Hope at Home: Alfredo Smith Changes Lives of People With HIV/AIDS
Hope at Home: Alfredo Smith Changes Lives of People With HIV/AIDS
Hope at Home: Alfredo Smith Changes Lives of People With HIV/AIDS
- Kylie Minogue
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HOPE AT HOME
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4 Hope at home
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AIDS Documentary t Makes Detroit Debu dar Of Statewide Calen s World AIDS Day Event
- Kylie Minogue
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H O P E AT H O M E
People think they know the story of AIDS in America, but they don't.
David France, director of "How to Survive a Plague." Pg. 26
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5 Federal funding cuts hamper HIV prevention efforts in Michigan 6 Tackling AIDS in Detroit 7 Michigan legislators seek to deny foster children loving homes 10 Keisling calls for passionate action against violence 10 Caught in the budget battle 11 Home HIV test now available 11 Survey says: Gay marriage is good 12 Benefits fight brings lesbian couple to high court
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BY ANDREA POTEET
DETROIT - Anyone working for a nonprofit organization that fights against AIDS with information, outreach and support is obviously driven by a desire to do good and help those in need. But while that is also the case for Alfredo Smith, who has worked with AIDS Partnership Michigan for five years, he admits that what initially drew him to his first AIDSrelated volunteer stint, with Ruth Ellis Centers Young Brothers United, was BTL photo: Andrew Potter something a bit more practical. I actually got into it because of the free condoms, he says with a chuckle. I went to a party one summer after I graduated high school...and they had free condoms. I was like oh this is cool, then I found out they had go over the cliff. discussion groups every Sunday, where guys After five years, the program was closed due to in my demographic came together and talked funding issues and Smith, 26, was brought on as about everything from politics to relationships an early intervention specialist at APM. and from there it kind of grew. When we had to close the doors down it was Though he came for the freebies, he stayed for a real slap to the face for the community, Smith the one-on-one connections he was making with said. These young men and women really relied the 13-to-24-year old men the program targeted. on the services that the REC boys brought to the Thats where my passion kind of grew community so when it closed down it was like, because I saw HIV prevention on another scale, well what do we do now? he said. It wasnt all about safer sex this, use-aHe said though other empowerment groups condom that, it was more about these are people met in the area, REC Boyz had provided a with real-life issues. At the end of the day I space for its members, who often didnt feel learned that a lot of youth arent worried about comfortable in other groups. protecting themselves, they are worried about So he and other former REC Boyz took their where they are going to sleep at night. group underground, meeting unofficially once From there, he was offered a job as the a month to continue providing support to each small groups coordinator with Michigan AIDS other, discuss possible volunteer opportunities Partnerships REC Boyz program, an acronym and continue outreach through APM, which helps for Real Enough to Change. Beginning in 2007 to train the members to provide HIV testing. until the program closed its doors this year, he Even though the program isnt being funded helped guide a group of about 50 young men as anymore, were still trying to keep the youth they designed outreach programs to teach their active and educated, he said. demographic about safe sex. Hes juggling underground REC Boyz meetings It was really their program, he said. They with his class load at Wayne State University made the decisions and I was kind of like the rails where he is pursuing a bachelors in psychology on the side of the road to make sure they dont (as a prerequisite to the masters he hopes to
At the end of the day I learned that a lot of youth arent worried about protecting themselves, they are worried about where they are going to sleep at night.
At APM, he spends his time with clients who are newly diagnosed with HIV or have fallen out of medical care for the virus and need help addressing it. Once they are assigned to him, he talks them through the process and may also physically accompany them on any step of the way, from finding a doctor to going on a job interview. At the end of the day I know Ive helped that person, I know Ive educated someone, and I know Ive made a new friend, Smith said. Thats what a lot of my clients are. They become like family. And adding new members to his adjunct family is Smiths favorite part of his job. I get to interact with so many different types of people, Smith said. Ive always been interested in people who grew up differently than I did or thought differently than I did or had different values than I did. Growing up for Smith was not without its challenges. Born in Detroit and raised by a single mother, he said he always felt different from the rest of his family. I grew up one of those smart cool kids or smart kids that try to be cool, he said. I got good grades and tried to do my mom and grandmothers and family proud, but I always knew I was different than a lot of relatives around my age and I was always kind of treated different. As he grew into a teenager he clashed with his stepfather and struggled with the religious dichotomies in his family. A lot of people in my family, at least at the time, had very traditional Christian values, he said. It was kind of like youre sinning but dont
look at me. I always felt like I had two sides of the family; the super Christians and the super thugs and I was somewhere in the middle. He sought refuge in dancing, dreaming of touring with Janet Jackson as a backup dancer. Dancing was in my body, he said. At family events I was the little kid break dancing in the middle of the floor. But when it came time for me to do modern dancing and things that were a little more feminine, it wasnt really supported by my mom. She was more into hey, heres a football, go out and play with the boys. I wanted to play pitty-pat with the girls. He said even if his mother did approve of sending him to dance classes, she couldnt afford it. But if he had his way, hed make sure more children get the chance to pursue their creative dreams. As a teen in an entrepreneurship camp, he dreamed up a nonprofit dance school for inner-city youth and hopes one day to make it a reality. Theres so much talent in the city and the talents kind of wasted because no ones paying attention to it, Smith said. No ones giving kids the tools they need to go further with their talent. Until then, hes keeping up his efforts to improve things for LGBT youth and adults in the Detroit area. After taking part recently in a weeklong activist boot camp in Washington, D.C. sponsored by Campaign to End AIDS, in which he joined a group protesting for transgender rights outside of the citys mayors office, he said he came back with tools he hopes to use when he volunteers with Campaign to End Aids upcoming Detroit chapter. The big thing I learned was that when you have a group full of people with different minds and different backgrounds, you can really make some things happen, he said. The trip also brought on realizations about Detroit for Smith. It was kind of bittersweet relief to know that the issues I see everyday in my city are not just in my city, he said. We get so much flack here in Detroit because of this reputation of being this violent or decayed city in an odd way it relieves me to know that the problems Im seeing are not just here. And as for his family problems, those got better after he came out to his family in 2008. He said he wrote his mother a long letter describing how she sometimes made him feel and he said their relationship has improved greatly. He said he feels more at home at family functions and his mother frequently tells him how proud she is of him and the work hes done. The older she got and the older I got she realized whoever Im sleeping with at night, Im still doing really good work and helping people and living a good life, he said. Overall thats what makes her proud.
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20 percent of Americans living with HIV are unaware they have the virus. That group is significantly more likely to transmit the virus according to various studies. This transmission issue is in part due to the uncontrolled viral activity in people without treatment.
express concern about the loss of institutional memory at the exodus, but MDCH dismisses those concerns. As with any departure, institutional knowledge can be lost but MDCH has continued to provide prevention services and grants, said Minicucci in an email to Between The Lines. The funding cuts and short-term contracts are not the only issues hampering HIV prevention efforts. Federal funding mandates that 75 percent of Michigans prevention funding be spent on HIV prevention efforts for those living with HIV, and the remaining for reaching out to risk groups and general community testing. Prevention for people who have tested positive for HIV specifically target them with tools to live with the virus, adhere to medication protocols and help prevent transmission of their virus. However, 20 percent of Americans living with HIV are unaware they have the virus. That group is significantly more likely to transmit the virus according to various studies. This transmission issue is in part due to the uncontrolled viral activity in people without treatment. Recent studies have found that an undetectable viral load, or viral suppression, achieved through the use of anti-retroviral medications reduces transmission of HIV by 96 percent. These findings have driven the federal government to prioritize the use of the medications, which continue to have significant side effects, as prevention. That prevention method is called treatment as prevention, and in at least one situation federal officials have called it treatment is prevention. The focus on medications has led to increase funding of drug assistance programs, and funding decreases in effective prevention programs such as teaching safer sex techniques to high-risk populations and other techniques that had been funded previously.
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Detroit Department of Health and Wellness, the director of the HIV/AIDS program, Patrick Yankee. BTL photo: Crystal Proxmire
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out as a volunteer for HARC (HIV/AIDS Resource Center) in 1985/86 and I was on Continued from p. 6 the board of Wellness Huron Valley. All we did in the early days was train volunteers. Theres also fatigue because weve been To start we had move volunteers than cases, forced into competition. Its not intentional, but we knew the epidemic was coming but it is a system that prevents cooperation. and we just tried to learn all we could and Yankees vision is to bring reach out to as many people organizations together and as possible. look for ways to bring costs When he was 23 years old down, and also for ways to his friends were getting sick, make sure that funding is and dying quickly. My oldest reaching the right people. We need to streamline services and sister and dear friend died of Weve got all this data, and brain cancer, Yankee said. bring unity as much as possible. I know weve been studying zip codes She was the first person I to find out very specifically the passion and brains and talent in our came out to when I was 14. who we need to reach out to. She said Its good, its fine. We need to streamline services community are there to fix this. She held a special place for and bring unity as much as me and I feel like I owe her. I possible. I know the passion came home from the funeral and brains and talent in our and turned the key and I heard community are there to fix the phone ringing inside. A hopes to do more targeted efforts to reach this.I want to turn the page with service providers to open dialogue and use data to people who are infected, both by zip close friends partner called and said if code and by reaching out more in the gay you want to see them again you need to close gaps. get to the hospital. He was dead less than One way to reduce the prevalence of community. One barrier to this, however, is economic. a week later. So I quit my job and went to HIV/AIDS is to catch infections early This is a disease of poverty, Yankee the Wellness network. I worked two part and get people into treatment. Our goal is to link a newly diagnosed person to get said. When someone has money problems, time jobs just so I could volunteer there. In medical care within 90 days, he said. housing problems, mental health issues, not 1990 he became the first director of HARC, There is a big interest in getting people to having enough to eat, getting treatment a position he held for about 10 years, and care. You do not need insurance to be seen may be lower on their list of priorities. has spent most of the past ten years at the by a doctor. Treatment for people with HIV Thats why we need to work well with State Health Department. He said that having a small geographic is completely covered for many people if each other, and other agencies that provide area and a concentrated number of cases is their income is $45,000 a year or less. services to people in need in general. Our helping him maintain his passion for AIDS goal is to reduce that out of care number, There are multiple other programs that so we need to be able to connect people to work. Ive always worked hard, but here can help with costs of medicine and care. I feel creative again. Based on laboratory reporting, Yankee whatever support they need. People with HIV and AIDS are still on can estimate that of the 9,708 patients in For more information about the Detroit the six counties, as many as 3,000 have not the outside looking in. We have awesome Department of Health and Wellness had a medical visit in the last year. While medical care in this community. My concern Promotion HIV/AIDS program visit there is an obvious concern for the health is that people dont find their way there. Yankee started with the Detroit Health their website at http://www.detroitmi. of those individuals, early treatment has an Department in late August, but has spent gov/DepartmentsandAgencies/ additional benefit. When someone is in treatment, the amount of the virus in their his life doing HIV/AIDS work, going back DepartmentofHealthWellnessPromotion/ blood is lower, and the risk of transmission to the beginning of the epidemic. I started Programs/HIVAIDS.aspx.
Tackling
AIDS
is lower too. Getting people into treatment means they are less likely to infect other people. Stopping the spread through treating the disease is one of the reasons why 75 percent of Ryan White funding goes towards medical care. Its also why Yankee
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ts World AIDS Day. On this day, we join together as a community to remember the losses, celebrate the successes and support those living with the virus. But this year we find ourselves at a truly momentous point in history. What we do about HIV in the next year will define the outcome of the epidemic in Michigan and the U.S. for years to come. We can make this about ending this dreadful epidemic, challenging arcane and discriminatory laws and supporting our brothers and sisters who are infected, affected and effected by the epidemic, or we can turn the page on the calendar and pretend like HIV is nothing to worry about until next year on Dec. 1. To reach the historic challenges of putting an end to new HIV infections, we here at Between The Lines ask you to post the red ribbon on your Facebook page and other social media sites but leave them up for the next month. This, however, is the first step in a series of tangible actions we need you to take to help end the epidemic as we know it. Here are our ideas, and our reasoning: Donate to your local AIDS service organization. We know, we know. Everyone wants money at this time of the year. But the reality is that ASOs in Michigan have been forced to do more with less for years and by the end of 2013, federal funding for prevention services will be reduced by 33 percent. And thats before any decisions have been made on the looming fiscal cliff. Our ASOs need your financial support to provide prevention services, support services for those living with HIV and to be a voice for HIV in the community. So, make a donation. Not just for some special event like AIDS Walk, either. Agree to make a monthly donation. Maybe its $5 a month, maybe its $100 a month. It doesnt matter how much, every penny literally helps to save lives. Start talking about HIV. Seems silly to have to tell a community where 1 in 5 gay and bisexual men is infected with the virus - and 44 percent of those who are infected didnt know it until the study was done in 2010 - to talk about HIV; but the facts are sobering. The epidemic in Michigan, as it is nationally, is striking our youth and particularly our youth of color. Young gay and bisexual men are coming out younger, but facing an educational environment which does not provide basic HIV education that is culturally appropriate for LGBT youth. That means we have
to have those conversations. And we have to do it in a sex positive way. Lets get real, gay and bi men are barebacking. Its happening. There are whole websites dedicated to it. The question is, why is it a taboo subject? Why arent we talking about the reason gay and bi men are barebacking? Lets have that conversation. For real, and in earnest. Get tested. One in five gay and bisexual men is positive. Nearly half them dont know it. We know that those who are positive, but dont know it, are more likely to transmit their virus to others. We also know that being diagnosed early leads to healthier long term outcomes for people living with the virus and a decrease in infectiousness. Thats not pie in sky thinking, those are scientific facts. Testing is not just a personal responsibility, it is a community obligation. Stop the stigma. Weve all seen it. The personal ads that read Clean, U B 2. The writer is not talking about hygiene, they are talking about HIV. Its a code. Its demoralizing and offensive and it is time to end it. We have run whole campaigns to stop people from saying Thats so gay now it is time for us to remind ourselves that our own language about ourselves is unnecessarily hurtful and damaging. If you expect a person to
disclose they are HIV-positive, then you had also better respond with common decency. The adage, treat others as you would have them treat you applies. People living with HIV have the right to be intimate, to love another, and we as a community burdened with this epidemic have an obligation to support that right. Take action. Call your doctor and ask if they are asking everyone 13-64 to be tested for HIV. If they arent ask them why. Call your local health department and ask them if access to pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis is available in your community and where. If its not, ask why. Call your law maker and ask them to repeal arcane HIV laws that criminalize people living with HIV. Call your school board and demand to sit on the reproductive health committee and be a voice for rational LGBT sensitive reproductive health education. Donate two hours a week to distribute condoms for your local AIDS service organization. Offer to take friends for free testing anytime they want to go. Become a certified testing counselor. Getting to zero new infections is going to take all of us. The options on how to act are myriad, but there is only one you. How are you going to help us get to zero?
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ate a hearty Thanksgiving dinner with friends - a gay senior, a working lesbian mom, a transgender newbie, a straight advocate for womens rights, an outspoken teacher for bullied students. We traveled shortly after turkey time by way of our collective Memory Lanes to the legendary Well of Loneliness that, contrary to skeptics nay say, televangelist baseless rumor, does exist. The Well of Loneliness itself was first mentioned by author Radclyffe Hall as a place of pilgrimage for outcasts, marginals, those shunned by the busy, hurly burly of self-righteous knowit-alls. It was a courageous thing for Radclyffe Hall to do decades ago. God knows the censuring by clergy, press, and snooty readers she endured for mentioning the Wells existence and her discovery visit. (My own private thanks to you Radclyffe for such courage. I suppose being British and just a trifle butch helped.) If truth be known, this place of pilgrimage has been visited over the years by many, many more persons than those who care to admit their own private visit or visits of short, long, heartrending duration. For those dependent upon GPS, let us, as a reader service, say at the onset, there are no satellite-electronic guidelines. (A search for the appropriate sounding voice to say, Take a thoughtful right turn for a quarter mile, a reflective left turn three-quarters afterward, hasnt been successful. Whats more: there have been no volunteer voices, not for love or money.) It was almost dark when we friends arrived at the Forest of Memory surrounding the Well of Loneliness. It gets dark so early these days (and for some, the autumn or winter of life). It was light-blue ink dark at six. We skipped dessert to make it before total black curtained all. As might be expected, the trees of the Forest of Memory had mostly shed. The ground surrounding the fabled Well of Loneliness was covered. There were thousands upon thousands of vibrant, heart-shaped leaves, of many, many hues of red, orange, yellow, gold. It was a singular moment of autumnal beauty; and none of our small band wanted to break the sense of awed reverence we shared by speaking. We simply looked to each other, nodded, joined hands. How long we stood in silence, none of us knew. As we stood, heads bowed, around the Well of Loneliness on Thanksgiving Day, we shared a moment of intuition. Each began to gather leaves and drop them carefully into the Well. In the dwindling light we also saw that each leaf bore a name, many etched in multitudes of languages. We gathered gold leaves for AIDS losses. We gathered orange leaves for gay and lesbian victims of hate crimes. We gathered red leaves for transgender persons murdered, raped, assaulted. We gathered yellow leaves for women victimized by husbands, politicians, religious fanatics. Early leaves for helpless bullied kids. And once it became too totally dark we left the Well of Loneliness, sadly aware that next year there would be more leaves to gather, more names to remember, more memories to replenish and fuel the Well of Loneliness. Leaves . . . . . . countless as the shining stars above. [email protected]
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Caught In The Keisling Calls For Passionate Budget Battle Action Against Violence
How The Fiscal Showdown National Trans Leader Inspirational At EMU Impacts LGBT Americans BY JEROME STUART NICHOLS
BTL STAFF
WASHINGTON, DC - As fiscal cliff deliberations intensify, the Center for American Progress, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, and a coalition of 23 other national LGBT organizations released Caught in the Budget Battle: How the Fiscal Showdown Impacts Gay and Transgender Americans. This new report details the negative effects that sequestration would have on LGBT Americans in areas such as employment, health, housing, higher education and safety. If Congress fails to strike a deal before the end of the year, all Americans will suffer, including those that are LGBT, said Jeff Krehely, vice president of CAPs LGBT Research and Communications Project. Sequestration in particular would inflict significant harm by requiring wholesale cuts to programs that are critical to the health, wellness and livelihood of LGBT people and their families. We cannot afford to let that happen. As the report details, many federal programs, both directly and indirectly, function to support and serve the LGBT population. If across-the-board budget cuts go into effect, this community will experience a host of negative outcomes as a result of sequestration, including: - Threats to the employment security of LGBT workers because federal agencies would have fewer resources to investigate claims of employment discrimination - Lower quality health care for LGBT families because of reduced programmatic funding used to address their health care needs - Absence of critical resources from government agencies currently working to combat bullying and school violence against LGBT youth - Limited ability of the federal government to address the high rates of homelessness among LGBT youth - Limited governmental capacity to prevent discrimination in housing against LGBT renters, tenants and potential homeowners - Hampered governmental efforts to prevent violent crime against LGBT people through enforcement of hate crimes legislation Lives are literally on the line if Congress lets our country tumble off this cliff. LGBT people and our families - like so many families - are already struggling in this recovering economy, and draconian budget cuts will only make things worse, said Rea Carey, executive director of the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force. This critical report spotlights just how severe the consequences will be for LGBT people - from tackling LGBT youth homelessness and bullying in the schools, to fighting discrimination, to enforcing hate crimes laws, to ensuring proper health care for all. Our elected leaders must act responsibly and not put lives in harms way. For the full list of coalition members, which includes more than 20 national LGBT organizations, please see the full report see www. thetaskforce.org/reports_and_research/budget_battle_2012. YPSILANTI - Trans people dont always have a lot to celebrate. Besides the fact that the odds are stacked against them financially, socially and judicially, theyre also much more likely to be victims of violence. This is why each year on Nov. 20, we take a bit of time out to celebrate and recognize those who have lost their lives due to transphobic violence. To recognize this years Transgender Day of Remembrance, Eastern Michigan Universitys LGBT Resource Center hosted prominent trans activist Mara Keisling. As shes known to do, the towering Michelle Obama fangirl brought her patent-pending sense of humor and charm to the discussion. Her speech focused on themes of transgender rights and issues, racism in the trans community and offered tips on how to be a trans ally. It was an inspiring night capped by a lively Q and A and a reflective candlelight vigil. Although mostly unknown to people outside the movement, Keisling is the founding executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality and is one of the most knowledgeable people on the topic of trans issues, making it an easy decision to invite her to share her message and perspective from a national level. EMU is really lucky to have her here, especially on the eve of TDoR, EMU LGBTRC Program Coordinator Mary Larkin said. Just being able to have such an intimate conversation with her I think is really beneficial to our students. I know a lot of the students were really excited about that happening. My Facebook status today says, play it cool today because I feel a little excited but I want to be professional. The goal of the event was to remember and celebrate, but also to inform. Since people spanning the gender spectrum were in attendance, this presented a great opportunity to spread knowledge and bridge gaps. In the fight for trans equality, it is important to connect trans and to other people. Often, its a lack of knowledge that proves to be a barrier to understanding. Recently, NCTE and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force quantified these issues and the results are disheartening. Trans people have an unemployment rate twice the national average, are four times more likely to live on less than $10,000 a year and 91 percent of them have faced difficulties in their work place because of
Mara Keisling addressing EMU students as part of Transgender Day of Remembrance events. BTL photo: Jerome Stuart Nichols
their gender identity. Then theres the issue of health care. We saw 20 percent of people in our sample say that they had been refused care from a healthcare provider because theyre trans, Keisling said. We once got a call from a nursing student in Florida who had been in a class on emergency room care. They were covering the difference between treating men and women in emergency rooms. She was a trans ally and said, what about transgendered people? The teacher said, when I was in New York City, we would just let those people die. Since these socioeconomic issues are inextricably linked, solving one requires progress on another. This makes it difficult to confront the main issue at hand on TDoR; violence. The folks who are murdered about one a month in the United States are never like me. Theyre never middle class, middle-aged, white trans people, Keisling said. Theyre almost always young, almost always women, almost always people of color, often immigrants, often sex workers and almost always low income because if youre any of those things, youre much more susceptible to violence. You arent really killed just because youre trans although it may have been transphobia that triggered it. Theres also socioeconomic implications and education implications. So, we need to fix all of those things. We need to make it so that people dont have to live in the conditions that foster that kind of violence. This compounding of issues also makes
attacking the racism within the trans community challenging. Sure, theyre facing transphobia. But for a lot of folks the racism they have to deal with is worse. We really take that seriously and I always talk about racism when I speak, said Keisling. For Keisling, its not about making sure that everyone joins in the fight to stop the inequalities that trans people face. Its about doing something about the issues that someone is passionate about. I want the folks who are in the audience to maybe get inspired to do something, she said. I think all people, including students, are sometimes for things or against things and dont do anything about it. I want people to act, but I dont want them to do what I want them to do. I want them to do what they want to do. But really do it. Once Keislings speech was over the lights were snuffed and candles were lit. In the darkness, there was a sense of camaraderie that filled the space. As the names of the victims were read, many people were moved to tears. The amber cast of the candlelight outlined hands grasped, giving strength in a touching and emotionally evocative moment. This is my first Transgendered Day of Remembrance. I knew it was going to be really emotional, participant Jessie Kane said. What really got to me was the unknowns. Thats somebodys child, parent, lover, friend. Just all those people that died to this senseless ignorance. Its important to remember.
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The Positives And The Negatives: Survey Says: Gay Marriage Is Good Home HIV Test Now Available
BY CRYSTAL A. PROXMIRE
As a doctor, it can be hard telling a patient they are HIV positive. When a person goes in for an HIV test at a clinic, like the Be Well Clinic in Berkley, they meet with a trained consultant who will help prepare them for the news. But still, for some people the news hits hard. Its not like a pregnancy test. No one is happy with a positive test result, said Dr. Paul Benson, who has been testing people for over 20 years. Sometimes the first words out of their mouth are well, I deserve this, Dr. Benson said. I hear this so much more than I expected. I deserve it because I slept with so-and-so. I deserve it because Im gay. I deserve it because God is punishing me. Shock and hopelessness are common reactions. Populations with low selfesteem, drug users, people who have unsafe sex, think well, I may not live another year so why bother changing anything? Dr. Benson and his staff are trained to focus on the patients needs in that critical moment when they may not know what a positive test result could mean for them. We are passionate providers and we make sure that people leave our office with a plan they are comfortable with. We set appointments for follow up care and counseling, Benson said. We let them know that a positive result is manageable if they begin treatment early. He said they look for signs of depression, and they follow up with people who may be avoiding care. The strategy is to get people who are positive into treatment. It gives them a higher life expectancy and it significantly reduces the risk of spreading it. To Dr. Benson and others in the realm of HIV expertise, the lack of support and follow up is what makes an HIV home test problematic. OraQuick is the first FDA-approved oral swab in-home test for HIV-1 and HIV2. Its an oral swab test that doesnt require blood and gives a result after 20 minutes. It costs about $40 and is available at major pharmacies. The test allows people to test at their convenience, in the privacy of their own home. The test is particularly attractive to those who may be deterred by the idea of going to a clinic, or who are in rural areas where they may not have access to free testing or compassionate care. The marketing also suggests that a home test can be used by couples before being intimate, and the New York Times is reporting that some are already using it this epidemic, so we will see if this one develops any more popularity than the last one, Ryan said. Cost is another factor. So many inner city clients cant afford to buy one. Also home test kits do not replace the need for outreach efforts to educate clients they might be at risk on the first place. Frankly, the CDC has kept on trying to reevent the wheel, hoping to reach the hard core infected populations. The people who may use this test are likely gay white men with some financial means. Like Dr. Benson, Ryans biggest concern was for the people taking a test without an immediate support system in place. I
BY CRYSTAL A. PROXMIRE
Every year, Michigan State University conducts a State of the State survey systematically tracking the political mood of Michiganders on a variety of subjects, including gay marriage. The survey asked 1018 people statewide about their views, categorizing them by region and political affiliation. The State of the State found that 56 percent of the states residents support gay marriage while 39 percent oppose it. Two years ago, 48 percent supported gay marriage and 51 percent were opposed. Support for gay marriage has increased in recent years, in Michigan and across the country, said Charles Ballard, MSU economics professor and director of the State of the State Survey. Results varied among different groups: Among those with at least some college education, 63 percent favored gay marriage, while it was favored by only 26 percent of those who had never been to college. About 71 percent of those with household income over $100,000 favored gay marriage, compared with only 26 percent of those with household income below $20,000. Since income is strongly influenced by education, Ballard said, it is not surprising that there are major differences among Michigan residents of different income levels. Some 57 percent of whites favored gay marriage, whereas only 30 percent of blacks did so. Gay marriage was favored by 58 percent of Catholics, 48 percent of Protestants and 78 percent of those with no religious preference. Although a majority of Michigan residents favored gay marriage in this survey, Ballard said, there remain substantial differences among different groups. Nationwide the tide is also changing. Maine, Maryland and Washington recently voted to allow same-gender marriage, making them the first states to approve gay marriage by a direct vote of the people. They now join Connecticut, Iowa, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Vermont and the District of Columbia. Before getting too excited about the results though, Michigan voters must consider the steps required to secure gay marriage here. Equality Michigan Policy Director Emily Dievendorf said, In Michigan our first hurtle to achieving marriage equality is our constitutional ban against marriage equality. This means we have demolition work to do before we can lunge forward to pass marriage equality, win the stability for all Michigan families that Michiganders are now freely and overwhelmingly saying they believe should be allowed to exist, catch up with the progress being made elsewhere in the nation, and join the modern age. This will take a committed effort and a few more years of patience to change hearts and minds and to build up the resources necessary to either put equality back on the ballot and/ or challenge the ban in the courts. The State of the State survey also had other surprising results. For example when asked whether they were better off or worse off than one year before, Michigan residents gave the highest ratings since the summer of 2002. Economically 41.7 percent said they are better off than they were last year and 25.6 percent said they stayed the same. The survey also broke down data by region. In the Upper Peninsula alone, 61.9 percent said that President Obama was doing excellent or good, whereas only 21.8 percent said that about Governor Snyder. To learn more about the State of the State survey, visit http:// ippsr.msu.edu/soss/.
The harshest reality of using the test to screen partners is the fact that being HIV free does not mean being STD free.
to screen prospective bar pick ups. There are reasons to think that screening might make a difference. Studies have found that a significant minority of people who are H.I.V. positive either lie about their status or keep it secret, infecting unsuspecting partners, the article states. It looked at situations where one might use it to prescreen partners, and situations where it might fail. For example, if someone were unwilling to wear a condom, they might also be unwilling to take a test. There is concern over what happens if someone gets a positive test result while in the company of someone they may not know very well. How will they react? The harshest reality of using the test to screen partners is the fact that being HIV free does not mean being STD free. Unprotected sex with a stranger has many risks beyond HIV. Additionally, there is a window of time that someone could be infected but not have enough antibodies to test positive. Terry Ryan of Michigan AIDS Coalition is not thrilled with the tests either. The CDC has tried a home test kit before as the end all/be all solution to am concerned about lack of face to face psycho/social support We had a young client at MAC last week with a positive test who immediately wanted to commit suicide. The OraQuick website does not list any emotional support resources or nationally recognized resources on their FAQs page section about HIV resources. http://www. oraquick.com/FAQs. It does however have well-thought-out questions like, What happens if my pet accidentally drank the testing fluid from the test tube What should I do?, What should I do if I (or my child, friend, or partner) accidentally ate the test stick device?. and I have discovered a cure for HIV/AIDS. Who can I talk to? There is a 24/7 customer support hotline that is included with the test and on the OraQuick website. Find out more at www. oraquick.com. For information on local agencies that do free HIV testing along with support, check out: Michigan AIDS Coalition at http://michiganaidscoalition.org, and AIDS Partnership Michigan at www. aidspartnership.org.
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Creep of the Week Benefits Fight Brings Lesbian Couple To High Court
OPINION BY DANNE WITKOWSKI
BY LISA LEFF
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A San Francisco couple is waiting to find out if the U.S. Supreme Court will take their case challenging the 1996 law that prohibits the federal government from recognizing samesex marriages. Karen Golinski and her partner of 23 years, Amy Cunninghis, got married during the brief window in 2008 when gay and lesbian couples could tie the knot in California. Wihtin weeks of their wedding, Golinski applied to add her spouse to her employersponsored health care plan, a move that would save the couple thousands of dollars a year. Her ordinarily routine request still is being debated more than four years later, and by the likes of former attorneys general, a slew of senators, the Obama administration and possibly this week, the U.S. Supreme Court. Because Golinski is married to another woman and works for the U.S. government, her claim for benefits has morphed into a multi-layered legal challenge to the 1996 law that prohibits the federal government from recognizing same-sex unions like hers. The high court has scheduled a closed-door conference for Friday to review Golinski's case and four others that also seek to overturn the Defense of Marriage Act overwhelmingly approved by Congress and signed by President Bill Clinton. The purpose of the meeting is to decide which, if any, to put on the court's schedule for arguments next year. The outcome carries economic and social consequences for gay, lesbian and bisexual couples, who now are unable to access Social Security survivor benefits, file joint income taxes, inherit a deceased spouse's pension or obtain family health insurance. The other plaintiffs in the cases pending before the court include the state of Massachusetts, 13 couples and five widows and widowers. "It's pretty monumental and it's an honor," said Golinski, a staff lawyer for the federal appeals court based in San Francisco. The federal trial courts that heard the cases all ruled the Defense of Marriage Act act violates the civil rights of legally married gays and lesbians. Two appellate courts agreed, making it highly likely the high court will agree to hear at least one of the appeals, Lambda Legal Executive Director Jon Davidson said. "I don't think we've ever had an occasion where the Supreme Court has had so many gay rights cases knocking at its door," said Davidson, whose gay legal advocacy group represents Golinski. "That in and of itself shows how far we've come." The Supreme Court also is scheduled to discuss Friday whether it should take two more long-simmering cases dealing with relationship recognition for same-sex couples. One is an appeal of two lower court rulings that struck down California's voterapproved ban on same-sex marriage. The
o not fuck with Madonna. Not many court opinions can be summarized in five words, but when it comes to a favorable ruling for Madonna after a right-wing group in Russia sued her for not hating gay people, I think this about does it. If you arent familiar with the case, in August an antigay and pro-Kremlin group calling itself the Trade Union of Russian Citizens sued Madonna for over $10 million for daring to speak in favor of gay rights during a St. Petersburg concert. Madonna and her band waved rainbow flags on stage and handed out pink bracelets, t-shirts, and rainbow banners reading No Fear to the crowd. Now, if you know anything about Madonna youll notice that this sounds pretty tame. Whats the big deal? Is being pro-gay illegal in St. Petersburg? Why, yes. It is. At least since March when a law was passed banning propaganda of sodomy, lesbianism, bisexualism and transgenderism, and pedophilia to minors, and now waving rainbow flags is apparently hard-core gay propaganda in this part of Russia. And so a bunch of anti-gay nuts sued. And lost. According to the Associated Press, during a court hearing the Trade Union of Russian Citizens claimed that Madonnas so-called propaganda of perversion would negatively affect Russias birthrate and erode the nations defense capability by depriving the country of future soldiers. Thats right. One day youre a young Russian man or woman at a Madonna concert, the next youre renouncing procreative sex in order to subvert the military. The AP also reported that the judge almost kicked journalists out of the courtroom for laughing too much. And you kind of have to laugh when you get a load of some of the crazy testimony heard. Who will children grow up to be if they hear about the equal rights of the lesbian lobby and manly love with traditional sexual relations? one plaintiff testified. The death rate prevails over the birth rate in the West; young guys are becoming gender neutral. Ah, yes, the children. Just who will these children learning about manly love from Madonna grow up to be? Androgynous and dead, I suppose. The plaintiffs even submitted, as evidence, articles from Wikipedia, claiming that a real encyclopedia could not have articles about homosexuality, according to the AP. You cant even use Wikipedia as evidence in a freshman comp paper, by the way. We arent against homosexual people, but we are against the propaganda of perversion among minors, plaintiff testimony continued. We want to defend the values of a traditional family, which are currently in crisis in this country. Madonna violated our laws and she should be punished. But it was not to be as the judge called bullshit on it all and sent the Trade Union of Russian Citizens packing. As for this we arent against homosexual people stuff? Thats bullshit, too. Anyone who passes or supports laws that make support for LGBT equality illegal is definitely against people. And while this might seem like something far removed from the United States, we forget at our peril that there are plenty of folks who see anti-gay laws like St. Petersburgs as a model for what should be happening right here. Weve made a lot of progress, but there is still much work to be done. Dont just stand there, lets get to it.
other is a challenge to an Arizona law that made state employees in same-sex relationships ineligible for domestic partner benefits. The last time the court confronted a gay rights case was in 2010, when the justices voted 5-4 to let stand lower court rulings holding that a California law school could deny recognition to a Christian student group that does not allow gay members. The time before that was the court's landmark 2003 ruling in Lawrence v. Texas, which declared state anti-sodomy laws to be an unconstitutional violation of personal privacy. Brigham Young University law professor Lynn Wardle, who testified before Congress when lawmakers were considering the Defense of Marriage Act 16 years ago, said he still thinks the law passes constitutional muster. "Congress has the power to define for itself domestic relationships, including defining relationships for purposes of federal programs," Wardle said. At the same time, he said, the gay rights landscape has shifted radically since 1996, citing this month's election of the first sitting president to declare support for same-sex marriage and four state ballot measures being decided in favor of gay rights activists. "This is the gay moment, momentum is building," Wardle said. "The politics are profound, and politics influence what the court does." For Golinski and Cunninghis, getting this far has been a long, sometimes frustrating and sometimes heartening journey. Citing the act, known as DOMA, the Office of Personnel Management, the federal government's human relations arm, initially denied Golinski's attempt to enroll Cunninghis in the medical coverage she had selected for herself and the couple's son, now 10. "I got a phone call from OPM in Washington, D.C., asking me to confirm that Amy Cunninghis was female, and I said, `Yes, she is,' and they said, `We won't be able to add her to your health plan,"' Golinski recalled. Golinski knew that her employer, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, had a policy prohibiting discrimination against gay workers, so she filed an employee grievance and won a hearing before the court's dispute resolution officer, Chief Judge Alex Kozinski. As a lawyer for the court, she felt awkward about pursuing the issue, but she was also angry. Lambda Legal and a San Francisco law firm offered to represent her. "I had been working for the courts since 1990, and I feel, like everybody, I work hard and I'm a valuable employee, and I'm not getting paid the same amount if I have to pay for a whole separate plan for Amy," she said. "It was really hurting our family." Kozinski ruled that Golinski was entitled to full spousal benefits, but federal officials
ordered Golinski's insurer not to process her application, prompting the chief judge to issue a scathing opinion on her behalf. After the government refused to budge, Golinski sued in January 2010. The couple had joked about whether they "would make a federal case" out of their situation. Cunninghis noted that their genders would not have been an issue had Golinski worked in the private sector or in state or local government where domestic partnerships are offered. Because of DOMA, she said, "we don't get access to a whole slew of benefits." The Department of Justice originally opposed Golinski in court but changed course last year after President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder said they would no longer defend the law. Republican members of the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group, which oversees legal activities of the House of Representatives, voted to hire an outside lawyer first to back the act in Golinski's case and the four others, and to then appeal the rulings that the act is unconstitutional. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White handed Cunninghis and Golinski an unequivocal victory in February, finding that anti-gay sentiment motivated Congress to pass DOMA. In ordering the government to allow Golinski to enroll her wife in a family health plan, White rejected all of the House group's arguments, including that the law was necessary to foster stable unions among men and women. A group of 10 U.S. senators who voted for DOMA in 1996 have filed a brief with the Supreme Court angrily denouncing the judge's opinion and urging the high court to overturn it. "It is one thing for the District Court to conclude that traditional moral views, standing alone, do not justify the enactment of DOMA; it is quite another to find that legislators who hold or express such moral views somehow taint the constitutionality of the statute," they said. Former U.S. Attorneys General John Ashcroft and Edwin Meese, who served in Republican administrations, also weighed in, telling the court that Obama had failed in his duty and set a dangerous precedent by declining to defend DOMA. As a result of White's ruling, Cunninghis was allowed in March to be added to Golinski's health plan. Golinski so far is the only gay American who has been allowed to begin receiving federal benefits while DOMA remains in effect, a development that could be reversed if the Supreme Court upholds DOMA. Until then, the couple said they are going to trust that the tide of history is moving toward gay rights. "It seems so simple to us: just put me on the family health plan," Cunninghis said. "It's much bigger than that obviously, yet it isn't."
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Winter Coat
Drive for Seniors
Senior Care clients need warm winter coats (new or gently used and any size).
Bring them to the Metropolitan Community Church of Detroit at 2441 Pinecrest, Ferndale
Office hours are Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 3 pm to 8 pm or Sundays 10 am to noon.
248-399-7741
A Project
Girolamo, Project Chair
MCCDs Do-Gooder Social Organization. E-mail [email protected] for more info.
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Getting To Zero
10 a.m. Zero infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. Activities include free/confidential testing, STD and syphilis screenings, diabetes, blood pressure and cholesterol tests, displays from HIV/AIDS awareness organizations, workshops on STD prevention and a panel discussion on existing stigmas. Michigan Department of Community Health, 801 Fort St., Detroit. Michigan.gov
FRIDAY, NOV. 30
SATURDAY, DEC. 1
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"The AIDS ribbon with world heart configuration is backgrounded by a Hubble Space Telescope photo taken in 1990 (eight years after the onset of the AIDS crisis). The photograph lends itself well to themes of universality, HIV replication and tallying those thousands upon hundreds of thousands who suffered and lost their lives to devastating AIDS-related and AIDS-induced diseases. The clusters of stars and novae also bright in a near-revealed distance of space, time, transition represent hope and the longed for promise of a cure."
to share names to be remembered and healing prayers. Musical accompaniment by the Bel Canto Choral Society, directed by Martin Mandelbaum. Service organized by Peter Cooper. Refreshments and social will follow. All are welcome and attire is casual. Barrier free bldg. Mondry Bldg., Oak Park Jewish Community Center campus, 15000 W. 10 Mile Road (between Greenfield Coolidge), Oak Park. 248-542-0900. Tchiyah.org
HIV 101
2:30 p.m. Graham Health Center presentation on HIV/AIDS. Part of Oakland's World AIDS Day 2012 event series. Gender & Sexuality Center, Oakland University, Rochester. Oakland.edu/GSC
Continued on pg. 20
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Worldaidsweekum.wordpress.com
MONDAY, DEC. 3
Take A Stand
7 p.m. Open to the public with a $2 donation or a canned good. Sponsored by AIDS Committee of Windsor and AIDS Support ChathamKent. AIDS Committee of Windsor, 401 Riverside Dr. West, Windsor. 519-973-0222. AIDSWindsor.org
Jake Mossop of 1 Girl 5 Gays will speak on the status of HIV in Grand Rapids, Dec. 1
Exceptionalism. Part of Oakland's World AIDS Day 2012 event series. Gender & Sexuality Center, Oakland University, Rochester. Oakland.edu/GSC
SUNDAY, DEC. 2
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disproportionately? More importantly, how can AIDS in the black community and in all communities be effectively addressed to prevent infection? Join MSUs LGBT Resource Center for a screening of Endgame: AIDS In Black America, a documentary chronicling the rise of HIV/AIDS in the United States and particularly in black communities, as well featuring the stories of those living with the disease. A short discussion will follow the film. Food and beverages will be provided. Michigan State University LGBT Resource Center, MSU Campus, East Lansing. 517-353-9520. [email protected] www.Facebook.com/events/136875393129601/
TUESDAY, DEC. 4
Free HIV Testing at UM-Dearborn
11 a.m. This is an opportunity for students, faculty and staff of UM-Dearborn to get free testing courtesy of the AIDS Partnership Michigan as well as receive information about the disease in a private setting. Testing is anonymous. PRIDE UM-Dearborn, 4901 Evergreen Road, Dearborn. Facebook.com/Prideumdearborn
Continued on pg. 23
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Cool Cities
Birmingham
Pinpoint your ad dollars where they will do the most good . Advertise in the next Cool Cities TO PLACE AN AD CALL 734.293.7200 x 13
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THURSDAY, DEC. 6
AIDS in Black and Brown: HIV Testing
10 a.m. Sponsored by Zeta Phi Beta Sorority Inc, Latin@ Student Organization and Lambda Theta Alpha Latin Sorority Inc. AIDS in Black and Brown, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Worldaidsweekum.wordpress.com
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 5
AIDS in Black and Brown: Knowledge, Stigma
7 p.m. Sponsored by Iota Phi Theta Fraternity Inc. and Sister 2 Sister. AIDS in Black and Brown, University of
Fusion of Cultures
9 p.m. Sponsored by the African Student Association, Arab Students Association, Latin@ Students Organization, Black Student Union, Persian Students Association, and the Indian American Student Association. AIDS in Black and Brown, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Worldaidsweekum.wordpress.com
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BY CHRIS AZZOPARDI
ylie Minogue was just 19 when she landed a record deal that would turn the soap star into a singing superstar. This year marks a quarter-century of Kylie, whos celebrating the milestone with orchestral reinterpretations of her most popular songs on The Abbey Road Sessions, a greatest hits, two movies and an upcoming book chronicling her style over the last 25 years. We hooked up with the 44-year-old pop icon to talk about those projects, the outfit she calls an abomination, taking a sabbatical from music and why she doesnt want to know how she became a gay icon.
The Abbey Road Sessions really shows a more sophisticated side to you one that people who only know you from your dance music might not be familiar with. Why now are you venturing out into more stylistically ambitious territory and taking risks? Is it because youre in your 25th year and you just dont give a crap anymore?
(Laughs) That could be a tiny bit of it! I actually recorded The Abbey Road Sessions late last year, knowing it would be part of what weve called K25. But I cant tell you exactly why. Ive just felt like now is as good a time as any to do these things that Ive been harboring these desires to do the Anti Tour and to do an orchestra album and I managed to make them happen.
Its not even just with music, though. Youre taking risks with film, too. You returned to acting this year in Jack and Diane and you kissed a girl.
(Sings) And I liked it.
Did you study any lesbian flicks, like Bound or The Hours, to prepare for your lesbian role in Jack and Diane?
(Laughs) No, I just went with instinct.
Youve kissed a girl before anyway. Remember smooching Geri Halliwell in 2001?
Icon Looks Back At 25 Years Of Gay Fans, Bad Fashion & Girl Kisses
24 BTL | November 29, 2012
Oh, thats right! Thats true, I hadnt thought about that. (Laughs) It was just very straightforward. Its a film about a couple of girls who fall in love, and I was a momentary wake-up call for Rileys character. We never discussed it the kissing or anything. It just all happened.
What does your hot Spanish boyfriend think of your lady lovin?
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(Laughs) He hasnt seen it. I dont think he minded at the time. Hes very open-minded, which is good.
the years from your gay fans about how youve inspired them?
Thats really hard for me to think of a specific story, but in general, I do hear that kind of thing. The biggest question is: How did I end up in this position? My gay audience just decided. It was like, Youre ours. Were adopting you. And I thought it was brilliant. But it wasnt like I was marketed to the pink pound or anything like that that didnt even really exist back then, actually. So yeah, I do hear lots of stories about people feeling some kind of support and loving what I do. I dont have the answer and Im asked all the time, Why do you have such a gay following? Why are you a gay icon? I almost dont want to know the answer, because it was so organic the way it happened.
works, and I hear this ones supposed to be more personal. How personal are we talking?
I dont want to make a personal album at the expense of a great pop album, so I can put some personal material in there; I have done that previously, as well. People dont generally know that I write quite as much as I do, but a song like Flower (from The Abbey Road Sessions) thats the extreme end of personal. But it was very liberating, so I wouldnt mind more of that. That song wouldnt even be on the album if fans hadnt just loved it and they didnt even know what it was about before they fell in love with it! It was just an instinctive reaction to the song; if its about my life, they seem to know it.
A lot of people who are working the same job for as long as you have might move on to something else. In these 25 years, was there ever a moment maybe during your battle with cancer in 2005 where you thought about ...
going off and living in Taos, New Mexico? Somewhere easy, somewhere kind of mystical? Maybe for a brief moment, but no, I was just eager to finish what Id started. I wanted to get back on stage, and I wanted to be better and stronger and not as stressed out as I always was. I wanted to make it work for me as well as working for it. So no, Im really so fortunate that I have a lot of different types of opportunities thank god, because otherwise I would be off! Thats why Im doing so many different things, and fortunately my audience understands that about me and almost expects it of me these days. Its harmonious. Its not like I go off and do something and they just think, Shes just disappearing for a while and then shell be back. They come with me.
context. Im thinking of one example of being on stage, where youve got extra stage makeup on, and then going to something afterward. You look a bit like a freak.
You crushed my little gay heart when you debunked rumors about you doing a song with Madonna for a TV special to commemorate your anniversary. You were kidding, right? Please tell me this is happening.
Aww. No, for real. Theres nothing. Ive always dueted with guys, which is also good, but the question always comes up: Would you duet with Madonna? Would you duet with Britney? And the answer is always yes, because I think all of those girls are great for different reasons. Hey, it might never happen, but maybe if the moment and the song and the desire came up from both parties. It is a bit like a gay wet dream, but who knows. Ive just always said, Of course thats something thats interesting.
When you work on a project, be it including mermen in the Aphrodite World Tour last year or recording a dance song, how much do you keep the gays in mind?
I try to keep everyone in mind, because I dont want to go too far and I dont want to go not far enough. Its just a case of balance. Like, I wouldnt go on a tour thats got a routine like we had for Slow on the Showgirl tour. You wouldnt want that for two hours. I dont even think my gay audience would want that for two hours.
The Best of Kylie Minogue compilation, released earlier this year, made it easy to compare all the styles youve gone through since the 80s. For you, which was the most ridiculous fashion era? What are some clothes youd like to burn or that you have already?
Oh my god. Gee, I probably have burned them. Hey, the late 80s wasnt that kind to anyone. Theres a poster in existence where I have bicycle pants or, like, leggings under cutoff shorts with polka-dot socks and ankle riding boots and a huge leather jacket and I even think there are stripes involved. Its just an abomination. If that could disappear into the black hole, that would be amazing. But theres been some in the kind of good period when Im supposed to know what Im doing. (Laughs) Sometimes things just dont come together, especially if theyre out of
Is there a gay friend who cuddles up with you on the couch with a bottle of wine to watch RuPauls Drag Race?
Is there one? No! Look, I might be a serial monogamist with my actual boyfriend, but with my gay boyfriends Im a floozy. There are a few. Ive got one in every port! (Laughs)
For a lot of gay fans, youve been a source of strength and perseverance. I have a gay friend who was in the military who said he listened to you every day and it got him through.
Aww, really? I love stories like that.
What would you like to tell your gay fans whove been following you for these last 25 years?
Its very simple: I just want to say thank you. Thats all.
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INFO
How to Survive a Plague
1 p.m. Dec. 1 Compuware Theater 1 Campus Martius, Detroit $15 surviveaplague.eventbrite.com www.worldaidsdaydetroit.com
present in those years. Activists had adopted them broadly, with somewhat overlapping motivations. Some were artists responding to and commenting on the many incomprehensible outrages defining our lives then. Others were motivated to monitor public demonstrations and document police misconduct, or to memorialize loved ones as their illness progressed. What they shared was a desire to capture the images from the plagues ravages that mainstream media was ignoring. You notice this in one of the most startlingly dramatic moments in the film, when Tim Baileys friends carry his open casket through the streets of New York to the headquarters of the Republican party on the rainy night before George H. W. Bush was voted out of office in 1992. They were demanding that the world acknowledge Tims human remains and understand their grief and anger. But almost nobody noticed. You can see in the footage the activists shot that no network television camera was dispatched to the scene, and no bank of photographers greeted them in Midtown. If it werent for the activists cameras, the moment and Tims last act of civil disobedience would have been lost.
With all this talk of HIV complacency in recent years, why is telling this story important now, three decades later, on World AIDS Day? What do you hope people who are experiencing the AIDS crisis for the first time, through the film, feel and think?
How to Survive a Plague shows how a few ordinary individuals, with nothing in common but a fierce will to live, changed the course of an epidemic and saved millions of lives. Fundamentally, its a story about our capacity as human beings to tackle the insurmountable, to triumph and to prevail. Thats an important and useful message on any day, for anybody confronting any challenge. In AIDS, the challenges today remain daunting. We have not been able to stop the 55,000 new infections each year in America, most of them still among young gay men. And although some eight million people worldwide are on anti-HIV drugs, we havent found the political will to reach the remaining 28 million, despite how cheap the medicine is. I hope people watching the film are reminded of this unfinished business and inspired to take it on and finally do something about it.
You made this movie not because you wanted to show the affliction caused by AIDS in the 80s, but because you wanted to show what can be done when a group of people stand up and fight. Why was it important to you to cast the film as such?
People think they know the story of AIDS in America, but they dont. It wasnt just a period of hideous disease and staggering death, although it certainly was that. But it was also a time of heroes and visionaries, and of revolutionary change in science and healthcare as well as in the gay community and the culture at large. People with HIV and their advocates have left us a dazzling legacy. Through groups like ACT UP and the Treatment Action Group, which were so sometimes dismissed as reckless troublemakers in the media at the time, they even helped focus the work of Nobel Prize-winners to study the drugs that would eventually save so many lives. Somehow until now that part of history had been overlooked. I wanted to enrich the record to show not just what HIV did to our community and to the world, but what we did in response.
If ACT UP hadnt fought as hard as it did during that time, pressuring drug companies to release meds to AIDS patients, how do you think that would have affected the future of HIV/AIDS? Would people still be dying in droves?
One way or another, the era of effective medication would certainly have arrived without the intercession of ACT UP and other AIDS treatment activists, just not in the same timeframe. The work the activists accomplished made it possible to identify, test and regulate the drugs quicker. As a result, the new pills were able to reach patients by mid 1996 and within a year, hospital admission rates dropped by 80 percent. The pharmaceutical industry working in isolation might have taken another six months, or another year or maybe many years more to bring the pills to market. Thousands or more lives would have been lost, including most of the people depicted in the film.
What was it like making this film and reliving the AIDS crisis?
For me, sinking back into this time was a huge catharsis. Anybody who survived the plague years, from 1981 to 1996 15 long and traumatic years has locked away major parts of their memories: the terrible losses, the personal terrors, the rages. The feelings of betrayal. All of that came back, of course. I lost my lover to the plague. Believe me, AIDS is no easy way to die. But it was a pleasure to revisit those long-lost people in the archival footage, to see them animated again all these years later walking, talking and laughing. Thanks to the archival footage, they remain forever young and full of life young gay people at their very best. I had forgotten how much joy was involved in the fight back
What do you think we we being the government, we being just the average person learned from the AIDS epidemic?
We learned a lesson that is still being debated that you ignore science at great peril. When we first learned about the mysterious new disease in 1981, there were 41 reported cases. If the Reagan administration had listened to epidemiologists and public health experts, rather than religious leaders and political moralists, we wouldnt have a global pandemic today. Over 34 million have died needlessly.
How did you compile such compelling archive footage? Which clip was especially difficult to attain? Any that you wouldve liked to include but couldnt?
At the beginning of the project, I had a memory of the bulky video cameras that were so
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A Little Night Music continues at Performance Network Theatre through Dec. 30. Photo: Sean Carter
REVIEW
A Little Night Music
Performance Network Theatre, 120 E. Huron, Ann Arbor. Thursday-Sunday through Dec. 30. 2 hours, 35 minutes. $30-$46. 734-663-0681. performancenetwork.org
about the stage quite nicely, with scene changes occurring briskly and with much entertainment. But where he excels is digging into the characters personalities and motives. Theres no ambiguity here, and his cast brings the story to life quite vividly. As a result, the production features a true ensemble and that includes the six musicians, whose work is the best Ive experienced in recent seasons. Each character is carefully delineated and the role beautifully sung. And the harmonies (with but a few brief exceptions) are angelic. Even the supporting characters are given moments to shine. Zach Barnes (credited as one of two Lieder Singers, a Greek chorus type of role) only has to raise an eyebrow and grin slightly to let you know what his character is thinking. And the buxom Leslie Hull is wonderful using her God-given assets to help define the Armfeldt family maid, Petra. Four performances merit special attention, however. Barbara Scanlon is delightful as the aging Madame Armfeldt, Desirees mother, who like her daughter has a rather colorful past. Watch as the elderly woman quietly melts into the past as she recalls her many Liaisons. Hers is a spot-on interpretation that will leave you smiling because of its
warmth and honesty. Conversely, Crownovers bombastic Count is a lesson on how to use carefully constructed, over-the-top gestures, facial expressions and mustaches for comedic effect. As usual, its a masterful performance from one of the local stars of the musical theater genre. Finally, musical theater is at its best when uber-talented stage veterans unite in a production that uses their immense skills and experiences to their fullest. Thats certainly true with the combination of Edwards and Seibert in Night Music. Together and with others in the cast, each is in top-notch form. But watch them sizzle in the best-known song from the show, Send in the Clowns. Flawlessly sung, the emotions emanating from the two are palpable and unforgettable. And their humorous You Must Meet My Wife is a gem. Monika Essens set and projections evoke the time and country setting; panels slide in and out to help make scene changes quick and efficient. Lighting is by Daniel C. Walker, and costumes by Suzanne Young channel the era in which the play occurs. Gremlins, however, nibbled around the fringes of the show. A few light cues were late, an occasional set piece didnt end up where it was supposed to, various noises intruded from backstage, and a necklace came apart offstage, scattering its many round, rolling piece parts in all directions. If the actors noticed these and a few other unexpected intrusions, they hid it well. To many, Sondheim is considered a theater god. If so, Simmons production is a fine offering that I suspect would please him greatly.
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27
Happenings
OUTINGS
Saturday, Dec. 1
Congregation Tchiyah (Jewish Reconstructionist) Shabbat Service and Observance of World AIDS Day Will include a display of The NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt, congregation invited to share names to be remembered, healing prayers, and musical accompaniment by the Bel Canto Choral Society, directed by Martin Mandelbaum. Service organized by Peter Cooper. Refreshments and social will follow. All are welcome and attire is casual. Barrier free bldg. Mondry Bldg., Oak Park Jewish Community Center campus, 15000 W. Ten Mile Rd. (between Greenfield Coolidge), Oak Park. 248-542-0900. Tchiyah.org 10th Anniversary Celebration & Holiday Gathering 6 p.m. All proceeds will be donated to the USO Warrior and Family Care Program. Cocktails, silent auction, dinner, live auction, music and dancing. Tickets are $15-40. Perceptions Saginaw Valley, 4519 River Road, Freeland. PerceptionsSV.org Lesbian Euchre 6 p.m. No partner needed. For beginners to experienced. Come join the fun and meet new friends. Affirmations, 290 W. 9 Mile Road, Ferndale. 586-3035977. [email protected] World AIDS Day: Todd Heywood 6 p.m. Guest speaker Todd Heywood presents Viral Apartheid: The Rise of HIV Exceptionalism. Part of Oaklands World AIDS Day 2012 event series. Gender & Sexuality Center, Oakland University, Rochester. Oakland.edu/GSC The 12 Drags of Christmas 7 p.m. Featuring September Murphy, Deja Van Vartier, Natalie Cole, Hershae Chocolatae, Leah Halston, Sir Walt, Michael Cole and Aurora Sexton. A benefit for Ruth Ellis Center and Mittens for Detroit. Tickets available online. Five15 Media, 515 S Washington, Royal Oak. 248-515-2551. Five15.net
Friday, Dec. 7
Womyns Film Night 7 p.m. Film: Tracy Ullman: Live and Exposed; In this stand-up performance, the multitalented Ullman sums up the highs and lows of a varied career that includes appearances in films (Plenty) as well as sitcoms (Girls on Top). Affirmations, 290 W. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. 248-3987105. Goaffirmations.org/
1. 313-576-5111. DSO.org Flowers of the Lakes; Huron Valley Optimists Club; Triangle Creative Arts A Piano Extravaganza: Tour de Force on Four Grand Pianos Four master pianists and local musicians bring March of the Toys and other songs to life on four grand pianos. Delightful for all ages. Admission: $7-$25. Lakeland High School Performing Arts Center, 1630 Bogie Lake Road, White Lake. Dec. 8 - Dec. 8. 800585-3737. 4-pianos.com Kerrytown Concert House Annual Croissant Concert Enjoy fresh baked croissants and hot coffee while listening to rich festive sounds of traditional brass quintet music. Tickets: $10-30. Kerrytown Concert House, 415 N Fourth Ave., Ann Arbor. 11 a.m. Dec. 1. 734-769-2999. Kerrytownconcerthouse.com Kerrytown Concert House Boom Tic Boom CD release party for Boom Tic Boom, named one of the Top 10 Jazz Albums of 2010. Tickets: $5-30. Kerrytown Concert House, 415 N Fourth Ave., Ann Arbor. 7 p.m. Dec. 2. 734-769-2999. Kerrytownconcerthouse.com Olympia Entertainment Ho Ho Hoeys Rockin Holiday Show Following a sold out performance last year, world renowned rock guitarist Gary Hoey will return to the City Theatre with his signature Ho Ho Hoeys Rockin Holiday Show. Tickets: $33-55. City Theatre, 2301 Woodward Ave., Detroit. 8 p.m. Dec. 7. 800-745-3000. Olympiaentertainment.com Olympia Entertainment Daughtry and 3 Doors Down Multi-platinum rock bands Daughtry and 3 Doors Down are excited to bring their joint 19-date first ever co-headline U.S. tour to the Fox Theatre. Tickets: $35-60. Fox Theatre, 2211 Woodward Ave., Detroit. 7 p.m. Dec. 5. 313471-6611. Olympiaentertainment.com The Ark Ari Hest Tickets: $17.50. The Ark, 316 S. Main St., Ann Arbor. 7:30 p.m. Dec. 2. 734-761-1800. TheArk.org The Ark Cherish The Ladies Celtic Christmas. Tickets: $30. The Ark, 316 S. Main St., Ann Arbor. 8 p.m. Dec. 5. 734761-1800. TheArk.org The Ark Caravan of Thieves Tickets: $15. The Ark, 316 S. Main St., Ann Arbor. 8 p.m. Dec. 8. 734-761-1800. TheArk.org The Ark Melissa Ferrick With special guest Anne Heaton. The Ark, 316 S. Main St., Ann Arbor. 8 p.m. Dec. 7. 734-7611800. TheArk.org
Thursday, Nov. 29
Gender Non-Conformists 7 p.m. A social and discussion group for transgender, genderqueer, gender-neutral and genderexploring individuals. Space also available to significant others. Meets every Thursday. Affirmations, 290 W. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. 248-398-7105. JJenkins@ GoAffirmations.org GoAffirmations.org Resource Center Health Group 7 p.m. LGBTQ and allied teens 13-18. E-mail for more info. Kalamazoo Gay and Lesbian Resource Center, 629 Pioneer St., Kalamazoo. 259-381-2437. Youth@KGLRC. org Kglrc.org
as well as receive information about the disease in a private setting. PRIDE UMDearborn, 4901 Evergreen Road, Dearborn. Facebook.com/Prideumdearborn LanSINGout Rehearsal 7 p.m. LanSINGout Gay Mens Chorus is dedicated to enriching those around them through music, fellowship and community involvement. LanSINGout Gay Mens Chorus, 510 W. Ottawa St., Lansing. 517-490-1746. Info@ lansingout.org Lansingout.org
Rumi $10. MSU Department of Theatre at Arena Theatre, located in the basement of the Auditorium building, Farm Lane and Auditorium Road, East Lansing. Nov. 30 - Dec. 2. 1-800-Wharton. http://theatre. msu.edu The Snow Queen $12-15. Bonstelle Theatre, 3424 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Nov. 30 - Dec. 9. 313-577-2960. Bonstelle.com White As Snow, Red As Blood: The Story of Snow White $7-15. Eastern Michigan University Theatre at Quirk Theatre, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti. Nov. 30 - Dec. 9. 734-487-2282. Emich.edu/emutheatre
Saturday, Dec. 8
Crossroads 7 p.m. Dedicated to serving the needs of transgender individuals. Meets the second Saturday of every month. Affirmations, 290 W. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. 248-398-7105. GoAffirmations.org Chanukah Concert & Jam for Food Justice 8 p.m. Featuring Rabbi Shawn Zevit, Donations of any amount are welcome to cover event costs and benefit great Detroit food justice initiatives. Congregation Tchiyah, 1457 Griswold St., Detroit. Tchiyah.org
Wednesday, Dec. 5
Dykes on Bikes 6:30 p.m. Meets the first Wednesday of every month. Dykes on Bikes, 290 W. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. 248-398-7105. GoAffirmations.org Newly Single Support Group 6:30 p.m. Group for all dealing with the end of a relationship and want to talk - or listen - to others who share similar experiences. Affirmations, 290 W. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. 248-398-7105. Goaffirmations.org United in Anger Screening 7 p.m. Visual AIDSs United in Anger: A History of ACT UP, a new film by director Jim Hubbard, produced by Sarah Schulman and Jim Hubbard for Day With(out) Art/World AIDS Day. Urban Institute for Contemporary Art, 2 W. Fulton, Grand Rapids. 212-627-9855. VisualAids.org
PROFESSIONAL
A Christmas Carol $17-$40. Meadow Brook Theatre, 2200 N. Squirrel Rd., Rochester. Through Dec. 23. 248-3773300. mbtheatre.com A Little Night Music $30-$46. Performance Network Theatre, 120 E. Huron, Ann Arbor. Through Dec. 30. 734663-0681. performancenetwork.org A Paradise of Fools $17 in advance, $20 at the. Detroit Repertory Theatre, 13103 Woodrow Wilson, Detroit. Through Dec. 23. 313-868-1347. detroitreptheatre.com Adult Education: Storytelling After Hours $10. The Acorn Theater, 107 Generations Dr., Three Oaks. Nov. 29. 269756-3879. acorntheater.com Antigone in New York $25. The Elizabeth Theater at Park Bar, 2040 Park Ave., Detroit. Through Jan. 12. 313-444-2294. ParkBarDetroit.com Cancer! The Musical $25. Planet Ant Theatre at Boll Family YMCA Theatre, 1401 Broadway St., Detroit. Through Dec. 15. 313-365-4948. brownpapertickets.com Christmas Belles $15-18. Broadway Onstage, 21517 Kelly Road, Eastpointe. Nov. 30 - Dec. 22. 586-771-6333. Broadwayonstage.com Christmas with the Rat Pack - Live at The Sands $25-75. Fox Theatre, 2211 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Nov. 27 - Dec. 2. 313-471-6611. Olympiaentertainment.com Ebenezer $20-25. Williamston Theatre, 122 S. Putnam St., Williamston. Through Dec. 23. 517-655-7469. WilliamstonTheatre.org Fireside New Play Festival Pay-whatyou-can (suggested $10). Performance Network Theatre, 120 E. Huron, Ann Arbor. Dec. 2 - 5. 734-663-0681. performancenetwork.org Five One Acts by Alan Ball $18. Detroit Ensemble Theatre at Michigan Actors Studio Theatre, 648 E. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. Through Dec. 2. 877-636-3320. DetroitEnsembleTheatre.org Goodnight Desdemona (Good Morning Juliet) $12-30. Hilberry Theatre, 4743 Cass Ave., Detroit. Plays in rotating repertory through Feb. 9. 313-577-2972. Hilberry.com Greetings! $15-18. Two Muses Theatre at Barnes & Noble Booksellers Theatre, 6800 Orchard Lake Road, West Bloomfield. Through Dec. 16. 248-850-9919. TwoMusesTheatre.org Home for the Holidays $28. Dionysus Theatre and Performing Arts Academy at Hartland High School Auditorium, 10635 Dunham Rd., Hartland. Dec. 7 - 23. 517672-6009. diotheatre.com Jekyll & Hyde $39-79. Fisher Theatre, 3011 W. Grand Blvd., Detroit. Nov. 27 - Dec. 2. 313-872-1000. BroadwayinDetroit.com Ordinary Days $29-$32. Tipping Point Theatre, 361 E. Cady St., Northville. Through Dec. 9. 248-347-0003. tippingpointtheatre.com Othello $12-30. Hilberry Theatre, 4743 Cass Ave., Detroit. Plays in rotating
Friday, Nov. 30
Clinical Issues and Sexual Orientation Training Opportunity 8:30 a.m. Register to receive training on social development, legal and health issues, coming out, clinical considerations and more. This event is aimed toward social workers, addictions counselor, psychologists, school counselors, physicians and students. Register via e-mail. Affirmations, 290 W. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. 248-398-7105. Klatosch@ GoAffirmations.org GoAffirmations.org Getting To Zero 10 a.m. Zero infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDSrelated deaths. Activities include free/ confidential testing, STD and syphilis screenings, diabetes, blood pressure and cholesterol tests, displays from HIV/AIDS awareness organizations, workshops on STD prevention and a panel discussion on existing stigmas. Michigan Department of Community Health, 801 Fort St., Detroit. Michigan.gov 50 and Better Friday Group 7 p.m. Designed for those 50 and better looking for an excuse to get out of the house. Goes out every other week or so for miniature golf, a movie, or other activity, per vote. Kalamazoo Gay and Lesbian Resource Center, 629 Pioneer St., Kalamazoo. 269349-4234. PhoenixChurch.org Womyns Film Night 7 p.m. Film: Stray Dogs; Darla Carter lives in the rural south with her handsome, roguish husband, Myers. Myers cant hold a job, drinks too much and has a violent streak, so Darla decides to confront Myers with his misdeeds and asks her sister-in-law, Jolene, to join her for moral support. Affirmations, 290 W. Nine Mile Road, Ferndale. 248-398-7105. Goaffirmations.org
Sunday, Dec. 9
Winter Celebration Potluck 2 p.m. Winter Celebration Potluck is a special monthly meeting. Will still have support groups, but the program portion of the meeting is replaced with the potluck. PFLAG asks that if you are able to, that you bring your favorite dish to pass. Genesee County PFLAG, 2474 S. Ballenger Highway, Flint. 810-496-8302. [email protected] Pflagflint.com
Thursday, Dec. 6
AIDS Awareness Luncheon 12 p.m. Spreading awareness and education. Speakers will discuss first-hand experience with the disease and statistics. Student advocates are also invited to read poems, litanies and short stories of the history of World AIDS Day. As space is limited, RSVP by Dec. 1 (Link available on Facebook). PRIDE UM-Dearborn, 4901 Evergreen Road, Dearborn. Facebook.com/Prideumdearborn United in Anger Screening 5:10 p.m. Visual AIDSs United in Anger: A History of ACT UP, a new film by director Jim Hubbard, produced by Sarah Schulman and Jim Hubbard for Day With(out) Art/ World AIDS Day. Michigan Theater, 603 E. Liberty St., Ann Arbor. 212-627-9855. VisualAids.org Speak Out 7 p.m. Offers a welcoming environment for LGBT people to improve their public speaking and leadership skills. Meets the first and fourth Thursday of every month. Jim Toy Community Center, 319 Braun Ct., Ann Arbor. 734-995-9867. [email protected]
CLASSICAL
Sunday, Dec. 2
Peace & Justice Banquet 4 p.m. Michelle Alexander is author of The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. VIP/Honorary Host: $200, Patron: $125. Central United Methodist Church, 400 Renaissance Dr., Detroit. 313965-5422 ext. 13. CentralUMchurch.com
Bach Festival Concert Series 43rd Annual BachFest Christmas Feature works by Bach, Handel, Mendelssohn, and more. Lyric soprano Rhea Olivacce will make her Kalamazoo debut with a performance of O, Holy Night and as the featured soloist in Moses Hogans Glory to the Newborn King. Familiar carols and an audience sing-along complete this often sold-out concert and much beloved family holiday tradition. Tickets: $22. Stetson Chapel, Kalamazoo College, Kalamazoo. 4 p.m. Dec. 2. KalamazooBachFestival.org Detroit Symphony Orchestra Romeo & Juliet Tchaikovskys Romeo and Juliet, Ades Violin Concerto and Prokofievs Romeo and Juliet. Tickets: $15+. Max M. Fisher Music Center, 3711 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Dec. 8 - Dec. 9. 313-576-5111. DSO.org Fort Street Chorale Handels Messiah The Fort Street Chorale and Chamber Orchestra present their 34th annual performances of G. F. Handels Messiah. Under the musical direction of founder Edward Kingins, the Fort Street Chorale has grown from a handful of volunteers in 1971 to a musically proficient ensemble of some 90 voices. Fort Street Presbyterian Church, 631 W. Fort St., Detroit. Dec. 1 & 2. 313-865-6306. Fortstreet.org Rackham Symphony Choir Too Hot To Handel The one-night-only annual holiday concert. Tickets: $18-85. Detroit Opera House, 1526 Broadway, Detroit. Dec. 12 Dec. 1. 313-237-7464. Michiganopera.org
Tuesday, Dec. 4
AIDS Testing - UM-Dearborn 11 a.m. This is an opportunity for students, faculty, and staff of UM-Dearborn to get free testing courtesy of the AIDS Partnership Michigan
CIVIC/COMMUNITY THEATER
Christmas Belles $11-12. The Twin City Players, 600 W. Glenlord Road, St. Joseph. Nov. 30 - Dec. 23. 269-429-0400. TwinCityPlayers.org Four Scenes: A Hungarian Trilogy $6-10. Fancy Pants Theater at Studio 246, N. Kalamazoo Mall, Kalamazoo. Nov. 30 - Dec. 9. 269-599-6437. FancyPantsTheater.webs.com Miracle on 34th Street $28. The Croswell, 129 E. Maumee St., Adrian. Nov. 30 - Dec. 9. 517-264-7469. croswell.org Nuncrackers $19. Kalamazoo Civic Theatre at Civic Auditorium, 329 S. Park St., Kalamazoo. Nov. 23 - Dec. 9. 269343-1313. KazooCivic.com The Hollow PTD Productions at Riverside Arts Center, 76 North Huron Street, Ypsilanti. Dec. 6 - Dec. 15. 734-483-7345. ptdproductions.com The 1940s Radio Hour $16-18. Farmington Players, 32332 W. Twelve Mile Road, Farmington Hills. Nov. 30 - Dec. 22. 248-553-2955. FarmingtonPlayers.org
THEATER
Editors Pick
Detroits Bonstelle Theatre will open an adaptation of one of Hans Christian Andersens The Snow Queen just in time for the holiday season. The show runs Nov. 30 to Dec. 9, and children get a special ticket price of only $6. The Snow Queen is a tale of a young heroines journey to rescue a young boy from the clutches of the evil Snow Queen. The heroine must traverse through a world filled with a number of eccentric and dangerous characters to find and free the boy. Using puppets, music and supernatural magic, The Snow Queen is a show that celebrates the ideals of childhood. The Bonstelles production will include a preshow craft activity for children starting 45 minutes prior to curtain time. Paper roses and snowflakes will be made in the upstairs lobby and used by children in the audience to interact with the show. For tickets ($12-$15), call the Bonstelle Theatre Box Office at 313-577-2960.
CONCERTS
Detroit Symphony Orchestra Rachmaninioff & Tchaikovsky Khachaturians Suite from Masquerade, Rachmaninoffs Piano Concerto No. 2 and Tchaikovskys Symphony No. 2 Little Russian. Tickets: $15+. Max M. Fisher Music Center, 3711 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Nov. 29 - Nov. 30. 313-576-5111. DSO.org Detroit Symphony Orchestra Al Jarreau with the DSO The smooth style. The soothing voice. It is - unmistakably - Al Jarreau. The only artist ever to win Grammys in three categories. All of your silky Al Jarreau favorites, from Mornin to Moonlighting, plus holiday favorites! Tickets: $35. Max M. Fisher Music Center, 3711 Woodward Ave., Detroit. 8 p.m. Dec.
COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY THEATER
www.PrideSource.com
Ian As We Speak
Across
1 Testy response, or testicles 5 Antislavery author 10 Made it to second base, so to speak 14 Stage piece 15 Part of a makeup kit 16 Kitchen foray 17 First name in lesbian fiction 18 Gay porn director Francis 19 Java vessels 20 Janis Ian song about biracial love 23 Little fairies 24 Leave as is 25 Thats a wrap! 28 Bring shame to 32 After 20-Across, book about Janis Ian 38 Theyre performing, in Fame 39 Barbeque locale 40 Peril for Patty Sheehan 41 Neros thus 42 Pink slip actions 44 Proud Mary singer Turner 45 Dickhead 47 Lake Wobegone Days author 49 Shakespeares dusk 50 Three, in Napoli
51 Janis Ian song about teenage angst 56 ___ Let the Sun Go Down on Me 58 Cosmetics name 59 Where orientation is determined, some say 62 Actress Skye 63 Turner that goes either way 64 Tibets setting 65 Moved ones ass 66 Comes over 67 Winetasters guess
Down
1 Morning Edition airer 2 Exodus author Leon 3 The Tin Mans best friend 4 O beautiful for ___ skies (Katharine Lee Bates) 5 What hibernating bears do 6 Fouls, to the Pinball Wizard 7 Nothing but 8 Houdinis birth name 9 How Homo sapiens walks 10 Gay nocturnal flyer? 11 Banjoist Scruggs 12 Swedish soprano Jenny 13 Scores by David Kopay 21 ___ the end of my rope!
22 Enjoy phone sex 25 Stock up on 26 Line from Porter 27 First-rate mate 29 March follower 30 Plumed military cap 31 Keyed up 33 Willa Cather classic 34 Setters sound 35 When I see ___ will believe ... 36 Porking noise? 37 Eager beavers 42 Montagues, to Capulets 43 k.d. lang record label 46 Made a profit of 48 Street named for writer Harper? 51 Shakespeares Hathaway 52 Brandy bottle letters 53 Sundances Place 54 Its a gas on Broadway 55 What Sam twitched on Bewitched 56 Bad-mouth 57 Caveman of comics 60 Woodys ex 61 Stonewall Inn, for one See solution on pg. 32
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Happenings
Continued from p. 28
repertory through Jan. 17. 313-577-2972. Hilberry.com Plaid Tidings $26-$32. The Encore Musical Theatre Company, 3126 Broad St., Dexter. Through Dec. 23. 734-268-6200. theencoretheatre.org Puppet Scrooge $12 adult, $10 senior & student. Matrix Theatre Company, 2730 Bagley, Detroit. Nov. 30 - Dec. 16. 313967-0999. matrixtheatre.org Shakespeares Will $48. Wharton Center, Michigan State University, East Lansing. Nov. 29 - Dec. 1. 517-432-2000. WhartonCenter.com Superior Donuts $18.50-42. The Purple Rose Theatre Company, 137 Park St., Chelsea. Through Dec. 15. 734-433-7673. purplerosetheatre.org
Editors Pick
Focusing on the tension and overlap between these two strong currents in 20th-century art, the juxtapositions and points of convergence in Grand Rapids Art Museums Real/Surreal encourage fresh new ways of looking at some of the most dynamic works of art of the 30s, 40s and 50s in America. The exhibition offers viewers the exciting opportunity to actively reexamine categories that previously seemed oppositional. Artists whose styles are traditionally described as realist, such as Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth, distill from reality using composition and style to convey an ambiguous or unsettling mood, finding the uncanny in the everyday. Artists typically known as surrealists, such as Man Ray and Yves Tanguy, are represented with otherworldly yet sometimes familiar images. In between is the work of the magic realists, such as George Tooker and Jared French, who render reality in a way that makes it seem alien. Real/Surreal is organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, and includes over 60 paintings, drawings, photographs and prints. This exhibit runs until Jan. 13 at GRAM, 101 Monroe Center, Grand Rapids, 49503. For more information, go to ArtMuseumGR.org.
Project at Mix Studio Theater, 130 W. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti. Through Dec. 16. 734-961-8704. TheNewTheatreProject.org Nov. 17 - March 17. 877-462-7262. CranbrookArtMuseum.org Flint Institute of Arts Worth a Thousand Words: American Political Cartoons 1120 E. Kearsley, Flint. Nov. 3 - Jan. 6. Flintarts.org Flint Institute of Arts Drawing Together: International Cartoons 1120 E. Kearsley, Flint. Nov. 1 - Dec. 30. Flintarts.org Grand Rapids Art Museum Real/Surreal 101 Monroe Center, Grand Rapids. Nov. 1 Jan. 13. 616-831-2904. ArtMuseumGr.org Grand Rapids Art Museum Salvador Dalis Twelve Tribes of Israel 101 Monroe Center, Grand Rapids. Nov. 1 - Jan. 13. 616-831-2904. ArtMuseumGr.org Grand Rapids Art Museum Robert McCann: New History Paintings 101 Monroe Center, Grand Rapids. Nov. 1 Jan. 13. 616-831-2904. ArtMuseumGr.org Kalamazoo Institute of Arts Great Lakes Pastel Society National Show 2012 314 S. Park, Kalamazoo. Nov. 1 - Jan. 8. 269-349-7775. KIArts.org Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit Anri Sala 4454 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Sep. 7 - Dec. 30. 313-832-6622. Mocadetroit.org The Detroit Institute of Arts Faberge: The Rise & Fall 2100 Woodward Ave., Detroit. Nov. 1 - Jan. 21. 313-833-7900. DIA.org University of Michigan Museum of Art Jesper Just 525 South State Street, Ann Arbor. Aug. 21 - Dec. 9. 734-763-4186. Umma.umich.edu
Meet Russia!
12-year-old shorthair weighing in at 10.5 pounds, Russia is the ideal lap cat. Friendly and sweet, Russia enjoys a quiet atmosphere and would do best in a less active home that allows him to spend a lot of time curled up with you. Come meet this nice guy today! The adoption fee includes microchipping, sterilization, age-appropriate vaccinations, the MHS Adoption Guarantee and much more. For more information, please visit or call the MHS Rochester Hills Center for Animal Care at (248) 852-7420 and provide the pet ID number, 733680. Photo courtesy Heidi Waeschle-Gabel.
The Homosexuals $10-20. The Ringwald Theatre, 22742 Woodward Ave., Ferndale. Through Dec. 10. TheRingwald.com The Marvelous Wonderettes $20-$22. The Box Theater, 90 Macomb Place, Mount Clemens. Through Dec. 8. 586-954-2677. theboxtheater.com The Snow Queen $10 adult, $5 child. PuppetArt at Detroit Puppet Theater, 25 E. Grand River Ave., Detroit. Dec. 1 - Jan. 26. 313-961-7777. PuppetArt.org The Snow Queen $8. Wharton Centers Pasant Theatre, 750 E. Shaw Lane, East Lansing. Dec. 2. 1-800-Wharton. whartoncenter.com The Ugly Duckling and The Tortoise & the Hare $17 adult, $7 child. Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts, 350 Madison St., Detroit. 4 p.m. Dec. 2. 313887-8501. musichall.org Wolf Cry Wolf $10-15. The New Theatre
Charles H. Wright Museum Visions of Our 44th President 315 E. Warren, Detroit. Nov. 1 - April 30. 313-494-5853. Thewright.org Cranbrook Art Museum From Here to There: Alec Soths America 39221 Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills. Nov. 17 - March 30. 877-462-7262. CranbrookArtMuseum.org Cranbrook Art Museum Soo Sunny Park: Vapor Slide 39221 Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills.
ARTNAROUND
Classifieds
101-ANNOUNCEMNTS LGBT AA MEETINGS
Ann Arbor-Friday
7:30 pm, St. Andrews Episcopal Church Gay AA, 306 N. Division St. Closed/Discussion.
Ferndale-Wednesday
8 p.m., Diversity Wednesday Gay AA, St. Lukes Episcopal Church, 540 W. Lewiston @ Livernois. Closed/Discussion.
Ferndale-Saturday
1 p.m. Brown Baggers Gay AA, Affirmations, 290 West 9 Mile Rd. Closed/Discussion. 8 p.m. Go After Your Sobriety Gay AA, Drayton Ave Presbyterian Church, 2441 Pinecrest. Closed/ Discussion.
Bloomfield HillsThursday
7:00 pm ,Sobriety in The Hills Gay AA, Kirk in The Hills Church, 1340 W. Long Lake Rd. Closed/ Discussion.
Detroit-Tuesday / Friday
8:00 pm, Downtown Gay AA, Fort Street Presbyterian Church, 631 West For t St. Closed/ Discussion (Open 1st Friday of every month).
Livonia-Friday
8 p.m., West Side Storys Gay AA, Providence Medical Center, 7 Mile & Newburgh. Closed/ Discussion.
Warren-Monday
7:30 p.m., Eastside Serenity Gay AA, Faith-Trinity United Church of Christ, 12221 Martin Rd. East of Hoover. Closed/Discussion.
Farmington HillsMonday
8:00 pm, Suburban West Gay AA, Universalist Unitarian Church, 25301 Halstead (Between 10 & 11 Mile Roads) Closed / Discussion.
www.PrideSource.com
www.PrideSource.com
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Classifieds
Continued from p. 30
! e r he
Assistant Needed
Blind gay male needs parttime male with car for store shopping and attending civil rights meetings. References required. Call Ray 313-5810888.
Professional Swedish
Auburn Hills Kansonn 248-672-0669 [email protected]
www.PrideSource.com
www.PrideSource.com
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in on the screenplay and stage version, while the movie stars Matt Bomer, Jerry OConnell, Marisa Coughlin, Patrick Wilson and Liv Tyler. True to its name and set in the futuristic 1970s, its convoluted soap opera plot involves space travelers named Misty and Sunshine and involves robots, bisexual secrets, Valium addiction, Womens Lib, asteroid assaults and a lot of feathered hair, pretty much everything you want from outer space that isnt already named Buck Rogers. Check film festival listings first, but itll eventually crash down into an arthouse near you. Or possibly one in a galaxy far, far away.
www.PrideSource.com