3 Plays That Have Shaped LGBTQ Theater History
At the beginning of the 20th Century, you could have been arrested for putting on a gay play. It didn’t matter if the show sold out or if the theater
At the beginning of the 20th Century, you could have been arrested for putting on a gay play. It didn’t matter if the show sold out or if the theater
Kimberley Bush is the Director of Art and Cultural Programs at The DC Center and the founder of the new LGBTQ Artist Market in Washington, DC.
In 1923, the North American run of Sholom Ash’s God of Vengeance came to an abrupt end at the Apollo Theatre on 42nd Street when the entire cast, the producer,
Barbara Proud (aka B. Proud), is an award-winning photographer who divides her time between commercial assignments, fine art projects, documentary projects, and teaching at The University of the Arts in
Founded in 2003, the DC Shorts Film Festival was created by DC-based filmmaker, Jon Gann, in response to the dozens of festivals where the focus wasn’t on the filmmakers and
Author, memoirist, and literary art organizer Michelle Tea will be the keynote speaker at the 2018 OutWrite LGBTQ Book Festival, scheduled for Friday, August 3, through Sunday, August 5, 2018,
Musician Holly Near has dedicated her life and career to ensuring that her music allows activism, storytelling, and more to intersect. She has participated in the annual music festival SisterSpace
Successful, radical zines require badass visionaries. Enter tatiana de la tierra. A self-described combat femme, poet, publisher, activist, and back-talking zinester, de la tierra was a verifiable badass. Born in
Musiq Scene is back and queerer than ever! This issue I got to talk with Katie Hargrove, a Tennessee native Pop/Soul artist based in D.C. Introduced to music by her
The circus is coming to town! Not just any, the internationally acclaimed Cirque du Soleil. From August 16-20 at EagleBank Arena in Fairfax, Virginia, you can slide into the magical