Tag Archive | "Queer"

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Sex, Death & Art

Posted on 24 April 2007 by Andy Horwitz

exposed paint

After a nine year absence from NYC, porn star-turned-performance artist and sex scholar Annie Sprinkle makes her long-awaited return to Off-Broadway. Sprinkle, in collaboration with Elizabeth Stephens will present the East Coast Premiere of EXPOSED:EXPERIMENTS IN LOVE, SEX, DEATH & ART. This new multimedia performance event is directed by Neon Weiss with media design/soundscape by Sheila Malone.

The show opens Thursday 4/26 and runs through May 12th. Performances are Thursday-Saturday @ 7:30pm, Fri. @ 10pm and Sat. @ 3pm. at Collective:Unconscious
279 Church Street @ White St.

For more info visit http://www.weird.org/exposed.htm

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Annie Sprinkle Exposed!

Posted on 21 March 2007 by Andy Horwitz

Annie Sprinkle & Elizabeth Stephens Make Love Off-Broadway in
EXPOSED: EXPERIMENTS IN LOVE, SEX, DEATH & ART
Limited Engagement runs April 26 – May 12

After a nine year absence, porn star-turned-performance artist and sex scholar Annie Sprinkle makes her long-awaited return to Off-Broadway. Sprinkle, in collaboration with Elizabeth Stephens will present the East Coast Premiere of EXPOSED: EXPERIMENTS IN LOVE, SEX, DEATH & ART. Presented by Collective: Unconscious this new multimedia performance event is directed by Neon Weiss with media design/soundscape by Sheila Malone. It begins a limited engagement Off-Broadway run beginning April 26 at Collective: Unconscious in Tribeca. Opening night is set for Saturday, April 28 at 8pm.

Move over Yoko and John, Sonny and Cher, Siegfried and Roy, and Gertrude and Alice. Annie and Beth are here! EXPOSED: EXPERIMENTS IN LOVE, SEX, DEATH & ART is a unique love story created in response to the violence of war and the anti-gay marriage movement. It examines issues of artificial insemination, famous breasts having breast cancer, queer relationships and much more. Mixing elements of pleasure, pain and passion, EXPOSED will stimulate the senses and crack hearts open.

(more after the jump)
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Red Tide Blooming

Posted on 10 April 2006 by Andy Horwitz

this Thursday, April 13th, is the opening night of Taylor Mac’s Red Tide Blooming.

Red Tide Blooming

Set in a phantasmagorical aquatic wonderland, Red Tide Blooming tells the story of Olokun, a hermaphrodite sea creature, who is on a quest to find a community of divine freaks on a far-off place called The Floating Landfill. Using the revitalization of Coney Island as a metaphor for America’s obsessive desire to find safety by eradicating the old, odd, and the uncomfortable, Red Tide Blooming uses song, dance, burlesque and classic Mermaid Parade antics to create a collective visualization of Armageddon in the murky waters of gentrification and cultural homogenization.

Taylor Mac creates fantastical, genre-and-gender-bending theater in the tradition of Charles Ludlam and the Theater of the Ridiculous, The Cockettes, Theatre Couture and Ethyl Eichelberger. Bringing together the grand spectacles of musical theater with the glitter and outrageousness of the downtown performance scene, Mac creates performances that excite, entertain, and engage audiences, taking them on a rollicking ride through a fabulous post-apocalyptic fantasy landscape.

With Red Tide Blooming Taylor Mac teams up with puppeteer Basil Twist, choreographer Julie Atlas Muz and a slew of New York’s most joyous, extreme and outrageously gifted downtown performers to create this a musical extravaganza inspired by the gentrification of Coney Island and imagining the Last Mermaid Parade Ever.

Red Tide Blooming: Written and Directed by Taylor Mac; choreography by Julie Atlas Muz; puppets by Basil Twist; scenic Design by Derrick Little; costumes and makeup by Steven Menendez, and lighting design by Garin Marschall.

Featuring Todd D’Amour, Bridget Everett, James Tigger Ferguson, Laryssa Husiak, Stacie Karpen, Bianca Leigh, Taylor Mac, Dirty Martini, Steven Menendez, Scotty The Blue Bunny, Ruby Lynn Reyner, Suzi Takahashi, and Layard Thompson.

READ THE ARTICLE IN THE BROOKLYN RAIL!

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please let me love you

Posted on 04 February 2006 by Andy Horwitz

Brooke Baxter’s GlassHouse Gallery looks like a tornado lifted the tower sculpture from the Garden at 6th & B and set it down in a warehouse in Williamsburg where a thousand dollhouses, art-school projects, televisions and stretched canvases exploded; after which a band of acid-crazed hippies proceeded to throw a body-painting party and love-in, at the conclusion of which they cosmically teleported to the Dimension of Total Cosmic Consciousness, leaving behind an all-encompassing positive vibration and assorted toys for misfit children. Out of this junkyard of the imagination comes The Off-Stage Fright Theater Company’s presentation of Dan Fishback‘s refreshingly subversive renegade performance project PLEASE LET ME LOVE YOU.

On Saturday night Culturebot found himself amidst a swarming sea of early-twentysomething alterna-kids all crammed in to see what Fishback calls a “Tragic Performance Play.” Less a play than a cleverly juxtaposed collection of monologues, spoken word and musical interludes hinging around a single theme, PLEASE LET ME LOVE YOU sinuously explores global politics, American pop culture and all the hateful things we do in the name of love.
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2005 Asunci�n Play Readings

Posted on 28 June 2005 by Andy Horwitz

Pregones Theater presents the 2005 Asunción Play Readings. Asunción showcases the work of Latino playwrights exploring issues of difference and transformation at the limits of queer identity. The project especially seeks works that challenge normative assumptions about gender and sexuality. With this initiative Pregones Theater nurtures a space for playwrights who are exploring these themes in a professional, supportative environment. There will be a short discussion with the authors after each play reading.

Pregones is located at 571-575 Walton Avenue in the Bronx.
Call 718-585-1202 for more info…
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Dress Suits to Hire Returns

Posted on 05 May 2005 by Andy Horwitz

LaMaMa ETC presents a limited 3-Week Run
in Celebration of the 25th Anniversary of Split Britches:
DRESS SUITS TO HIRE

dress_suits.jpg

In DRESS SUITS TO HIRE, a heady mixture of erotic fantasy and hard-boiled pulp drama, two “sisters” who live in a rental clothing shop use the merchandise to try on various facets of their personalities. Created by Holly Hughes, Peggy Shaw and Lois Weaver, DRESS SUITS TO HIRE is a haunting and hilarious look into a room where one woman embodies a dark and predatory sexuality while the other one struggling against lesbian desires and her autonomous and abusive right hand. DRESS SUITS TO HIRE, which won OBIE Awards for both Shaw and Hughes (Shaw for her performance in the original 1987 production and a special citation for Hughes for the 1993 revival), is a mellifluous ode to lesbian eros and a joyful, literate send-up of all romantic fantasy.

May 19-June 5, 2005
7:30 pm Thursday-Saturday
2:30 pm Sunday
at LaMama – 74A E. 4th St. NYC.
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LTTR

Posted on 22 March 2005 by Andy Horwitz

Flavorpill sez:

Identity politics are anything but stable — “queer” and “gender” have morphed from nouns to verbs, pronouns are marginalizing, and the acronyms just keep getting longer. Luckily for the folks behind queer feminist journal LTTR, renewal is what gender is all about. They’ve even got a tricky acronym of their own, which first stood for Lesbians to the Rescue, then Listen Translate Translate Record. Tonight, LTTR curates “Let’s take the role”, a multimedia event featuring performance artist Nao Bustamante and music/video duo Marriage. Artists and editors K8 Hardy and Emily Roysdon should be on hand to help you tell your FTM from your SWF — but your P’s and Q’s don’t stand a chance.

Tonight, 3/22/2005, 8 pm at The Kitchen.

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bois vs grrls

Posted on 01 October 2004 by Andy Horwitz

This is actually about Dan Fishback’s show boi with an I, but its going to take a minute for me to work up to it. So keep reading.
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naked radical show queens

Posted on 14 September 2004 by Andy Horwitz

Indeed, Mr. Miller may never have put forth a more provocative idea than the one that informs the finest moments of this often delightful but uneven show: namely, that his proudly radical queer politics were indelibly shaped by a youthful obsession with Broadway musicals. As he puts it: “I learned everything I needed to know from these shows about love, politics and America. Forget Marx and Engels, I had Rodgers and Hammerstein!”

Read Charles Isherwood’s review of Tim Miller’s Us in the NY Times (username/password required)

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Friendly Neighborhood Lesbian Superhero

Posted on 08 April 2004 by Andy Horwitz

There are no men in the world of Butch McCloud – only butch and femme dykes, living in the city of Missopolis. There, Butch and her band of bakers – who run a collectively-owned non-profit vegan bake shop – face off against the evil corporate femmes of Vulvatronics™. The rivalry has been chronicled in seven episodes so far, with titles such as “Attack of the Scones” and “The Case of the Sapphic Sapphire.” The latest Butch McCloud episode, “Dykes are from Mars, Dykes are from Venus” opens April 8 at Clemente Soto Velez Center.
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