Q-Seattle Events: Tacky Tourist Clubs

Friday, October 19, 2007

Responding to hate with a loving church service

9:58 PM

Activists from throughout Snohomish County (where Lynnwood is) and King County (where Seattle is) have come together to stage an alternative to the violently anti-gay Watchmen conference scheduled for the Lynnwood Convention Center this weekend. [Click for all of our Watchmen coverage, or here for Hutcherson coverage.]

The Sunday afternoon even will feature a gathering of speakers, including members of the clergy, and a special free screening of Inlaws & Outlaws, a local-produced documentary featuring the real-life stories of Washington LGBT people.

Everyone is welcome to participate.

Details:

Love and Pride: Lynnwood Responds to Hate

Sunday, October 21, at 3pm
Edmonds Unitarian Universalist Church, 8109 224th Street, Edmonds, Washington [get directions]

Equal Rights Washington had this to say today in a press release about the Watchmen gathering:


We're concerned about this group's activities. They have a radical agenda that seeks to roll back rights for members of the LGBT community and a record of violence is associated with the watchmen. Activists from Lynnwood along with many groups are hosting an alternative event to show support and concern for the LGBT community.

Note: Post mirrored from seaQwa.com

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Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Lynnwood promoters get themselves mixed up with Latvian + Euro politics

7:10 PM

UK Gay News is a website that has -- along with its wonderfully inclusive daily summery of gay-related news stories -- done more than any other to recount the frightening flowering of often-violent homophobia that has accompanied the re-emergence of religious institutions in the countries of the former Soviet bloc.


This week, their focus turned slightly to the west as Eastern European homophobes prepare to meet with some of their American fellow-travelers in Lynnwood.


UK Gay News combines a summary of the week's developments here with one of those lessons in Latvian politics that has become so oddly relevant in the Pacific Northwest.


The Russian-language preacher, Alexey Ledyaev, who is scheduled to be here for the weekend conference, runs his radio ministry -- called New Generation Church -- from Latvia's capital city Riga. Ledyaev is closely allied with a right-wing party that is part of a coalition that controls the government there.


While the quasi-governmental body that runs Lynnwood's convention center still insists that booking a radical hate group at the facility was the proper thing to do, European officials haven't been so willing to tolerate the intolerance that characterizes the group that will be here.


According to the UK Gay News story, Euro human rights officials recently refused invite one of Ledyaev's political cronies to a meeting even though the Latvian politician -- Janis Smits -- holds the official ministry position that makes him responsible for human rights issues in the country.



This week, Andreas Gross, rapporteur of the Judicial and Human Rights Committee of the Council of Europe?s Parliamentary Assembly (PACE), was in Latvia and invited the Latvian Parliamentary Social Affairs and Human Rights Committee to lunch.

Well, not quite all of the committee. Excluded was chairperson Janis Smits, whose homophobic outbursts are legendary. ...

Janis Smits is no stranger to "anti-gay" demonstrations in Latvia. While he is not known to have been seen wearing one of the "No Pederasts" t-shirts, he has been seen ? even photographed ? with placards containing the "No Pederasts" symbol at anti-gay pride rallies.


The Council of Europe group that's more familiar with what Ledyaev, Smits, and their cohorts are doing in Europe judged Smits unworthy of contributing to a discussion about human rights.

The folks in Lynnwood might have been -- as some of them are now claiming -- confused about the group's name and about its purpose, but Hutcherson's involvement with the conference should have allowed them to figure it all out if only they'd done a bit of research.


: post mirrored from seaQwa.com

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Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Seattle Opera makes its Ring announcement

10:38 AM

So here it is [although the information hadn't yet made it to the website as we post this] -- the official announcement from Seattle Opera about the 2009 Ring that we mentioned the other day. (And which we flubbed embarrassingly by saying somewhere in the post that there are three operas in the cycle when everyone knows there are four. But, hey... we did try to indicate in that post that we are tyros on all this -- just to pull in a vague but oh-so-appropriate Nietzsche reference.)

From the press release:
Seattle Opera's General Director, Speight Jenkins, officially announced today the international cast for the company's 2009 presentation of Wagner's Ring des Nibelungen. New to the production are American soprano Janice Baird as Brunnhilde, Danish tenor Stig Fogh Andersen as Siegfried, and Australian tenor Stuart Skelton as Siegmund.

Baird previously has appeared as Brunnhilde in numerous houses in Europe, including the Deutsche Oper Berlin and the Opera de Marseille, but this will be her American debut as the Valkyrie. Andersen, a member of the Royal Theatre Copenhagen, has sung Siegfried in London, New York, Dresden, Munich, Berlin, Helsinki, and Mannheim among other cities. Besides appearing in Wagner roles throughout Europe, Skelton sang the role of Siegmund in the State Opera of South Australia's Ring, for which he received a Helpmann Award for "Best Male Performer in a Supporting Role in an Opera." ...

"With Stephen Wadsworth as director, every repetition of the Ring is rehearsed as if it were a new production," said General Director Speight Jenkins. "In this, our third repetition of the Cycle, I decided to cast several new singers, to vary the mix extensively. I think we have a cast that will give our audiences a rewarding and new experience in the Seattle Ring, and one that I hope will make the best Ring we have ever presented."

Robert Spano, music director of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, also returns to Seattle Opera to conduct the Ring. Spano previously conducted his first Ring for the company in 2005. ...

The 2009 Ring is directed by Stephen Wadsworth, with sets designed by Thomas Lynch, costumes designed by Martin Pakledinaz, and lighting designed by Peter Kaczorowski. This team, highly active in theater as well as opera, has worked on several Seattle Opera productions. ...

The Wadsworth production of Wagner's Ring, Seattle Opera's third Ring production, was first presented in the summer of 2001 and was repeated in the summer of 2005. Both the 2001 and 2005 cycles sold out nearly a year in advance. In 2005, Seattle Opera's Ring was enjoyed by audiences from 49 states and 19 countries.
The four operas will be performed in three cycles of cycles starting August 9, 2009. The first cycle runs Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday through August 14. The second cycle is Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday -- August 17-22. The concluding cycle is Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday -- August 25-30.

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Monday, August 13, 2007

Of Wagner, pink flamingos, chocolate, and family soap operas

4:18 PM

Seattle Opera's Ring, 2005Seattle Opera's Ring, 2005
So... What will you be doing at about this time in 2009?

If you're wholly baffled by the question, then you're probably not a fan -- or at least not a fanatic -- of Wagner's operatic masterpiece, the Ring Cycle.

Wagner devotees know that they will, come hell, Valhalla, high water, or flaming stages be here in Seattle to take in Seattle Opera's next staging of the German composer's complete three-opera extravaganza.

This Wednesday, August 15, Seattle Opera director Speight Jenkens will announce the dates and the cast for the 2009 Ring Cycle. And the company will also start taking names for ticket buyers.

The last time Seattle Opera presented The Ring was in 2005. It was a new production first staged in 2001. Tickets to both cycles sold out a year in advance. The next complete cycle here, in 2009, is likely to surpass that ticketing marvel.

In its review of the company's 2001 production of The Ring, a classical music magazine Andante calls Seattle "America's Bayreuth". (That, for non-fans, is the German town/Wagner shrine where the composer's clan mounts an annual production of the operas.)
Consider what it's like having Mt. Rainier looming outside the back door with all the shimmering majesty of your own private Valhalla, or the stunning marriage of water and mountain cradling Seattle. How else - other than such readily available grandeur-to account for what must have seemed like the pure madcap ambition of a provincial upstart back in 1975, when the fledgling Seattle Opera first undertook producing Wagner's complete Ring as part of a week-long festival?

Yet through its frequent revisitations of the cycle, the company filled a crucial niche. A quarter-century later, Seattle has become a Wagner mecca. Throughout August, operagoers from 19 countries trek into the Emerald City to experience Seattle Opera's Ring production -- the third in its history -- now being premiered in its entirety following sneak previews of Das Rheingold and Die Walküre last summer.
Befitting that moniker as "America's Bayreuth", Britain's The Independent mentions Seattle's 2001 production as a benchmark in interpretations in its extensive review of this week's London production of the cycle:
The Seattle Opera House's recent production by Stephen Wadsworth featured Rhinemaidens swimming on a trapeze, a naturalistic forest and a real horse for Brünnhilde. "The production follows every one of Wagner's stage directions," commented the astonished Michael Portillo in the New Statesman. "Having endured many impenetrable interpretations around the world, opera-goers heave a sigh of relief that here is a Ring as Wagner intended it."
So... we're just saying: Wednesday's announcement is a big deal.

But why worry about any of this? Well, fans of immersive dance music might recognize something of their experience in these 'graphs from The Independent's review:

What is so special about this stuff? Well, if it were a drug, it would probably be banned. It's the closest thing opera offers to an acid trip. Wagner can force the listener into a kind of superconsciousness -- a relationship with time, space and sound that's far removed from everyday experience. He weaves a spell of uninterrupted musical intensity so overwhelming that, for those who surrender to it -- and it's hard not to -- it can become almost addictive. Nothing else matches its impact: therefore you simply have to go back for more.

And the Ring cycle's scale is unprecedented. Despite its length, every moment is laden with significance in the unfolding story. The whole thing surges onward with an inevitability that doesn't require the suspension of disbelief as much as the suspension of outside life for its duration.
Fortunately for non-fanatics, the early save-the-dates announcement also gives folks who don't quite understand what the fuss is about time to become fanatics. As always, Seattle Opera gives us hints of what is to come with a Wagner on this year's schedule. This year, the company will present Wagner's, The Flying Dutchman, staged by Stephen Wadsworth who also directed the 2001/2005 Ring Cycle.

Dustin Kaspar, a tenor who sings in the chorus for this year's Dutchman, explained his own growing infatuation with the music:

Wagner was an intermediate thing for me. I started listening to classical music in high school. I went from heavy metal to Wagner, Holst, and Stravinsky. The rhythmic intensity of their music, as well as the large amount of brass -- i.e. heavy metal -- made it an easy switch for me. I've loved it ever since. There's something great about Wagner-and-later music because it requires genuine effort. We show up to do Puccini and we learn it pretty quickly because there isn't much to it. But to tackle something with these complex rhythms and shifts, lack of tunes, etc. -- that's a real challenge. Wagner ends up meaning a lot more to me because it has a depth of character that you don't get anywhere else. It's not surface. There are layers of wonderful that get into you. You can't perform it without it being a part of who you are.
To help novices get to that point, the opera company offers what might be considered operatic training sessions. Their website offers capsule summaries of the composer's works and of his controversial life and even a guide for opera virgins.

But there's more. In fact, there's a group called BRAVO! Club set up especially for folks between the ages of 21 and 39. They host parties that, we're told, not only provide at least one glass of free wine but also large amounts of chocolate. Yes. Chocolate. Membership would also entitle you to discounted performance tickets.

The headline on the page devoted to another interest group Wagner and More is "How is Richard Wagner like a pink flamingo?" The page doesn't answer the question. But it does make us curious. For that, you'd probably have to join the group [pdf], which is, however, open only to Seattle Opera subscribers.

Wednesday's announcement of Seattle Opera's new Ring Cycle comes just as a major history is released that focuses new light on the bizarre Wagner family that still controls the composer's legacy in Bayreuth:
Making sense of this unholy family saga calls for the skills of a soap-opera scriptwriter and a seasoned political reporter. Jonathan Carr, the Economist's former bureau chief in Germany and a biographer of Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, falls comfortably into the latter category yet has a keen eye for human foibles.

Carr's The Wagner Clan (Faber and Faber, 20 pounds, to be published on Sept. 6) is, remarkably, the first objective history of the family. He treats the endemic blend of ancestor worship, anti-Semitism, self-interest and mutual loathing with the fastidiousness of an English butler at an orgy. ...

Cosima held the reins until she was 69 and half-blind, handing over in 1906 to her only son Siegfried who, though affable, capable and suitably Judeophobic, was a gay Sybarite with potentially scandalous liaisons.

Mother found him an English orphan, Winifred Williams, raised by Wagnerians in Berlin. Siegfried was 46, Winnie 18; they produced two sons and two daughters before Siegfried died in 1930 and Winifred took over the festival.

The new boss nurtured a passion for a Munich rabble- rouser, Hitler, whom she supplied in jail, after the failed 1923 coup, with the writing materials that yielded Mein Kampf. As Fuehrer, Hitler forced his lumpen Gauleiters to sit through Wagner longueurs and consulted at length with Winnie on matters of staging and casting.

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Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Q-Squared: Where everybody knows your name

5:10 PM

Q-Squared logo

It might not yet be a familiar name among local LGBTQ groups, but Q-Squared is doing its best to make its name better known.

They'll host a fundraiser this Thursday, August 9, to introduce the group to anyone interested and to help those who are interested in it introduce themselves to each other. And they've picked, once again, an intriguing location for the get-together that they're calling Raise the Roof -- because, well... they're holding it in a large garden without a roof. The venue for the fundraiser is, in fact, "the largest private outdoor garden in the city" located in the sunset-shadow of the Space Needle at 500 Wall Street.

If you'd like to become a part of the evening in the garden, RSVP through their website.

Q-Squared is an all-volunteer group without paid staff that grew out of a number of programs, including the annual Labor Day CAMP outing, now in its 12th year.

CAMP is a place to connect with fellow Gay, Bisexual and Trans men; the place to shed attitudes and dissolve boundaries. It is a place to learn about yourself, to forge lasting friendships and develop a deeper sense of community. ...

It provides an escape from the pressures of the city and a place where you can accept new challenges, experience personal growth and just relax and have fun.
Q-Squared, as an umbrella organization, holds similar values:
We are one of Seattle's newest community organizations. Q-Squared was born from the needs of CAMP to become a year long on-going community building organization. Q-Squared is dedicated to bringing new and exciting programs to the community and we look forward to you being involved with Q-Squared by attending any of our events or volunteering! ...

Q-Squared?s plans are ambitious. We plan to have at least one event per month available to the community. Watch for posters in your neighborhood and announcements in local publications as well as updates on our web site. Each event is designed with you and the community in mind. By empowering volunteers with the task of building community, each individual will have a greater stake in the outcome. We are committed to serving a constituency that is reflective of the diversity of our community.
If that sounds interesting, then Thursday's event is a great place to get to know more about the group.

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Tuesday, January 23, 2007

3-Dollar Bill hosts party for Asian-American film fest

12:02 PM

Three Dollar Bill Cinema, producers of the Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Festival, will host one of its unique Cineoke parties (that's karaoke set to movies) as part of the Northwest Asian American Film Festival (NWAAFF).

The festival itself starts tomorrow with a pre-festival kickoff at Theatre Off Jackson [get directions]. The first film screening is Thursday. [Schedule] Three Dollar Bill's Cineoke is Saturday evening, January 27 at 9:30 pm at Theatre Off Jackson. Online tickets are still available through Brown Paper Tickets for most of the festival screenings and parties. Walk-up and rush tickets will be available at the door if there's room. A full-festival pass costs $70.

The festival is the largest showcase for Asian American films and videos in Washington. This year's lineup includes eight feature films and over three dozen films from the United States and Canada.

The festival opens tomorrow with two films that were featured at the Sundance Film Festival in 2006 and have since received numerous awards and critical raves: Eve and the Fire Horse by Vancouver, BC director Julia Kwan, and Journey from the Fall by Vietnamese American filmmaker Ham Tran.

The opening-night films will be presented in 35mm film at Northwest Film Forum on Capitol Hill [get directions].

Three Dollar Bill will be a co-presenter with NWAAFF of the Seattle premier of the Asian American musical Colma: The Musical directed by Richard Wong.

Taking place in the suburban town of Colma, where the dead outnumber the living 1500 to 1, Colma: The Musical takes the music of H.P. Mendoza and weaves it into a fresh personal look into the ups and downs of early adulthood.

Best pals Rodel, Billy, and Maribel find themselves in a state of limbo; fresh out of high school, they are just beginning to explore a new world of part-time mall jobs and crashing college parties. As newfound revelations and romances challenge their relationships with one another and their parents, the trio must assess what to hold onto, and how to best follow their dreams.With 13 original musical numbers, you'll be singing along with the musical that the LA Weekly proclaimed had "more wit, energy, and imagination in any one frame...than in an entire decade's worth of lame Hollywood attempts to revivify the genre."

Other features at the festival include the family drama Red Doors (dir. Georgia Lee), the underground film Scumrock (dir. Jon Moritsugu), Feature documentaries include Mighty Warriors of Comedy (dir. Sung H. Kim), The Cats of Mirikitani (dir. Linda Hattendorf), and The Slanted Screen (dir. Jeff Adachi).

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