Ambush Magazine Volume 36 Issue 03

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Volume 36 Issue 03 Jan 30 · Feb 12, 2018 Facebook.COM/AmbushMag

Award Winning

Happy Mardi Gras & Valentine’s Day! @AmbushMag

Celebrating LGBTQ Life, Music & Culture! Gulf South LGBTQ Entertainment/Travel Guide · 36th Anniversary 1982-2018 · For Adults Only


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POUR ME SOMETHING

Mister! The Music of

Senator Ken Fridays 7:30–9:30pm

Live Shows Play Girlz

hosted by Gia GiaVanni

Fridays 10–11:30pm

Catch Krewe of St. Anne MARDI GRAS DAY featuring DJ Ken

The Music of the

Vanessa Carr Band Saturdays 7:30–9:30pm

Golden

The Official Home of Southern Decadence.

Jubilee: Dragging for Jesus with Reba Douglas

Divas R Us starring Monica

Synclaire-Kennedy

Saturdays 10–11:30pm

Sundays 5:00–7:00pm

Best Happy Hour in the Quar ter!

THE

Lantern

1239 Royal St. New Orleans • facebook.com/GoldenLanternBar

HAPPY HOUR 8AM – 8PM DAILY

N E V E R A C O V E R AT THE GOLDEN LANTERN

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The “Official” Dish by Frank Pizzolato, Publisher Email: frank@ambushpublishing.com

Congratulations to Jason Waguespack and Jeff Morgan and The Forum for Equality, as well as all hosts and sponsors of the very successful fundraising reception honoring Governor & Mrs. John Bel Edwards. Jason and Jeff opened their uptown home for the evening and it could not have been a more present event. It could not be more fitting to say Thank You, and offer our continued support for our Governor. He is literally all that stands between holding on to what small progress we have made in Louisiana and a complete retreat to the dark ages. When you look at most of the state wide elected officials in this state and the rabid religious fanaticism of the

people who vote for them there is no way we can turn our backs on this Governor. We may not agree with him on every issue, but he has stood up with us and for us in defending the full measure of our citizenship, his fight for the LGBT Executive Order protections is on the right side of history and the right side of the law. We are heading into the “home stretch” for this Carnival Season and Mardi Gras, guests from all over are heading in to the city for the fun and frivolity that we do so well. A good time to be had by all. Looking ahead, we are making preparations for the Gay Easter Parade, always a good time and a reason to spend Easter Sunday after-

noon in the Quarter. Easter Bonnets optional!! We learned this week of yet another death of someone who was a very important part of the “extended family” that has made up the gay community in New Orleans. Johnny Jackson, former State Legislator, former New Orleans City Council member, and a GREAT FRIEND to the LGBT community in New Orleans. He was one of the earliest and most steadfast supporters of the fight for justice for LGBT folks in New Orleans. Our thoughts and prayers are extended to his family, and our undying gratitude will always be with him. A life well lived and time well spent!!!

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Snap Paparazzi

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A Community within Communities

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Commentary by Noel Twilbeck

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Is it Mardi Gras Yet?

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Pride & Ambush Partnership

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Snap Paparazzi

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Commentary

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Announcement

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2017 in Memoriam

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Moments in Gay History

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Prospect 4

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Under the Gaydar

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Snap Paparazzi

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Book Review

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Snap Paparazzi

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Mardi Gras Season Parade Schedule

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LGBTQ Owned/Friendly Business Directory

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Snap Paparazzi

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Trodding the Boards

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Snap Paparazzi

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AWARD WINNING: Saints & Sinners Literary Festival Hall of Fame/2015, Louisiana Excellence Award: Media & Internet/2014, New Orleans Print Media Award/2014, 25th NO/AIDS Task Force Humanitas Award/2013, New Orleans Print Media Award/2013, Krewe of Mwindo Media Honoree/2009, Krewe of Petronius Carnival Spirit of Gay Mardi Gras XLVIII Award/2009, Forum For Equality Acclaim Awards X Media Recipient/2008, NO/AIDS Task Force Prometheus “Torch of Truth” [media] Award/2001 Email: info@ambushpublishing.com ANNUAL READERSHIP OVER 1 MILLION: 260,000+ Print/780,000+ Online

Inside this Issue of Ambush Pride Side

Facebook.COM/AmbushMag Gulf South Entertainment/Travel Guide Since 1982 • Texas-Florida Official Gay Easter Parade Guide© Official Gay Mardi Gras Guide© Official Gay New Orleans Guide© Official Pride Guide© Official Southern Decadence Guide©

CIRCULATION: Alabama - Mobile Florida - Pensacola Louisiana - Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Lake Charles, Metairie, New Orleans, Slidell Mississippi - Bay St. Louis, Biloxi

Job Opportunities Ambush Magazine is growing!

Freelance & Contributing Writers Wanted

We want to hear from you if you are a working or aspiring journalist interested in covering topics meaningful to the LGBTQ community.

Snap Paparazzi Photographer Wanted

Do you frequent the LGBTQ bars and events? We want to hear from you if you are interested in regularly covering the bars and events.

If you are interested, please email your resume, cover letter, and portfolio to info@ambushpublishing.com

Gulf South LGBTQ Entertainment & Travel Guide Since 1982 New Orleans, Louisiana info@ambushpublishing.com

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STAFF: PUBLISHER/EDITOR/PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Frank Pizzolato, New Orleans GULF SOUTH/NEW ORLEANS AD SALES Jim Tomeny, New Orleans THEATRE/PERFORMING ARTS CRITIC Brian Sands AD REPS/JOURNALISTS/PHOTOGRAPHERS Misti Gaiter, Tony Leggio, Hubert S Monkeys, Felicia Phillips, Frank Perez, Rev. Bill Terry-New Orleans Miss Cie-Mobile, AL National Advertising Rep: Rivendell Media 212.242.6863 Ambush Mag is published on alternate Tuesdays of each month by Ambush Publishing. Advertising, Copy & Photo DEADLINE is alternate Tuesdays, 4pm, prior to publication week, accepted via e-mail only: info@ambushpublishing.com, except for special holidays. The Publisher assumes no responsibility for the claims of advertisers and has the right to reject any advertising. The inclusion of an individual’s name or photograph in this publication implies nothing about that individual’s sexual orientation. Letters, stories, etc., appearing herein are not necessarily the opinion of the Publisher or Staff of AMBUSH Mag. Subscription rate is $45 for 1/2 Year; $75 for 1 year. Sample Copy is $3 First Class Mail. ©1982-2017 AMBUSH PUBLISHING LLC, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. NOTHING HEREIN MAY BE REPRODUCED WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION OF THE PUBLISHER INCLUDING AD LAYOUTS, MAPS and PHOTOS.


The Pride Side We are thrilled to partner with Ambush Magazine with ongoing updates about the incredible people, groups and resources in New Orleans’ vibrant LGBT+ community. New Orleans Pride fully embraces the message of “One CommUNITY” as we celebrate our history and promote the future prosperity of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast Region. We use public awareness and education about the LGBT+ community as a way to combat discrimination and the fear of being different. Our programs, seminars and events leading up to, and during Pride weekend, include everyone from all walks of life. We spread not only the message of being proud of who you are, but also of how proud we ALL are of our incredible city. New Orleans Pride raises funds for two very important reasons: to host our annual New Orleans Pride Festival, and to bring our message of inclusion and acceptance to the next generation of New Orleanians via the New Orleans chapter of Stand For The Silent, which aims to identify and eliminate bullying in schools and among young people. At New Orleans Pride, we welcome everyone and want everyone to feel included. We strive to create a sense of belonging and shared pur-

pose. We celebrate the uniqueness of all individuals while bringing people together as One CommUNITY. The New Orleans Pride Festival is June 8-10, 2018 and is celebrating the Tricentennial with the theme 300 Years: History + Diversity = 1 CommUNITY. We would love to have you join our volunteer-based team! If interested contact us at NewOrleansPrideFestival.com. New Orleans Pride is a registered 501c3 non-profit organization. The New Orleans Pride Organization is excited to announce our January Entertainer of the Month, Dominique DeLorean. Dominique hails from Shreveport, LA, currently lives in Metairie, and entertains across the entire state of Louisiana. She has been in the art form of female impersonation for the past 24 years, which confuses us, because we thought she WAS 24 years old! We caught up with Dominique to ask her a few questions about her goals, achievements, and what she loves most about New Orleans. How it all began: “I met my drag mother, Shree’ Welch the first night I set foot in a gay bar. She taught me to base tease a wig (Laughing) and most importantly, how

the business works and to always be humble.” What do you love most about New Orleans? “The culture and the good food.” What is your favorite music to perform? “Whatever moves me! I mainly love the 1980’s.” Where can we find Dominique performing? “Ladies of Oz” at Oz New Orleans every Sunday and I have a monthly show at Billy’s Lounge in Slidell, Louisiana

• • • • • • • • • • •

Miss Gay Louisiana, US of A (2016) Miss Gay Louisiana America (2005) Miss Gay America (Top 10, 2004) Miss Gay Four Seasons LA, US of A (2016) Miss Gay Shreveport Miss Central Station Miss Gay Northwest Louisiana Miss Gay Metairie America Miss Gay New Orleans America Miss Gay Splash America Miss Gay South Louisiana Globe

Photo Credit: Glamour Puss by Lana O’Day

What is a major goal you have set for yourself? “To become Miss Gay America someday because that’s where I got my education and my molding. Although I have my time to bow out someday, that’s still a goal nevertheless. Even if I don’t reach that goal, I’m still grateful for my accomplishments and opportunities & I will leave with no regrets because everyone has their own destinies in life.” What titles have you earned:

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Snap Paparazzi From Oz New Orleans & Drag Queen Bingo at Tulane | Photos provided by Persana Shoulders

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A Community within Communities by The Very Rev. Bill Terry+ Email: fr.bill@stannanola.org

Alone in the Crowd

This is the GRAND MARDI GRAS ISSUE! It is a season that we celebrate each year. Carnival time! As a native of this glorious, thread-bare, quixotic city I sometimes enjoy and at other times hide from the mayhem. I must say that I do enjoy Krewe du vieux! All of that said, has anyone wandered down the street in the midst of the crowd and not felt a buzz, not gotten a lift, in fact have felt perhaps “left out” somehow? I imagine more people than one might expect. Increasingly our community is being assaulted with social isolation. Even more deeply and more toxic is a thing that has permeated humanity since the earlies times…loneliness. Can someone die of loneliness? The answer is YES. Now I write this at an odd time of the year. It would appear that Carnival is a time when we are least apt to feel lonely. Yet, I suspect that is not the case. Have you ever been in a room filled with people, many of whom you may know, and felt lonely? I suspect that the answer, at least for some, is “yes.” Medical researchers are starting to understand loneliness as a health issue. So much so is the evidence that loneliness is toxic that the U.K. has appointed a “Minister of Loneliness” to deal with the growing epidemic of loneliness. Here are some of the biological health risks of loneliness: • Elevated blood pressure that if chronic can lead to dementia and other related illnesses. • Coronary heart disease. • Chronic inflammation. • Premature risk of mortality. • Obesity, chronic drinking (stop the wise cracks), and loss of social skills. “There is robust evidence that social isolation and loneliness significantly increase risk for premature mortality, and the magnitude of the risk exceeds that of many leading health indicators,” Julianne Holt-Lunstad, a professor of psychology at Brigham Young Univer-

sity in Utah, said in a statement. Our community social institutions are starting to fade. The day when the “safe place” was the local gay bar is slowly eroding. Stop weeping in your cups m’dears it will all be ok! Just different. Gay bars provided venues for people to get to know each other well…yes maybe too well sometimes. But none the less relationships were forged in these ‘savannah watering holes.’ But with a liberalizing general public where being gay is quickly becoming ‘no big deal.’ The social necessity of Gay Bars is fading. Who knows what if anything will replace them outside of social media. AND NO…GRINDER … is not a sufficient replacement for being humanly present, physical there with someone. GRIDER and even texting can be tool for connecting but it does not replace human engagement! Electronic media is only a pale shadow of who and what we are. So, loneliness will remain and perhaps increasing over the near term. Ageing Queens will become more isolated and younger bucks will become more inwardly focused how that will play out is hard to say. Recently I had the pleasure of attending the Amon Ra ball. I will also be honored to attend the Ball Masque for the Lord’s. I encourage joining one of the several remaining Krewe’s as a preventative from isolation and loneliness. Over time real relationships and caring are fostered in these types of setting. Yes, they are and can be particular to the LGBTQ community and certainly for the next decade or so it is still important to be a community within communities because our society while liberalizing is not quite there yet. So, these clubs offer both a social meeting space and a purpose of identity that remains important. As a priest of I strongly suggest church or houses of worship that are really and honestly inclusive and diverse. Being liberal and being honestly diverse and inclusive are two

different critters. A liberal church may not share any disparaging remarks or theologies that would be politically or socially averse to being gay; BUT, that does not mean that such places are inclusive. So, to become part of a family and lay down roots, which is what churches are supposed to be about, find an inclusive church that is diverse. St. Anna’s is one such church. Not only that but it has powerful missions that add purpose to our social engagement with each other. A shared or common cause can very often be the setting for prosperous friendships. Churches that are inclusive, warm, with a mission are great places to fend off isolation and loneliness. You don’t necessarily have to buy into the theology but you can be a part of the community and in so doing become part of a larger family. At the end of the day be mindful of isolation even among the parades, floats, ball masque, and revelry. Stand-

ing in the midst of noise can mask a loneliness that isolates and has deep implications for both spiritual and physical health. Understand, if you will, that texting is a convenience but it is really not relational. That snap chat, facetime, and grinder are only tools of communication they are vehicles of human engagement. We are hardwired to be social yes even the most reclusive of us need to know that someone out there cares and shares our paths with us. We are not meant to be alone. Yet, our culture is moving increasingly into a loneliness that is pervasive. Please, friends, reach out and make a friend and be a friend and let none of us be alone. He said, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid [or alone].”

Commentary by Noel Twilbeck With our frozen temperatures hovering around in the third week of January and wreaking havoc on our city and in our lives, you may have missed a bit of chill coming from Washington. An icy front blew through that week aimed squarely at the LGBTQ community. CrescentCare, one of the largest nonprofit health care providers, cannot sit by in silence without responding to the current turn of events. In late December we heard that leaders of the CDC told employees to nix using words like “transgender” and “diversity” and by year’s end that the President’s Advisory Council on HIV/ AIDS was disbanded after almost a year into the Trump administration. Certainly, it may seem like there is a progression of events happening that smack the face of the LGBTQ community, but the third happening is so disturbing (but not surprising) in this series which is cause to sound the alarm. As the icy front started to pass through New Orleans, little did we know that Washington’s ice storm was brewing. On January 19as we started to thaw, the chill descended from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in the form of the new Conscience and Religious Freedom Division(CRFD) in the HHS Office of Civil Rights (OCR). This entity is charged with “restoring federal enforcement of our nation’s laws that protect the fundamental and unalienable rights of conscience and religious freedom.” The Trump Administration is pro-

viding federal cover for health care workers to deny care to the LGBTQ community and for any reproductive health procedures in which they object on “moral” grounds. “We See You,” and we are here for you. For 35 years now, NO/AIDS Task Force, now known as CrescentCare, has been here for the LGBTQ community, and with greater force since becoming CrescentCare by offering comprehensive health care to all. This issue is important to us and we are on a vigilant watch. Too much progress has been made over the past decade not only in HIV advances, but also in the fight for equality across the country. Our message at CrescentCare has always been one of inclusivity and acceptance, and we will continue to see anyone and everyone for the multi-services our heath care facilities provide. In this issue of Ambush, we have begun a series of affirming ads called, “We See You” in response to this administration’s attempt to diminish us and push us back into the darkness of the past. While you may be able to erase words from being used, you cannot erase people, our place in society or the progress we have made! We see you and we, at CrescentCare, will always be here for you! Noel Twilbeck is the CEO of CrescentCare, a Federally Qualified Health Center that grew out of NO/AIDS Task Force.

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Is It Mardi Gras Already? by Elisa Cool If you’re like me, you’ve got friends outside of New Orleans (or new to New Orleans) asking “Is it Mardi Gras already?” Here’s a handy explanation/ retort. Dear Non-New Orleans Friends: You’ve got Mardi Gras wrong. Many folks think Mardi Gras is the day, prior to Ash Wednesday, where everyone drinks heavily, fights for beads, and topless ladies climb greased poles on Bourbon Street. This is only half true. (side note all of those things are available any time of the year on Bourbon but said topless, greased pole ladies are indoors and there’s a twodrink minimum). Mardi Gras is actually part of a season, Carnival season to be exact. And, we have Catholics to thank for it. The season kicks off on the last day of Christmas and runs until the start of Ash Wednesday. It’s sort of a reverse Advent or pre-Lent, Lent. It’s an opportunity to get all the evils out of your system after celebrating the birth of Christ before we remember the uncomfortable part where he was brutally tortured and died for our sins. Sort of a Halloween night that lasts for many many nights. It all starts with the last (12th) day of Christmas which is called the Feast of Epiphany. This is the day the three kings “of Orient” stopped traveling from afar, because they’d literally found Jesus. Hows that for #first? To some, this celebration is known

as Kings Day and so we kick off carnival / Mardi Gras by a parade that night, known as 12th night. The festivities are led by a Joan of Arc parade in which people dress like Monty Python characters and celebrate the brave life of Joan and other notable saints. Confusing? Yes. But girl power and all that. We toast each other and stuff our faces with a lumpy doughnut-shaped cake, covered in sugar that’s green, purple, and gold with a plastic baby inside. This is called King Cake. It’s delicious. And yeah, he who finds the baby is - you guessed it - king. Just like the dudes in the song. If this is all sounding a bit twisted, you’re not ready for Nola. (Nola is what we locals call New Orleans for short, only the Zatarans guy says ‘Nawlins). So... Kings Day. It has several parades on floats, on foot, and on streetcars and ends in fireworks. It sets off a series of amazing days and weekends in which literally dozens of parades take place. These include the adorable, quirky, political, and raunchy but are not limited to: • the light show productions including Harry Connick Junior that you see on TV • the Star Wars themed Chewbaccus parade • the dog led Barkus parade • the lady led parade where the trophy catch (called a throw) is a shoe • the day drinking parade where the

prized throw is a plunger • the hipster parade where costumes are made of beans • the miniature parade where every float is a shoe box • the African American parade where black float riders wear black face • the ancient parade with torches where old dudes wear hoods and ride horses I’m not making any of this up. I’m outstandingly creative but nowhere near as creative as a century plus of compounded and refined New Orleans history. After Kings Day the abject silliness goes on for weeks. It includes balls, drinking, king cakes, fancy dinners, more drinking, more king cakes, costumes, fancy lunches with - yep drinking, and plenty of non-fancy shenanigans too (including drinks and king cake). Carnival ends at exactly 11:59pm on Fat Tuesday, which is English for... you guessed it... Mardi Gras. Gras means fat (as in #I’mSoGras). Mardi means Tuesday so use the term “Mardi Gras Day” sparingly like when you’re trying to make a song rhyme.... or never. Fat Tuesday/Mardi Gras is the day before Ash Wednesday which of course kicks off the 40 days of pre-Easter atonement called Lent. The cops fill the streets and send everyone home. And everyone complies because, well, they’re either good Catholics or their livers would like them to be.

Now if you’re following your lunar calendar you’ll note the date of Easter floats. Yep. It’s based on the phases of the moon and not our modern calendar. How’s that for the Catholic Church being inclusive of crazy pagan traditions? Why’s this matter when it comes to Mardi Gras? Glad you asked. It means Mardi Gras floats. Thus, the Carnival season varies in length each year. So while it always starts on Jan 6 it can be as short as three weeks or many many more. This year is a short year ending on February 13th. That means New Orleans will have lower expenses for bead clean up and less tourism revenue. For the rest of us lowly citizens, it will mean we will party our butts off till midnight, go to church to get blessed, and then drag our boos out for Valentine’s dinner this year. Valentine was also a Saint and thus Catholic but that’s another story. So to answer the question, “is it Mardi Gras already?” Yep, and it will be until Valentine’s Day. Which... sadly... means a compact season for us. The question then will be “is it over already?”

New Orleans Pride and Ambush Magazine Announce 2018 Partnership New Orleans Pride is pleased to announce a community unifying 2018 partnership with Ambush Magazine. As you know, the New Orleans Pride organization, which was founded in 2011, works tirelessly to not only produce the annual Pride Festival and Parade (held this year June 8-10), but also strives to raise awareness and educate on the effects of bullying. To be partnering with Ambush Magazine, which launched in 1982 and is the oldest and only surviving regional LGBTQ publication serving the Gulf South, is not only an honor, but a fantastic way to further maintain and grow New Orleans’ thriving LGBT community as it progresses into a new age. A key element of this partnership will entail organic cross-promotion in an effort to better publicize all of the many diverse LGBT events happening in New Orleans, and surrounding

areas. You’ll also notice entertaining and thought provoking articles written by the New Orleans Pride Board Members popping up frequently in upcoming issues of Ambush Magazine. We are thrilled for what’s to come and excited to continue working towards a unified New Orleans together. Don’t forget to mark your calendars for the New Orleans Pride kick-off on June 8th! Are You Coming? Pictured: Ambush Publisher, Frank Pizzolato, New Orleans Pride President, Lonnie Cheramie, Ambush Rep, Reed Wendorf

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Snap Paparazzi From Oz New Orleans | Photos provided by Persana Shoulders, Mark David & eyeLucius

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Commentary by Frank Perez Email: f.perez@sbcglobal.net

On Christians and Shitholes

Donald Trump’s recent “shithole” comment about countries comprised mostly of brown people is the latest confirmation of decent people’s worst fears about the megalomaniac currently occupying the White House, namely that he is ignorant, crude, racist, and generally despicable. The comment came as no surprise to those who have long since resigned themselves to the fact Trump is a national disgrace and an utter embarrassment. Nor was the irony of an asshole who constantly spouts bullshit making such a remark lost on thinking people. Of course, the crass statement was a big hit with his supporters, who share his bigoted views—a sad reality that caused me to once again consider his voters and ask yet again, who in the hell are these people? The answer is almost as scary as Trump himself. Four out of five white Evangelical Christians voted for Trump and white fundamentalist Christians constitute the majority of those still supporting him. This bizarre fact goes beyond what we already knew about the hypocrisy of right-wing religious zealots. Their stubborn support of a man who is the antithesis of everything Christ was and preached evokes a colossal WTF? They claim they find his personal character and conduct offensive, yet they are perfectly willing to overlook his potty-mouth, insatiable greed, ugly

intolerance, unabashed lust, and supreme selfishness because he advocates policies they agree with. In other words, the ends justifies the means. Now that’s a gospel Jesus would find very alien. Never mind the fact that Jesus looked more like Osama bin Laden that someone from, say, Norway. Never mind the fact that Jesus said it was harder for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of Heaven than to pass through the eye of a needle. Never mind that Jesus preached against greed more than any other sin. Never mind the fact that Jesus commanded pay unto Caesar that which is Caesar’s and pay unto God that which is God’s. And never mind the fact that Jesus said, “My Kingdom is not of this world.” And although Jesus never, ever said a word—not one word—about abortion (even though infanticide was legal in the Roman Empire) or homosexuality (even though it was common in the Roman Empire). These are the issues white Evangelicals get their collective panties in a wad over. Oh, and guns. Because the Prince of Peace wants his followers to pack heat. The ballbuster is that Trump doesn’t give a damn about those issues. He and the republicans in Congress pay lip service to those issues, for sure, but their real agenda is naked greed in the form of tax cuts for the wealthy at the expense of the poor. Wolves in sheep’s clothing. Shitholes.

2017: In Memoriam by Frank Perez The local LGBTQ community lost some seminal people in 2017, as did our national community. Those national figures include: • John Ashbery—poet • Gilbert Baker—creator of the rainbow flag • Judith Bradford—scientist • J.D. Disalvatore—filmmaker and writer • Max Ferra—director • Michael Friedman—composer • Jim Graham—HIV / AIDS activist and politician • William M. Hoffman—playwright • Albert Innaurato—playwright • Rudy Kikel—poet and editor • Gregory Lugliani—HIV /AIDS activist • Henry McClurg—publisher • Kate Millett—writer and activist • Ruth Mountaingrove—photographer and writer • Rip Naquin and Marsha De-

• • • • • • • • •

lain—publishers and activists Celeste Newbrough—writer and activist Chuck Renslow—founder of Leather Archives and Museum Charley Shively—activist and educator Emily Sisley—psychologist and writer Stuart J. Thompson—Broadway producer Stuart Timmons—historian Diane Torr—artist Robert A. Wilson—writer and bookseller Edie Windsor—plaintiff in Windsor vs. U.S.

Announcement by Frank Perez Email: f.perez@sbcglobal.net

Gay Carnival at the Historic New Orleans Collection

On Wednesday, January 31, author Howard Philips Smith will give a presentation on his new book Unveiling the Muse: The Lost History of Gay Carnival in New Orleans (University Press of Mississippi, 2017). Traditional Carnival has been well documented with a vast array of books. However, few of them, if any, mention gay Carnival krewes or the role of gay Carnival within the larger context of the season. Smith corrects the oversight in this lavishly illustrated new work. Based on years of detailed interviews, each of the major gay krewes

is represented by an in-depth historical sketch, outlining the founders, moments of brilliance on stage, and a list of all the balls, themes, and royalty. Reproductions of brilliant never-before-published invitations, large-scale commemorative posters, admit cards, and programs add dimension and life to this history. Sketches of elaborate stage sets and costumes, as well as photographs of ball costumes and rare memorabilia, further enhance descriptions of these tableau balls. Smith will be available immediately after to sign copies of the book, which will be available to purchase for $50. Reservations are suggested. Email wrc@hnoc.org or call (504) 523-4662 to reserve your seat. GayMardiGras.com · GayEasterParade.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Facebook.com/AmbushMag · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · 13


Moments in Gay New Orleans History by Frank Perez Email: f.perez@sbcglobal.net

Armeinius Turns 50 The Krewe of Armeinius turns 50 this year and in a happy coincidence, the krewe’s golden anniversary coincides with the city of New Orleans’ tricentennial celebration. Consequently, the theme of the 2018 ball is “La Nouvelle Orleans: 300 Years of Fabulous.” Co-Captain Barrett Delong-Church promises “this ball will be like no other.” That’s a high standard to surpass. In their early years, at a time when gay bars were routinely raided and being gay was anything but okay, gay carnival balls afforded gay men not only safe spaces, but also an outlet for artistic and creative expression. The talent and artistry of the early gay Bal Masques was remarkable and constitutes a distinctive feature of local gay history. The first three Armeinius balls remain legendary as exemplars of imaginative genius. In 1968, a group of friends (Tracy Hendrix, Jerry Loner, Scott Morvant, Wendell Stipelcovich, and Don Stratton) formed Armeinius. Stipelcovich served as the krewe’s first Captain, bringing to the krewe his experience with a former krewe—the short-lived but highly influential Ganymede. Stipelcovich’s first challenge was finding a site for the ball. Because of the extremely homophobic climate of the time, hotels (perhaps with the memory of the ill-fated 1962 Yuga Ball, which was raided by the police, on their minds) refused to host gay carnival balls. Other locations were also reluctant. One venue, however, was more welcoming; the African-American Laborer’s Union Hall on Tchoupitoulas Street was willing to host Armeinius. For its inaugural ball in 1969, Stipelcovich selected the theme “The Year of the Queen,” a prophetic choice considering the Stonewall riot would occur a few months later. As the tableau unfolded, various members of the krewe appeared in drag costumed as female rulers throughout world history. Of course, there was also a “Size Queen,” replete with a tape measure. For the krewe’s second ball, Stipelcovich chose as a theme “Armeinius Gardens,” a take on Harmonia Gardens—the restaurant in the popular Broadway musical, Hello, Dolly! Participants costumed as menu items beginning with Captain Stipelcovich as Shrimp Cocktail, who dazzled the crowd by appearing in a five-foot tall champagne glass. Stratton appeared as dessert, Cherries Jubilee, in a costume so elaborate it occupied the entire stage.

Jerry Loner returning as Cleopatra at the second Armeinius Ball. Photo by Krewe of Armeinius Carnival historian Howard Philips Smith notes Stipelcovich “envisioned each menu dish as a grand costume, channeling not only high camp—no easy feat even within the gay world— but also the likes of the surrealist Salvador Dali’s lobster haute couture for Elsa Schiaparelli.” Armeinius’ third ball was produced by Captain Albert Carey. Drawing inspiration from a memorable ball staged by the mainstream Krewe of Consus (1897—1907), Carey chose as a theme “Atlantis Redivivus,” which resurrected the residents of the doomed, mythical city as fantastical sea-creatures. Carey appeared as the volcano that destroyed the city and Becky Allen, in her gay carnival ball debut, traipsed around the stage as a tap-dancing crawfish. In recognition of the high bar set by Stipelcovich and Carey, both men were originally selected to reign as King and Queen at this year’s ball but health concerns have prevented them from doing so. In their stead, Stipelcovich has designated Ned Pitre to reign as King and Carey has designated Brent Durnin to reign as Queen. Co-Captains Fred Arocho, Chad Brickley, Barrett Delong-Church, and Frederick Guess will play the parts of historical figures from New Orleans history as the krewe interprets that illustrious history through a gay lens. Seminal moments from gay history will also be featured; for example, the Krewe of Yuga will make an appearance. For the first time in decades, the ball will not take place in Chalmette but rather in Orleans Parish (at Blaine Kern’s Mardi Gras World). According

to Guess, this return to the city was facilitated by the city of New Orleans’ desire to promote the event in conjunction with the city’s tricentennial celebration. National publications such as Vanity

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Fair and Playboy will cover the ball. The 50th Armeinius Ball will take place on February 10. Tickets are available at http://armeinius.org/.


Armeinius Court through the Years YEAR

CAPTAIN

QUEEN

KING

THEME

1969

Wendell Stipelcovich

Jerry Loner

Scott Morvant

Year of the Queen

1970

Wendell Stipelcovich

Don Stratton

Denny Dennison

Armeinius Gardens

1971

Albert Carey

Paul Schwartz

Henry Denoux

Atlantis Redivivus

1972

Don Stratton

Wendell Stipelcovich

Skip Navarre

A Gala Evening

1973

Jon Lee Poche

Danny Schuffield

Larry Dodd

An Evening with the Fairies

1974

Wendell Stipelcovich

Albert Carey

Jack Vaughn

Lilies of the Field

1975

Henry Denoux

Jon Lee Poche

Tracy Hendrix

Balls!

1976

Danny Schuffield

Jules Weiss

David Peltier

An Evening of Grand Illusions

1977

Don Stratton

Roy Chauvin

David Daronselet

Girls of the Golden West

1978

Wendell Stipelcovich

Jesse Hand

Jerry Hocke

The Hippodrone, Among My Souveniers

1979

Albert Carey & Jon Lee Poche

Adrian Pratini

Ron Bourgeois

Do You Know What it Means to Miss New Orleans

1980

Larry Dodd

Dale Rogers

Toby Corrington

Movies Greatest Moments

1981

Wendell Stipelcovich

Tom Wood

Jim Willemet

All that Glitters

1982

Jon Lee Poche & Danny Shuffield

David Wagner

Wally Willemet

An Evening at the Lido

1983

Jon Lee Poche

John Wiggins

Ernie Apodaca

Great Disasters of the Western World

1984

Jon Lee Poche

Henry Denoux

Maurice Geisel

I Never Met a Cunt I Didn’t Like

1985

Jon Lee Poche

John Thompson

Billy Dembrokski

The Boy Who Would be Queen

1986

Henry Hocke

Don Lemoine

Jon Lee Poche

Black Ball

1987

Don Downs

Earl Punch

Albert Carey

Give Me that Old Time Religion

1988

Don Stratton

Jimmy Hulin

Harry Bale

When everything Old is New Again

1989

Don Stratton

Wally Willemet

Wally McLaughlin

Ice Follies

1990

Don Stratton

Chip Lohner

Ed O’Halloran

The Masters’ Touch

1991

Don Stratton

Maurice Geisel

Bruce Orgeron

I Write the Songs

1992

Wally McLaughlin

Charles Rector

Scott Speak

Tarot

1993

Wally McLaughlin

Don Stratton

Don Downs

Silver Anniversary

1994

Bruce Orgeron

Charles Turberville

Larry Anderson

Renaissance Ball

1995

Wally McLaughlin

Romney Leleux

Kevin Keller

The No Ball

1996

Wally McLaughlin

Tracy Hendrix

Freddie Clark

Oh NO, Not Her!

1997

Wally McLaughlin

Hank Ranna

Russell Sutherland

The Barbara Ball

1998

Bruce Orgeron

Glenn Plauche

Rusty Toups

Petal Profusions of Floral Fantasies & Diversions

1999

Bruce Orgeron

Kelly Biggs

Vinnie Pervel

The Blue Ball

2000

Charles Turberville

Bruce Orgeron

Bill McLemore

Russia

2001

Charles Turberville

Ricky Lenart

Nick Weber

Disco

2002

Jo Jo Marrione

John Cucineilo

Charles Turberville

Ink

2003

Albert Carey, Bruce Orgeron, Don Stratton, & Charles Turberville

Rosario Damico

Rick Mirabelli

Remembrance of Things Past

2004

Bruce Orgeron

Kevin Charpentier

Kelly Briggs

Looney Toons and Tunes

2005

Bill McLemore

Randy Chauvin

Jimmy Deblanc

Bug Ball

2006

Charles Turberville

Joel Haas

Bill McCarthy

Gay Ball

2007

Charles Turberville

Michael Sullivan

Adam Matthews

Pirates, Prostitutes, Prisoners & Pigs

2008

Charles Turberville

Tommy Dietsch

Charles Maddox

Let Them Eat Cake

2009

Charles Turberville

Tim Jeansonne

Ricky Lenart

There’s Something About Mary

2010

Bruce Orgeron

Rusty Toups

Albert Carey

Masquerade

2011

Bruce Orgeron

David Schue

Tim Goodwin

2012

Bruce Orgeron

Nick Weber

Kevin Charpentier

Making Groceries

2013

Charles Turberville

Freddie Guess

Fred Arocho

Oh Captain, My Captain

2014

Kevin Charpentier

Chris Leonard

Bruce & Joel

Bal de Blanche

2015

Frederick Guess & Brent Durnin

Chad Brickley

Tim Jeansonne

If You Build It, They Will Come

2016

Frederick Guess & Albert Carey

John Peifer

Scott Spivey

The Beauty and the Beast

2017

Chad Brickley

Beaux Delong-Church

Paul Metoyer

Festevils

2018

Fred Arocho, Chad Brickley, Barrett Delong-Church, & Frederick Guess

Brent Durnin

Ned Pitre

La Nouvelle Orleans: 300 Years of Fabulous

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Prospect 4: The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp by Frank Perez Email: f.perez@sbcglobal.net

The fourth iteration of Prospect New Orleans’ international art exhibition, Prospect.4 (P.4), opened to the public on Saturday, November 18, 2017 and runs through February 25, 2018 aligning with the City of New Orleans’s Tricentennial celebration. According to P.4’s website: Prospect.4 Artistic Director Trevor Schoonmaker, Chief Curator and Patsy R. and Raymond D. Nasher Curator of Contemporary Art at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University has selected 73 local, national, and international, artists to present their work throughout the city for P.4. Prospect.4 continues the organization’s tradition of showcasing the work of artists from around the globe. Taking into consideration the 300th anniversary of New Orleans’s founding and the city’s strategic location near the Gulf of Mexico, P.4 directs its focus southward, placing greater emphasis on art and artists that engage the Global South, specifically from North America, Latin America, the Caribbean, Africa, and the European powers that colonized the New Orleans area. The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp evokes New Orleans’s natural environment—surrounded by bayous, lakes and wetlands near the mouth of the Mississippi River. It also alludes to the

city’s unique cultural landscape as a creative force; the politically engaged jazz saxophonist Archie Shepp described jazz itself as a triumph of the human spirit, a lily that grows “in spite of the swamp.” New Orleans of course gave birth to jazz, arguably the preeminent art form of the twentieth century, pioneered under adverse circumstances. That music germinated within of the darkness of slavery; grew through the African drumming of Congo Square; absorbed European classical and brass band music; was nourished in the sultry brothels and saloons of Storyville where Buddy Bolden played his cornet; and mixed with the syncopated Cuban rhythms that Jelly Roll Morton called the “Spanish tinge.” This history of creolization and cross-cultural fertilization informs more than the evolution of jazz; it is central to the very essence of New Orleans, as is evidenced in the hybrid nature of the city’s customs and celebrations, food ways, religion, architecture, language, numerous genres of music and people themselves. In no other American city is this concept such a part of the everyday. Cultural synthesis and syncretism inform many of the central issues explored in Prospect.4. The rich diversity of New Orleans is rooted in a long history of human interactions including col-

onization, the transatlantic slave trade, waves of migration and displacement and Gulf Coast trade buoyed by the city’s position as the American South’s largest port. Many artists in P.4 explore related themes, connecting them to contemporary geographies and cultures around the world. Prospect New Orleans is a citywide triennial of contemporary art. Emphasizing collaborative partnerships, Prospect presents the work of diverse local, national, and international artists in unique and culturally exceptional venues, creating an optimistic cartography through the education and engagement of residents and visitors. The idea to mount a large-scale international art biennial in New Orleans came to Dan Cameron, an internationally-recognized contemporary art curator, during his first post-Katrina visit to New Orleans. An annual visitor to Jazz Fest and acknowledged “Nolaphile”, in early-2006 Cameron was invited to New Orleans by friends in the art community to attend a public meeting about the role of art and artists in the rebuilding of the city. As a veteran curator of international biennials in Taipei and Istanbul, Cameron had witnessed first-hand the social and financial benefits that biennial exhibitions yield for their host cities, and was keenly aware of the fact that the U.S. does not have an international contemporary art biennial on the scale of major cities in Eu-

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rope, Asia, and South America. Given the potential benefits and opportunities, Cameron decided that post-Katrina New Orleans was an ideal time and place to launch such a venture and in 2007, with seed money from the philanthropist Toby Devan Lewis, Prospect New Orleans was born. In the tradition of the great international exhibitions, Prospect New Orleans invites leading contemporary artists from around the globe to exhibit at venues that include major cultural institutions, as well as non-arts venues, and public spaces. In addition to its impact on cultural tourism and the fact that people travel to and spend money in New Orleans to see Prospect, its larger impact has been the way that artists have embraced the social mission of the biennial, and created projects that resonate deeply with the City’s unique history, culture, people, and institutions, making a lasting impression on audiences both local and throughout the world. At the heart of Prospect is the connection that it enables between “high art” and the larger cultural landscape of the city, with its rich and diverse vernacular traditions of music, Mardi Gras Indians, second line parades, and other popular cultural forms. Prospect introduces audiences to the richness of New Orleans culture as seen through the eyes of artists.


i d r a M s a r G

No cover. No closing time. No raised drink prices. No excuses.

Friday

Sunday

Beer bust with the Lords of Leather

Offical after party for Lords of Leather Bal Masque

Carlos Alexander on stage all weekend long! 16-oz. cans, perfect to head out to parades Stiegl, Dixie $4, just $3 during Happy Hour PBR, Dos Equis $3, just $2 during Happy Hour

The Phoenix is the proud home once again for PrideFest

Follow us to the fun 941 Elyisian Fields Ave., New Orleans

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Under the Gaydar by Tony Leggio Email: ledgemgp@gmail.com

Party Down

It’s Carnival and the city is alive with festivity. The scent of fresh king cake fills the air as the parades start winding their way through the streets. It is a perfect time of the year to live and visit our beautiful city. I filled my time these last two weeks with all kinds of wonderful events starting with a reception announcing Crescent Care’s new building being constructed on Elysian Fields. The soiree held at Ralph’s on the Park and was very well attended. Guests enjoyed wonderful bites and libations as we learned about the organization’s new facility. It truly will be a fabulous state of the art facility. Crescent Care makes major strides in helping out LGBT Community and it is wonderful to see them grow into all the new areas of treatment. Also that evening, I attended the NOAGE Potluck dinner at the Drifter Hotel. Once again, this worthwhile organization has created such fun networking events to meet other in the gay community. The following day, I went to two hotel openings. The first is the new Cambria hotel located on 632 Tchoupitoulas Street and the AC Hotel on 221 Carondelet. Both venues were excellent remodels of the old properties. If you have an opportunity go check these places out. A combination of contemporary style and Southern charm, the AC Hotel New Orleans Bourbon/ French Quarter Area is int he heart of the Central Business District. I especially love their AC Kitchen, serving delicious European-style breakfast options, and the AC Lounge, where they serve some amazing hand-crafted cocktails. The Cambria Hotel is an upscale oasis in the Warehouse District. Check out both places. On Friday, I was went to see Parker Simon perform at Mags 940. You may have read my interview with Parker in the last issue. This was one talented performer and his show proved it. He even premiered a song called Absinthe about NOLA that night. It was a great and magical night. This city is a music lover’s dream. Besides the good times, this is also the time of the year I work a lot. But I managed to attend the Amon Ra Ball at the Sigur Center in Chalmette. It was a wonderful tribute to Errol Rizzuto as well as Rip and Marsha Naquin, The royalty costumes were spectacular and Jeremy Weinberg and Safonda Peters looked great as the King and Queen. Congratulations on another ball well done. That wraps up my two weeks. Until

next time, enjoy the chaos of Carnival!

Hot Happenings

Happy Carnival. The city is nonstop with parades, parties, balls and beads. There is so much to see and do, Here are just few events to kick your year off right. Tuesday, January 30 - Sunday, February 4, 2018 An American In Paris: The Saenger Theatre; 111 Canal Street AN AMERICAN IN PARIS, the most awarded new musical of 2015 and winner of four Tony Awards, will play in New Orleans at the Saenger Theatre. Presented by the New Orleans Theatre Association, AN AMERICAN IN PARIS is part of the East Jefferson General Hospital Broadway in New Orleans 2017-2018 season. Tickets for AN AMERICAN IN PARIS start at $30 at the Saenger Theatre Box Office (1111 Canal St., New Orleans, Louisiana, 70116), BroadwayInNewOrleans.com, all Ticketmaster outlets and by phone at (800) 9822787. Inspired by the Academy-Award winning film, AN AMERICAN IN PARIS is the romantic story about an American soldier, a mysterious French girl and an indomitable European city, each yearning for a new beginning in the aftermath of war. Directed and choreographed by 2015 Tony Award-winner Christopher Wheeldon, the show features the music and lyrics of George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin, and a book by Craig Lucas. The score of AN AMERICAN IN PARIS includes the songs “I Got Rhythm,” “Liza,” “’S Wonderful,” “But Not For Me,” “I’ll Build a Stairway to Paradise,” and orchestral music including “Concerto in F,” “Second Prelude,” “Second Rhapsody/Cuban Overture” and “An American In Paris.” AN AMERICAN IN PARIS won four 2015 Tony Awards, four Drama Desk Awards, four Outer Critics Circle Awards, the Drama League Award for Best Musical, three Fred and Adele Astaire Awards, and two Theatre World Awards.

other special guests. Hosted by Trixie Minx. Tacos, Tequila and Tiaras: Buffa’s Bar and Restaurant; 1001 Esplanade Avenue; 8 p.m. Tacos, Tequila, and Tiaras is a one of New Orleans’ only family friendly drag shows! Join hostess Vanessa Carr Kennedy every Tuesday, have a taco or two, and learn a little bit about the art of drag. Wednesday, January 31, 2018 WednesGays at LPK Uptown: Louisiana Pizza Kitchen; 615 South Carrolton Ave.; 5 p.m. Join us every Wednesday to celebrate diversity. See old friends or make some new ones and find out what’s happening in the Nola community. All this while enjoying 1/2 price drinks from the bar. Invite your friends. You Better Sing Karaoke; Lafitte’s in Exile; 901 Bourbon Street; 7 p.m. Join DJ Kory and DJ Derek as they play Karaoke at Lafittes in Exile. Behind the bar slinging your drinks for you are Jeremy, Ryan, and Tim. Oz Show Night: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 10:30 p.m. This popular drag show is hosted by Persana Shoulders and features Nicole Lynn Foxx, Lisa Beaumann, Connie Hung, Anastascia Davenport; Chichi Rodriguez and Dominique DeLorean.

Tuesday, January 30, 2018 Country Dance lessons: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart Street; 8 p.m. Tuesdays are Country Dance lessons with dancing from 8 - 11 p.m. Bourbon Boylesque: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 8:00 p.m. See the men of Oz like you have never seen them before. The show stars Atomyc Adonis, Bobby B, Franky, Phathoms Deep and

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Game Night: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart Street; 7 p.m. Wednesdays are Game night with Honey Bee at 7 p.m. with free jello shots and Bar Tabs. Razzle Dazzle: Hi-Ho Lounge; 2239 St. Claude Ave.; 9 – 11:30 p.m. Come out for a night of GLITZ and GLAMOUR featuring a stellar cast including Roxie Le Rouge, Lune Noirr, Juno Bilquis, Darling Darla James and hosted by Nicole Lynn Foxx! Showtime @ 10pm / $10 Cover / 21+ Thursday, February 1, 2018 Honey Bee Trivia: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart St.; 7 p.m. Thursday is Honey Bee Trivia at 7 p.m. Four rounds with jello shots to the winner of each round and a Bar Tab to top person/team of the night. Girl | Crush: Oz New Orleans; 800 Bourbon Street; 9 p.m. Girl | Crush is bringing you a weekly event for girls who like girls, and their friends! This flavor of CRUSH entitled DTF is exclusive to New Orleans’ #1 Dance Club, Oz and happens every Thursday night. The Jeff D Comedy Cabaret; Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 10 p.m. The Comedy Cabaret stars Jeff D. featuring Gia Giavanni. Enjoy hilarious comedians, amazing talent and the Ladies of Oz. Strip Off: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; Continued on Page 19


Continued from Page 18

midnight Persana Shoulders hosts the Strip Off every Thursday night. Sign up begins at 11 p.m. and the show features a spotlight performance by Miss Gay Louisiana America 2013 Mercedes Ellis Loreal. Winners receive 1st PLACE - $100 Cash • 2nd PLACE - $50 Bar tab Friday, February 2, 2018 New Orleans Radical Faeries Brigid Ball; Cafe Istanbul; 2372 St. Claude Ave.; 8 p.m. - 1 a.m. This year’s costume themed ball is Haute Hot Pink Mirror Ball. New Meat Amateur Dance Contest: Corner Pocket; 640 St. Louis Street; 6:30 p.m. Hosted by Lisa Beaumann, anyone can enter - $100 cash prize. NOLA PAH Beer Bust - Puppy Gras Madness: The Phoenix; 941 Elysian Fields; 9 p.m. - midnight Join NOLA PAH for their monthly beer bust! They are still celebrating the season with our Puppy Gras Beer Bust! Come decked out in your best outfits and have fun with us! They will have $10 all you can drink draft and $1 jello shots (or 6 for $5)! Saturday, February 3, 2018 Krewe of Petronius Annual Bal Masque: The Pontchartrain Center; 4545 Williams Blvd.; 6:30 p.m. Join the Krewe of Petronius for a SPECTACULAR EVENT! It’s their 57th Annual Ball Masque - BRAZILIAN DRAGONS, MOVING TO THE BEAT OF A DIFFERENT DRUM! From Elaborate Costumes, to Casa Samba, to Celebrity Entertainment, this is going to be a Night you won’t forget! We will dazzle and promise to entertain! For tickets, go to www.eventbrite.com. It’s Showtime on Rampart: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart St.; 10 p.m. This free drag show stars Moanalot Fontaine and Sable Nicole Starr who are the fabulous Southern Barbituates. Classics: The Four Seasons Bar; 3229 N. Causeway Blvd.; 10:30 p.m. Starring Princesse Stephanie, Regina Adams, Josie Mae Cotton and Opal Vanderhurst. Sunday, February 4, 2018 Krewe of Barkus 2018 - Game of Bones; Armstrong Park; 2 p.m. Come roll with the Mystic Krewe of Barkus! They start their reign of terror (or terriers) at Armstrong park at 2pm. Register for a spot to walk with the Krewe atbarkus.org. You Better Sing Karaoke; GrandPre’s; 834 North Rampart St.; 7 p.m. Join DJ Kory and DJ Derek as they play Karaoke at Good Friends Bar. Behind the bar slinging your drinks for you are Jeremy, Ryan, and Tim. Zingo: Corner Pocket; 640 St. Louis Street; 6:30 p.m. Play Bingo with hosts Opal Masters followed by the

Barry BareAss Dancer of the Week Contest. Oz Show Night: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 9:30 p.m. This popular drag show is hosted by Persana Shoulders and features Nicole Lynn Foxx, Lisa Beaumann, Connie Hung, Anastascia Davenport; Chichi Rodriguez and Dominique DeLorean. Monday, February 5, 2018 S.I.N. Night: The Corner Pocket; 940 St. Louis Street; Starting at 9 p.m. Come drink with Ashlee. Get your SIN card and receive $2.50 canned beer or well drinks and $1.50 draft. Margarita Mondays: Grand Pre’s; 834 N. Rampart St.; 7 p.m. From 7 p.m. till close enjoy margarita specials with your bartender Michael Tuesday, February 6, 2018 Country Dance lessons: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart Street; 8 p.m. Tuesdays are Country Dance lessons with dancing from 8 - 11 p.m. Bourbon Boylesque: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 8:00 p.m. See the men of Oz like you have never seen them before. The show stars Atomyc Adonis, Bobby B, Franky, Phathoms Deep and other special guests. Hosted by Trixie Minx. Tacos, Tequila and Tiaras: Buffa’s Bar and Restaurant; 1001 Esplanade Avenue; 8 p.m. Tacos, Tequila, and Tiaras is a one of New Orleans’ only family friendly drag shows! Join hostess Vanessa Carr Kennedy every Tuesday, have a taco or two, and learn a little bit about the art of drag. Sugar and Spice: Always Lounge; 2240 St. Claude Avenue, 8 - 10:30 p.m. Attention all club goers, drag enthusiasts, and the people who enable them. Cycle 6 of the New Orleans Drag Workshop presents Sugar & Spice. There will be pulse pounding, earth shattering, side splitting drag numbers that are sure to satisfy your sweet tooth and bring some much needed spice into your life. The All-Star lineup includes Chrysalis, Kamra , Fabigail Tchoupitoulas, Ladybeast, The Faun, Napoleon Complex and Gayle King Kong (Hostess). Doors @ 8 p.m.; Show @ 9 p.m.; $5 cover at the door. Wednesday, February 7, 2018 WednesGays at LPK Uptown: Louisiana Pizza Kitchen; 615 South Carrolton Ave.; 5 p.m. Join us every Wednesday to celebrate diversity. See old friends or make some new ones and find out what’s happening in the Nola community. All this while enjoying 1/2 price drinks from the bar. Invite your friends... You Better Sing Karaoke; Lafitte’s in Exile; 901 Bourbon Street; 7 p.m. Join DJ Kory and DJ Derek as they play Karaoke at Lafittes in Exile. Behind the bar slinging your drinks for you are Jeremy, Ryan, and Tim.

Oz Show Night: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 10:30 p.m. This popular drag show is hosted by Persana Shoulders and features Nicole Lynn Foxx, Lisa Beaumann, Connie Hung, Anastascia Davenport; Chichi Rodriguez and Dominique DeLorean. Game Night: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart Street; 7 p.m. Wednesdays are Game night with Honey Bee at 7 p.m. with free jello shots and Bar Tabs. Thursday, February 8, 2018 Honey Bee Trivia: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart St.; 7 p.m. Thursday is Honey Bee Trivia at 7 p.m. Four rounds with jello shots to the winner of each round and a Bar Tab to top person/team of the night. Girl | Crush: Oz New Orleans; 800 Bourbon Street; 9 p.m. Girl | Crush is bringing you a weekly event for girls who like girls, and their friends! This flavor of CRUSH entitled DTF is exclusive to New Orleans’ #1 Dance Club, Oz and happens every Thursday night. The Jeff D Comedy Cabaret; Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 10 p.m. The Comedy Cabaret stars Jeff D. featuring Gia Giavanni. Enjoy hilarious comedians, amazing talent and the Ladies of Oz. Strip Off: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; midnight Persana Shoulders hosts the Strip Off every Thursday night. Sign

up begins at 11 p.m. and the show features a spotlight performance by Miss Gay Louisiana America 2013 Mercedes Ellis Loreal. Winners receive 1st PLACE - $100 Cash • 2nd PLACE - $50 Bar tab Friday, February 9, 2018 Greetings from Queer Mountain NOLA Ep. 26 Drunk In Love: Always Lounge; 2240 St. Claude Avenue; 7:30 p.m. Greetings, From Queer Mountain is a monthly LGBTQ storytelling showcase featuring the best storytellers from all across the land! Come join them for stories that will make you laugh, cry, ponder the meaning of life and make that drink taste even sweeter. Fat Tuesday and Valentine’s Day are one day apart this year so to honor this our theme is Drunk in Love. Line up: Frederick Mead, Genevieve Rheams, Jeff D. And Aurel Holmes. Lords of Leather Night of Leather Beer Bust: The Phoenix; 941 Elysian Fields Ave.; 9 p.m. “Nuit de Cuir” (“Night of Leather”) will be the theme to open Carnival weekend as the Mystic Krewe of Lords of Leather host their monthly Beer Bust. Break out the leather, gear or the fetish wear of your choice (or come as you are!) and celebrate Mardi Gras with the Krewe and Continued on Page 22

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Continued from Page 19

staff of the Phoenix. Beer flows from 9 p.m. until midnight on the bar’s patio. All the keg beer, soda and snacks you can handle are yours for just $10. Purple, green and gold jello shots will be on sale for just #1.00. $10 bottomless keg beer. New Meat Amateur Dance Contest: Corner Pocket; 640 St. Louis Street; 6:30 p.m. Hosted by Lisa Beaumann, anyone can enter - $100 cash prize. Saturday, February 10, 2018 It’s Showtime on Rampart: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart St.; 10 p.m. This free drag show stars Moanalot Fontaine and Sable Nicole Starr who are the fabulous Southern Barbituates. Armeinius 50th Bal Masque - 300 Years of Fabulous: Mardi Gras World; 1380 Port of New Orleans Place; 7 p.m. This is it, an effort that has been 50 years in the making and it is almost here. This will be one of the most monumental and memorable balls in years as we celebrate our theme “300 Years of Fabulous” in the very city where we started for the very first time at Mardi Gras World. Come be immersed in one of the most unique gay Bal Masque experiences ever put on as we highlight the most hidden fabulous parts of New

Orleans’ 300 years. Traffic is anticipated to be heavy so plan to arrive early either by enjoying our VIP party in the mansion starting at 6pm. Doors open at 7pm. For tickets, go to www.armeinius.ticketleap.com.

to questions available via: https://www. eventbrite.com/e/bal-masque-xxxvtickets-41594625645 Please carefully review the information therein. Thank you for supporting Leather Love and Laughter!

Sunday, February 11, 2018 NOLA Softball League Opening Day Party: Good Friends Bar; 740 Dauphine Street; 3:30 - 5:30 p.m. Plan to come out for drinks and fun, as well as a 50/50 raffle and an auction to benefit the league charity. You Better Sing Karaoke; GrandPre’s; 834 North Rampart St.; 7 p.m. Join DJ Kory and DJ Derek as they play Karaoke at Good Friends Bar. Behind the bar slinging your drinks for you are Jeremy, Ryan, and Tim. Zingo: Corner Pocket; 640 St. Louis Street; 6:30 p.m. Play Bingo with hosts Opal Masters followed by the Barry BareAss Dancer of the Week Contest. Oz Show Night: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 9:30 p.m. This popular drag show is hosted by Persana Shoulders and features Nicole Lynn Foxx, Lisa Beaumann, Connie Hung, Anastascia Davenport; Chichi Rodriguez and Dominique DeLorean. Lords of Leather Bal Masque XXXV: Alario Center; 2000 Segnette Blvd.; 8 p.m. Tickets, information, and answers

Monday, February 12, 2018 S.I.N. Night: The Corner Pocket; 940 St. Louis Street; Starting at 9 p.m. Come drink with Ashlee. Get your SIN card and receive $2.50 canned beer or well drinks and $1.50 draft. Margarita Mondays: Grand Pre’s; 834 N. Rampart St.; 7 p.m. From 7 p.m. till close enjoy margarita specials with your bartender Michael Tuesday, February 13, 2018 54th Annual Bourbon Street Awards; Good Friends Bar; 740 Dauphine Street; Noon The World Famous Costume Contest with Host Varla Jean Merman and Special Guest Ryan Landry.. Cash Prizes and Awards. Wednesday, February 14, 2018 WednesGays at LPK Uptown: Louisiana Pizza Kitchen; 615 South Carrolton Ave.; 5 p.m. Join us every Wednesday to celebrate diversity. See old friends or make some new ones and find out what’s happening in the Nola community. All this while enjoying 1/2 price drinks from the bar. Invite your friends... You Better Sing Karaoke; Lafitte’s in Exile; 901 Bourbon Street; 7 p.m. Join DJ Kory and DJ Derek as they play Karaoke at Lafittes in Exile. Behind the bar slinging your drinks for you are Jeremy, Ryan, and Tim. Oz Show Night: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 10:30 p.m. This popular drag show is hosted by Persana Shoulders and features Nicole Lynn Foxx, Lisa Beaumann, Connie Hung, Anastascia Davenport; Chichi Rodriguez and Dominique DeLorean. Game Night: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart Street; 7 p.m. Wednesdays are Game night with Honey Bee at 7 p.m. with free jello shots and Bar Tabs. Thursday, February 15, 2018 Honey Bee Trivia: GrandPre’s; 834 N. Rampart St.; 7 p.m. Thursday is Honey Bee Trivia at 7 p.m. Four rounds with jello shots to the winner of each round and a Bar Tab to top person/team of the night. Girl | Crush: Oz New Orleans; 800 Bourbon Street; 9 p.m. Girl | Crush is bringing you a weekly event for girls who like girls, and their friends! This flavor of CRUSH entitled DTF is exclusive to New Orleans’ #1 Dance Club, Oz and happens every Thursday night. The Jeff D Comedy Cabaret; Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 10 p.m. The Comedy Cabaret stars Jeff D. featuring Gia Giavanni. Enjoy hilarious comedians, amazing talent and the Ladies of Oz. Strip Off: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street;

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midnight Persana Shoulders hosts the Strip Off every Thursday night. Sign up begins at 11 p.m. and the show features a spotlight performance by Miss Gay Louisiana America 2013 Mercedes Ellis Loreal. Winners receive 1st PLACE - $100 Cash • 2nd PLACE - $50 Bar tab Friday, February 16, 2018 New Meat Amateur Dance Contest: Corner Pocket; 640 St. Louis Street; 6:30 p.m. Hosted by Lisa Beaumann, anyone can enter - $100 cash prize. Saturday, February 17, 2018 Miss Gay Vieux Carre LA USofA 2018: Mags 940; 940 Elysian Fields; 8 p.m. Miss Gay Vieux Carre LA USofA is an official preliminary pageant to the states oldest female impersonation pageant Miss Gay Louisiana USofA! The theme is Coven. Featuring Audrey Rose, Ivy Dripp and Aaryiah Sinclaire. Categories include interview, gown and talent. Sunday, February 18, 2018 Miss Four Seasons Exotique: Four Seasons Bar; 3229 N. Causeway Blvd.; 6 p.m. Miss EXOTIQUE has now grown into a mini system in the Louisiana area with a total of 5 prelims now. The first prelim pageant will be held at The Four Seasons Bar in Metairie. Come root your favorite diva on as the contestants battle for the title of MISS EXOTIQUE 2018. Every pageant will have a winner and a 1st runner up who will go on to the final Miss EXOTIQUE pageant in November. They will have Gumbo and Jambalaya for you to eat and there is a $5 entry fee. Come out and have a great time while encouraging our ladies to win the title. See you all at the pageant. The theme is Masquerade Fantasy. You Better Sing Karaoke; GrandPre’s; 834 North Rampart St.; 7 p.m. Join DJ Kory and DJ Derek as they play Karaoke at Good Friends Bar. Behind the bar slinging your drinks for you are Jeremy, Ryan, and Tim. Zingo: Corner Pocket; 640 St. Louis Street; 6:30 p.m. Play Bingo with hosts Opal Masters followed by the Barry BareAss Dancer of the Week Contest. Oz Show Night: Oz; 800 Bourbon Street; 9:30 p.m. This popular drag show is hosted by Persana Shoulders and features Nicole Lynn Foxx, Lisa Beaumann, Connie Hung, Anastascia Davenport; Chichi Rodriguez and Dominique DeLorean.

If you want to make sure your upcoming event is listed, email the information to me at ledgemgp@gmail.com.


Snap Paparazzi From the Lords of Leather Mardi Gras Beer Bust at the Phoenix | Photos by Tony Leggio

At the NOAGE Potluck Dinner at the Drifter Hotel | Photos by Tony Leggio

At the Parker Simon Show at Mags 940 | Photos by Tony Leggio

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Book Review by Frank Perez Email: f.perez@sbcglobal.net

Unveiling the Muse: The Lost History of Gay Carnival in New Orleans. Howard P. Smith. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN: 9781496814012. 2017. 346 pages. $50.00. At long last, a book on the history of Gay Carnival has been published. And what a book it is. Simply put, this book is a triumph! Traditional Carnival has been well documented with a vast array of books published on the subject. However, few of them, if any, mention gay Carnival krewes or the role of gay Carnival within the larger context of the season. Howard Philips Smith corrects this oversight with a beautiful, vibrant, and exciting account of gay Carnival. Gay krewes were first formed in the late 1950s, growing out of costume parties held by members of the gay community. Their tableau balls were often held in clandestine locations to avoid harassment. Even by the new millennium, gay Carnival remained a hidden and almost lost history. Much of the history and the krewes themselves were devastated by the AIDS crisis. Whether facing police raids in the 1960s or AIDS in the 1980s, the Carnival krewes always came back each season. A culmination of two decades of research, Unveiling the Muse positions this incredible story within its proper place as an amazing and important facet of traditional Carnival. Unveiling the Muse contains entire chapters devoted to current krewes as wells as those long since gone: Yuga, Petronius, Amon-Ra, Ganymede, Armeinius, Apollo, Olympus, Celestial Knights, Ishtar, Polyphemus, Lords of Leather, Mwindo, Satyricon, and other, lesser-known krewes. Each chapter is chock-full of color photographs and easy to read charts listing each krewe’s Captains, Queens, Kings, and Ball themes. The pictures alone, over 600 of them, are worth the price of the book. In addition to photographs from balls, including a rare snapshot from the 1961 Yuga Ball, there are dozens of candid street scenes featuring revelers on Mardi Gras, some dating back to the 1950s. The reproductions of ball invitations, posters, and costume sketches are fascinating and the chapter on the artists who designed and created them constitute a priceless record of the

amazingly creative talent that makes this history so incomparable. Especially noteworthy is the chapter on Elmo Avet, an early pioneer, and perhaps the Patron Saint of Gay Carnival, is incredibly insightful. Of particular interest is a chapter called “Rue de L’Amour: Gay Café Society and the Once Brilliant Lights of Rampart Street,” which offers an intimate glimpse into gay life in the Quarter in the 1980s. Recalling the glory years of N. Rampart Street, Smith takes us to a birthday party at Jonathan’s and for cocktails at Marti’s, where Tennessee Williams broods in a corner. Brief sketches are also provided of legendary bars: Club My-O-My, Travis’s, Dixie’s, Café Lafitte, The Post Office, and Flamingo’s. There are also a plethora of bar advertisements from watering holes such as Finale II, Brady’s, Ms. Kitty’s, Charlene’s, Diane’s Cocktail Lounge, Pino’s Club 621, Lucille’s, TT’s West, Menefee’s, Mississippi River Bottom Saloon, The Mint, Jewel’s Tavern, and Phoenix. Based on years of detailed interviews, each of the major gay krewes is represented by an in-depth historical sketch, outlining the founders, moments of brilliance on stage, and a list of all the balls, themes, and royalty. Of critical importance to this history are the colorful ephemera associated with the gay tableau balls. Reproductions of never-before-published brilliantly designed invitations, large-scale commemorative posters, admit cards, and programs add dimension and life to this history. Sketches of elaborate stage sets and costumes as well as photographs of ball costumes and rare memorabilia further enhance descriptions of these tableau balls. Gay Carnival is one of the features that makes New Orleans gay history distinctive. By expertly chronicling that history, Unveiling the Muse has not only added to that history but also made history in its own right. A triumph of scholarly research and accessible writing, this book will be the definitive history of Gay Carnival for decades to come. Smith can rightfully share in artist Daniel de Beau-Maltbie’s sentiments. De Beau-Maltbie, who designed especially memorable invitations for several Amon-Ra balls, once observed, “I have always been in awe of gay Carnival. I sat in the audience at many balls simply mesmerized by the beauty and magic of it all. What an honor to have contributed to it all!” Howard Philips Smith grew up on a

steve richards __________________ properties 504 258 1800 steverichardsproperties.com ____________________ 504 948 3011 712 orleans new orleans, la 70116 licensed by the louisiana real estate commision

Job Opportunities Ambush Magazine is growing!

Freelance & Contributing Writers Wanted

We want to hear from you if you are a working or aspiring journalist interested in covering topics meaningful to the LGBTQ community.

Snap Paparazzi Photographer Wanted

Do you frequent the LGBTQ bars and events? We want to hear from you if you are interested in regularly covering the bars and events.

If you are interested, please email your resume, cover letter, and portfolio to info@ambushpublishing.com

farm in rural Mississippi and attended the University of Southern Mississippi and the Université de Bourgogne, Dijon. He began writing about pre-AIDS New Orleans and the gay ball scene during the early 1980s, the so-called

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Golden Age of Gay Carnival. He lives in Los Angeles with his husband and three cats. His forthcoming book, Southern Decadence in New Orleans (co-author Frank Perez) will be published by the LSU Press this summer.


Snap Paparazzi From the CrescentCare Reception at Ralph’s on the Park | Photos by Tony Leggio

GayMardiGras.com · GayEasterParade.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Facebook.com/AmbushMag · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · 25


Mardi Gras Parade Schedule

Friday, February 2, 2018, Saturday, February 3, 2018 & Sunday, February 4, 2018

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Mardi Gras Parade Schedule

Friday, February 2, 2018, Saturday, February 3, 2018 & Sunday, February 4, 2018

PARADES Friday, February 2, 2018 French Quarter Krewe of Cork 3:00pm Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Oshun 6:00pm Krewe of Cleopatra 6:30pm Mandeville Krewe of Eve 7:00pm Metairie Krewe of Excalibur Follows Saturday, February 3, 2018 Slidell Krewe of Paws 10:00am Krewe of Titans 6:30pm Westbank The Mystic Knights of Adonis 11:45am Madisonville Krewe of Tchefuncte 1:00pm Chalmette Knights of Nemesis 1:00pm Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Pontchartrain 1:00pm Krewe of Choctaw Follows Krewe of Freret Follows Knights of Sparta 6:00pm Krewe of Pygmalion Follows

Marigny ‘tit Rəx 5:00pm Krewe of Chewbacchus 7:00pm Metairie Krewe of Caesar 6:00pm Covington Krewe of Olympia 6:00pm Sunday, February 4, 2018 Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Femme Fatale 11:00am Krewe of Carrollton Follows Krewe of King Arthur and Merlin Follows Krewe of Alla Follows Slidell Krewe of Claude 1:00pm Krewe of Dionysus Follows French Quarter Krewe of Barkus 2:00pm

UPCOMING GAY BALLS Friday, February 2, 2018 Petronius @ Pontchartrain Center Kenner

Saturday, February 10, 2018 Armeinius @ Mardi Gras World

Sunday, February 11, 2018 Lords of Leather @ Alario Center

Job Opportunities Ambush Magazine is growing!

Freelance & Contributing Writers Wanted

We want to hear from you if you are a working or aspiring journalist interested in covering topics meaningful to the LGBTQ community.

Snap Paparazzi Photographer Wanted

Do you frequent the LGBTQ bars and events? We want to hear from you if you are interested in regularly covering the bars and events.

If you are interested, please email your resume, cover letter, and portfolio to info@ambushpublishing.com

GayMardiGras.com · GayEasterParade.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Facebook.com/AmbushMag · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · 27


Mardi Gras Parade Schedule

Wednesay, February 7, 2018, Thursday, February 8, Friday, February 9, 2018 & Saturday, February 10, 2018

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Mardi Gras Parade Schedule

Wednesay, February 7, 2018, Thursday, February 8, Friday, February 9, 2018 & Saturday, February 10, 2018

PARADES Wednesday, February 7, 2018 Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Druids 6:30pm Krewe of Nyx 7:00pm Thursday, February 8, 2018 Uptown New Orleans Knights of Babylon 5:30pm Knights of Chaos 6:15pm Krewe of Muses 6:30pm Friday, February 9, 2018 French Quarter Krewe of Bosom Buddies 11:30am Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Hermes 6:00pm Krewe d’Etat 6:30pm Krewe of Morpheus 7:00pm Slidell Krewe of Selene 6:30pm Metairie Krewe of Centurions 7:00pm

Mandeville Original Krewe of Orpheus 7:00pm Saturday, February 10, 2018 Westbank Krewe of NOMTOC 10:45am Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Iris 11:00am Krewe of Tucks 12:00pm Mid-City Krewe of Endymion 4:15pm Metairie Krewe of Isis 6:30pm

EVENTS Wednesday, February 7, 2018 The Corner Pocket Wet Jockey Shorts Contest @ The Corner Pocket Starting at 10:00PM | The Corner Pocket’s Famous Wet Jockey Shorts contest. We kick off Mardi Gras getting the boys wet in white jockey shorts. Customers get to wet them down.

Thursday, February 8, 2018 girl | CRUSH @ Oz Upstairs Starting at 9:00PM | Your official parade afterparty for the ladies! Come celebrate how many shoes you caught from the Muses parade and throw some of those beads off of our balcony...

Friday, February 9, 2018

As they say in French “laissez les bon temps rouler’’ !

Saturday, February 10, 2018 TRAX GRAS w/ Bouffant Bouffant & Father Figure @ Okay Bar Starting at 10:00PM | The screaming heathens of TRAX ONLY bring you a ONE NIGHT ONLY Mardi Gras rager at our newest rave haunt. Hosted by Flicky + Miss Hot Girl Sandy....ALL NIGHT!! Henny Gras! @ Treme Market Branch Starting at 10:30PM | The Duke Of Orleans Presents The Biggest Urban LGBT Party in the City: Henny Gras Mardi Gras Weekend With Special Guest Host Taethedoug!

“Nuit de Cuir” (“Night of Leather”) will be the theme to open Carnival weekend as the Mystic Krewe of Lords of Leather host their monthly Beer Bust at the Phoenix Bar, 941 Elysian Fields Avenue. Break out the leather, gear or the fetish wear of your choice (or come as you are!) and celebrate Mardi Gras with the Krewe and staff of the Phoenix. Beer flows from 9 p.m. until midnight on the bar’s patio. All the keg beer, soda and snacks you can handle are yours for just $10. Purple, green and gold jello shots will be on sale for just #1.00.

to our

lgbtq community:

we see

you & you

matter. no matter what the administration says.

GayMardiGras.com · GayEasterParade.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Facebook.com/AmbushMag · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · 29


Mardi Gras Parade Schedule

Sunday, February 11, 2018, Monday, February 12, 2018 & Tuesday, February 13, 2018

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Mardi Gras Parade Schedule

Sunday, February 11, 2018, Monday, February 12, 2018 & Tuesday, February 13, 2018

EVENTS

PARADES Sunday, February 11, 2018 Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Okeanos 11:00am Krewe of Mid-City 11:45am Krewe of Thoth 12:00pm Krewe of Bacchus 5:15pm Metairie Corps de Napoleon 5:00pm Krewe of Athena 5:30pm Krewe of Pandora 6:30pm

Monday, February 12, 2018 Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Proteus 5:15pm Krewe of Orpheus 6:00pm Tuesday, February 13, 2018 Uptown New Orleans Krewe of Zulu 8:00am Krewe of Rex 10:00am Krewe of Elks Orleans Follows Krewe of Crescent City Follows

Metairie Krewe of Argus 10:00am Krewe of Elks Jefferson Follows Krewe of Jefferson Follows Covington Krewe of Lyra 10:00am

Sunday, February 11, 2018 “Olympos” will the theme of the Lords of Leather Bal Masque XXXV on Sunday, February 11 at the John A. Alario Events Center in Westwego, LA. Door open at 7 p.m. and the tableau begins at 8 p.m. Varla Jean Merman will be the special guest entertainment for the evening filled with creative costumes worn by members and the crowning of Lord King XXXV and Lord Consort XXXV. Limited tickets remain at www.lordsofleather.org.

GayMardiGras.com · GayEasterParade.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Facebook.com/AmbushMag · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · 31


LGBT Owned & Friendly Business Directory

947.3735, KajunPub.COM MAG’S 940, 940 Elysian Fields Ave., 948.1888 OZ NEW ORLEANS, 800 Bourbon, 593.9491, OzNewOrleans. COM THE PAGE, 542 N. Rampart St., 875.4976 PHOENIX/EAGLE, 941 Elysian Fields, 945.9264, www.phoenixbarnola.com Rawhide 2010, 740 Burgundy St., 525.8106, Rawhide2010.COM TROPICAL ISLE: Home of the Hand Grenade, 721 Bourbon St., 529.4109, TropicalIsle.COM VALIANT THEATRE AND LOUNGE, 6621 St. Claude Ave., Arabi, LA, 504.900.1743 Slidell, LA [985] BILLY’S, 2600 Hwy. 190 West, 847.1921 Biloxi, MS [228] CLUB VEAUX, 834 Howard Ave., 207.3271

bookstores

New Orleans, LA [504] FAB - Faubourg Marigny Art & Books, 600 Frenchmen St., 947.3700

circuit/events

Aug. 30-Sept. 4, 2017, 46th Official Southern Decadence Celebration of Gay Life, Music & Culture, end of Summer Blowout including the Southern Decadence Parade & loads of activities, bringing over 180,000 revelers to New Orleans, LA, sponsored by Ambush & SouthernDecadence.com Oct. 20-22, 2017 Halloween 34, benefiting Project Lazarus, New Orleans, LA, sponsored by AmbushMag.COM, HalloweenNewOrleans.com Dec. 29, 2017-Jan. 1, 2018 Gay New Year’s in New Orleans, New Orleans, LA, GayNewOrleans.com Feb. 9-13, 2018, 69th Official Gay Mardi Gras, New Orleans, LA, sponsored by Ambush, GayMardiGras.com Easter Sunday, April 11, 2018, 19th Official Gay Easter Parade, New Orleans, sponsored by Ambush, GayEasterParade. com

costumes

New Orleans, LA [504] QT PIE BOUTIQUE - 241 Dauphine St., 581. 6633

galleries

bars

Mobile, AL [251] B-Bob’s Downtown, 213 Conti St., 433.2262, B-Bobs.COM Flip Side Bar & Patio, 54 S. Conception St., 431.8819, FlipSideBarPatio.COM GABRIEL’S DOWNTOWN, 55 South Joachim St., 432.4900 The Midtown Pub, 153 Florida St., 450.1555 Pensacola, FL [850] THE ROUNDUP, 560 East Heinberg St., 433.8482 Baton Rouge, LA [225] GEORGE’S, 860 St. Louis, 387.9798, SPLASH, 2183 Highland Rd., 242.9491, SplashBR.COM Lake Charles, LA [337] CRYSTAL’S, 112 W. Broad, 433.5457 Metairie, LA [504] FOUR SEASONS & PATIO STAGE BAR, 3229 N. Causeway, 832.0659, FourSeasonsBar.com New Orleans, LA [504] 700 CLUB, 700 Burgundy, 561.1095,

BIG DADDY’S, 2513 Royal, 948.6288 BIG EASY DAIQUIRIS, 216 Bourbon, 501 Bourbon, 409 Decatur, 617 Decatur THE BLACK PENNY, 700 N. Rampart BOURBON PUB & PARADE, 801 Bourbon St., 529.2107, BourbonPub.COM Café Lafitte in Exile, 901 Bourbon Street 522.8397, Lafittes.COM CORNER POCKET, 940 St. Louis, 568.9829, CornerPocket.NET COUNTRY CLUB, 634 Louisa St., TheCountryClubNewOrleans.COM, 945.0742 CUTTER’S, 706 Franklin, 948.4200 THE DOUBLE PLAY, 439 Dauphine, 523.4517 THE FRIENDLY BAR, 2301 Chartres, 943.8929 GOLDEN LANTERN, 1239 Royal, 529.2860, Facebook.COM/GoldenLanternBar Good Friends Bar, 740 Dauphine St, 566.7191, GoodFriendsBar.COM GRANDPRE’S, 834 N. Rampart St., 267.3615, Facebook.com/grandpres KAJUN’S PUB, 2256 St. Claude Ave.,

New Orleans, LA [504] CASSELL-BERGEN GALLERY, 1305 Decatur St., cassellbergengallery.com, 504.524.0671

guides

AMBUSH Mag, 828-A Bourbon St., New Orleans, LA 70116-3137; 504.522.8049, AmbushMag.COM; marsha@ripandmarsha.com

groceries/delis

New Orleans, LA [504] QUARTERMASTER DELI, THE NELLIE DELI, 1100 Bourbon, 529.1416

hair salons

New Orleans, LA [504] Two Guys Cutting Hair, 2372 St. Claude Ave., Suite 125, appointments: Adikus 215.519.5030, Trent 504.239.2397

hardware

New Orleans, LA [504] MARY’S FRENCH QUARTER HARDWARE, 732 N. Rampart, 529.4465

accommodations

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New Orleans [504] AARON INGRAM HAUS, 1012 Elysian Fields, New Orleans, LA 70117, PHONE: 504.949.3110, www.ingramhaus.com/xqey, e-mail us at ingramhaus@yahoo.com. Condos with queen-size beds, private entrances; located only six blocks from Bourbon Street and walking distance to most New Orleans attractions. Several favorite bars are within one block. [0118] BLUES60 GUEST HOUSE, 1008 Elysian Fields Ave. New Orleans, LA 70117, Phone: 1.504.324.4311, www.blues60guesthouse.com, info@blues60guesthouse.com. The Blue60 Guest House with 5 suites provides a peaceful retreat in the center of the Faubourg Marigny, just blocks from the French Quarter and Frenchman St. [1115] BURGUNDY BED AND BREAKFAST, 2513 Burgundy St., New Orleans, LA 70117, PHONE/FAX: 504.942.1463, Toll Free (Continental US only): 1.800.970.2153, www.theburgundy.com, E-mail us at theburgundy@cox.net. Gay owned and operated in newly renovated 1890’s double. Four guest rooms with private baths, guests’ parlor and “half-kitchen”, courtyard and half-open tubhouse with spa (hot tub/ whirlpool). Clothing optional in sunbathing and hot tub area. Walking distance to French Quarter. Immediate vicinity of gay and lesbian bars/venues. [0815] The french quarter guest houses, 1005 St. Peter, New Orleans, LA 70116, Phone: 1.800.367.5858, FrenchQuarterGuestHouses.com, email: Info@frenchquarterguesthouses.com. Four meticulously restored boutique inns located in the heart of the French Quarter’s most popular LGBT neighborhood. Each building’s individual character and charm provides an unforgettable authentic French Quarter experience!

media

New Orleans, LA [504] AMBUSH Mag, Official Gay Easter Parade Guide, Official Gay Mardi Gras Guide, Official Gay New Orleans Guide, Official Gulf South Guide, Official Pride Guide, Official Southern Decadence Guide, 828A Bourbon St., 70116-3137, 522.8049, AmbushMag.COM; email: ripna@ambushmag.com AMBUSHonLINE, 828-A Bourbon St., 70116-3137; 522.8049, ambushonline. com, email: ripna@ambushmag.com

organizations

FOOD FOR FRIENDS, 504.821.2601 ext. 254 FRIDAY NIGHT BEFORE MARDI GRAS (FNBMG), 504.319.8261, www.fridaynightbeforemardigras.com GAY APPRECIATION AWARDS, 828A Bourbon St., 70116-3137; 522.8049; AmbushMag.COM/GAA GAY EASTER PARADE, 828-A Bourbon St., 70116-3137, 504.522.8049, info@ gayeasterparade.com, GayEasterParade. COM GAY MARDI GRAS, 828-A Bourbon St., 70116-3137, 504.522.8049, GayMardiGras.COM GAY NEW ORLEANS, 828-A Bourbon St., 70116-3137, 504.522.8049, GayNewOrleans.COM HAART (HIV/AIDS Alliance Region Two, Inc.), 4550 North Blvd. Ste. 250, Baton Rouge, LA 70806, 225.927.1269, www. haartinc.org, offers a complete continuum of care to people living with HIV/AIDS including housing, primary care, medications, case management, and an array of


photography

New Orleans, LA [504] GRAHAM/STUDIO ONE NEW ORLEANS, by appointment, grahamstudioone. com

restaurants

supportive services. In addition HAART provides HIV prevention education and FREE testing to the Baton Rouge area. HALLOWEEN IN NEW ORLEANS, INC., PO Box 52171, 70152-2171; HalloweenNewOrleans.COM KREWE OF AMON-RA, PO Box 7033, Metairie, LA 70010, KreweOfAmonRa. COM KREWE OF ARMEINIUS, PO Box 56638, New Orleans, LA 70156-6638, KreweOfArmeinius.ORG KREWE OF MWINDO, PO Box 51031, 70156; 913.5791, KreweOfMwindo.ORG, krewe@kreweofmwindo.org KREWE OF NARCISSUS, PO Box 3832, New Orleans, LA 70177. Contact: 504.228.9441 KREWE OF PETRONIUS, PO Box 1102, Kenner, LA. 70063-1102, www. kreweofpetroius.net KREWE OF QUEENATEENAS / KING CAKE QUEEN ROYALTY CLUB, 828-A Bourbon St., 70116-3137, 522.8049, GayMardiGras.COM/KCQ LGBT+ Archives Project of Louisiana, 1308 Esplanade Ave., New Orleans, LA 70116, 504.475.7911, www.lgbtarchivesla.org MYSTIC KREWE OF LORDS OF LEATHER, 1000 Bourbon St #B415, New Orleans, LA 70116, www.lordsofleather.org MYSTIC KREWE OF SATYRICON, 2443 Halsey Ave., New Orleans, LA 70114, 504.906.7990 Todd J. Blauvelt / Secretary, krewe.of.satyricon@gmail.com, MysticKreweOfSatyricon.COM NO/AIDS TASK FORCE, 2601 Tulane

Ave., Suite 500, 70119; 504.821.2601; NOAIDSTaskForce.COM NEW ORLEANS PRIDE, info@neworleanspridefestival.com; 504.321.6006; NewOrleansPrideFestival.COM; NOLAPride. ORG; New Orleans Pride fully embraces the message of “One CommUNITY” as we celebrate our history and promote the future prosperity of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast Region. We use public awareness and education about the LGBT+ community as a way to combat “phobias” and discrimination. Our programs, seminars and events leading up to, and during Pride weekend, are meant to include individuals from all walks of life. RENEGADE BEARS OF LOUISIANA, PO Box 3083, New Orleans, LA 70177; renegadebearsoflouisiana@gmail.com SOUTHERN DECADENCE, 828-A Bourbon St., 70116-3137, 504.522.8049, SouthernDecadence.COM ST. ANNA’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 1313 Esplanade Avenue New Orleans, LA 70116 504.947.2121, stannanola.org

pharmacy

Mumfrey’s Pharmacy, 1021 W. Judge Perez Dr., Chalmette, LA 70043, 504.279.6312, www.MumfreysPharmacy.COM. Supporting & serving the LGBT Community for over 20 years. Local pharmacy offering personalized family-like service, automatic refills & free metro wide confidential pickup & delivery. Also offering shipping for out-side our delivery area. When you call us you speak to a person, not a machine. See our ad.

Metairie, LA [504] Chef Ron’s Gumbo Stop & Pub, 2309 N. Causeway Blvd., 835.2022, GumboStop.com New Orleans, LA [504] The Bombay Club, 830 Rue Conti, 577.2237, www.bombayclubneworleans. com Broussard’s Restaurant & Courtyard, 819 Rue Conti, 581.3866, http://broussards.com Cafe Sbisa, 1011 Decatur St., 522.5565, www.cafesbisanola.com Cheezy Cajun, 3325 St. Claude Ave., 265.0045, www.TheCheezyCajun.com Clover Grill, 900 Bourbon St., 598.1010, www.CloverGrill.com Country Club Restaurant, 634 Louisa St., www.TheCountryClubNewOrleans. com, 945.0742 Gene’s Po-Boys & Daquiris, 1040 Elysian Fields Ave., 943.3861, www.genespoboys.com Ilys Bistro, 1040 Elysian Fields Ave., 947.8341, www.Facebook.com/ILYSBistro Kingfish Kitchen & Cocktails, 337 Chartres St. 598.5005, www.KinfishNewOrleans.com Mona Lisa Restaurant, 1212 Royal St., 522.6746 Orleans Grapevine Wine Bar & Bistro, 720 Orleans, 523.1930, www.OrleansGrapevine.com Quartermaster: The Nellie Deli, 1100 Bourbon St. , 529.1416, www.QuartermasterDeli.net Royal House Oyster Bar, 441 Royal St., 528.2601, www.RoyalHouseRestaurant.com

real estate

New Orleans, LA [504] Engel & Völkers New Orleans, Michael Styles, Realtor — Michael specializes in helping first-time homebuyers and real estate investors find the perfect New Orleans properties. 504.777.1773, NolaStyles.com Latter & Blum, Steven Richards Realtor, 504.258.1800, SteveRichardsProperties.com New Orleans Relocation, Realtors — gay-owned boutique real estate agency for locals and newcomers. 504.273.0088 www.NOLArelo.com

retail/shopping

New Orleans, LA [504] BOURBON PRIDE, 909 Bourbon, 566.1570 COK (Clothing or Kinkl), 941 Elysian Fields, 945.9264 MARY’S FRENCH QUARTER KITCHEN & BATH, 732 N. Rampart, 529.4465 QT PIE BOUTIQUE - 241 Dauphine St., 581. 6633 XXXSHOP, 1835 N. Rampart St., 504.232.3063

services

New Orleans, LA [504] Formal Connection, 299 Belle Terre Blvd. LaPlace, LA, 985.652.1195

theatres

New Orleans, LA [504] CAFE ISTANBUL, 2372 St. Claude Ave., #140, 504.974.0786, CafeIstanbulNOLA.COM

tours

New Orleans, LA [504] Gay New Orleans Walking Tour, Crescent City Tour Booking Agency, (LGBT Business of the Year) 638 St. Ann St., 568.0717. follow Gay New Orleans Walking Tour @ Facebook.COM

Job Opportunities Ambush Magazine is growing!

Freelance & Contributing Writers Wanted

We want to hear from you if you are a working or aspiring journalist interested in covering topics meaningful to the LGBTQ community.

Snap Paparazzi Photographer Wanted

Do you frequent the LGBTQ bars and events? We want to hear from you if you are interested in regularly covering the bars and events.

If you are interested, please email your resume, cover letter, and portfolio to info@ambushpublishing.com

Get Listed

Want to see your business, organization, or event in our next issue?

Email Ambush info@ambushpublishing.com

GayMardiGras.com · GayEasterParade.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Facebook.com/AmbushMag · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · 33


Snap Paparazzi From the Krewe of Amon-Ra Ball at the Sigur Center | Photos by Tony Leggio & Jeremy Weinberg

34 路 The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com 路 Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 路 Official Southern Decadence Guide 路 SouthernDecadence.com


Trodding the Boards by Brian Sands Email: bsnola2@hotmail.com

Peter and the Starcatcher at Slidell Little Theater through Feb. 4

When I saw Peter and the Starcatcher on Broadway in 2012, I found the first act, set amid dreary workhouses and the dank holds of ships, overly dark and, worse, a gobful of exposition slowed it to a tedious crawl as we met a Lord, his daughter, her nanny, some nasty sea captains and their henchmen, a preening villain by the name of Black Stache, and an orphan boy with no name, called just ‘Boy.’ The second act, however, blossomed into a different, bewitching show full of theatrical legerdemain, light, and emotionally rich material. Approaching Slidell Little Theater’s production of Rick Elice’s adaptation of Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson’s novel, a kind of Peter Pan prequel, I wondered in my last column if “the Slidellians might be able to make the first act as enchanting as the sec-

ond.” Well, hear hear, pip pip and jolly good show, indeed they have. Applying the old adage that “less is more,” Director Gary Mendoza has lightened the first act by using a minimum of scenery and relying on the words themselves, as well as his fine actors, to tell the story. In this way, though the script still ladles out an oversized portion of narrative, Mendoza allows the audience to imagine all the details which leads to a much more engaging experience. Granted, this approach, fueled, I suspect, as much by economics as aesthetics, precludes some of the oohing and ahhing that the second act’s Tony-winning production values engendered on Broadway, but by then this tale has taken flight and SLT’s smashing production soars to its fitting conclusion. In this paean to the magic of storytelling, one of the most heartening aspects of SLT’s production is how Men-

Sarah Faust and David Stubbs in Peter and the Starcatcher doza and Co. have made it their own, an approach that too few other shows encourage (Godspell comes to mind), to avoid the xeroxed feel that plagues too many other local productions, particularly of works of the modern canon. Perhaps Mendoza’s wisest touch is to have actual teenagers play those in Starcatcher rather than the 20- and 30somethings that have portrayed them in the other productions I’ve seen

(Broadway and Le Petit). This adds a priceless verisimilitude to the underlying emotional ebb and flow. And if I assume that, during football season not enough males came out to audition, whatever the reason, Mendoza’s gender-bending casting in a number of roles pays off by further stretching an audience’s imagination and balances things out in a show that Continued on Page 36

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Continued from Page 35

has always featured one actor in (obvious) drag. Mendoza guides the cast to mine all the laughter in Elice’s script which employs mostly Victorian locutions but current expressions (“Can you hear me?” a la a cell phone ad) slyly creep in along with anachronistic references (Ayn Rand, Michael Jackson, etc.), allusive alliterations, terrible puns, and daffily dexterous wordplay as in “I smelled a smelt” and “He singlehandedly rendered me single-handed.” Perhaps my favorite was a description of something as “elusive as a key in a Philip Glass opera”; from the audience’s muted response, the “Google It” sign (which seems an addition from Broadway) that appeared after some references probably should’ve popped up here as well. As Peter and the Starcatcher keeps revealing its charms, the entire cast, most doubling in roles, proves to be utterly committed to its fanciful style and message. Sarah Faust, a sophomore at NOCCA, makes Molly, the Lord’s daughter, to the Victorian manner born--tough, knowing and fearless as she encounters new challenges. Yet beneath her headstrong exterior lies a teenager not immune to inchoate feelings of romance, however they may startle her.

Do I see Shavian heroines in Faust’s future? I hope so. Looking like a Pre-Raphaelite model with his mane of red hair, David Stubbs, another high schooler, brings out the vulnerability in Boy (the future Peter Pan) as well as his impulsiveness and innate goodness. From what I can tell, he doesn’t have as much experience on stage as Faust and occasionally it shows. But his is an altogether winning performance, particularly during his and Faust’s unsentimental non-love scene, an absolute delight. As two of the Lost Boys, Blakely Shouse and Mya Walgamotte continue our area’s recent tradition of outstanding performances by females of males (NOCCA’s 1776, Kristen Swanson in Caroline, or Change). Shouse, tall and angular, plays Prentiss as oh-so-logical and a rule-follower but a decent and essential companion to Boy. Walgamotte’s Ted, addicted to the joys of eating, is adorable and has his own inner strength. Last seen as the cynical, attention-starved daughter in SLT’s The Happy Elf and before that as an older neurotic widow in Loyola’s Beyond the Horizon, in Starcatcher Cara Duffaut finds the comedy in Smee, the jolly, slightly subversive pirate’s assistant without ever overdoing it; what can’t this talented young thespian do?!

In a role created specifically for this production, Trenton Gilmore (previously seen in SLT’s On Golden Pond) wordlessly and inventively plays a cat, a bird & other characters, and gets laughs merely by creating the sound effects for a duel aboard a pirate’s ship. Among the older members of the cast, Matthew Waranius endows Lord Aster with stalwart righteousness, while Matthew Price as Mrs. Bumbrake and Richard Sasnett as Alf, her swain, aptly and humorously fulfill all the Victorian conventions for their earthy characters. Eric Generes’ Black Stache may lack the swashbuckling menace of Christian Borle’s Tony-winning turn, but he grows into the part in the more keenly written second act, less inspired by Errol Flynn and more reminiscent of John Belushi, not a bad trade-off. Lillian Pfeiffer, Gary Gilmore and Carson Koffler all contribute worthily in a variety of roles. Carol Cline plays the onstage piano with aplomb while Julie Generes’ brilliantly individualized costumes for the mermaids at the start of Act Two (one used traffic cones, another cigarette packs, one featured Mardi Gras colors, etc.) more than made up for the “no uke(lele)s” policy of this Starcatcher. If you don’t have plans for the first weekend of Carnival, then head to

Slidell for this completely captivating trip to Neverland.

Hair & Other Stories at the Contemporary Arts Center

Grand larceny was committed at the Contemporary Arts Center (CAC) recently. By a two-year-old. In full view of an audience. This happened during Urban Bush Women’s Hair & Other Stories every time Aminata Balde took the stage. For not only is she extremely cute (a tongue-in-cheek video shown during intermission informs us that she’s not there just for her cuteness, but actually “runs the company”), but tremendously self-possessed and highly disciplined. She immediately steals an audience’s attention from all others around her. Balde struck me, however, as no mere toddler lurching around the stage, but preternaturally aware of what she was expected to do, a participant in the choreography as much as the adults. I expect her to be President some day or, at the least, run her own arts organization. Crafted from personal narratives that derive from conversations in African-American communities, kitchens, Continued on Page 37

Visit us for Mardi Gras! We will not raise our prices because we care for you!

Join the

Big Easy Stompers For Country Dancing Tuesdays 8-11

Margarita Mondays 7– close

Happy Hour Daily noon - 9 $3 well and domestic

36 · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Official Southern Decadence Guide · SouthernDecadence.com

Specials mixed up by

Michael


Continued from Page 36

hair salons and on social media, Hair & Other Stories promises to debate “the center of perceived American ‘values’ and celebrate the persevering narrative of the African Diaspora” as well as to “explore disquieting perceptions of body image, race, gender identity, economic inequities and what constitutes freedom, liberation and release in our everyday struggles to rise to our Extra-ordinary Selves in extraordinary times.” That’s a lot to cover in less than two hours. I wish I could say it did so effectively, but, despite certain powerful segments, Hair & Other Stories comes off as too diffuse to make much of an impact. It is at its best when exploring, through spoken word and movement, black women’s complicated relationship with their hair and the pressures that society in general and the Black community in particular place on women (the hair of black men seems to be absent from this conversation) to conform to a certain style. This leads to specific recollections, both humorous and disturbing, of what it was like to have one’s hair straightened; one could hear some audience members acknowledging their own similar remembrances. Here, Madam C. J. Walker, whose hair care products made her the first female self-made millionaire in America, is viewed with ambivalence; despite being one of the most successful African-American business owners ever, her products made natural “nappy” hair seem less desirable. Interestingly, despite the unpleasantness of the hair-straightening process, the overall experience, one of bonding with other women, is looked back on fondly. Colorism, in which darker skin tones, even within the Black community, are not always viewed as favorably as lighter ones, is touched on, but the question is left hanging as to why four of the five Black performers (a sixth is White) are light-complected. Intriguing phrases appear (“The

only thing harder than being a superhero is being a working class mother”) or are mentioned (“If you don’t get a seat at the table you’re probably on the menu”) but are not dealt with in depth. Chanon Judson and Samantha Speis’ modern choreography is impressive, and The Illustrious Blacks music provides a stirring fusion of funk, house and pop, but too much in the show takes a simplistic approach, substituting visual shorthand for a more complicated exegesis. All six dancer/performers (in addition to Balde) are unquestionably superb. Yet only at the start of the second act when the six men of the Black Magic Drumline, a local drum corps recently invited to be part of the production, took over the stage for a highly polished routine showcasing their disciplined flashiness did a charge of unique talent ripple through the auditorium, the only moment in the evening that organically brought the audience to life.

Curtain Up

Not sure what to expect from this, but Evan Spigelman’s drag alter ego Mz Asa Metric is hosting and producing, so it should be pretty fab: You ever hear something and immediately think of a taste? You ever eat something and go, “huh, this tastes like purple?” Or see something and go “hey, that building looks like an A-flat-minor scale”? Our brains do some strange things, so come indulge in some carnival happy hour realness on Sunday, February 4, to explore all the vagaries of the mind! SYNESTHESIA, an afternoon cabaret (2pm) and t-dance (3pm) in the back theater of the Allways Lounge (2240 St. Claude) will bring together local drag, burlesque, theater, dance and performance art to create a one-of-a-kind variety show and dance experience. Come for the variety acts (Quinn Laroux, Gayle King Kong, Ladee Lucerne, Grand Mafun, Scott Heron, Cameron Mitchell Ware), stay for the T-Dance afterwards led by DJ Dreamer!

Upcoming at Oz Super Bowl Sunday, February 4th Join us for all Super Bowl festivities. Whether you’re into tight ends or wide receivers, we’ve got the game playing on all TVs throughout the bar. Come and have a drink so you can go deep. And long.... Oz New Orleans presents MARDI GRAS 2018! We are very excited for a fabulous MARDI GRAS! Fabulous shows! MARDI GRAS SHOW NIGHT Starring the Ladies Of Oz: Lisa Beaumann, Chi Chi Rodriquez, Nicole Lynn Foxx, Connie Hung, and Special Guest Ladi Phat Kat, Hosted by: Persana Shoulders, Wednesday @ 10:30pm! MARDI GRAS EDITION OF THE JEFF D COMEDY CABARET Laugh at Oz for our special comedy show starring local comic, Jeff D, Feauring: Carla Cahlua, Geneva Joy, and Nicole Lynn Foxx. Thursday @ 10pm MARDI GRAS STRIP OFF Hosted by Persana Shoulders,

Thursday @ Midnight! $100 in cash for the winner! Sponsored by Swiss Navy. With Co Host - Nicole Lynn Foxx DJ LINE-UP Our fabulous resident DJs (DJ Kyle D, DJ Tim Pflueger, and DJ JRB) spinning all weekend long! FRIDAY: DJ Joe Gauthreaux SATURDAY: DJ Will Lowe SUNDAY FUNDAY: DJ Kyle D, DJ Tim Pflueger, and DJ JRB LUNDI GRAS (MONDAY): DJ Steve Sidewalk MARDI GRAS (FAT TUESDAY): PARTY ALL DAY AND NIGHT LONG WITH ALL YOUR FAVORITE DJS, BARTENDERS, PATRONS, AND FRIENDS!! Sexy gogos dancing on top of the bar for your viewing pleasure! Hosted by: Persana Shoulders SDGMXLIII WEEKEND PASSES ON SALE NOW! https://www.ozneworleans.com/ purchase/

Job Opportunities Ambush Magazine is growing!

Freelance & Contributing Writers Wanted

We want to hear from you if you are a working or aspiring journalist interested in covering topics meaningful to the LGBTQ community.

Snap Paparazzi Photographer Wanted

Do you frequent the LGBTQ bars and events? We want to hear from you if you are interested in regularly covering the bars and events.

If you want your upcoming show reviewed, contact Brian at bsnola2@hotmail.com.

If you are interested, please email your resume, cover letter, and portfolio to info@ambushpublishing.com

GayMardiGras.com · GayEasterParade.com · Jan 30 - Feb 12, 2018 · Facebook.com/AmbushMag · The Official Mag: AmbushMag.com · 37


Snap Paparazzi Pictures from the Corner Pocket | Photos by Jeremy Weinberg

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E D I R P E V HA U PLAY O Y E R WHE

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Hotel offers are subject to availability and require a valid credit card for reservation and at check-in. Room type not guaranteed. Blackout dates and holiday restrictions may apply. Must present valid ID and mychoice card upon check-in. Offer valid for stay at Boomtown Casino & Hotel New Orleans on stated dates only. Advance reservations required. This offer may not be combined with any other offer. Valid only on time/date specified and redeemable at Boomtown Casino & Hotel New Orleans. Active mychoice® card and valid photo ID required. This offer is nontransferable, non-negotiable and must be redeemed in person. Must be 21 years of age or older. Management reserves the right to change, cancel or modify this program at any time with applicable Gaming Regulations. Offer not valid for persons on a Disassociated Patrons, Voluntary Exclusion or Self Exclusion List in jurisdictions which Pinnacle Entertainment operates or who have been otherwise excluded from the participating property. ©2018 Pinnacle Entertainment, Inc. All rights reserved.

GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 800.522.4700


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