigious to say we are a municipally sponsored Hall of Fame,” he said. “The city, in the end, was contributing substantial amounts.” Kelley hopes that if the GLHF keeps its municipal connection, money might be available for the organization once the economy improves. The GLHF has historically funded much of its work through private donations and two annual fundraisers. Anticipating hard economic times and possible cuts, GLHF established a 501(c)(3), Friends of the Gay and Lesbian Hall of Fame for fundraising purposes in 2009. If the GLHF splits with the council, the new organization will likely take on all of that fundraising. Carol Ronen tribute Sept. 25 State Sen. Heather Steans and Chicago Ald. Harry Osterman are co-hosting “Wine, Woman and Song”—a tribute to Democratic Committeewoman Carol Ronen—Sunday, Sept. 25, at Broadway Cellars, 5900 N. Broadway, 5-7:30 p.m. The folk-rock group “Wells-next-the-Sea” will entertain. Tickets are $100 each; see https://events. r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?ll r=nyxpabcab&oeidk=a07e4mvw1kw577a395f& oseq=a0239hf2we87jm. ‘Dining Out for Equality’ Sept. 27 The third annual Dining Out for Equality will take place on Tuesday, Sept. 27. Kit Duffy. Photo by Helen Adamopoulos However, the split could also free up GLHF to raise more money. “There are limitations on what it can do because of its association with the city,” said Bill Greaves, director of the LGBT Advisory Council. Greaves said that all possibilities must be discussed and that his main concern will be what allows the GLHF “to flourish.” The GLHF funding was pulled along with other city heritage events, which include the city’s salute to LGBT veterans and its annual Pride Reception. The cuts have resulted in grumblings from some that Mayor Emanuel is less supportive of the LGBT community than Richard M. Daley was. Still, the issue may boil down to a shift in priorities, and not necessarily a pull of support. While social and cultural events have been cut, Greaves confirmed he is being encouraged to focus more on policy issues as of late. Those include anti-discrimination language in leases and contracts and the implementation of a police policy on treatment of transgender people. Kit Duffy, who was Chicago’s first liaison to the LGBT community, said that shift could be a good thing. “I would see the liaison position as a policy position,” she said. “The perfect person for that position is Bill Greaves.” In the meantime, the city seal sits atop the the GLHF website. Whether or not that seal will appear on induction ceremony programs in November remains to be seen. More departures at Howard Brown By Yasmin Nair A key member of the senior leadership team at Howard Brown Health Center (HBHC), David Grazman, has left the organization. The departure was confirmed to Windy City Times via an email from HBHC CEO Jamal Edwards. Grazman’s tenure at HBHC appears to have been brief and subject to changes in responsibilities; his change in position had not been updated on the organization’s website even as of last week. (His profile has been removed.) Grazman was first hired as senior vice president and chief operating officer at HBHC. A press release dated April 15 lauded him for his “leadership expertise in healthcare management and clinical operations.” He had previously been the executive director of Heartland Health Outreach, of the Heartland Alliance for Human Needs and Human Rights. According to his LinkedIn profile, last accessed by WCT Aug. 29, he had been the senior director, Hworks Consulting at The Advisory Board Company and, prior to that, vice president of strategy and consulting at CBIZ The Leifer Group. Grazman has a Ph.D. in business administration from the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. A few weeks after his appointment as vice president and COO, Grazman was made senior director of research. There appears to be some question about his exact title and responsibilities. In his email, Edwards referred to Grazman as the “interim” director of research; WCT has been told by sources that he was in fact appointed to be director. Edwards, in his email to WCT, said, “As David shared with our staff on Friday, we mutually agreed to conclude his employment based on certain personal and professional reasons, which will remain confidential and private as a personnel matter should. We wish David well in his future endeavors and he has also expressed his well wishes for HBHC and its promising future. In an email dated Aug. 26, Grazman sent Cocktail sold in wake of lawsuit BY KATE SOSIN After months of tumult between bar owners and its landlord, popular Halsted Strip gay bar Cocktail is changing hands. John “Geno” Zaharakis, who has owned Cocktail since it opened 16 years ago, handed over most of the company to an undisclosed longtime friend this week, he confirmed. The new management will take over the bar Sept. 1. Patrons dine out at a participating restaurant on that date and a significant portion of the food and drink bill will be donated to Equality Illinois, according to an organizational press release. Among the places participating are D.S. Tequila, 3352 N. Halsted; Big Jones, 5347 N. Clark; HB Home Bistro, 3404 N. Halsted; Wilde, 3130 N. Broadway; and Monastero’s, 3935 W. Devon. For more information, see http://www. diningoutforequality.com. OPALGA gala Nov. 19 The Oak Park Area Lesbian and Gay Association (OPALGA) will hold its OPAL Awards Gala Saturday, Nov. 19, at the Nineteenth Century Club, 178 Forest Ave. Those interested in helping with the committee, donating silent auction items or sponsoring the event should email info@opalga. org. Cocktail. Photo by Tracy Baim WINDY CITY TIMES David Grazman. Facebook photo Karen York, interim director of employee services, an announcement to be forwarded to HBHC employees. The text is as follows: “As we just discussed, you have my permission to pass this along to Jamal to distribute. To my former colleagues: I made the decision to depart Howard Brown this past Tuesday, for a number of personal and professional reasons. I enjoyed getting to know all of you and thank you for your graciousness to me over the past several months. I wish only the very best for Howard Brown and, especially for all of you, Howard Brown’s amazing employees. Sincerely, David.” WCT attempted to contact Grazman, but received no response by the time of publication. In his email, Edwards also stated that HBHC will be conducting “a national search for a new leader of our research department. Our goal is to fill this position this fall.” Kert Hubin, senior director, human resources, has also resigned, as per an email sent to staff on Aug. 9. Contacted for comment, Hubin responded that “[t]he particulars of my separation from HBHC preclude me granting you an interview.” WCT also received news that Jessie Mott, director of grants, is no longer with HBHC. WCT contacted Mott on Aug. 29. Mott had been with Test Positive Action Network (TPAN) for two years prior to joining HBHC a month ago. When asked about the reason she left HBHC, Mott would only say she left because she “wanted to get back to TPAN.” She also said that, “Howard Brown does wonderful work, and I believe in their mission.” Zaharakis will remain part-owner while he looks for spaces for a new bar and builds the Cocktail franchise, he said. The sale comes less than a month after Cocktail slapped its landlord, management company and two former employees with a lawsuit over an alleged conspiracy to destroy Cocktail’s good name and oust the bar. “I’m stepping back to focus on the lawsuit and take some time,” Zaharakis said. “They’ve made me feel really unwelcome and that’s not fair.” The suit alleges that Robert Brumbaugh conspired with David Sikora, a the bar’s former manager and Alexander Stoykov, another former Cocktail employee and current employee of Key Management and Realty Inc. to put Cocktail out of business. Brumbaugh purchased the building that houses Cocktail at Halsted and Roscoe in June. Since, Zaharakis has said that three went to extreme measures to ruin Cocktail. According to the complaint, Sikora allegedly vandalized the property by urinating and spitting on Cocktail while Brumbaugh and Stoykov allegedly threatened Zaharakis and tried to destroy his business relationships. Brumbaugh declined to comment on the allegations or the pending sale. On Aug. 26, Zaharakis sat his staff down and broke the news. The new owner, who Zaharakis said he has worked with closely for years, will retain all current employees. Zaharakis is expected to announce the new management next week. However, before a new owner can take over the property, Zaharakis has to work out the details with his landlord. That, he said, might pose a challenge. WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 a GAYin the LIFE Text and PHOTOS BY Ross Forman the stats Name Liz Pazik Age “Close to 50, [on] one of those sides.” Neighborhood Portage Park Relationship status Partners with Diana Guzzo Favorite Chicago restaurant Mon Ami Gabi Hobbies Gardening, history, geography and traveling Favorite sport Baseball. “One of my special skills is being a Cubs fan.” It’s a fact Was part of the entertainment segment for the Gay Games in 1994, held in New York City and commemorating the 25th anniversary of Stonewall. She got to walk through the field of Yankee Stadium and step on home plate, a personal highlight. 13 Actress/Business owner Liz Pazik Liz Pazik vividly recalls the sturdy dog doorstop that her grandparents had. She named the dog and remembers taking it, as a 4-year-old, for countless imaginary walks— complete with a belt around its neck as the leash. “So today, to work with dogs, well, it’s not a surprise to me,” said Pazik who, for the past 15 years, has owned Lizzie’s Dog Walkers on the city’s Northwest Side. She has about 60 clients and about 75 dogs on her roster, and her company specializes in play groups. “With dogs, it’s a great balance and unconditional love,” she said. Pazik also is a local actress and is proud to say she’s been able to “make a living in this city as an actress” since 1977. Pazik spent July and August performing in The Adventures of Pinocchio at Chicago Shakespeare’s Courtyard Theater. Before that she was in Milwaukee, performing Mrs. Zero in Skylight Opera’s critically acclaimed production of The Adding Machine, one of her favorite and most challenging roles to date. Her acting resume also includes The Wizard of Oz, Miss Tweed in Something’s Afoot! (Jeff Award nominee), Mother Superior in Nunsensations, Mazeppa in Gypsy, Crazy Aunt Harriet in The Man Who Came to Dinner (Drury Lane Oakbrook); and Mahiette in Hunchback, The Musical (Bailiwick Repertory Theatre). In addition, Pazik has performed as Miss Shields in A Christmas Story, Nettie in Carousel, Katisha in The Mikado, Mrs. Zero in The Adding Machine and Mrs. Fezziwig in the national tour of Scrooge. Pazik will be guest-hosting a part of the Pride Films & Plays event on Sept. 8 at the Center on Halsted, 3656 N. Halsted. She will appear in The Sound of Music at Drury Lane in Oakbrook Terrace starting Oct. 20 and running through Jan. 8, 2012. “Of course [acting] is fun, but it’s still a business,” Pazik said. “In fact, both of my jobs are vocations as opposed to occupations. They both fill my soul.” Lizzie’s Dog Walkers features two full-time and three part-time walkers. “We develop relationships—not just with the dogs, but with our clients,” Pazik said. “Working with the dogs is spiritually fulfilling. You cannot be self-centered; you have to be totally grounded and present [around the dogs.] “I definitely have come full circle.” Naturally, Pazik has a sturdy dog doorstop at her home, courtesy of one of her clients. Photo by Michael Brosilow Have your premiums increased recently? See me: Charles T. Rhodes, Agent 2472 N. Clark 773.281.0890 State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (not in NJ) State Farm Indemnity Company (NJ) Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois Friday, Sept. 9 7:30 p.m. Patricia Ann McNair Temple of Air Launch Party Mark your calendars! Sunday, Oct. 9 time TBA Actor and comedienne Jane Lynch 5233 N. Clark (773) 769-9299 wcfbooks@aol.com www.womenandchildrenfirst.com Parking Available Wheelchair Accessible 14 WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 A special series in partnership with the AIDS Foundation of Chicago AIDS in America: By the numbers By John J. Accrocco It began as a rare flu for five Americans, but by the end of 1981 more than 100 cases of what would become known as AIDS had been reported in the U.S. The AIDS crisis in America is as critical now as it was 30 years ago. An estimated 400,000 Americans are living with AIDS (more than 34,000 diagnosed in 2009 alone) and over the last three decades more than one million Americans have been diagnosed with the disease. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control has been studying AIDS for more than 30 years and part of their research includes tracking individual cases reported in all 50 states to provide accurate statistics for funding. Since the early 1980s, the CDC had been able to monitor the patterns of HIV infection by analyzing the number of reported cases of AIDS, since HIV reporting is still not a federal requirement. AIDS statistics hit a high point in 1993 when the CDC refined guidelines for AIDS diagnoses to include any individual with fewer than 200 T-cells. Scientists began better understanding and correctly diagnosing AIDS through the early to mid-1990s, which accounts for the spike in statistics during the 1990s. The numbers began to decline in the U.S. around 1996 when the (HAART) anti-retroviral therapy regiment became more widely available. Due to better HIV medications fewer patients have progressed into AIDS, so those specific statistics no longer accurately reflected HIV trends in the U.S. These days, AIDS-specific statistics are used to pin- point where private and national funding is lacking and also where drug therapy has failed. When broken down regionally, the U.S. AIDS statistics paint a picture of where the epidemic is most severe. From 2007 CDC reports, the Northeast AIDS rate shows a rising trend. A quarter of all new AIDS diagnosis came from the Northeastern region. New York State is the highest AIDS populated state in the country. New York City also has the highest number of people living with AIDS. Though this region’s numbers are on a rise, neither Boston nor Philadelphia were among the top five highest AIDS cities. Almost half of the new AIDS cases were reported in the Black community, while the rest were split evenly between the white and Latino communities. “HIV/AIDS remains mostly an urban disease,” says the CDC, as a majority of diagnoses occurred in cities with populations higher than 500,000. The Midwest remains on the decline, reporting the least amount of AIDS cases in the U.S. Only 11% of new cases came from the Midwest, however Chicago is still a very big hub for the epidemic. AIDS mortality rates in the Midwest are also very low. This could be because of the relatively low incidence rate of AIDS outside urban centers. Most AIDS cases are among urban populations but rural case rates are going up, too. In rural areas AIDS is seen heavily in the Black and gay men’s communities and more prevalent in men than women. Midwestern AIDS rates are split almost down the middle between Black and white where only 11% of AIDS cases are within the Latino population. Regional diversity shows how AIDS flourishes in rural, low-income areas like the South. AIDS rates in the South are rising steadily, consequently the South has some of the highest AIDS-related mortality rates in the U.S. AIDS in the South has hit the Black community especially hard. In 2003, the six states considered the “deep South” (Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina and South Carolina) reported a 35.6% rise in the number of AIDS cases, contributing to the overall four percent increase for the entirety of the South. According to the CDC by 2007 the South accounted for 40% of all citizens living with AIDS, On the CDC’s list of highest AIDS populations by state, Florida and Texas ranked within the top five. CDC also ranks major U.S. cities’ AIDS populations and Miami and Washington, D.C. are also among the top five. In Washington, D.C. AIDS has hit a crisis-level: it is estimated that three percent of residents are living with HIV/AIDS. The high incidence reports in the South are the result of poor awareness and limited access to low-cost healthcare. As for the West, 17% of new AIDS cases were reported there. Only a fifth of people living with AIDS are from Western states. Los Angeles is still the second most AIDS populated city with San Francisco just behind it at third, making California the second most AIDS populated state. Whites and Latinos vastly outweigh the Black population in the West in AIDS diagnosis. The West also includes many low AIDS reporting states like Wyoming, which reported 114 cases A CDC map about AIDS in America 1985-2008. See http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/topics/surveillance/resources/slides/trends/slides/trends2.pdf in 2009. Men who have sex with men still make up the largest group of people with AIDS. In 2007 alone 47% of all new AIDS cases were the result of male-to-male sexual contact (MSM). Over 30 years, more than half of all reported cases of AIDS have been in men who have sex with men (MSM). In 2008, 17,940 MSM were diagnosed with AIDS, a six percent increase from 2005. CDC officials attribute the high rates among MSM to a number of social issues, including internalized to overt homophobia which contributes to low self-image issues. Low confidence and support surrounding sexual orientation are found to have profound impacts on sexual health decisions and safe sex practices. Other reasons such as racism, poverty and homelessness can also interfere with access to healthcare. Complacency towards AIDS from the current generation and common misconceptions are also contributing factors to the rise in MSM AIDS statistics, officials said. The young MSM community is one the CDC targets annually and nationwide with awareness campaigns to promote HIV testing and access to resources. An even more specific U.S. group seeing a large increase in AIDS cases are young Black MSM. Between 2004 and 2007 young Black MSM showed the largest increase in HIV/AIDS cases in America, accounting for 62% of all HIV/AIDS cases in the U.S. Research shows that in communities where the gay stigmas are very strong, the rates of HIV/AIDS increase. On Aug. 15, 2011 at the WINDY CITY TIMES CDC National AIDS Prevention conference it was noted that the young Black MSM HIV/AIDS numbers increased by 48%, the largest increase of all ethnic groups. In September, Black gay activists along with the CDC are rolling out a new awareness campaign in five major American cities where young Black MSM HIV/AIDS are particularly high. The “Testing Makes Us Stronger” campaign will focus on positive images of Black gay men. Despite the high numbers, Dr. John Su of the CDC said, “Young Black men are doing more to prevent HIV/AIDS than any other group.” Though 75% of Americans living with AIDS are men, Black and Latino women living with AIDS are also on the rise in the U.S. There are more than three times as many Black women living with AIDS in the U.S. than white or Latino women. For women of color, AIDS diagnoses are on an increase and the primary source of transmission is unprotected heterosexual contact and needle-based drug use. Over the past few years, more Americans between 30 and 50 have developed AIDS, showing a significant increase for the age group in both males and females. In 2009 studies showed that the highest rate of new HIV infection was among the age group between 40-44. The rises in AIDS in older people is also very strong in the Black and Latino communities. Twenty-nine percent of all people living with AIDS are over the age of 50. Many things can account for AIDS in the older population, one is that many of the signs and symptoms of AIDS mimic natural aging and can be overlooked. The older generation is also not as informed as the younger ones and does not consider themselves to be at as great of a risk. Unprotected sex and drug use are still the two leading transmission routes. Though the rate of increase of reported AIDS cases is declining, this does not accurately reflect HIV trends overall, since HIV itself is not reported and tracked. In fact, more people are living with HIV in the U.S. than ever before. With better medications and more accessible healthcare, it is easier to maintain HIV, but without crucial HIV/AIDS funding and awareness the rates of infection will continue to rise. In a statement from the AIDS prevention conference in Atlanta in August, the CDC’s Dr. Jonathan Mermin said, “We cannot allow the health of a generation to be lost to a preventable disease.” See maps about HIV/AIDS in America at: http://aidsvu.org/map. in Windy City Times runs through December, and past articles are available on www. windycitymediagroup. com under the AIDS button. Aug. 31, 2011 See AIDS Vu maps like these two, about HIV/AIDS in America at: http://aidsvu.org/map. 15 Aug. 31, 2011 16 WINDY CITY TIMES A day in the life of HIV in America By Ross Forman Rick Guasco came across a website last year called, A Day in the Life of Africa, an AIDSawareness campaign sponsored by the camera manufacturer Olympus. He immediately thought, What about AIDS in America? “HIV is considered ‘manageable’ these days, but it’s still a serious problem,” said Guasco, 47, who lives in Chicago’s Edgewater neighborhood. “I wanted to do something that would raise awareness without scaring people. HIV has become an everyday fact of life. How you choose to live with that fact is up to you. A photo project seemed like the perfect way to convey that message and give people the opportunity to express themselves. The more I thought about it, I realized this project would also help destigmatize HIV.” And so was born A Day with HIV in America, which made its debut in 2010, and is set for round two on Sept. 21. “Having people take pictures on the same day is a way of creating a sense of solidarity among everyone who takes part, whether they are positive or negative,” said Guasco, who works for Test Positive Aware Network (TPAN) and is spearheading the project. “I chose Sept. 21 because it’s near the autumnal equinox and the start of fall. It signals a time of change. “I came up with this idea less than two months before it was to occur last year, so TPAN had no budget for it. Promoting A Day with HIV in America was done using social media—namely, Facebook and Twitter—and word of mouth. A friend who is a film editor in Los Angeles also put together a promotional video that was posted to YouTube. As [last] Sept. 21 approached, we started getting the attention of a few gay bloggers and ultimately more than 100 people sent in pictures. “It was amazing, the diversity of people who took part,” he said. Gay photographer Tom Bianchi submitted a photo, as did Chuck Panozzo, co-founder of the band Styx, who is positive. Many other people from all over the country and from all walks of life also participated, Guasco said. Many of the 2010 photos were featured in the November/December issue of Positively Aware— and the plan is the same for this year. Photos also will be posted online, at http://www.adaywithhivinamerica.com A selection of 2011 photos also will be on display at the Positively Aware booth at the U.S. Conference on AIDS, set for Nov. 10-13 in Chicago. Guasco said everyone who e-mails a picture to TPAN, taken by either a digital camera or a smartphone, and includes a caption and a consent form, will have their picture posted on the A Day with HIV in America website. “It’s important to include everyone [negative and positive people alike] in A Day with HIV in America because tearing down the barriers that divide us—straight, gay, white, minority, positive, negative—is essential to ending the stigma of HIV,” Guasco said. “Most of the people who submitted photos for A Day with HIV in America last year disclosed their status. However, there was one guy who took a picture of himself riding a bus in midtown Manhattan who refrained from revealing his own. He wanted to make the point that you can’t tell someone’s HIV status just by looking at them. And if you think about it, whether you’re positive or negative, we all Darryl Takushi in 2010. Courtesy TPAN Jennifer Jako and daughter Bianca in 2010. Courtesy TPAN Aaron DeWinter Williams. Photo by John Gress Richard Cordova. Photo by John Gress live [with] HIV.” Including Guasco, who is a journalism graduate from Columbia College. Guasco, who is openly gay, has been HIV-positive since at least 1992, when he was diagnosed with Kaposi’s sarcoma, a rare form of skin cancer which at the time was listed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as an, ‘end-stage AIDS-defining illness.’ “When I got my HIV test result, the extent of my counseling was that I was given three publications, all of which were produced by TPAN— Positively Aware, the HIV Services Directory, and a TPAN membership newsletter,” Guasco said. “I learned where to get the treatment that saved my life and how to take care of myself. It was then that I realized that information was the key to survival with HIV.” Guasco is the art director of Positively Aware, the HIV treatment magazine published by TPAN. Although he has been at the magazine since February 2010, Guasco first worked at the publication from 1995-’97 before leaving to briefly serve as art director of The Advocate in Los Angeles. In the intervening years, while working for other gay publications, he maintained ties to TPAN, designing the agency’s annual HIV Services Directory until 2010. “Having worked as a writer and a designer, I understood the importance of presenting information in a way that readers would find useful. That’s what led me to become art director of Positively Aware. I wanted to present this useful, potentially life-saving information in an approachable manner. That’s why I re-designed the magazine each time I became art director.” For this year’s project, Chicago photographer John Gress shot a promotional video, featuring a mix of people—gay, straight, positive and negative—each talking about what it means to live with HIV. Richard Cordova, who also works at TPAN and is HIV-positive, participated in the promotional video shoot, “and talks candidly about his life and the issues that led him to become HIV-positive,” Guasco said. “[Cordova] has turned his life around in the face of HIV. You can’t help but be impressed by his honesty and enthusiasm for life.” Chicagoan Aaron DeWinter, who also is HIVpositive, is featured in the video as well. “Aaron’s always been a vibrant, determined personality,” Guasco said. “You can sense that he doesn’t step down from a challenge, and his inner strength comes across in the video.” Also in the video is Evany Turk, an AfricanAmerican woman from the South Side who is HIV-positive. “She took part in last year’s A Day with HIV in America along with her two sons, so I’m thrilled she offered to appear in the video,” Guasco said. “Evany recounts how her children have been a constant source of love and assurance since she disclosed her status to them.” Photos from the 2010 project can still be viewed at http://www.adaywithhivinamerica. com “Looking at last year’s photos, one thing you might not realize right away is the number of pictures of serodiscordant couples, in which one person is HIV-positive and the other is negative,” Guasco said. “There are pictures of gay couples as well as heterosexual couples. You can’t tell which is the positive or negative person. When you look at their pictures, all you can see is the love between two people. “In the early days of the AIDS epidemic, the face of AIDS was arguably that of a gaunt, gay man. Today, there is no one, single ‘face of WINDY CITY TIMES AIDS.’ If you go to the website and look at last year’s photos, you’ll see that this project has cut across every line—gay, straight; white, Black, Hispanic; young, old; individuals, couples, families; positive and negative. HIV has affected the lives of so many people. And they have should inspire all of us in how to live—regardless of our status.” Guasco proudly says the project has seemingly taken on a life of its own. “I’m encouraged that TPAN and Positively Aware have decided to make it an annual event,” he said. “Beyond the website, I’d love to stage a public exhibition of the photos. Eventually, it would be nice to publish a book of some of the most compelling and inspiring images. Whatever form it takes, I want A Day with HIV in America to de-stigmatize HIV. “The biggest surprise [with this project] has been the story behind each photo. These images capture a moment in time, but they say so much about the lives of these people. There’s a picture of a mother who is HIV-positive, playing with her daughter who is negative. You can sense the joy captured in that image. Another picture is of a young guy in bed as he is about to start the day; his caption simply reads, ‘I still wake up with a smile.’ You can’t help but smile back at his picture. These snapshots convey a sense of hope, determination, dignity, openness, and optimism that, candidly, go beyond what I had expected.” About 20 Chicagoans participated in the project last year, from the Far South Side to Boystown, to an HIV-positive man who posed with his daughter while they were grocery shopping. “Everyone is invited to take a photo on Sept. 21 and e-mail it, but we’ll need your permission to use your picture,” Guasco said. “To take part in A Day with HIV in America, go to http://www. ADaywithHIVinAmerica.com and then click on the ‘Submitting your photo’ link to download a PDF of the consent form. “We need the permission of everyone who appears in a photo.” The signed consent form can be faxed, emailed or returned via U.S. Postal Service. Photos should be emailed to: artdirector@tpan. com. Photos should be taken on Sept. 21; the deadline for submission is Sept. 26. Include your name and a caption, giving the time of day you took the picture, Guasco said. “Although you don’t have to disclose your status, mention why you decided to take part in A Day with HIV in America,” he said. BTAN reception Sept. 1 The Black Treatment Advocates Network (BTAN)-Chicago will hold a reception regarding the local fight against HIV Thursday, Sept. 1, 6-8 p.m., at the Inner Circle Services Center, 2150 S. Canalport Ave. Attendees will interact, exchange ideas and network with people who are “on the front line of the HIV fight in Chicago,” according to a press release. There is free parking, along with hors d’oeuvres and wine. Email programs@blackaids.org or call 877757-AIDS. Aug. 31, 2011 17 Preparing for PrEP By Bob Roehr Community HIV prevention leaders are trying to figure out what role, if any, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) might play in helping to rein in the number of new HIV infections that occur each year. Those questions and passions were on display at a lively and free-flowing forum at the 2011 National HIV Prevention Conference in Atlanta. PrEP uses antiretroviral drugs to protect from initial HIV infection. IPrEx, the first study proving the concept, was published last November. It showed that high risk gay and bisexual men who took the combination therapy Truvada as directed were 91 percent less likely to become infected with HIV compared with those who received a placebo. A subsequent study in heterosexuals also showed protection. Further studies are needed to move beyond this proof of concept and figure out how PrEP might work in the real world—what at-risk groups might benefit the most from this expensive form of prevention and how programs might be structured to achieve the best results. Grant Colfax said the situation requires a paradigm shift in thinking similar to that took place a decade ago prior to the large-scale rollout of treatment in sub-Saharan Africa. “Building new systems of delivery in isolation just to provide PrEP is not a sustainable option. Moving forward the question is, where are the sites where this is most likely to be delivered? Is it STD clinics, HMOs, primary care settings? How do we integrate it into a medical structure that is sustainable over time,” asked the head of HIV prevention at the San Francisco Department of Public Health. “One of the fears I have is that PrEP will be looked as this thing that is being put upon given populations rather than something that the populations themselves are asking for,” said David Evans with Project Inform. “That is particularly sensitive in some communities,” he said alluding to the legacy of suspicion that remains within the African American community from the Tuskegee syphilis study. “We know what [PrEP] looked like in the IPrEx study but we don’t know what it is going to look like in the real world.” Evans encouraged people to start having these discussions with the community and not “squander opportunities” to help shape the definition of what PrEP is. Barriers The NIH’s Carl Dieffenbach fears “that PrEP, even in San Francisco, will not reach the people who will truly benefit from it” because people at highest risk for infection often do not get tested. Testing is key to the use of PrEP because the drugs used probably are not sufficiently potent to completely suppress the viral load of someone already infected, and resistance will develop. Thus, testing negative is a prerequisite for using PrEP; those who test positive will be directed into care. But testing also is a barrier to using PrEP. Dieffenbach asked, “Is it going to be so medicalized that it will end up being like a prescription where people just can’t or won’t fill it? We need to find a way of normalizing this, as radical as that sounds.” A participant from Washington, D.C., said physicians’ views might be another barrier. “My doctor has told patients that he would not consider Carl Dieffenbach. Photo by Bob Roehr prescribing PrEP to anyone other than a person who was in a serodiscordant relationship. I guess because of fears of not using it properly.” “My big fear is that we are going to see rates of HIV go up because people are going to think this is the magic pill,” said a man from New York’s GMHC. That could be the result of poor adherence to the drug and/or an increase in risky behavior. Perhaps the most commonly expressed theme was that inequitable access to PrEP might further worsen existing health disparities. Blacks are 13 percent of the U.S. population but about half of those infected with HIV. Others supported the concern of a women from Miami who argued, how can one justify spending money on PrEP when more than 9,000 people are on ADAP waiting lists for drugs to treat their existing infection. Groundswell “My greatest hope is that [PrEP] ignites the HIV community on fire. It is one of the most radical, new HIV prevention technologies and approaches that has come along in 30 years,” said Carey Johnson with the Fenway Institute in Boston. “My fear is that this is not happening, and I really wish I knew why.” “We’ve had a handful of people ask about PrEP; those who did were likely to have a seropositive partner or were in the IPrEx study,” said Steve Gibson with Magnet, the San Francisco prevention effort aimed at gay men. “People are waiting to see what’s next. How it can be integrated into their lives.” “I think it is odd we are lamenting that no one comes to our clinics asking for PrEP. Well, we haven’t told them about it, so why are we surprised?” said New York City physician Wafaa El-Sadr. “It is incumbent upon us to generate the interest. We do it for other interventions.” “I know of five to 10 people on PrEP locally, all of whom are discordant couples, all of them have insurance,” said Joanne Stekler with the University of Washington. She sees cost as the major inhibitor on interest. “If you took away the costs issue, and maybe the adherence issue to a little degree, everyone would want to be on PrEP.” Call to Action Leading HIV prevention organizations have issued a “call to action” for the Department of Health and Human Services to develop a comprehensive plan of PrEP demonstration projects that identify how and where the intervention might best be used. Initial groups behind the effort are the AIDS Foundation of Chicago, AIDS United, amfAR: the Foundation for AIDS Research, AVAC: Global Advocacy for HIV Prevention, the Black AIDS Institute, the International Rectal Microbicide Advocates, National Alliance of State & Territorial AIDS Directors, the National Minority AIDS Council, Project Inform, and the San Francisco AIDS Foundation. The recommendations focused on public health administration of PrEP programs and largely avoided the role that health insurance and private purchase of PrEP might play. Their statement and links to the full recommendations is available at http://www.projectinform.org/news/leaderspress-feds-for-promising-hiv-prevention-tool/ 18 687US11AB05809_Cnsmr2011_NewAfrAmFemaleAd_10.25x13.5_- 8/5/11 3:47 PM Page 1 WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 INDICATION: REYATAZ ® (atazanavir sulfate) is a prescription medicine used in combination with other medicines to treat people 6 years of age and older who are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). REYATAZ has been studied in a 48-week trial in patients who have taken anti-HIV medicines and a 96-week trial in patients who have never taken anti-HIV medicines. REYATAZ does not cure HIV or lower your chance of passing HIV to others. People taking REYATAZ may still get opportunistic infections or other conditions that happen with HIV infection. IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION: Do not take REYATAZ if you are allergic to REYATAZ or to any of its ingredients. Do not take REYATAZ if you are taking the following medicines due to potential for serious, life-threatening side effects or death: Versed® (midazolam) when taken by mouth, Halcion® (triazolam), ergot medicines (dihydroergotamine, ergonovine, ergotamine, and methylergonovine such as Cafergot®, Migranal®, D.H.E. 45®, ergotrate maleate, Methergine®, and others), Propulsid® (cisapride), or Orap® (pimozide). Do not take REYATAZ with the following medicines due to potential for serious side effects: Camptosar® (irinotecan), Crixivan® (indinavir), Mevacor® (lovastatin), Zocor® (simvastatin), Uroxatral® (alfuzosin), or Revatio® (sildenafil). Do not take REYATAZ with the following medicines as they may lower the amount of REYATAZ in your blood, which may lead to increased HIV viral load and resistance to REYATAZ or other anti-HIV medicines: rifampin (also known as Rimactane ® , Rifadin ® , Rifater ® , or Rifamate®), St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum)containing products, or Viramune® (nevirapine). Serevent Diskus ® (salmeterol) and Advair ® (salmeterol with fluticasone) are not recommended with REYATAZ. Do not take Vfend ® (voriconazole) if you are taking REYATAZ and Norvir® (ritonavir). The above lists of medicines are not complete. Taking REYATAZ with some other medicines may require your therapy to be monitored more closely or may require a change in dose or dose schedule of REYATAZ or the other medicine. Discuss with your healthcare provider all prescription and non-prescription medicines, vitamin and herbal supplements, or other health preparations you are taking or plan to take. Tell your healthcare provider if you are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. REYATAZ use during pregnancy has not been associated with an increase in birth defects. Pregnant women have experienced serious side effects when taking REYATAZ with other HIV medicines called nucleoside analogues. After your baby is born, tell your healthcare provider if your baby’s skin or the white part of his/her eyes turns yellow. You should not breast-feed if you are HIV-positive. Also tell your healthcare provider if you have end-stage kidney disease managed with hemodialysis or severe liver dysfunction. Tell your healthcare provider right away if you have any side effects, symptoms, or conditions, including the following: • Mild rash (redness and itching) without other symptoms sometimes occurs in patients taking REYATAZ, most often in the first few weeks after the medicine is started, and usually goes away within 2 weeks with no change in treatment. IMPORTANT SAFETY INFORMATION (cont’d): • Severe rash may develop with other symptoms that could be serious and potentially cause death. If you develop a rash with any of the following symptoms, stop using REYATAZ and call your healthcare provider right away: — Shortness of breath – General ill-feeling or “flu-like” symptoms – Fever – Muscle or joint aches – Conjunctivitis (red or inflamed eyes, like “pink eye”) – Blisters – Mouth sores – Swelling of your face • Yellowing of the skin and/or eyes may occur due to increases in bilirubin levels in the blood (bilirubin is made by the liver). • A change in the way your heart beats may occur. You may feel dizzy or lightheaded. These could be symptoms of a heart problem. • Diabetes and high blood sugar may occur in patients taking protease inhibitor medicines like REYATAZ. Some patients may need changes in their diabetes medicine. • If you have liver disease, including hepatitis B or C, it may get worse when you take anti-HIV medicines like REYATAZ. • Kidney stones have been reported in patients taking REYATAZ. Signs or symptoms of kidney stones include pain in your side, blood in your urine, and pain when you urinate. • Some patients with hemophilia have increased bleeding problems with protease inhibitor medicines like REYATAZ. • Changes in body fat have been seen in some patients taking anti-HIV medicines. The cause and long-term effects are not known at this time. • Immune reconstitution syndrome has been seen in some patients with advanced HIV infection (AIDS) and a history of opportunistic infection. Signs and symptoms of inflammation from previous infections may occur soon after starting anti-HIV treatment, including REYATAZ. • Gallbladder disorders (including gallstones and gallbladder inflammation) have been reported in patients taking REYATAZ. Other common side effects of REYATAZ taken with other anti-HIV medicines include: nausea; headache; stomach pain; vomiting; diarrhea; depression; fever; dizziness; trouble sleeping; numbness, tingling, or burning of hands or feet; and muscle pain. You should take REYATAZ once daily with food (a meal or snack). Swallow the capsules whole; do not open the capsules. You should take REYATAZ and your other anti-HIV medicines exactly as instructed by your healthcare provider. You are encouraged to report negative side effects of prescription drugs to the FDA. Visit www.fda.gov/medwatch or call 1-800-FDA-1088. REYATAZ is one of several treatment options your doctor may consider. Please see Important Patient Information about REYATAZ on the adjacent pages. REYATAZ is a registered trademark of Bristol-Myers Squibb. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners and not of Bristol-Myers Squibb. © 2011 Bristol-Myers Squibb, Princeton, NJ 08543 U.S.A. 687US11AB05809 07/11 687US11AB05809 10.25 X 13.5 687US11AB05809_Cnsmr2011_NewAfrAmFemaleAd_10.25x13.5_- 8/5/11 3:48 PM Page 2 WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 19 DETERMINED + UNDETECTABLE REYATAZ CAN HELP GET YOU TO UNDETECTABLE, SO YOU CAN FIGHT HIV YOUR WAY. ONCE-DAILY REYATAZ IN HIV COMBINATION THERAPY: • Can help lower your viral load to undetectable* and help raise your T-cell (CD4+ cell) count • Has been prescribed by physicians for more than 200,000 HIV patients since 2003 † • Can be taken by adults who are starting HIV treatment for the first time and adults who have already been on HIV treatment Do not take REYATAZ if you are allergic to REYATAZ or to any of its ingredients. REYATAZ does not cure HIV and has not been shown to reduce the risk of passing HIV to others. Individual results may vary. Ask your healthcare team how REYATAZ in combination therapy can help get you to undetectable. Fight HIV your way. www.REYATAZ.com * Undetectable was defined as a viral load of less than 400 copies/mL. † Wolters Kluwer. SDI Product Brand Report. Total Patient Tracker; November 2010. P Publication: 687US11AB05809_Cnsmr2011_NewAfrAmFemaleAd_10.25x13.5_- 8/5/11 3:48 PM Page 3 Aug. 31, 2011 20 FDA-Approved Patient Labeling Patient Information REYATAZ® (atazanavir sulfate) About all the medicines you take including prescription and nonprescription medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. Keep a list of your medicines with you to show your healthcare provider. For more information, see “What important information should I know about taking REYATAZ with other medicines?” and “Who should not take REYATAZ?” Some medicines can cause serious side effects if taken with REYATAZ. How should I take REYATAZ? • Take REYATAZ once every day exactly as instructed by your healthcare provider. Your healthcare provider will prescribe the amount of REYATAZ that is right for you. • Always take REYATAZ with food (a meal or snack) to help it work better. Swallow the capsules whole. Do not open the capsules. Take REYATAZ at the same time each day. • If you are taking antacids or didanosine (VIDEX® or VIDEX® EC), take REYATAZ 2 hours before or 1 hour after these medicines. • If you are taking medicines for indigestion, heartburn, or ulcers such as AXID® (nizatidine), PEPCID AC® (famotidine), TAGAMET® (cimetidine), ZANTAC® (ranitidine), AcipHex® (rabeprazole), NEXIUM® (esomeprazole), PREVACID® (lansoprazole), PRILOSEC® (omeprazole), or PROTONIX® (pantoprazole), talk to your healthcare provider. • Do not change your dose or stop taking REYATAZ without first talking with your healthcare provider. It is important to stay under a healthcare provider’s care while taking REYATAZ. • When your supply of REYATAZ starts to run low, get more from your healthcare provider or pharmacy. It is important not to run out of REYATAZ. The amount of HIV in your blood may increase if the medicine is stopped for even a short time. • If you miss a dose of REYATAZ, take it as soon as possible and then take your next scheduled dose at its regular time. If, however, it is within 6 hours of your next dose, do not take the missed dose. Wait and take the next dose at the regular time. Do not double the next dose. It is important that you do not miss any doses of REYATAZ or your other anti-HIV medicines. • If you take more than the prescribed dose of REYATAZ, call your healthcare provider or poison control center right away. What are the possible side effects of REYATAZ? The following list of side effects is not complete. Report any new or continuing symptoms to your healthcare provider. If you have questions about side effects, ask your healthcare provider. Your healthcare provider may be able to help you manage these side effects. The following side effects have been reported with REYATAZ: • mild rash (redness and itching) without other symptoms sometimes occurs in patients taking REYATAZ, most often in the first few weeks after the medicine is started. Rashes usually go away within 2 weeks with no change in treatment. Tell your healthcare provider if rash occurs. • severe rash: Rash may develop in association with other symptoms which could be serious and potentially cause death. If you develop a rash with any of the following symptoms stop using REYATAZ and call your healthcare provider right away: • shortness of breath • general ill feeling or “flu-like” symptoms • fever • muscle or joint aches • conjunctivitis (red or inflamed eyes, like “pink eye”) • blisters • mouth sores • swelling of your face • yellowing of the skin or eyes. These effects may be due to increases in bilirubin levels in the blood (bilirubin is made by the liver). Although these effects may not be damaging to your liver, skin, or eyes, call your healthcare provider promptly if your skin or the white part of your eyes turn yellow. • a change in the way your heart beats (heart rhythm change). Call your healthcare provider right away if you get dizzy or lightheaded. These could be symptoms of a heart problem. • diabetes and high blood sugar (hyperglycemia) sometimes happen in patients taking protease inhibitor medicines like REYATAZ. Some patients had diabetes before taking protease inhibitors while others did not. Some patients may need changes in their diabetes medicine. • if you have liver disease including hepatitis B or C, your liver disease may get worse when you take anti-HIV medicines like REYATAZ. • kidney stones have been reported in patients taking REYATAZ. If you develop signs or symptoms of kidney stones (pain in your side, blood in your urine, pain when you urinate) tell your healthcare provider promptly. • REYATAZ® (RAY-ah-taz) (generic name = atazanavir sulfate) Capsules ALERT: Find out about medicines that should NOT be taken with REYATAZ (atazanavir sulfate). Read the section “What important information should I know about taking REYATAZ with other medicines?” Read the Patient Information that comes with REYATAZ before you start using it and each time you get a refill. There may be new information. This leaflet provides a summary about REYATAZ and does not include everything there is to know about your medicine. This information does not take the place of talking with your healthcare provider about your medical condition or treatment. What is REYATAZ? REYATAZ is a prescription medicine used with other anti-HIV medicines to treat people 6 years of age and older who are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). HIV is the virus that causes acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). REYATAZ is a type of anti-HIV medicine called a protease inhibitor. HIV infection destroys CD4+ (T) cells, which are important to the immune system. The immune system helps fight infection. After a large number of (T) cells are destroyed, AIDS develops. REYATAZ helps to block HIV protease, an enzyme that is needed for the HIV virus to multiply. REYATAZ may lower the amount of HIV in your blood, help your body keep its supply of CD4+ (T) cells, and reduce the risk of death and illness associated with HIV. Does REYATAZ cure HIV or AIDS? REYATAZ does not cure HIV infection or AIDS. At present there is no cure for HIV infection. People taking REYATAZ may still get opportunistic infections or other conditions that happen with HIV infection. Opportunistic infections are infections that develop because the immune system is weak. Some of these conditions are pneumonia, herpes virus infections, and Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) infections. It is very important that you see your healthcare provider regularly while taking REYATAZ. REYATAZ does not lower your chance of passing HIV to other people through sexual contact, sharing needles, or being exposed to your blood. For your health and the health of others, it is important to always practice safer sex by using a latex or polyurethane condom or other barrier to lower the chance of sexual contact with semen, vaginal secretions, or blood. Never use or share dirty needles. Who should not take REYATAZ? Do not take REYATAZ if you: • are taking certain medicines. (See “What important information should I know about taking REYATAZ with other medicines?”) Serious life-threatening side effects or death may happen. Before you take REYATAZ, tell your healthcare provider about all medicines you are taking or planning to take. These include other prescription and nonprescription medicines, vitamins, and herbal supplements. • are allergic to REYATAZ or to any of its ingredients. The active ingredient is atazanavir sulfate. See the end of this leaflet for a complete list of ingredients in REYATAZ. Tell your healthcare provider if you think you have had an allergic reaction to any of these ingredients. What should I tell my healthcare provider before I take REYATAZ? Tell your healthcare provider: • If you are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. REYATAZ use during pregnancy has not been associated with an increase in birth defects. Pregnant women have experienced serious side effects when taking REYATAZ with other HIV medicines called nucleoside analogues. You and your healthcare provider will need to decide if REYATAZ is right for you. If you use REYATAZ while you are pregnant, talk to your healthcare provider about the Antiretroviral Pregnancy Registry. • After your baby is born, tell your healthcare provider if your baby’s skin or the white part of his/her eyes turns yellow. • If you are breast-feeding. You should not breast-feed if you are HIV-positive because of the chance of passing HIV to your baby. Also, it is not known if REYATAZ can pass into your breast milk and if it can harm your baby. If you are a woman who has or will have a baby, talk with your healthcare provider about the best way to feed your baby. • If you have liver problems or are infected with the hepatitis B or C virus. See “What are the possible side effects of REYATAZ?” • If you have end stage kidney disease managed with hemodialysis. • If you have diabetes. See “What are the possible side effects of REYATAZ?” • If you have hemophilia. See “What are the possible side effects of REYATAZ?” 687US11AB05809 WINDY CITY TIMES 10.25 X 13.5 687US11AB05809_Cnsmr2011_NewAfrAmFemaleAd_10.25x13.5_- 8/5/11 3:48 PM Page 4 WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 21 REYATAZ® (atazanavir sulfate) some patients with hemophilia have increased bleeding problems with protease inhibitors like REYATAZ. • changes in body fat. These changes may include an increased amount of fat in the upper back and neck (“buffalo hump”), breast, and around the trunk. Loss of fat from the legs, arms, and face may also happen. The cause and long-term health effects of these conditions are not known at this time. • immune reconstitution syndrome. In some patients with advanced HIV infection (AIDS) and a history of opportunistic infection, signs and symptoms of inflammation from previous infections may occur soon after anti-HIV treatment, including REYATAZ, is started. Other common side effects of REYATAZ taken with other anti-HIV medicines include nausea; headache; stomach pain; vomiting; diarrhea; depression; fever; dizziness; trouble sleeping; numbness, tingling, or burning of hands or feet; and muscle pain. Gallbladder disorders (which may include gallstones and gallbladder inflammation) have been reported in patients taking REYATAZ. What important information should I know about taking REYATAZ with other medicines? • Do not take REYATAZ if you take the following medicines (not all brands may be listed; tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take). REYATAZ may cause serious, life-threatening side effects or death when used with these medicines. • Ergot medicines: dihydroergotamine, ergonovine, ergotamine, and methylergonovine such as CAFERGOT®, MIGRANAL®, D.H.E. 45®, ergotrate maleate, METHERGINE®, and others (used for migraine headaches). • ORAP® (pimozide, used for Tourette’s disorder). • PROPULSID® (cisapride, used for certain stomach problems). • Triazolam, also known as HALCION® (used for insomnia). • Midazolam, also known as VERSED® (used for sedation), when taken by mouth. Do not take the following medicines with REYATAZ because of possible serious side effects: • CAMPTOSAR® (irinotecan, used for cancer). • CRIXIVAN® (indinavir, used for HIV infection). Both REYATAZ and CRIXIVAN sometimes cause increased levels of bilirubin in the blood. • Cholesterol-lowering medicines MEVACOR® (lovastatin) or ZOCOR® (simvastatin). • UROXATRAL® (alfuzosin, used to treat benign enlargement of the prostate). • REVATIO® (sildenafil, used to treat pulmonary arterial hypertension). Do not take the following medicines with REYATAZ because they may lower the amount of REYATAZ in your blood. This may lead to an increased HIV viral load. Resistance to REYATAZ or cross-resistance to other HIV medicines may develop: • Rifampin (also known as RIMACTANE®, RIFADIN®, RIFATER®, or RIFAMATE®, used for tuberculosis). • St. John’s wort (Hypericum perforatum), an herbal product sold as a dietary supplement, or products containing St. John’s wort. • VIRAMUNE® (nevirapine, used for HIV infection). The following medicines are not recommended with REYATAZ: • SEREVENT DISKUS® (salmeterol) and ADVAIR® (salmeterol with fluticasone), used to treat asthma, emphysema/chronic obstructive pulmonary disease also known as COPD. Do not take the following medicine if you are taking REYATAZ and NORVIR® together: • VFEND® (voriconazole). The following medicines may require your healthcare provider to monitor your therapy more closely (for some medicines a change in the dose or dose schedule may be needed): • CIALIS® (tadalafil), LEVITRA® (vardenafil), or VIAGRA® (sildenafil), used to treat erectile dysfunction. REYATAZ may increase the chances of serious side effects that can happen with CIALIS, LEVITRA, or VIAGRA. Do not use CIALIS, LEVITRA, or VIAGRA while you are taking REYATAZ unless your healthcare provider tells you it is okay. • ADCIRCA® (tadalafil) or TRACLEER® (bosentan), used to treat pulmonary arterial hypertension. • LIPITOR® (atorvastatin) or CRESTOR® (rosuvastatin). There is an increased chance of serious side effects if you take REYATAZ with this cholesterollowering medicine. • Medicines for abnormal heart rhythm: CORDARONE® (amiodarone), lidocaine, quinidine (also known as CARDIOQUIN®, QUINIDEX®, and others). • MYCOBUTIN® (rifabutin, an antibiotic used to treat tuberculosis). Publication: REYATAZ® (atazanavir sulfate) • BUPRENEX®, SUBUTEX®, SUBOXONE®, (buprenorphine or buprenorphine/ naloxone, used to treat pain and addiction to narcotic painkillers). • VASCOR® (bepridil, used for chest pain). • COUMADIN® (warfarin). • Tricyclic antidepressants such as ELAVIL® (amitriptyline), NORPRAMIN® (desipramine), SINEQUAN® (doxepin), SURMONTIL® (trimipramine), TOFRANIL® (imipramine), or VIVACTIL® (protriptyline). • Medicines to prevent organ transplant rejection: SANDIMMUNE® or NEORAL® (cyclosporin), RAPAMUNE® (sirolimus), or PROGRAF® (tacrolimus). • The antidepressant trazodone (DESYREL® and others). • Fluticasone propionate (FLONASE®, FLOVENT®), given by nose or inhaled to treat allergic symptoms or asthma. Your doctor may choose not to keep you on fluticasone, especially if you are also taking NORVIR®. • Colchicine (COLCRYS®), used to prevent or treat gout or treat familial Mediterranean fever. The following medicines may require a change in the dose or dose schedule of either REYATAZ or the other medicine: • INVIRASE® (saquinavir). • NORVIR® (ritonavir). • SUSTIVA® (efavirenz). • Antacids or buffered medicines. • VIDEX® (didanosine). • VIREAD® (tenofovir disoproxil fumarate). • MYCOBUTIN® (rifabutin). • Calcium channel blockers such as CARDIZEM® or TIAZAC® (diltiazem), COVERA-HS® or ISOPTIN SR® (verapamil) and others. • BIAXIN® (clarithromycin). • Medicines for indigestion, heartburn, or ulcers such as AXID® (nizatidine), PEPCID AC® (famotidine), TAGAMET® (cimetidine), or ZANTAC® (ranitidine). Talk to your healthcare provider about choosing an effective method of contraception. REYATAZ may affect the safety and effectiveness of hormonal contraceptives such as birth control pills or the contraceptive patch. Hormonal contraceptives do not prevent the spread of HIV to others. Remember: 1. Know all the medicines you take. 2. Tell your healthcare provider about all the medicines you take. 3. Do not start a new medicine without talking to your healthcare provider. How should I store REYATAZ? • Store REYATAZ Capsules at room temperature, 59° to 86° F (15° to 30° C). Do not store this medicine in a damp place such as a bathroom medicine cabinet or near the kitchen sink. • Keep your medicine in a tightly closed container. • Keep all medicines out of the reach of children and pets at all times. Do not keep medicine that is out of date or that you no longer need. Dispose of unused medicines through community take-back disposal programs when available or place REYATAZ in an unrecognizable, closed container in the household trash. General information about REYATAZ This medicine was prescribed for your particular condition. Do not use REYATAZ for another condition. Do not give REYATAZ to other people, even if they have the same symptoms you have. It may harm them. Keep REYATAZ and all medicines out of the reach of children and pets. This summary does not include everything there is to know about REYATAZ. Medicines are sometimes prescribed for conditions that are not mentioned in patient information leaflets. Remember no written summary can replace careful discussion with your healthcare provider. If you would like more information, talk with your healthcare provider or you can call 1-800-321-1335. What are the ingredients in REYATAZ? Active Ingredient: atazanavir sulfate Inactive Ingredients: Crospovidone, lactose monohydrate (milk sugar), magnesium stearate, gelatin, FD&C Blue #2, and titanium dioxide. VIDEX® and REYATAZ® are registered trademarks of Bristol-Myers Squibb Company. COUMADIN® and SUSTIVA® are registered trademarks of Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharma Company. DESYREL® is a registered trademark of Mead Johnson and Company. Other brands listed are the trademarks of their respective owners and are not trademarks of Bristol-Myers Squibb Company. Princeton, NJ 08543 USA 1246226A9 F1-B0001B-02-11 Rev February 2011 WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 22 CITY VIEWPOINTs WINDY TIMES REV. IRENE MONROE Why can’t puppets Bert and Ernie marry? Sesame Street’s most famous duo, Bert and Ernie, first appeared in 1969, the same year as the Stonewall Riots, which to the nation’s surprise catapulted the LGBTQ Liberation Movement. At that time, the idea of partnering these two lovable striped-sweater-wearing puppets as gay was as inconceivable as the idea of legalized same-sex marriage. However, four-plus decades later—with Bert and Ernie’s relationship outliving many heterosexual living arrangements (roommates or married) and mirroring the subtle ways in which LGBTQ couples discreetly went about their lives back in the day—the question of whether the guys are gay is not only apropos, but so, too, is the question of their nuptials. “They are not gay, they are not straight, they are puppets,” Sesame Workshop President/CEO Gary Knell said. “They don’t exist below the waist.” The funny thing about the dominance of heteronormativity in society, I’ve learned as a lesbian, is that it is always assumed—whether it’s above or below the waists of people or puppets. Also, oddly, heteronormativity is also assumed without questions, expected without exception and explained even in its silence. However, Knell is not totally truthful in his rejoinder that the puppets are neither gay nor straight. My favorite Jim Henson Muppet is the heterosexual over-the-top prima-Donna, femme fatale and sex siren Miss Piggy. The love of her life, Kermit the Frog, unwittingly marries her in The Muppets Take Manhattan. Sesame Street has always moved and grooved with the times, and its concept of “Muppet diplomacy,” a term coined to depict Sesame Street’s efforts to educate children around the world, has tackled tough social issues like HIV/ AIDS, child obesity, 9/11 and military deployment, to name a few, and has featured megastars like Bono, Beyonce and Justin Bieber. Is it possible that my “gaydar” is off about Sesame Street? Perhaps. But hasn’t Sesame Street over the years, in a tongue-in-cheek fashion, winked and nodded to the LGBTQ community? For example, was it mere coincidence that in 2010, during National Coming Out Month, African-American lesbian comedian Wanda Sykes appeared on show? However, Sykes is not the only openly LGBTQ person to appear on the show. Openly gay guest-stars like Neil Patrick Harris played a “shoe fairy.” The Black Eyed Peas’ will.i.am (who is straight) sang “What I Am?,” a song about self-acceptance, creating an online kerfuffle about its underlying message. Is it now time for Sesame Street’s under-theradar winks and nods to the LGBTQ community be replaced with a full-throated statement of support? Sesame Street has a long history of teaching children about diversity and acceptance; so, why should the issues impacting our LGBTQ children be excluded? Moreover, many of the children watching the show are not only LGBTQ, but so, too, are their parents and households. In other words, could it be that Sesame Street needs to come out of the closet? In many ways, their famous duo has. Bert and Ernie have not only been roommates, but they have also been bedmates, sleeping next to each other like any long-term committed couple. I realize, however, in a culture that constantly sexualizes the coupling of same-gender relationships as gay, we ignore our own friendships with our “best friends forever” (BFF), which is what producers of Sesame Street are stating about Bert and Ernie. For example, for more than two decades Oprah and her gal pal, Gayle King—editor-at-large for O, The Oprah Magazine—have denied rumors they are lesbians, but rather have publicly stated they are each other’s BFF, just two sistahgirls being sister-friends. After 30 years of four-times-a-day phone calls, and frequent sightings of where you see Oprah you also see Gayle, the public continues to question Oprah and Gayle about their relationship. “No, I’m not a lesbian, I’m not even kind of a lesbian,” Oprah recently stated on A Barbara Walters Special: Oprah, The Next Chapter. “The reason why it irritates me is because it means that somebody must think I’m lying. That’s number one,” Winfrey told Walters. “Number two...why would you want to hide it? That is not the way I run my life.” I also realize that in constantly labeling samegender relationships as gay, it diminishes and distorts the romantic relationships we LGBTQ people have with our significant others. As a matter of fact, constantly labeling same-gender relationships as gay not only wrongly assumes that the only reason for two people of the same gender getting together is for sex, but it also keeps in place the myth of the hypersexual and predatory homosexual. However, Sesame Street is an open classroom for our kids, reflecting the times. Same-sex marriage is one of the social issues of the day. How will Sesame Street explain to children in same-gender families and households why Miss Piggy and Kermit the frog can marry, but Bert and Ernie can’t? LETTERS Taking action Dear Editor: In light of ongoing safety concerns in Boystown, I’d like to offer my observations and advice to Ald. Tom Tunney and the community: 1. Most of the groups that residents blame for loitering and noise are gay teens. Halsted has nothing to offer them on a weekend (or summer weekday) evening. There are no non-social service queer youth spaces in Boystown as there once were. This is something the Northalsted Business Alliance, Lakeview Chamber of Commerce, and the alderman’s office could take up. There are no business establishments in the area geared towards gay youth, and they are a viable customer segment. If no gym existed in Boystown, the business alliance, chamber of commerce and alderman’s office would surely make it their focus to court health club operators for the area. The solution to noise/loitering is not to try and keep gay youth out of the area. The solution is to bring queer youth spaces into the area so that queer youth have an alternative to loitering on the streets once Center on Halsted programs end for the day. Instead of focusing on a budget for security to keep queer youth away from their establishments, the business alliance and chamber of commerce (in coordination with the alderman’s office) should be working to bring in businesses which cater to queer youth. 2. There is a large population of homeless gay teens in the area. Lakeview social-service providers need to be able to connect with and get resources to them. Otherwise, this popula- tion can become vulnerable to sexual predators, drug dealers and other criminals and they may be forced to commit survival crimes (prostitution, muggings, etc.). There has to be a strong proactive effort to reach this population before they become victims and/or are forced to turn to survival crimes that result in area residents and visitors becoming victims. The answer is not to wait for homeless gay teens to reach a stage of despair and then send the police in to arrest them. 3. There are bona fide criminals who come to the neighborhood to prey upon its residents and visitors. Many Lakeview residents are incorrectly and unfairly categorizing those in the two groups I’ve described above with this last group. Also, they are blaming those in the former two groups for the behavior of those in this latter group. Violent crime needs to be addressed with a community policing strategy that does not unfairly target those in the first group, that helps connect those in the second group with proper services, and that deters or apprehends those in this third group. What I am seeing take place instead of what I have described above is strategies aimed at lumping all three groups into one, with the goal of pushing this incorrectly defined monolithic group out of the neighborhood. That is not the answer. Jay Gotlier Lakeview A new coalition Dear editor, The Lakeview Safety and Inclusion Coalition (LSIC) is a new community group of service providers, residents, business leaders, youth, public servants and individuals invested in bettering Lakeview. A response to recent acts of violence, LSIC’s goals are simple. First, uphold Lakeview’s longstanding tradition of serving as an open and welcoming community for individuals from all backgrounds, ethnicities, ages, gender identities and orientations. Above all, make Lakeview safer for everyone by bringing the entire community together and taking a holistic, results-driven approach to solutions. With the broad coalition that LSIC has built, and continues to build, I am confident that together we can strengthen our community and preserve Lakeview’s integrity for all of those who live, work and visit Lakeview. LSIC recognizes the need to steer away from the exclusion and divisiveness that hinders our progress and instead focus on our shared goals of feeling safe and welcomed in our community. When we uphold our values of respect, inclusion and commitment, we can productively work to ensure that our streets remain safe for all. As a proud member of this community and as state representative, I support LSIC and am looking forward to working with the coalition to make our neighborhood safer for everyone. Sara Feigenholtz State representative, 12th District VOL. 26 No. 47, Aug. 31, 2011 The combined forces of Windy City Times, founded Sept. 1985, and Outlines newspaper, founded May 1987. 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WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 GOINGS-ON 23 WINDY CITY TIMES’ ENTERTAINMENT SECTION Photo by Johnny Knight YOU REALLY GOT A HOLD ON ME Things get very physical in the theatrical production The Double. See more on page 24. MUSIC DISH SPORTS Have a Taste. Page 28. Top man. Page 31. Base stop. Page 34. Photo from Taste of the Gold Coast by Andrew Davis Photo of ZZ Top by Vern Hester Photo of Mark Febonio courtesy of Febonio SCOTTISH PLAY SCOTT Mapping out the Fringes BY SCOTT C. MORGAN Fifty performance groups from 14 states (plus Canada and the United Kingdom) are set to perform in five venues in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood Sept. 1-11 as part of the 2nd annual Chicago Fringe Festival. “The scope of this year’s festival stems from your success in 2010,” said associate producer Vinnie Lacey in a statement. “This year we’ve got more performers and show times slated. Our growth demonstrates how electrifying Fringe is for audiences and performers alike, and we’re thrilled to turn Pilsen into the city’s prime location for freewheeling and diverse theatrical revelry again.” The Chicago Fringe Festival aims to move around to different neighborhoods each year, but the festival returns to its first stomping grounds in part to build upon its previous success in the Pilsen neighborhood. Unlike some other festivals that are juried by a panel or artistic director, the Chicago Fringe Festival touts its democratic selection process via a lottery system. Hence professionals are mixed in with amateur artists, while a whole range of performance styles are featured ranging from kid-friendly puppetry to adults-only burlesque. There are also plenty of shows touching upon LGBT issues with both serious and comical approaches. Two shows with trans-identified performers include Chicago’s own Rebecca Kling’s No Gender Left Behind (exploring the state of transgender discrimination in the United States today) and New Yorker Roman Rimer’s Evolution, which details his travels in the South to work with LGBTQ youth in Christian communities. As with most fringe festivals, there are some very oddly named shows. Take, for instance, Robin Gelfenbien’s My Salvation Has a First Name: A Wienermobile Journey, which details her time as a driver of the touring Oscar Mayer Wienermobile as a way of overcoming bullying. There’s also Jesus, Shakespeare and Lincoln Walk into a Bar, a show from the Indianapolis-based Giants of Theatre troupe that imagines what kind of karaoke songs these three might sing. The Chicago Fringe Festival’s five venues are: The Doppler Stage, 1915 S. Halsted St.; Dream Theatre, 556 W. 18th St.; Human Thread, 645 W. 18th St.; Meridian Stage, 1932 S. Halsted St.; and Temple Gallery, 1749 S. Halsted. Tickets are available at Fringe Central, 2003 S. Halsted, which also hosts the festival’s opening and closing ceremonies plus networking events. Performance times vary, but most shows are performed three to five times during the festival. Tickets to most shows are $10 (ticket sales go directly to the artists), on top of a reusable $5 festival button. Other ticket/button packages are also available. For more information, visit http:// www.fringechicago.org. CCPA becomes a church? Itinerant Windy City theater companies will probably have to scratch the Chicago Center for the Performing Arts (CCPA) off of their lists of rentable venues, since the arts complex at 777 N. Green is likely to become a church full time. David Odd of The Edge Comedy Club alerted fans and members of the media about the arts complex’s change to a house of worship via an email sent Aug. 23. Odd warned that The Edge Comedy Club’s final shows might be on Aug. 25 and 27, and that its home at CCPA since 2007 “is no more” (though Odd hinted that The Edge Comedy Club’s shows at the Skokie Theatre on the first Friday of the month may continue). A call to CCPA seeking more information was not returned. Chris Jones of the Chicago Tribune later reported that City Church Chicago (which rents out space at CCPA on Sundays and Mon- Rebecca Kling in a photo illustration for her show, No Gender Left Behind. Illustration courtesy of Kling days) is the likely institution that will take over the complex in the fall. Jones then reported that Bailiwick Chicago, which had planned on staging its forthcoming production of Jeanine Tesori’s award-winning 1997 musical Violet at CCPA, was now moving the show to the Mercury Theatre. (For more information on Violet, visit http://www.bailiwickchicago.com.) It will be too bad if the switch from arts complex to church goes through for CCPA. Congo Square Theatre Company and Bailiwick Chicago both did great work recently at the CCPA (I thoroughly enjoyed their respective productions of The Colored Museum and Passing Strange). But despite CCPA’s cozy theaters spaces and lovely lobby, its location of west of Halsted Street just off of Chicago Ave. wasn’t exactly the easiest to get to and to attract audiences. At press time, CCPA’s website at http://www.theaterland.com was not updated about any potential changes. Moving Home The Equity theater company known as The Artistic Home is on the move again. When it starts its 2011-12 season with Eugene O’Neill’s A Touch of the Poet Sept. 30, The Artistic Home will be housed in an 80-seat space at Stage 773 (which is in the midst of a major remodeling along Belmont Avenue). “We could not be more excited to open our 13th season in this fabulous new space amongst such good company,” said The Artistic Home’s artistic director Kathy Scambiatterra in a statement. “Being part of the Stage 773 theater family opens our work to a much wider audience, namely more theatergoers and less Cubs fans, and makes us much more accessible than we were before.” The Artistic Home was previously housed at the former 49-seat Live Bait Theater at 3419 N. Clark St., and before that in a storefront space along Irving Park Road that is now Chemically Imbalanced Comedy. The Artistic Home’s shift means that the former Live Bait Theater is now a new tenant. Let’s hope that it continues to exist as a theater in the future. For more information on The Artistic Home and Stage 773, visit http://www.theartistichome.org and http:// www.stage773.org. Aug. 31, 2011 24 THEATER REVIEW The Double Playwright: Barbara Lhota At: Babes With Blades at Lincoln Square in the Berry Methodist Church, 4754 N. Leavitt St. Phone: 773-904-0391; $20 Runs through: Sept. 24 BY MARY SHEN BARNIDGE Listen up, kids—here’s your premise: It’s 1940 and, in support of women’s contribution to the war effort (Rosie the Riveter, don’t ya know?), Broadway producer Saul Bloomfield is financing a modern-day production of Cyrano de Bergerac—with Roxane fighting alongside her beloved men at the front—that he hopes Warner Brothers will consider for a possible movie. To that end, he has assembled a bevy of Hollywood personalities, among them a female fencing master whose younger sister has, coincidentally, been hired to stunt-double for the leading lady. Welcome to the world of screwball comedy! Barbara Lhota’s homage to the film classics of this romantic genre adheres to formula with a plot encompassing elements of the backstageintrigue scenario (lecherous leading men, temperamental divas, etc.), the class-differences scenario (stage vs. cinematic acting styles) and no less than three pairs of lovers unsure of their affections—especially two young women, initially enamored of the same man, who find themselves increasingly drawn to one another. Lhota’s cupid being an equal-opportunity facilitator, everyone eventually gets what they want. Oh, but not until an escalating series of complications have threatened to scuttle the bestlaid plans of sweethearts and show biz. Will exspouses Charles Fontaine and Rosalind Rollins (the latter played by Lisa Herceg in full Rosalind-you-know-who drag) reunite? Will onscreen villain George Hall overcome his shyness and profess his passion for his feisty swordmistress? Will childhood companions Minnie Sparks and Olivia Wood acknowledge their mutual attraction and come up with a scheme for preserving their careers guaranteeing their likewise lavender swain safety as well? Will the West Coast moguls applaud the experimental Cyrano and make Joffrey names chief marketing officer The Joffrey Ballet and Executive Director Christopher Clinton Conway have announced that Brian Smith has joined the Joffrey’s executive leadership team as its new chief marketing officer, effective immediately. everybody rich? Lhota’s dialogue for this Babes With Blades production crackles with rat-a-tat authenticity (despite being sometimes blurred by its churchbasement acoustics), while Leigh Barrett’s direction keeps the pace crisp and high-stepping. The athletic cast combines precision comic timing and unflagging agility—Did I mention Alison Dornheggen’s swing-dance numbers?—to fulfill the demands of this period romcom. Theatergoers dismissing the Babes With Blades as a stunt troupe instead of a bona fide theater company are advised to re-assess their assumptions, even as they thrill to Libby Beyreis’ dazzling—and hilarious—climactic swordplay scene featuring BWB founding member Kathrynne Wolf swinging steel in the role of the entire attacking Spanish army! How can you pass up spectacle like that? THEATER REVIEW A Walk in the Woods Playwright: Lee Blessing At: TimeLine at Theater Wit, 1229 W. Belmont Tickets: 773-975-8150; http://www.timelinetheatre.com; $34-$44 Runs through: Nov. 20 BY JONATHAN ABARBANEL We expect first-rate shows from TimeLine Theatre, and the troupe delivers again with this engaging, even sprightly production of A Walk in the Woods, Lee Blessing’s intelligent rumination on the wary friendship between American and Soviet arms-reduction negotiators. As a two-character play, it’s a smaller scale production than usual for TimeLine, which doesn’t stop sure-handed director Nick Bowling from taking a fresh approach: with Blessing’s OK, the Soviet negotiator has undergone a sex change and now is a woman. Perhaps the switch wouldn’t be as effective without Janet Ulrich Brooks as Anya Botvinnik, the weary and sometimes cynical yet charming Soviet negotiator who has engaged for years in fruitless talks between the superpowers. Brooks and Bowling take full advantage of the change in tone the sex switch allows, introducing the dynamics of occasional girlishness, flirtation, motherliness and even the feminine mystique to lines which, in previous productions with a male negotiator as written, are those of a Russian bear playing cute or coy. To say Brooks is convincing and appealing is an understatement. As John Honeyman, the American negotia- WINDY CITY TIMES tor new to the arms talks, TimeLine veteran David Parkes is no slouch. Trimly elegant in his stylishly conservative suits and ties, he’s every inch the wary and solemn newcomer determined to prove his mettle, and still idealistic enough to believe something might be achieved. Initially reluctant to engage in offthe-books talks with his Soviet counterpart, Parkes delivers precisely the necessary degree of starchiness and yet convey Honeyman’s decency and sincerity. Set in a forest near Geneva, Switzerland (conveyed by Brian Sidney Bembridge with simple economy using plywood trees and leafy video projections), A Walk in the Woods was written in 1986 and was inspired by real negotiations that came thisclose to a meaningful arms reduction treaty. The play ends with bittersweet failure for Botvinnik and Honeyman, although their real-life counterparts were rewarded by arms treaties in 1987 and 1991 (the START treaty that was renegotiated successfully last year). In 1985, there were over 70,000 missilebased nuclear warheads in the world. Thanks to START, there now are fewer than 20,000. But since two or three dozen missiles could destroy the world—fewer than that using socalled dirty bombs—what difference does it make? Blessing and his characters fully embrace the cynicism inherent in nuclear weapons strategies, yet also state that anything is possible once—and if—opponents can trust each other. Today, nuclear war is far more likely to come about through the actions of a rogue nation or terrorists than because of disagreements between the United States and Russia. That sad truth makes A Walk in the Woods far more poignant than purposeful in a world which has grown infinitely less rational in 25 years. A Walk in the Woods. Photo by Lara Goetsch The Double. Photo by Johnny Knight Smith, 44, most recently served for five years as the director of marketing and development for the Chicago Loop Alliance. Prior to that role, Smith was the development officer for the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago and the director of communications and special events for Lookingglass Theatre Company. CULTURE CLUB SPOTLIGHT Before it became a midnight movie mainstay, Richard O’Brien’s The Rocky Horror Picture Show was titillating London and Broadway theater audiences in the flesh as The Rocky Horror Show. Ludicrous Theatre allows audiences to get up close and personal with this quirky 1970s musical that blends 1950s-style rock and roll numbers with a sexually expansive plot twist on monster movies. Ludicrous Theatre’s The Rocky Horror Show continues through Saturday, Sept. 17, at BoHo Theatre at The Heartland Studio, 7016 N. Glenwood. Show times are at 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, plus a midnight show on Sept. 9. Tickets are $20-$25. Call 773-455-6001 or visit http://www.ludicroustheatre.com for more information. Photo of J. Keegan Sibken as Rocky and David Goodman as Frank ‘N’ Furter in The Rocky Horror Show courtesy of the company. WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 THEATER REVIEW THEATER REVIEW Colin Quinn: Long Story Short Blue Man Group Playwright: text by the ensemble At: Briar Street Theatre, 3133 N. Halsted St. Phone: 773-348-4000;$49-$69 Runs through: open Playwright: Colin Quinn At: Broadway Playhouse at Water Tower Place, 175 E. Chestnut St. Phone: 800-775-2000; $40-$65 Runs through: Sept. 10 BY SCOTT C. MORGAN Don’t let comedian Colin Quinn’s tough-guy Brooklyn accent fool you. He may sound like a stereotypical New York cop, but it’s clear that this former Saturday Night Live funnyman could have been a much-loved history teacher after seeing Colin Quinn: Long Story Short. Quinn’s 2010 one-man Broadway show is a speedy examination of the rise and fall of great world civilizations, but scrambled up with hilarious pop culture references of today. Now playing through Sept. 10 at the Broadway Playhouse at Water Tower Place, Long Story Short achieves a happy blend of history lesson and sarcastic stand-up comedy routine. Some of Quinn’s hypotheses and conclusions may sound way out there, but you end up laughing so much that you do have to often agree with his pointed and often politically-incorrect observations. Also, like many comedians, Quinn is an equal opportunity offender. Take, for instance, how Quinn likes to tidily divide certain civilizations as being run by Smart Guys (like the Greeks) and Tough Guys (like the Romans). He also discusses how drugs ultimately played a part in the downfall of great Latin American civilizations before and after the arrival of Spanish conquistadors. The United States certainly doesn’t escape Quinn’s comic barbs, as he points out how its recent involvement in invading Iraq was not unlike an after-hours barroom brawl that got out of hand. Now as a performer, Quinn exuded a lot of nervous energy on opening night, perhaps delivering his material a tick or two faster than it needed to be. The effect might have sounded been a bit garbled for audiences unaccustomed to hearing Brooklynese dialogue at such a quick clip. Also, for those who might bristle at paying up CRITICS’ PICKS Black and Blue, Factory Theater at Prop Thtr, though Sept. 3. Baseball may be only a game, but families have gone to war over differences less frivolous than loyalties to Cubs or Sox. Will that also be the sorry fate of the two brothers in this down-home Chicago-style fable? MSB Family Devotions, Halcyon Theatre at the Greenhouse, through Sept. 4. “What do you know about America? You were born here!” sneers an immigrant Chinese greed-head in a very young David Henry Hwang’s wry Shepard-esque comment on the intergenerational conflicts that drive a boy to flee his family. MSB Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, Drury Lane Theatre Oakbrook, through Oct. 9. It’s simple: this is the best Sweeney Todd you ever are likely to see. Don’t miss it. Greg Edelman and Liz McCartney are Sweeney and Mrs. Lovett. The ensemble, band and designs are astonishing. JA They’re Playing Our Song, Fox Valley Repertory at Pheasant Run Resort, St. Charles, through Oct. 9. The real-life and talented husband-and-wife team of Michael Mahler and Dara Cameron both help to make this disco-era romantic musical comedy into a fun and great date-night show. SCM —By Abarbanel, Barnidge and Morgan 25 Colin Quinn. Photo by Carol Rosegg to $65 for what is essentially a brainy standup routine, Long Story Short does feature plenty of stage extras like a tiered set suggesting an amphitheatre, some cleverly chosen photo projections and a series of computer animated graphics to help place all of Quinn’s comic commentary into context. Plus, Long Story Short boasts superstar comedian Jerry Seinfeld as the show’s director, so you do get what you pay for in terms of brand-name comedy. There are some topics in Long Story Short that you wish Quinn could have comically riffed further and longer on than what he currently serves. However, it’s far better to leave audiences waiting for more, which is exactly what Quinn does so well at mirthfully mashing up world history for quick consumption. Repeatedly, Quinn finds ways to poke and prod audiences to consider mankind’s failure to learn from its past mistakes. However, he does it in such a way that you’ll likely contemplate it all with a wicked smile on your face. Open call for ‘Nutcracker’ student dancers The Moscow Ballet will host auditions in Rosemont Wed., Aug. 31, at 3:30 p.m., at SPACE Peterson, 3433 W. Peterson, for student dancers to perform in the Dec. 11 performance of the Great Russian Nutcracker at Rosemont Theater alongside the Russian, classically trained professionals. To register and for more audition information, contact Altin Naska 773-463-1220 or anaska@southportarts.com. ‘Spunk’ at Court Theatre Sept. 8 Court Theatre Artistic Director Charles Newell and Executive Director Stephen J. Albert open the Company’s 57th Season with Spunk, adapted from the short stories of Zora Neale Hurston by George C. Wolfe with music by Chic Street Man and directed by Seret Scott. Spunk features Alexis J. Rogers (Porgy and Bess) as Blues Speak Woman, Chris Boykin, Kenn E. Head, Patrese D. McClain, Kelvyn Bell, and Michael Pogue. Spunk, which Kirkland & Ellis LLP is sponsoring, will run Sept. 8-Oct. 9, 2011 at Court Theatre, 5535 S. Ellis Ave. Ticket prices are $30 to $40 for preview performances, and $40 to $60 for regularrun performances. Tickets are available by visiting the box office, calling 773-7534472 or going to http://www.CourtTheatre. org. BY MARY SHEN BARNIDGE When this quirky performance art/stunt show made its Chicago premiere in 1997, it was little more than a high-tech vaudeville designed to test the post-psychedelic generation’s tolerance for multi-sensory overload. An unbroken 15-year run has evidenced the unflagging popularity of extasis-in-groups, but after more than decade of revels recalling the amorally-exuberant exploratory play we enjoyed as children, a certain maturity was inevitable, making for changes in the program’s structure. This doesn’t mean that the noisy and messy fun that continues to draw repeat customers of all ages has been discarded as too juvenile for sophisticated post-millennium audiences. The spurting twinkie-vests and inquisitive videoprobes guarantee a modicum of yuck-factor, as do the exhibitions of creative chewing and spitting, not to mention the human-paintbrush art. We also get periodic audial stimulation via percussion symphonies played on spraying drum-heads and PVC-pipe marimbas, with extra ear-muscle supplied by a band dressed for a Brazilian carnival. What’s been added, however, is a manifesto— a statement of intent to lend a shape to the mischief—projected onstage as we enter the auditorium. “When meeting people from a foreign culture, offer gifts that reflect your interests as a gesture of friendship,” it exhorts us, ultimately concluding “The best way to forge a lasting friendship is to create something together.” This sentiment is reiterated later in the show, when a trio of iPhones debate the world of “2-D” vs. that of “3-D,” at which time the Blue Man ethos becomes clear: Fourth-wall separation of performer and audience, exemplified by the culture of faceless text-communication, is two-dimensional—and that’s bad. The silent Blue warriors fight valiantly against isolation, however: climbing over chair-backs with spectators seated in them, coaxing audience members to the stage to assist them in their tricks, scatter-shooting (soft) projectiles into the house and conducting the crowd in orchestrated chant-alongs. Even the much-publicized “splash” rows in front, where customers are issued waterproof ponchos, represent an effort to share the experience. By the time the animated—or so we think—stick figures step forward off their screens to encompass the entire theater in their communal embrace, even the most reticent playgoer will be caught up in the gleeful kinetic anarchy. Blue Man Group. Photo by Paul Natkin ★★★★this infectious new musical could get belly laughs from a corpse” “delivers fun to die for… ” “ —Time Out Chicago two actor-singers and ace musicians “not to be missed —Chicago Sun-Times these two pros never miss a beat” —Northwest Indiana Times “exuberant” —Chicagocritic.com “ would no doubt maKe mel brooKs giggle giddily ” —New City “a campy new whodunit” —Chicago Tribune extended by popular demand! 312.595.5600 www.chicagoshakes.com ticKet $ 25–30 s Aug. 31, 2011 26 KNIGHT AT THE MOVIES By Richard Knight, Jr. The Debt; Don’t Be Afraid...; film notes For 30 years Israel has glorified former Mossad agents Rachel, Stefan and David as the trio that brought to justice a sadistic Nazi war criminal who they found posing as a gynecologist in Berlin in 1965 and who they captured and killed (as he tried to escape). However, now, in 1997, just as Rachel’s daughter has released a biographical account of their actions, the trio find themselves unwittingly drawn back into these decades-old events. That’s the nifty set-up for director John Madden’s taut political thriller The Debt, a remake of a fictional 2007 Israeli film that is helped enormously by its cast. These include both older versions of the characters (Helen Mirren, sporting a Yiddish accent and an “L” shaped scar on her cheek, Tom Wilkinson and Ciaran Hinds) and their comely, younger selves (this year’s “It” girl Jessica Chastain, Martin Csokas and Sam Worthington). The bulk of the picture follows Rachel, Stefan and Sam Worthington in The Debt. David—strangers when they meet—who are bound by their united mission of bringing the Nazi to justice and who, during the course of that mission, find themselves caught up in an emotionally potent love triangle (not surprising as they make for the three most gorgeous secret agents of all time, I think). The plot to entrap the Nazi, going by the name Dieter Vogel, involves Rachel becoming one of his gynecological patients—an unbelievably discomforting situation for her (and the audience)—and leads to the attempted kidnap of Vogel, who the trio is supposed to ferret out of Berlin and back to Israel for trial. All does not go as planned, however, and the group is forced to THIS WEEK’S DEALS improv an alternate scenario. Here’s where “the debt” part comes into the story, commingling with the increasing romantic tension between the three and their prisoner (the appropriately smarmy Jesper Christiansen). The movie recalls a myriad of other psychological thrillers—from Death and the Maiden on back to Hitchcock’s Lifeboat—and works, as noted because of that good but oh so pretty trio and their acting elders. Mirren, as usual, is sensational and Wilkinson matches her intensity as her morally suspect ex-husband while Hans plays the conscience-stricken David with suitable complexity. Although there are lots of credibility gaps as the picture enters its concluding sequence in which Mirren must finally make good on “the debt” owed by the trio, as these political thrillers go, The Debt pays off in both departments. Speaking of credibility gaps ... well, that would be producer Guillermo del Toro’s remake of Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark (directed by Troy Nixey). The film—a remake of the creepy 1973 TV classic starring Kim Darby and Jim Hutton that del Toro and Matthew Robbins have adapted—now The “daily deal” site with our roots, vision and focus linked to the LGBT community www.QponChicago.com Proud QponChicago Partners: Pride Films & Plays www.pridefilmsandplays.com 773-472-6643 www.americasdog.com 5 locations thruout Chicago (Navy Pier, Lincoln Park, Loop, O’Hare) Sky WNBA Games Sept. 4 www.wnba.com/sky 312-994-5980 Polo Cafe www.PoloCafe.com 773-927-7656 In marketing partnership with Chicago Archery Center www.chicagoarcherycenter.com 312-612-2205 As featured in BoysTownBlog, NBC’s the Inc.well, Red Eye, Chicago Talks, Passport Magazine, BroadwayWorld.com, Chicago Pride.com For more information or to list your business, please contact us at customerservice@qponchicago.com 773-562-3311 or 773-387-2394 Bailee Madison in Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark. Photo by Carolyn Johns WINDY CITY TIMES focuses on Katie Holmes and Guy Pearce as a couple who have invested everything in their restoration of a once-celebrated mansion (he’s the restorer, she’s the interior designer) that, unbeknownst to them, includes some terrifying inhabitants. Once Pearce’s sour-faced daughter, Sallie (Bailee Madison), arrives, the secret of these tiny creatures (who live in an underworld far beneath the house) is slowly uncovered. First, Sallie finds a hidden room (complete with an arched skylight) that the original owner, a painter of renown, used as his studio. The room also hides (via a heating grate) the entrance to the lower world inhabited by the nasty, goblintype monsters who have an affinity for sticking sharp objects into their unsuspecting victims like so many pincushions, speaking in raspy, repetitive whispers reminiscent of Gollum in the Lord of the Rings pictures, and who can’t abide even a smidgen of light. In their script, del Toro and Robbins have included a backstory for the murderous wee folk that riffs on the legend of the tooth fairy (yes, really) that is laughable but which also allows for a stomach-turning prologue in which an unsuspecting servant girl’s teeth are brutally dispatched. This is the movie’s lone superior sequence and embodies del Toro’s unsung ability to combine gore with the gorgeous. (He did this superbly in Pan’s Labyrinth.) The rest of the movie is run-of-the-mill creature-feature stuff that finds as many gaping holes in the script as in the woodwork of the house. With the exception of that opening segment, this remake can’t hold a candle to its chintzy but decidedly more satisfying forebear. (The TV version also has the benefit of Billy Goldenberg’s truly chilling score, which haunts long after that movie’s 74-minute running time.) Warner Archives has just released a special-edition DVD, which contains the film and a bonus commentary track by a trio of the movie’s rabid enthusiasts. Film notes: —The Gene Siskel Film Center, 164 N. State St., has a lot of screening options this week that will be of interest to LGBT film enthusiasts. First up is a weeklong engagement, beginning Sept. 2, of writer-director Mike Mills’ autobiographical bittersweet dramedy, Beginners, in which a father (played by Christopher Plummer), comes out at 75 to his son (Ewan McGregor) after being widowed. It’s one of the best films of the year and both Plummer and McGregor give Oscar-worthy performances. —Next up, on Sept. 3 and 8, the Siskel presents three short films from the Outfest Legacy Project Program: Mona’s Candlelight (circa 1950), Queen At Hearts (1967) and Choosing Children (1984). The films, totaling 95 minutes, each offer rare, historical glimpses into gay culture that have been restored and are being presented as part of the Siskel’s 2011 UCLA Festival of Preservation. —Lastly, the Siskel is presenting Cher’s breakthrough movie role in Robert Altman’s 1982 gender-bending classic Come Back to the Five & Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean. The film, which isn’t on DVD, also stars Karen Black, Sandy Dennis and Sudie Bond. It, too, has been preserved and will be presented, on Sept. 3 and 7, as part of the UCLA Festival. Complete information on all these screenings at http://www. siskelfilmcenter.org —More Cher to share: On Wed., Sept. 7. at 7 p.m. (CST), Cher is the guest programmer for the evening on Turner Classic Movies. The gay icon sits down with TCM host Robert Osborne (in a pre-taped segment) and introduces four of her favorite classics which include Follow the Fleet (1936), Hobson’s Choice (1954), The Big Street (1942) and Lady of Burlesque (1943). http:// www.tcm.com Check out my archived reviews at http:// www.windycitymediagroup.com or http:// www.knightatthemovies.com. Readers can leave feedback at the latter website. WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 27 Kelly McGillis on ‘Top Gun,’ coming out and big hair By Richard Knight, Jr. Kelly McGillis broke through to film audiences with her sensational performance in 1985’s Witness and quickly solidified her position as a box office draw with the testosterone-heavy Top Gun in 1986. Director Tony Scott’s follow-up to his bisexual vampire chic thriller The Hunger, Top Gun focused on a group of ace pilots training for dangerous combat missions who compete, in the interim, for a coveted prize and bragging rights during their training. As nearly the lone female amongst the bevy of the ‘80s “top guns” (Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer, Dean Stockwell and others) who played the charged-up wingmen, McGillis held her own. The movie was a blockbuster and is now coming to Blu-ray in a 25th-anniversary edition. McGillis went on to co-star with Jodie Foster in the compelling rape drama The Accused and made a few other films into the 1990s, after which she did some stage work, raised a family and took a break from film acting. She made news in 2009 when she came out as a lesbian. McGillis, a breast-cancer survivor, has slowly returned to acting in films, taking on roles in between full time work as a rehab counselor near the home she shares with her partner in New Jersey. Windy City Times: It’s hard to believe that Top Gun was 25 years ago but the minute that Berlin’s “Take My Breath Away” started, I was transported back in time. [Laughs] You seem almost like Snow White with all those hunky Seven Dwarfs. What was it like being almost the lone female? Kelly McGillis: Dwarfs! [Laughs] WCT: Very beautifully coiffed dwarves, I might add... KM: Yes, they were! I used to love to rub their heads—all that shaved hair felt so good. [Laughs] Boy, I had a great time. Gosh, I was Darla with Spanky & Our Gang. WCT: Can you talk a little bit about the shoot itself? KM: The shoot was really fun. I always thought about it like being at camp—it was literally like that [laughs] because all the boys and I all lived in the same hotel complex. We called it “Wally World” and it was literally like camp. During the day we would go act and at night we just had a wild, crazy time. WCT: So they didn’t give you a hard time? KM: No, they were all really, really nice. We had a great time. You know—you’re young, you’re partying, you have no responsibilities— life can’t get any better when you’re in your 20s. WCT: Can you talk about shooting some specific scenes with Tom? KM: I loved working with Tom. I think he’s the most kind, generous, giving, loving, supportive soul and I really had a great time with him. We had to do a lot of stuff over because Tony Scott was really big on that sunset light—that golden hour. I just remember going to that friggin’ tarmac every day [laughs] at sunset to get this one friggin’ shot which seemed like it took forever. I really enjoyed the whole experience. WCT: There’s a love scene between you and Tom Cruise that’s very similar, photographically, to the love scene between Catherine Deneuve and Susan Sarandon in The Hunger, Tony Scott’s previous movie with the perfect back lighting. Had you seen The Hunger before shooting the movie? KM: Oh, yes. WCT: How do you feel about [Top Gun] now, 25 years later? It has a bit of a homoerotic reputation among the gay community. KM: I don’t know. I’ve never watched it. WCT: What?! KM: Well, no; I watched it when it came out because I had to talk about it but I don’t sit around and look back. I have caught glimpses of it when it’s on TV and my kids have been watching it or something [laughs] and I’m in the other room doing laundry and I go, “Oh my God. I used to be so young, what happened?!” But that’s about it. I don’t really go back but I just think it’s really amazing that people are still interested in it 25 years later. That blows my mind. And I think it’s a tribute to Tony, really, because he’s such a visualist and it’s a fun story, cowboys-and-Indians story—what could be sexier? WCT: Especially that shower-room scene says the gay film critic. [Laughs] And you had really good hair in that film—that big ‘80s hair. KM: [Laughs] I did! I hate when people look at pictures from that decade and say, “This was a really bad hair day” and I’m like, “In the ‘80s that was a fantastic hair day!” I really don’t love how people dump on the ‘80s—the ‘80s were my genre. I just think it’s funny how when we look back people have such judgments on their lives and I think, “Oh my gosh, it was so cool and hip and wonderful. Why judge that?” WCT: I agree 100 percent So, this film led to one of your best, The Accused, with Jodie Foster. What was it like to go from such a fun, blockbuster-type movie to something a lot grittier from an acting standpoint? KM: Well, that’s what acting is, isn’t it? You get to do a whole bunch of different stuff and that’s what I do and that’s what I did. I wouldn’t want to do all the same kind of characters nor the same kind of genres and I also felt that it was a huge gift to be able to talk about a sub- DaveOuanoPhotography.com Events • Fashion • Fitness Kelly McGillis. PR photo ject matter that people weren’t willing to talk about at the time. And that was something that was really important to me in my life and my experience at that time in life and what a huge gift that fell into my lap. WCT: So now, here we are in the new millennium and you’re back and you’ve come out and I’m curious, like the Dan Savage campaign proclaims, “It gets better.” Has it got- ten better for you now personally? KM: I don’t know if it’s gotten better or worse. I try not to have a value judgment on it. It just kind of is. It’s better in the sense that I don’t have to skirt around the questions; I don’t have to live a lie. What could be better than that? Because I think that, for me, not being able to be who I am creates so much self-loathing and self-hatred and that just got to a point to be a huge, incredible burden that I didn’t want to carry anymore. WCT: Well, kudos to you for that. I also want to say kudos for One A Minute, this breastcancer film that you narrated. I know that’s a subject that’s very near and dear to you. Are there other projects like that coming up for you, Kelly? KM: No, I haven’t done any other documentaries. Right now I’ve just been busy working at a drug and alcohol rehabilitation facility and that’s a full time, 40-hour-a-week commitment so I haven’t had a heck of a lot of time to be doing any other kind of service stuff. WCT: Well, doing that kind of work now, does the acting seem not as important or is it something that you want to stay with? I know you recently did a film in the horror genre called The Innkeepers. KM: For me I would love to have a life of balance—of loving service and creativity—and I think that’s the process in my life where I am. I’m trying to find a balance where I can do both because both are my passion and both I love with all my heart and soul and both feed me in incredible ways. I’m in the middle of trying to find the balance to be able to do both. WCT: That’s lovely. It’s not always easy to find that is it? KM: It isn’t for me sweetheart. [Laughs] I’m an all-or-nothing kind of girl! WCT: Well, thanks for being a hero for our community and welcome back—we’ve missed you. KM: Thank you so much—it’s good to be back. O Benefitting the Lesbian Community Care Project at Howard Brown Health Center Friday, September 16, 2011, 8 - 11 p.m. Carnivale, 702 W. Fulton Market Buy tickets now! Visit howardbrown.org/eve The Sponsors! ModelMayhem.com/DaveOuano Facebook: Dave Ouano Photography daveouano@me.com Benefitting HOWARD BROWN HEALTH CENTER HOWARD BROWN WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 28 DISH the SAVOR Oak Tree; Taste of the Gold Coast BY ANDREW DAVIS If you’re like me and can eat breakfast any time of the day, then check out Oak Tree, located on the sixth level of the Bloomingdale’s building at 900 N. Michigan. However, patrons should not be deceived by the tony address; despite the ambience, some of the patrons (“ladies who lunch”) and spectacular window views, the attire is casual (although I’d leave the cutoff shorts at home). The service will also have people thinking that they’re in a very upscale restaurant. Our server, John, was the utmost professional while the hostess, Gigi, was very courteous and informative. Owner Hale DeMar—who pitched in and served diners as well—told Savor that the menu changes about every six months or so, as less popular items are removed. Breakfast items cover a wide range of items, including tasty Eggs Florentine (with spinach and hollandaise sauce); chicken livers and eggs; Belgian waffles; and a wide array of pancakes and omelets. Lox and the fruit medley are popular dishes. WEEKLY DINING GUIDE IN However, Oak Tree offers so much more. I know this from experience, having had the sandwiches. One of my favorites is ham with Roquefort, fig preserves, fontina and spinach—it’s a gustatory delight. Also try the one with bacon, smoked gouda, cheddar, Granny Smith apple, arugula and fig preserves. In addition, there is a bakery that offers artisan breads (e.g., honey wheat, jalapeno cheddar, French flute, raisin pumpernickel and caraway rye), cakes, muffins, rolls and other delectables. All of the items are very reasonably priced; pancakes, for example, run about $9 and the aforementioned breads are $3.75-$6.50. The restaurant is open 7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. seven days a week, while the bakery is open 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m. The Third Annual Taste of the Gold Coast took place Aug. 23 at the Sutton Place Hotel. There were 13 participating restaurants—including Il Mulino, Cape Cod, RA Sushi, Chicago Q, Go Roma, Whiskey Bar, Carmine’s, Pane Caldo, Gaylord, The Drawing Room, Saloon Steakhouse, Devon Seafood Grill and Hendrickx Belgian Bread—in addition to Goose Island Belgium Style Ales. There was also live entertainment featuring Nan Mason & Terry Higgins and Lynne Jordan and the Shivers. In addition, a silent auction (including items donated by Windy City Times photographer/columnist Steve Starr) benefited the North Dearborn Association. Cece & Melinda with Raymi Productions hosted the event. Photos by Andrew Davis Oak Tree’s turkey hash and eggs. Photo by Andrew Davis Dining news —Chicago q chef Lee Ann Whippen did the Windy City proud at the 10th Annual Maryland State BBQ Bash recently. Competing against 63 teams from around the country, Whippen finished second in the Ribs category and sixth overall in the four categories of Pork Ribs, Pork Shoulder, Beef Brisket and Chicken. Chicago q is at 1160 N. Dearborn; see http://www.chicagoqrestaurant.com. —Restaurant reservation website OpenTable is teaming with Savored, which offers restaurant reservations and deals, to launch a partnership that gives Chicagoans access to Savored discounts through OpenTable.com, according to the Chicago Tribune. Savored members pay $10 per reservation and get 30 percent off their bill. The partnership allows OpenTable members to access Savored deals and book qualifying reservations through the website. —The Common Threads Associate Board will host its first-ever Common Threads Cook-Off Thursday, Sept. 15, at Fulton’s on the River, 315 N. LaSalle Dr., 6:30-9:30 p.m. Chefs will create and serve their favorite cookout-themed dish either in a glass, on a bun, in a shell or on a stick. Among the participating chefs/mixologists are Nicole Pederson (C-House), Chris Cavarra (Sable) and Stephanie Izard (Girl & the Goat). Tickets start at $75 each; see https://secure.tecture.com/ commonthreads/eventtickets.aspx?eventId=77. Send items to Andrew@WindyCityMediaGroup.com. DISH the American Beef ‘n Brandy 127 S. State St., Chicago 312-372-3451 beefbrandy.net A Chicago tradition since 1967. Serving pizza, burgers, meat loaf, homemade Foccacia bread and more. Roscoe’s Sidewalk Cafe 3356 N. Halsted St., Chicago 773-281-3355 roscoes.com Visit our popular outdoor cafe. Salads, burgers, wraps, sandwiches, drink specials, and Sunday Brunch. Images from the Taste of the Gold Coast. Photo by Andrew Davis. See more online www.windycitymediagroup.com DINING LISTINGS Hamburger Mary’s 5400 N. Clark St., Chicago 773-784-6969 hamburgermarys.com/chicago Burgers, salads and sass served up in a kitschy atmosphere with an on-site brew pub. Bakery Swedish Bakery 5348 N. Clark St., Chicago 773-561-8919 swedishbakery.com European-style cookies, pastries, breads, and tortes. We’ll create a cake for any celebration. Fondue Geja’s Cafe 340 W. Armitage Ave., Chicago 773-281-9101 gejascafe.com Romantic fondue dining. Live classical and flamenco guitar. Extensive, moderately priced wine list. ITALIAN Taverna 750 750 W. Cornelia Ave., Chicago 773-348-5172 Bright and fresh Italian small plates with an exciting cocktail menu. Surprisingly affordable. Mediterranean Socca 3301 N. Clark St., Chicago 773-248-1155 soccachicago.com Featured on Food Network. Italian/French cuisine. Dinner daily and weekend brunch. Outdoor patio. Mexican Mundial Cocina Mestiza 1640 W. 18th St., Chicago 312-491-9908 mundialcocinamestiza.com Creative Mexican cuisine in the Pilsen neighborhood. Handshaken margaritas and affordable wines. To get your business listed in The Dish, contact advertising@windycitymediagroup.com Middle Eastern Habibi Restaurant 1227 W. Devon Ave., Chicago 773-465-9318 habibirestaurantandhookah.com Authentic Middle Eastern dishes. Lunch and dinner until 4 a.m. Hookah bar. Delivery and catering available. SEAFOOD Kingfisher 5721 N. Clark St., Chicago 773-506-7014 www.kingfisheronclark.com Fresh seafood in the heart of Andersonville. Award-winning Chef Peter McCarthy. Reservations recommended. WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 29 Women & Children First thriving in economy By Ross Forman Although many major chain bookstores in Chicago and the surrounding suburbs have closed, including the Borders at Clark, Broadway and Diversey Streets in Lakeview, Women & Children First in Andersonville is doing fine—if not getting better from financial and business standpoints. Since the start of the year, for instance, the long-time independent bookstore run by Linda Bubon and Ann Christophersen has been selling Google eBooks through their website. “The Google eBooks have a great advantage over the Kindle books because they can be read on a myriad of devices,” Bubon said. “This is finally a way to compete with Amazon because you can read your Google eBooks on anything, [including] your computer, iPhone, iPad, Nook, etc.” Women & Children First continues to offer a full program schedule of author events, Bubon noted. Especially of late. “People still seem to want to read their books here and celebrate the publications of their books here. That’s been a good, solid part of the business.” Including celebrity authors, such as Jane Lynch of Glee fame, who will be at the store on Oct. 9. Sales of children’s books also have been steady, strong. In fact, it has increased some over the past few years, Bubon said. “This market is a little less affected by the digital revolution.” Women & Children First has been most impacted in recent years by Amazon, which uses books as a loss leader, she said. “Their biggest source of sales comes from [the sales of] electronics and appliances; they just don’t have to make money on [the sale] of books, so they more and more under-cut publishers, book stores and even price clubs.” The slow, steady growth in sales at Women & Children First also has been seen in its staffing. Christophersen, for instance, was in recent years only working at the store one day a week. But as of about a year ago, she’s now there four days per week. “We’re back to having both of us here most of the time and being able to afford that,” Bubon said. Although Women & Children First has not been able to expand its staff, it also has not had to lay anyone off. There are nine employees at the feminist bookstore, including three full-timers: Bubon, Christophersen and Kate Wilson. “The good news is, during the last three years, about 300 new independent bookstores have opened nationally and it seems that there is a trend that people are starting to take a chance again [to open independent bookstores],” Bubon said. “I think the pendulum is swinging the other way. Whether or not new feminist bookstores will be opened, I don’t know.” Bubon said the closing of many chain bookstores locally does not mean the book business is in trouble. “Barnes & Noble is re-organizing, sensibly. I think they’re doing fine,” Bubon said. “Borders made so many bad business decisions. The fact that they are bankrupt is largely due to very bad business decisions over years. I don’t think Borders closing is some type of death-blow to the book industry. In fact, it’s an opportunity for a lot of us independents that have been struggling with Borders stores surrounding us. “I’m more concerned for communities such as Omaha, where there are no independent bookstores left because of the chain stores, and now with the [chain stores] leaving [those cities], will there be people come back into that market to open [independent] bookstores where there now are no bookstores?” Women & Children First is one of only nine feminist bookstores open in North America, a number that hit about 110 in the early 1990s. Many closed in the 1990s and early 2000s, Bubon said, as did other niche bookstores. Women & Children First will hold its inaugural women writers weekend festival Oct. 15-16. The event, open to the public, will be called The Women’s Voices Weekend and showcase the works of four very different authors: Achy Obejas, StaceyAnn Chin, Nami Mun and Amy Krouse Rosenthal. There will be workshops on Oct. 15 at the Swedish Museum and a reception on that Saturday night (location not announced yet). On Oct. 16, at 4 p.m., there will be a ticketed reading of all four also at the Swedish Museum. The event is funded by the Women’s Voices Fund. “We hope [the event] is something that will be something that helps increase the Fund [in the future],” Bubon said. “I’m very excited about this event; I think it’s going to be a really fun weekend. From left: Ann Christophersen, Allison Bechdel, Nicole Hollander and Linda Bubon in 2009. Photo by Kat Fitzgerald “There are so many writers in Chicago, including students in the great writing programs at most of the area colleges. We think Chicago has a rich and special environment, so we really want the community of women writers to know each other, help each other, and work together including a mentor-like [program] where older writers can help younger writers. It just seems like Women & Children First should be the locus for that.” What’s hot? Here’s a look at some popular books, according to Linda Bubon of Women & Children First: —Bossypants by Tina Fey —The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot —A Visit From The Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan —Leatherman: The Legend of Chuck Renslow by Tracy Baim and Owen Keehnen WINDY CITY TIMES PRIDE DAY AT WRIGLEY Sunday, Sept. 4, 2011 $50 MEDIA SPONSORS: WINDY CITY nightspots TIMES Bleacher tickets Join us for a charitable event at the Chicago Cubs vs. Pittsburgh Pirates game 1:20 p.m., Sept. 4. Then, join us at the after-party at 800 W. Belmont Ave. 4 p.m. 2011 Windy City Gay Idol TJ CHERNICK performs at the game and at Spin (with other Windy City Gay Idol contestants at Spin) After-party sponsored by www.windycitymediagroup.com/WrigleyPride A portion of the proceeds will benefit the following charities: In partnership with & WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 30 REAL ESTATE CLASSIFIEDS ADVERTISE HERE ADVERTISE HERE: Want to advertise your product, service, etc. to thousands of readers? Place an ad in the Windy City Times! We offer affordable rates, convenient service, and as a bonus, your ad runs in our online section for free. To place an ad, contact Terri at 773871-7610 ex 101, terri@windycitymediagroup.com, or go to our website www.WindyCityMediaGroup. com. ASTROLOGY UNDERSTAND YOURSELF, YOUR MOTIVATIONS, YOUR FEELINGS. Recognize your talents, strengths, successes. Overcome difficulties and confusion. Astrology can help pull it all together. Relationships. Career. Plan the future. 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Pride Law, Andersonville’s legal aid clinic for the LGBT community can help. Clinic hours every Wednesday, 5-8:00 p.m. by appointment only. Call 1-866-703-5509 or send us an email at pridelsaw@ tsamislaw.com. MOVERS WE ARE AN EXPERT, FULL-SERVICE MOVING COMPANY with over a decade of excellence serving our community. We pride ourselves in offering top-quality, efficient, low-cost, damage-free moves. Small to large trucks, fully equipped with modern tools, supplies of the trade. Rates for guaranteed professional staff: 2-man crew $65/hr.; 3-man crew $85/hr.; 4-man crew $105/hr. (plus low, one-time travel charge.) Call 773-777-1110 or www.chicagocrescentmovers.com. (9/21/11-26) RESEARCH STUDY 773.398.4097 chadduda@gmail.com An independently owned and operated member of Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Inc. CONDO TO SHARE Fully restored Victorian greystone with open floor plan, updated kitchen, 3+ bdrms, intricate architectural details, & lots of natural light. Large English garden on oversized lot w/ garage. 2 rental units on the first floor & coach house. Conveniently located near the Medical district & Blue Line. 1532 West Jackson Laura Calvache, Broker Assoc. Coldwell Banker / 312.339.0021 Laura.Calvache@CBexchange.com 1532JacksonBlvd.info Offered at $1,000,000 FOR SALE - MULTI-UNIT BUILDING ANDERSONVILLE BRICK 2FLAT 1658 W.Hollywood. Rehabbed -1st floor duplex with 2/3 bdrm 2 bth. 2nd flr, 3bdrm 1 bth, sep hvac-hardwood floors, 2car garage, granite kitchens w/ss appliances, beautiful baths. Walk to restaurant and shops. Reduced and motivated $535,000. J. Frank Hunter Properties. 773-7713547 (9/14/11–4) FOR SALE - CONDOS HIV+? Age 16-29? Interested in receiving text messages to remind you to protect and promote your health? Contact us at 773.880.3919 or txtxt@childrensmemorial.org You will be compensated for your time and travel. Celebrations Share your special moments with the community in Windy City Times’ new announcement section! Bache-Holt Wedding Longtime partners and well-known local athletes Linda Bache (left) and Yvette Holt were married recently in a private ceremony at their home. Bache is majority owner and general manager of the Chicago Force women’s pro football team. Chad Duda RAINTREE GARDEN CONDOMINIUM IN WELCOMING GLEN ELLYN. Beautiful area minutes from Chicago Metra. Large one bedroom huge walk-in closet, eatin kitchen, dining room, 23X13 living room, walk-out patio overlooking golf course. Includes new carpeting, new Carrier furnace-C/A, space #46 in heated garage, pool, tennis courts, clubhouse. Call: Judie Newman, Remax Synergy (708) 288-7871 (8/17/11–4) LUXURY CONDO TO SHARE Andersonville/Lincoln Square area. Newer large 2br, 2 bath unit in boutique building. All amenities including elevator and heated attached garage. Fabulous kitchen, w/d in unit, large covered balcony. 5 Min walk to brown line and metra. Me: middle aged male non smoking professional. Rarely drink, keep immaculate residence, good guy. You: male, mature, employed, stable, non smoking, very clean, respectful of privacy. $900/Mo, utilities, garage included. Edmail950@aol.com (9/7/11–4) FOR RENT - TWO BEDROOM PALOS PARK - 2 BRM, 2 FULL BATHS. So nice to come home to! Convenient area. 2nd floor unit with dining room, den, laundry room, new carpet & 2 car garage. Available immediately. $1600 per month. Call Sharon: 708.269.0490 (8/24/11-2) FOR RENT - THREE BEDROOM ROGERS PARK: 3BR 2 BATH. Easy commute Own laundry & indv. lg bsmt. Fenced yard. Hardwood floors. Non smoker preferred. Pets? Avail 9/1. $1,100+ HEAT & UTIL. FREE parking. JACK: 312-305-5473 or 773338-5473. (9/7/11-8) ON THE LAKE 3BR 2BA; Large, gorgeous, vintage apartment in quiet, clean intimate building steps to the beach. Hdwd, stained glass, FP, built-in bookcases, arched doorways, 2000 SF. If you are looking for a special place to call home and love beautiful architecture and design this could be your answer. Nonsmokers, cats ok, may consider a small dog. $1850/ Mo including heat. For more info and pictures email: northshoreavenue-chicago@yahoo.com (8/31/11-2) ANDERSONVILLE LARGE 3 BEDROOM. 3rd Floor Foster & Ashland. Decorated. Separate Dining Room. Wood finished floors. $1200.00 per month. Heat included. Available October 1. 773-561-6568. (10/12/11-8) GEORGEOUS LARGE APT - ROGERS PARK renovated 3 bedroom 2 bath apt. new kitchen with appliances. new carpeting, ceiling fans. hardwood floors. sunny. many closets. 1st floor with security buzzer. storage room & FREE LAUNDRY. FREE HEAT, FREE 1 CAR GARAGE. close to parks, shopping, public transportation. $2000/month, Email sevenseasinvest@aol.com or call 773-9607064 (8/24/11-2) WINDY CITY TIMES NUNN ON ONE: TV Aug. 31, 2011 Emma. Both of them are such great people. I get so excited when we get to work together. WCT: What would you like to tell people who are picked on for being different? DJ: The people that are picking on them are just insecure about something of themselves. All of the people that I went to school with we grew up together. People talked crap about me when I was growing up. “Is that a man or a woman?” I was big. I went from 5’6” to 6’1” in eighth grade. Where the hell could I hide that? People always ask me if I would have been smaller or to win 15 world titles then I would see about shorter. retiring. I wouldn’t have accomplished anything and WCT: Jane Lynch has a book coming out. be where I am at if it wasn’t for how big I am. Would you ever want to write one? I went to the Olympic trails twice in the shot DJ: Absolutely. WCT: I watched you as a mentor on Oxygen’s The Glee Project. What do you think of that show? BENT NIGHTS DJ: It is fantastic. I love to see Robert Ulrich on there, too, because he was one of the casting directors that cast me on to Nip/Tuck. It was great to work with him outside of the office. The kids are so talented. by Vern Hester WCT: They are so good. DJ: I am just glad that I don’t have to be the Blues and more blues... one to pick the one that goes home. The last time that I saw Vanessa Davis and WCT: I am talking to the winner soon but her band was in 1982 and my impression then they won’t tell me who it is yet. was that one would not want to trifle with DJ: You will be happy. this woman. So it’s hardly a shock that after WCT: You know and can’t tell me! You get 29 years the Vanessa Davis Band is just as to be on the finale. I just recently saw you hard-rocking, if not harder, than before. As the appear on Logo’s Drag U as a judge. only out blues singer in Illinois (and maybe in DJ: I love me some RuPaul! the country) Davis has managed to go beyond WCT: How did that happen? RuPaul just mere art while her shows border on a religious called you up? fever. DJ: He called my agent and asked if I would Hitting Fitzgerald’s tiny stage with a flirty, interested. I said, “Hell yeah!” I love that show. sassy “Rock My Blues Away,” Davis and her I would have liked to have been one of the conband started the evening running. To say that testants that they made over because I grew up this group proffers the most joyful blues in out in the country and I am so casual. Dressing the Midwest may sound like a contradiction, up for me is a nice pretty shirt and new jeans. but it’s the truth. Davis—jamming on air guiSo that would be a blast to have them make me tar with her short dreads flying—was clearly over although I couldn’t walk in heels. wrapped in her joy while the band kept push WCT: I heard you might wear pants to the ing her further. Even a standard blues lament Emmys. like “Walking Man Blues” had such a rollicking DJ: I am planning on it. I have to find somebounce that it was impossible not to dance. body that can make something incredible for (They should have advertised this show as a me. I get offers where they want to fit me for dance party since the tiny space in front of the stage stayed packed with grooving bodies.) However, where so many blues artists rely on standards to the point of cliche (no, they did not do “Sweet Home Chicago”) or embrace the blues as an end-all and be-all, Davis and Co. forged into pop and soul classics while reinventing and coloring them. Aretha Franklin’s “See Saw” and “Dr. Feelgood” were transformed into blunt blues, taking “Lady Soul” where she would likely fear to tread. Sam and Dave’s “Wrap It Up” was lacerating, unforgiving and, believe it or not, far more joyful then the original. A slow burning take on the Supremes’ “Does Your Mama Know About Me?” gave Davis the chance to open up vocally while setting Doug Cannon loose on a searing sax solo. When Diana Ross first sang the song in 1969, her vocals and the sweetness of the production only hinted at its message of racial inclusion. Davis’ take not only seemed to challenge the color line but also that of sexual Dot Jones. PR photo identity without being overt or capsizing the song. (After all, it is a love song.) Was Davis making a statement? I can’t say, but it still hit like a brick fist. the Emmys then I tell them my size. They usually say, “We only have sizes zero to six.” I wasn’t To be honest I had no intention of actually likborn a six! ing ZZ Top’s recent show at The Venue. As that WCT: They have to make you something spe“Lil’ Ol’ Band from Texas,” I had pretty much cial, then. decided from the slightly misogynistic vid DJ: I know. I have a few phone calls I have to eos, deadpan low-key humor and monotonous return and I think we are going to come up with sound that there just wasn’t much there. That something great. they hadn’t released an album since 2003’s WCT: Can you tell me anything about the Mescalero (RCA Records) didn’t help, either. new season of Glee? However, I was wrong on all counts and was DJ: It is going to be incredible. That is all even made to feel dumb for it. Yes, ZZ Top is a I know. I just shot my first episode the other party band with blues, drugs, wild women and day. I was in one scene with Matt Morrison and Jayma Mays. I love her; she is the one that plays Glee’s Dot Jones on Emmys, RuPaul and arm wrestling 31 put, won 15 arm-wrestling titles and I am on the number-one show in the country. As my friend Kathy Griffin would say, “Suck it!” WCT: Sounds like her. When are you coming to Chicago? DJ: One of my best girlfriends lives in Skokie. I haven’t been there since 1999. I did a movie there in Stockton, Ill. It was called Stray Dogs with Genevieve Turner. I love Chicago—not to mention the best pie in the nation! WCT: How do people keep up with you? DJ: I do Twitter. It is dotmariejones. Look for the annual Emmy Awards on Sept. 10 by checking http://www.emmys.tv for listings. The new season of Glee starts in early 2012 on Fox. The Vanessa Davis Band; ZZ Top BY JERRY NUNN Dot Jones was breaking records even before her starring role as Coach Shannon Beiste on the hit Fox show Glee. Jones is a 15-time arm-wrestling world champion, has completed 20 years in showbiz and is ready to wrestle the Emmy out of her competitor’s grip next month. Windy City Times: Hello, Dot. How are you today? Dot Jones: Hi, Jerry. I’m sorry I am late calling you. I was at an audition and these crutches are slowing me down. WCT: You had to hobble to an audition? DJ: Yeah; it’s for a movie in October. I am only on crutches for a few more weeks. How are you, sweetie? WCT: I’m great. How exactly did the whole Glee experience happen for you? DJ: I ran into Brad Falchuk at the supermarket and I hadn’t see him since I had done Ryan Murphy’s pilot, Pretty Handsome. That was the show he had done right before the Glee pilot. It didn’t get picked up but Glee did. They were just finishing their first season. I loved the show and asked if they could write me something, please! Brad and I were laughing and he asked if I could sing. I said, “I’m no Mariah Carey but I can carry a little tune.” I missed Ryan because I had done three Nip/Tucks also for Ryan. Two months later my agent calls me and Ryan Murphy’s office wanted to know my schedule for last July. I was open because I had just finished a recurring role on HawthoRNe and the season had just ended. Cut to it and here we are. Now I have an Emmy nomination, which still blows my mind. WCT: That is crazy! Good for you. DJ: Thank you. This is my 20th year in show business. WCT: You started off in sports though, correct? DJ: Yes. I majored in criminology in college. I had no idea I would be doing this today. I worked four and a half years juvenile probation before a friend of mine told me about auditions back in ’91. It was for a new show kind of like American Gladiators but it was called Knights and Warriors. I played Lady Battle Axe. I got one of four women spots out of the 300 that auditioned. It was mostly athletic but we did little acting vignettes. It was fun. WCT: Do you still work out? DJ: I try to but I have been so crazy busy that I haven’t been to the gym in four months. WCT: Well, now you can’t with your foot. DJ: Yeah, I just did that Friday night. It’s all right I still have my foot so I am lucky. WCT: Do you have a sports award that you are most proud of? DJ: I think that when I won my 15th world title in arm wrestling. That was my goal. I wanted Vanessa Davis. Pic by Vern Hester fun times on the brain but the punchline is so subtle it’s actually designed to be missed. The truth is that ZZ Top is having a good long laugh by twisting the cliches of Texas (the land of oversized, overdone and over-the-top) into salt-water taffy. The band’s sound is big, sloppy and deliberately gnarly but live it’s downright crunchy and irresistible. As a band that prides itself on being from Texas there’s not much twang in the sound but there is a certain laid-back, spacey, subtle humor masquerading as a bouncy harmless “coolness” that’s reminiscent of, say, Dean Martin. The real joke is that all that sonic fury envelopes a simple aesthetic of goofy, harmless fun, fun and more fun. This actually neuters the misogyny; if you supplanted the genders of your choosing on “Legs,” “Gimme All Your Loving” or “Tush,” they would easily work as same-sex anthems. The hidden punchline of all the jokes is that, from their 3-foot-long beards to the hokey choreography to the matching outfits, ZZ Top warned us not to take them seriously. All that mental processing went out the window as soon as Billy Gibbons (guitar), Dusty Hill (bass) and Frank Beard (drums) got onstage. “Got Me Under Pressure” had the clumsy lurch of a 10-ton truck with stripped brakes while “Jesus Just Left Chicago” blasted The Venue with the evening’s first bong-induced joyride. The silly “Cheap Sunglasses” was followed by a furious take on Jimi Hendrix’s “Hey Joe.” Even that got topped by “Party On The Patio,” itself a revved-up surf-rock rip that was as anachronistic as ZZ Top could possibly get. Apart from the pile-up of hits at the end (“LaGrange,” “Sharp Dressed Man,” “Gimme All Your Loving”) the biggest pleasure of the night was the inclusion of video clips of the band from 40 years ago when they were all clean shaven. I finally got the joke when I realized that they’ve had those beards for so long that I thought they were born in them and that I wouldn’t know them if they walked up to me on the street and smacked me with a rubber chicken. Yuck-Yuck... WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 32 way out of it, but everyone is; 9 p.m.9:45 p.m., 312-337-3992, De Maat Studio Theatre, http://www.funnystub.com/ buyticket.cfm?showtimingid=96611&buy These Boots Are Made For Walkin’ Boot fetish benefit for TPAN. Boot raffles and Hot Boots Contest. 10 p.m., Touche, 6412 N Clark St, http://www.touchechicago.com All-Star Shower Party Next Door Studios presents this outrageous party featuring Adult film Stars and GoGo Boys! Next Door will provide tons of swag for the event also! 11 p.m., Spin Nightclub, 800 W. Belmont Ave., http://www.spin-nightclub. com Brought to you by the combined efforts of WINDY CITY TIMES Wed., Aug. 31 The Civil Rights Agenda: A “Civilized” Celebration The Civil Rights Agenda invites you to celebrate a year of making history. Join TCRA for their first in a series of “Civilized Celebrations” honoring friends who were joined in Civil Union on June 3 and celebrating the historical changes in acceptance and “getting civilized” in Illinois. 5:30 p.m.-9 p.m., The Joynt 650 N. Dearborn, http://www. jointcra.com Mayor Emanuel leads public town hall on 2012 City budget Emanuel will take questions about the budget from the assembled audience and address some ideas proposed by Chicagoans. Residents can contribute ideas on how to address the City’s fiscal challenges by phone, 9am-5 p.m. Monday through Friday, or can log on to the City’s interactive budget website. 6 p.m.-8 p.m., 312-744-6670, Malcolm X College, 1900 W. Van Buren St., http:// www.chicagobudget.org We Are Halsted A fabulous and affordable variety show with comedy, music, dance, prizes, inexpensive donated cocktails and beers, benefiting youth homeless shelters including The Crib, $5 tickets; 7 p.m., Center on Halsted, 3656 N. Halsted St., http://www.centeronhalsted.org Gay Softball World Series Talent Show Teammates with a talent email Jack Neilsen at jackneilsen@gmail.com to confirm a spot in the show. Emcee: Tajma Hall. Admission: $10.00; 7 p.m., Hyatt Regency O’Hare, 9300 Bryn Mawr Ave., Rosemont, http://www.chicagoseries2011.com Northern Lights Chicago’s northernmost queer dance party with this month’s guest PLAY BALL The Gay Softball World Series will take place in Chicagoland, with special events in the city. Photo from 2010 courtesy of Danny Tag host/ess D’Juana Cyber. Featured performer Crystal Wunderkind, DJ Erik Roldan, photos by A/S/L and, as always your beloved Go-Go Gothic Dancers! 9 p.m., Parlour on Clark, 6341 N. Clark St., http:// www.parlouronclark.com Thursday, Sept. 1 35th annual Gay Softball World Series Tournament Expected to draw 175 teams from 43 cities in North America in five divisions: A, B, C, D and Master’s; championships played in the Schaumburg Complex on Saturday, Sept. 3. 12 p.m., Complexes in Schaumburg, Elmhurst and St. Charles, Ill. Steve Becker “Landscapes” Photography, 24 x 60 framed, of Alaska’s natural beauty, show will run thru September, call for studio hours; 12 p.m., 773-728-8910, Las Manos Gallery, 5220 N. Clark St., Chicago, http://www.lasmanosgallery.com Pop-Up Art Loop Gallery Walk The Chicago Loop Alliance (CLA) presents its popular First Thursdays Pop-Up Gallery Walks be- CAMPING IT UP Sept. 2-5 The “Pitch a Tent to Save a Pooch” women’s camping trip will take place at an undisclosed site. Email sam. hamilton.photography@gmail.com for more info. Photo courtesy of Sam Hamilton Saturday, Sept. 3 Through Sept. 3 ginning Thursday evening, May 5. Pop-Up Gallery Walks are free, self-guided tours of the many new exhibits throughout the Loop that include complimentary wine, live art-making, music and more. 5 p.m.8 p.m., 205 S. State Street, http://www. popupartloop.com NAGAAA Hall of Fame Dinner NAGAAA will honor those that came before us and induct new members into the Hall of Fame. 6:30 p.m., Center on Halsted, 3656 N. Halsted St., http://www.chicagoseries2011. com/2011/index.php/upcomingevents/ halloffamedinner TheLStop.org Launch Party Fundraiser Join TheLStop.org for a fun night full of Chicago’s finest talent; featuring musical performances from 9-11 and Teri Bristol spinning from 11-2! 8:30 p.m., Parlour on Clark, 6341 N. Clark St., http://www. thelstop.org Friday, Sept. 2 Lesbian Camping Trip Labor Day Weekend, 125 conjoined campsites, camp has showers, flushable toilets, electricity, running water, free wi-fi and a band on Saturday (Heebie Jeebies), allows alcohol and is dog and kid friendly, bring your own tent, supplies, beverages and food but party and band free; benefits Windy City Animal Foundation. $15 per adult per night, $5 per child; sam.hamilton.photography@ gmail.com; 12 p.m., 708-436-0031, Yorkville next to the Fox River Equality Illinois First Friday Networking Social Join Equality Illinois every first Friday of the month as they feature a different community partner organization. $10 gets you 2 cocktails and a ticket for the prize drawing. 6 p.m.-9 p.m., Sidetrack, 3349 N Halsted St, http://www.equalityillinois.org “Labor of Love” A Folk and Rock Labor Day Concert Event The Flesh Hungry Dog Show shows its softer side with a (mostly) acoustic show headlined by Ezra Furman (of Ezra Furman and the Harpoons) performing a rare solo set; Congress of Starlings; and Tom Goss. Andrea Sottovoce has his “Bag of Fun” prize giveaways, DJ Sky with alternative tracks before and between the sets and Gary Airdale hosts; 21+ venue, tickets $10 at the door or $8 online. 9 p.m., 773-743-5772, Jackhammer, 6406 N Clark St., http://www.fleshhungrydog.com There Goes the Gaybarhood There Goes the Gaybarhood is a musical revue about the gay bar, the gaybarhood and everywhere in between. It follows characters in and out of the bar and the relationships that fill their lives. Some people find themselves in the bar and others want to find their Get online Gay Softball World Series Closing Awards Ceremony & Street Fair The 35th annual Gay Softball World Series (GSWS), which will take place in Chicago beginning August 29, will wrap-up a week of softball and social events with a closing awards ceremony and street fair in Boystown featuring local cover band Final Say and world-renowned DJ Bill Bennett. $5 suggested donation at the gate, which will benefit the Ben Cohen “Stand Up” foundation. 4 p.m.-10 p.m., Waveland Avenue between Halsted and Broadway, http:// www.chicagoseries2011.com Mr. Continental 2011 Finals The final round of the men’s counterpart to the nation’s premier drag pageant. For tickets and information, call 312-527-9338. 8 p.m., Park West Chicago, 322 W. Armitage Mr. Club Krave Benefit Show Join Myke Kagan as he presents a show to help raise money for next year’s Mr. Club Krave competition. Shots, 50/50 split the pot raffles, plus one hell of a show with Lindsey Devereaux, Serina DeVine, Myke Kagan, Genae, Bella LaMore, plus a lot more. $4 Long Island or Blue Island Iced Teas, $12 oversized mixed drink pitchers. DJ Kyle R. 8 p.m., Club Krave, 13126 S. Western Ave, http://www.clubkrave.com Sunday, Sept. 4 Rainbow Brunch North Shore Rainbow Brunch is a way for GLBT men and women in the suburbs to meet new friends and socialize in a low-key, friendly environment. 10am-12 p.m., Old Country Buffet, 8780 W. Dempster, Niles Urban Village Church LGBT-welcoming worship services at Urban Village Church are eclectic and experiential, practical and intelligent, relevant and, hopefully, inspiring. 10:15 a.m.-11:30 a.m., Urban Village Church, Spertus Institute, 610 S. Michigan, http://www.newchicagochurch.com Windy City Times Pride Day at Wrigley Field A charitable event at the Chicago Cubs vs. Pittsburgh Pirates game $50 bleacher tickets will benefit six local LGBT and AIDS charities. Pride Day is presented in partnership with the national gay softball world series taking place through Sept. 3. The organizations which will receive a portion of the proceeds are: AIDS Foundation of Chicago, Center on Halsted, Equality Illinois, Howard Brown Health Center/Lesbian Community Care Project, GLAAD Chicago Leadership Council and Lambda Legal. The winner of the Windy City Gay Idol contest will be given the chance to sing at Pride Day, and the NAGAAA world series Chicago host committee will select a person to throw out the ceremonial pitch for the Sept. 4 game. The media partners for Pride Day at Wrigley are Windy City Times, Nightspots, GoPride.com and Grab Magazine. After party at Spin, 800 W. Belmont Ave. at 4 p.m. 1:15 p.m., Wrigley Field, 1060 W. Addison St., http://www.windycitymediagroup. com/wrigleypride Urban Village Church Wicker Park Worship Services LGBT-welcoming worship services at Urban Village Church are eclectic and experiential, practical and intelligent, relevant and, hopefully, inspiring. 5:30 p.m.-7 p.m., 1502 N. Hoyne (at LeMoyne), KISS ON MY ‘LIST’ Monday, Sept. 5 Watch Reichen (above) and the rest of the cast of The A-List at a viewing party at Spin, 800 W. Belmont Ave. PR photo http://www.newchicagochurch.com Monday, Sept. 5 Miss Continental 2011 Finals The final round of the nation’s premier drag pageant. For tickets and information, call 312-527-9338. Vic Theater, 3145 N. Sheffield Ave. 7 p.m., Vic Theater, 3145 N. Sheffield Ave. United House: A Night of Unity in House Music Join Hydrate Nightclub, ChicagoPride.com, and host Cyon Flare for United House: A Night of Unity in House Music, featuring Resident House DJ Semaj; 9 p.m., Hydrate, 3458 N. Halsted, http:// www.hydratechicago.com A-List Viewing Party and Karaoke Mondays Karaoke from 10 p.m.-2 a.m. with your host, John Florida. Enjoy $4.50 Absolut Cocktails and $4 Miller Lite & Coors Light Drafts; 9 p.m., Spin Nightclub, 800 W. Belmont Ave., http://www.spin-nightclub.com Labor Day ... Sidetrack style Open at 1 p.m. with Sidetrack showtunes 8 p.m.-2 a.m.; http://www.sidetrackchicago.com Tuesday, Sept. 6 Spaghetti & Meatballs Night Join Philip and all the pretty gang at Angelina Ristorante every Tuesday for Spaghetti & Meatballs Night. 6 p.m.-10 p.m., Angelina Ristorante, 3561 N Broadway, http://www. angelinaristorante.com/ Wed., Sept. 7 Gay Liberation Network Organizing Meeting Organizing meeting for Chicago’s LGBTI direct action group—new participants welcome. Located just at the corner of Granville Street & Sheridan Road, a few blocks east of the; 7 p.m.-9 p.m., 773209-1187, Berger Park Fieldhouse, 6205 N. Sheridan Rd., http://www.gayliberation.net North America Now Bailiwick Chicago and Teatro Luna present “North America Now,” a cultural event focusing on the state of North America on the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. Tickets start at $30 and are available through www.bailiwickchicago.com or at www.brownpapertickets. com. 7 p.m.-10 p.m., Instituto Cervantes, 31 W. Ohio St. Queer Social Club A no-attitude, casual evening for the Humboldt/Ukie Area LGBTQ and their friends to come in, have drinks, meet new friends, mingle, etc. Just a fun night beyond the traditional outlets in Boystown and dance parties in Wicker Park - Doing our own thing across the Western Ave divide! 8 p.m., Archie’s Tavern. 2600 W. Iowa, 60622. See “Queer Social Club” on Facebook : WindyCityMediaGroup.com ChicagoPride.com WINDY CITY TIMES Aug. 31, 2011 BILLY MASTERS “Can I say one thing that was really sad? The protesting outside of these weddings ... I thought was really uncalled for and tasteless. If you think anything is killing heterosexual marriage ... the only thinking killing it is heterosexual marriage. So to protest someone’s gay [marriage] I find to be without taste.”—Elisabeth Hasselbeck gives her opinion regarding the protests to gay marriage in New York. You may disagree with her politics, but Lizzie’s OK by me. Just when you think you’ve heard it all comes the story of Roberto Arango from Puerto Rico. The Republican senator (who has voted to ban same-sex marriage) apparently had nude photos on the gay cruising app Grindr. When asked about the pics, the good senator said, “You know I’ve been losing weight. As I shed that weight, I’ve been taking pictures. I don’t remember taking this particular picture but I’m not gonna say I didn’t take it. I’d tell you if I remembered taking the picture but I don’t.” Shades of Anthony Weiner, right? Except one of the photos finds Ryan plays a gay-marriage activist who gets involved with Donovan. I’ll run pics of the two studs on BillyMasters.com. South Florida is home to oodles of drag and strip shows. In fact, this is where Channing Tatum got his start as a male stripper. (The video of him stripping is on BillyMasters.com.) As you all know, Chan is turning his past into his next film project—Magic Mike will recount his days as a teenage stripper. The flick is being helmed by Steven Soderbergh and begins filming next month in Tampa. We already knew that the adorable Alex Pettyfer will play the role based on Channing; Riley Keough (daughter of Lisa Marie Presley) will play his girlfriend; and Demi Moore will play a customer who gets a little too close. In addition to writing the script, Tatum will play the leader of the troupe (who has perhaps seen better days). Other hunks who have signed onto the project include Matthew McConaughey (who plays the club owner and veteran stripper himself), Matt Bomer (a fellow stripper) and Joe Manganiello (yet another stripper, known as “Big Dick Richie”—which I suspect is self-ex- planatory). There’s been much speculation that Soderbergh will include some full-frontal male nudity, but that’s unlikely since male strip shows in Florida only go down to a G-string (says your humble scribe who has more than a passing acquaintance with the male strip-show circuit). But, fear not—we’ve got some skin just for you ... and from one of the Magic Mike co-stars. Joe Manganiello recently did his first nude scene on True Blood and, of course, we have the video and stills on BillyMasters.com. Our “Ask Billy” question actually comes from a good friend. Larry in Hollywood writes, “I’m sending you a screener of our film, ‘Hollywood to Dollywood’. Sorry you missed it at Outfest, but I’m sure you’ll enjoy it. Again, we’re still bummed you were out of town when we were filming—we would have loved you to be in it!” Larry and Gary Lane, known as the Lane Twins, have carved out a little niche for themselves. They’ve been in movies, TV shows and commercials, and even won two reality programs—Winter WipeOut and Fear Factor. They’re also the official Filth2Go Twins (which tells you how far back we go). Their documentary Hollywood to Dollywood chronicles their cross-country journey in an RV named Jolene to personally hand their idol, Dolly Parton, a film script they wrote for her. However, it’s much more than that. It’s 33 about these nice, wholesome, hot twins who grew up in a very repressed Southern environment and had to basically move as far away as they could to pursue their dreams and be themselves. This documentary is as much to do with them trying to reconcile with their past as it is about trying to fulfill a dream. And if it doesn’t have the cliché Hollywood ending, it still straddles the line between touching and hopeful. Obviously, I know these boys very well, but even I learned so much about them and was moved by this work—and I think all of my readers will be, too. The flick is booked into dozens of film festivals, so check out their full schedule on Hollywood2Dollywood.com. When we’re posting pics of Dolly and the twins and we’re not talking about her boobs, it’s definitely time to end yet another column. By the way, the Lane Twins did manage to include me in the film after all. At the end, I got a special thank you—admittedly referring to our old website and not listing www.BillyMasters.com, but it’s the thought that counts! If you’ve got a thought you want to share with me, drop a note to Billy@BillyMasters.com and I promise to get back to you before Senator Arango asks “Do these chaps make my ass look fat?” Until next time, remember, one man’s filth is another man’s bible. It’s all about the twins with Dolly Parton. him on all fours holding up his phone to take the photo of his behind in a strategically placed mirror. You’d kinda think he’d remember that! When you see the pics on BillyMasters.com, you won’t be able to forget ‘em. Prior to this, the big news of the week was confirmation of something I reported months ago—that George Michael is a single man. Yes, after 15 years, his relationship with Kenny Goss has come to an end. In fact, GM admits that it’s been over for even longer than I knew. “In truth, Kenny and I haven’t been together for two and a half years,” Michael told the audience at the State Opera House in Prague where he kicked off his Symphonica tour. “I love him very much. This man has brought me a lot of joy and pain. My love life has been a lot more turbulent than I’ve ever let on, and I’m so sad about my relationship with Kenny. I’m sorry for the pain.” He also revealed that Goss has battled alcoholism for several years. An alcoholic and a pothead— I’m shocked it didn’t work out! In domestic gay splits, Sara Gilbert and partner Allison Adler have split up after 10 years and two children. Their reps say it was “amicable.” Of course, they also say that Leah Remini and Holly Robinson Peete are leaving The Talk of their own accord and are welcome back anytime. Gay love will remain on prime time for a bit longer. You know that sexy Trevor Donovan will be departing 90210 midway through the upcoming season. However, that ain’t stopping him from having an active sex life. Enter Ryan Rottman from the TeenNick show Gigantic (which I also know nothing about, but it sounds hot). Our game plan: have fun every day! Thursday, Sept. 1 • Open 1pm • Comedy Video Night 8pm-2am Friday, Sept. 2 • Open 1pm • Show Tunes 5-9pm. High Energy Labor Day Weekend Kickoff Party 9pm-2am Saturday, Sept. 3 • Open 1pm • Classic Sidetrack Summer Ultimate Mix ‘til 9pm. High Energy ‘til 3am! Sunday, Sept. 4 • Open 1pm • Biggest day of the week...Sidetrack Show Tune Sundays 4-9pm. Retro ‘til 2am Monday, Sept. 5 • Open 1pm • Labor Day...Sidetrack Style. Sidetrack Show Tunes 8pm-2am Sidetrack is a proud sponsor of: The The Video Video Bar Bar 3349 3349 N. N. Halsted Halsted SidetrackChicago.com SidetrackChicago.com Valet Parking Available Available /SidetrackBar Aug. 31, 2011 34 Softball World Series profiles Mark Febonio By Ross Forman Mark Febonio has played in 15 of the last 16 Gay Softball World Series, only missing the 1998 edition—and almost always with his regularseason team. “I have [played in] a lot of great games and have a lot of highlights from each of the 16 that I’ve played in. But nothing tops winning the championship in 2009,” he said. Febonio, 52, who lives in Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood, works as a project manager at a small family-owned engineering company. “You’ve earned the right to represent your league on the big stage,” which is the annual Gay Softball World Series, Febonio said. “You’ve succeeded in getting to the only week of softball that matters. But it’s not only about the competition and it’s not only about what happens on the field. I’ve established friendships with teammates and opponents that will last a lifetime. The time you spend with your teammates away Brian Sommer. Photo courtesy of Sommer Brian Sommer By Ross Forman Brian Sommer is making his debut in the Gay Softball World Series next month, in his hometown. Sommer, 37, a Rogers Park resident, graduated from Fenwick High School in Oak Park in 1991, and then North Central College in Naperville. He did not play sports in high school, but, while in grade school, he played baseball, soccer and swam with the Elmhurst Park District, where he grew up. The 2011 Gay Softball World Series, a sixday event, starts Aug. 29, with games played at multi-field complexes in Schaumburg, St. Charles … and Elmhurst. “I quit sports by middle school and got involved in theater,” said Sommer. “Throughout high school, I was part of the drama club at Fenwick called the Blackfriars. I did not get involved in sports again until I started bowling. In 2004, I started playing softball, [initially] playing third base and then pitching.” Sommer is a middle school teacher. He started teaching in 1997 in Naperville, then worked in Lombard from 2001–2004. He now teaches in the northern suburbs. He played for the Chicago Crush this season, and he also umpires in the Chicago Metropolitan Sports Association (CMSA) league. “I think it’s awesome that Chicago is hosting the World Series,” Sommer said. “Chicago has been very good to gay organizations, whether it is the Chicago Gay Men’s Chorus, the Gay Games a few years ago, or gay softball. It also will be a lot of fun to see Leslie Jordan at the opening ceremony,” held at Navy Pier. “I can’t wait [to play in the series]. The team I am playing with has played in several World Series [in the past,] but I have yet to join them. I am very excited to make my World Series debut in my hometown. I am sure my parents will come and watch, just as they did when I participated in the Gay Games.” Sommer, a Chicago Cubs fan, added: “The Series is special because it involves the best of the best from all around the U.S. Teams can’t just sign up for the series like other tournaments; teams need to qualify [to participate.] The series shows that gay people are diverse. Yes, many gay men do fit the stereotype of being theater lovers, but this event shows that many gay people are just like everyone—they like sports and have varied interests.” Mark Febonio. Photo courtesy of Febonio World Series’ opening ceremony at Navy Pier By Ross Forman Hours before the first pitch was thrown in the 35th annual Gay Softball World Series, Roy Melani of the North American Gay Amateur Athletic Alliance (NAGAAA), host of the event, predicted this year’s six-day tournament will go down as the best ever, without question. “It’s raised the bar over all previous World Series, and that’s what we ask each [local organizing committee] to do—and Chicago had a big bar to hurdle because Columbus, Ohio, in 2010 was a phenomenal World Series,” Melani said. Melani, of Portland, Ore., is in his fifth year as NAGAAA commissioner. He has played in the event annually since the mid-1990s, but just will be coaching the Portland Brewers in the BDivision this year. Melani confirmed that 150 teams will participate in five divisions, based on skill and age. There will be about 3,000 players, ranging in age from 18 to 70, though the majority are 20 to 40. This year, NAGAAA also introduced the Master’s Division for players age 50 and older, the only division based on age. Melani said the Chicago organizing committee—featuring Ted Cappas and an eightmember executive committee—raised the bar in sponsorship and notoriety within the local community. Plus, he praised Series 2011, the local organizing committee, for its communication, logistics, celebrity involvement and more. “They definitely have the recipe for this event to be the best ever,” Melani said. “The Chicago committee has done a great job, absolutely fantastic. It is going to be a phenomenal week. The from the field becomes almost as important as the time on the field. The bonding that develops while you’re spending time together helps build the team character and chemistry and supports the effort on the field. This happens to a lesser extent at other weekend tournaments, but is pronounced at the World Series.” The 2011 Series is scheduled for Aug. 29-Sept. 3, at multifield complexes in suburban Schaumburg, St. Charles and Elmhurst. “My first World Series—held in Nashville in 1994—was an eye-opener,” Febonio said. “My second, in Seattle, was memorable for being competitive on the field and for one special and lasting friendship with someone I met off the field. “The 1996 Series [held] in Minneapolis was the only Series that I played in where they used snow fences in the outfield. And in 1997 in San Diego, I dropped a routine pop up because of the sun, and that ended up costing us a game.” Febonio’s memories continue as if he just played the game. “In Kansas City in 1999, I played with a wild bunch from Chicago and that was the only time I’ve played as a pick up player—not on my regular-season team,” he said. “At the Toronto Series in 2000, we were kicking butt and scoring a ton of runs and embarrassing teams until we suffered a few injuries, me included. I also got to visit with a former boyfriend and his family who lived in Toronto. “San Francisco [in 2001] was special because it’s where the first GSWS was held. In Portland [in 2002], that’s where I met a guy off the field who I’ve remained friends with. Washington D.C. the following year featured some great ball and we came within a whisker of the championship.” Febonio said his lasting memory of the 2004 event in Dallas was that it rained—a lot. “In 2005, in San Diego, I made more errors in one game, played at night, than in whole seasons,” Febonio said, laughing. “Fort Lauder- Ben Cohen and Leslie Jordan at the opening ceremonies. Photo by Anthony Meade fields are great. The weather is supposed to be great. Plus, you can’t forget Boystown—that’s another huge draw.” The Series kicked off Monday night as about 2,000 attended the opening ceremony, held at Navy Pier. “The Opening was a huge success,” Cappas said. International rugby sensation Ben Cohen spoke to the crowd, while Leslie Jordan entertained with his wacky sense of humor. “Ben Cohen is fantastic to be part of the World Series,” Melani said. “I think his [Stand Up] foundation, [to help eliminate bullying] is part of what NAGAAA stands for.” Cohen spoke Monday afternoon at Center on Halsted. He also will practice this week with the predominantly gay Chicago Dragons rugby team. Plus, Cohen visited the Hancock Observatory, trained daily downtown and enjoyed walks and runs along the lakefront. “I really like Chicago,” Cohen said Aug. 29; it was his first time in Chicago since 1997. “Being here is about the foundation and spreading the word about what it does. It’s good to be invited, it’s an honor to be in- WINDY CITY TIMES dale the following year, we weren’t going until a month before. Our team stepped in to replace a team that qualified, but backed out. We threw a team together and then played great and killed a bunch of good teams en route to a secondplace finish. “Phoenix in 2007 was hot. And [in] Seattle in 2008, I met up with a friend who I had met the first time the Series was there—back in 1995. We played well [in Seattle] and took thirdplace.” In 2009, playing for the Spin Cougars, his BDivision team captured the title. The 2010 event was held in Columbus, Ohio. “For Columbus, we took a bunch of novices and players new to the B-Division, and taught them how to win. We went on a nice, unexpected run,” Febonio said. Febonio was the coach, pitcher and an infielder for his 2010 Spin RockStar team, which won the local regular-season title and playoff championship, and then finished 9th at the World Series. “In 2009, I was a player on the World Series BDivision championship team, Spin Cougars. Most of that team moved up to the A-Division for 2010,” Febonio said. “The remaining five players from our 2009 team, myself included, recruited 11 new players, all having been C-Division players the previous year and formed our team for the 2010 season. “With a new team, and an inexperienced coach, we were hoping to be a good enough team to be competitive in our league. We played in three tournaments prior to the GSWS. We really thought that being champs of the B-Division in the CMSA league was overachieving, but then we got on a roll at the World Series in Columbus and played some of our best softball of the year and were one game away from playing on Saturday, [in the championship round]. It was an incredible year and the team has stayed together for the 2011 season. I’m very proud of the team and the players who were my teammates last year for all the success we experienced.” —Favorite baseball team: Boston Red Sox —Favorite baseball player: Ichiro Suzuki vited. We want to eradicate bullying across the board, particularly the LGBT community.” When asked to appear in conjunction with the World Series, Cohen said his first reaction was, “where and when.” “Many within the gay community are bullied because they are perceived to be different from other people, which is very wrong,” Cohen said. Cohen said the drive to help end bullying started back in 2000, when his father was murdered while attempting to protect someone, he said. “About six years after that, I found out that I had a large following on Facebook, more than 37,000 people, and many were men. So my role as a sportsman comes with a responsibility—not just on the pitch as a part of the team, but also off the pitch. Doing some good and building some awareness is very important.” Cohen, who is heterosexual and married, said it is “so sad” to hear about LGBT-related suicides, especially among teens. “Those are a tragic shame,” he said. “Who the foundation looks to affect is, the next generation, those who are now getting bullied. That person could be the person who finds a cure for AIDS [or] cancer, could be the next Prime Minister or President, or could be the next worldfamous sportsman.” Cohen admitted Aug. 29 that, well, he doesn’t know too much about softball, “but sports is sports, and it’s a fantastic way to bring people together.” He added, “People come together from all around America for the Gay Softball World Series. They get to re-live their childhood a little bit, especially some who may have gotten bullied a little at school and felt they couldn’t participate. That’s where we want to make an impact.” See more photos online at http://www. WindyCityMediaGroup.com. 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