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Honoring LGBTQ+ History
Les Dames
HONORING OUR LGBTQ+ HISTORY
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du Soleil
DAP Health continues to honor its history rooted in health equity, inclusivity, and community collaboration by unveiling a new lobby in its Barbara Keller Love Building, the first of two exhibitions planned this year. Clients and visitors at DAP Health’s Wellness Wing will experience a space that has been transformed to pay homage to the fine art of drag, comedy, and humanitarianism.
Now, warm colors, vintage cabaret posters, and a life-size photographic mural of the drag troupe Les Dames du Soleil are reminding everyone about this valley’s rich history of inclusivity and fundraising.
“Steve Chase designed DAP’s first patient reception area, noting the connection between physical surroundings and wellness,” explains David Brinkman, CEO. “Since then, we have continued to create welcoming and vibrant spaces for the community members we serve.” To carry on this tradition, DAP Health partnered with Foley & Stinnette Interior Design, well-known across North America for transforming residential and commercial spaces. “Les Dames du Soleil are beautiful and vibrant inside and out, and we wanted the new waiting area to be a reflection of their empowering energy,” says Stinnette. “Bold IS beautiful when curated the right way.”
Clients are used to waiting in the area for acupuncture, reiki, massage, and group meetings. It is also where the computer lab is located, used by many for resume building and job searches.
“I am really pleased with how they changed up the color and decorative scheme of the space,” says John, a DAP Health client. “It’s just brighter, more vibrant, and a real change from the usual medical atmosphere, and I really appreciate it.”
For 30 years Les Dames du Soleil helped fund health access in the Coachella Valley, and their brand of humor and cabaret escapism improved the health of the entire community in an era when gay life was centered in bars, nightclubs, and galas.
Douglas Woodmansee and Marshall Pearcy, life partners since 1976, started Les Dames du Soleil using their gift of bringing people out of their shells through laughter. With a revolving cast throughout the years, the troupe helped bring in muchneeded funding to DAP, giving people with HIV (PWH) a chance to access health care, sometimes for the first time.
“We were the drag queens for people who don’t like drag queens,” says Douglas. “We won them over with lots of comedy, artful costuming, and always affordable ways to pitch in and help people with HIV.”
Whether in a bar for change, or in a convention center with celebrities, Les Dames du Soleil spent decades engaging and delighting a loyal fanbase.
Dottie and Maude at Queen of the Desert fundraiser.
Money was never the real reason;
“Les Dames du Soleil had a valuable purpose,” says Douglas. “People wanted something to believe in; to enjoy — to laugh at and to cry over.”
During the early AIDS crisis, finding that kind of community support was much harder for LGBTQ people.
“Our shows struck at the heart of the community, which we realized was an extremely generous and caring one,” he says. “We kept delivering to our fans and our fans loved us for it.”
DAP Health has been increasing health equity for the LGBTQ+ people in the Coachella Valley for almost 40 years. This includes meeting health and inclusion needs for people in other categories who face disparities in accessing care, especially due to race, class, and economic circumstance.
Building LGBTQ+ health equity has always included restoring the sense of belonging that many people lose because they are different. Due to open as well as cloaked hostilities, it still challenges many people to live authentically without facing isolation. Health experts warn that this is a serious health risk, and that community connection is a valuable antidote.
Before There Was Crowdfunding, There Were Les Dames du Soleil
Since 1994, they have raised $2 million so that people in the Coachella Valley with HIV can access the care and advocacy everyone deserves. “Les Dames du Soleil gave the audience an avenue to donate money,” says Douglas. “And we gave them a quite a show in return for donating money to DAP.”
That support was essential, given the lack of funding for health care, especially for people living with HIV (PWH). “We struggled along on nickels and dimes constantly,” says Ron Christenson, DAP’s founding Treasurer. “Half the time we didn’t have the money to pay the rent — it was really hard.”
In a time before accessible health care and LGBTQ+ protections, DAP founders kept carrying on because the suffering that PWH were experiencing in their valley was nothing short of a humanitarian crisis. “The poverty was unimaginable,” says Ron. “People who were dying did not have food, and many could not work, because people were afraid of them.” to make a difference, whether it happened in a bar or at a gala, and even if you had a day job in medicine.
To raise money, “We had big parties,” says Kathy McCauley, founding DAP RN. “And no matter who was coming, I always told them, ‘bring your wallet.’” No matter the venue, audience participation was a regular part of the shows, and as the years went on, people who wouldn’t traditionally consider LGBTQ+ entertainment had become devoted supporters of Les Dames du Soleil.
“We gave them a cabaret for twoto-three hours,” Marshall says. “The idea was to come in, leave all your troubles behind, have a drink, have fun, and laugh and sing along.”
Affordable Giving Can Move Mountains
“Les Dames du Soleil was founded on the premise that we wanted to include everyone,” says Marshall. “And by charging low admission rates, we made it so everyone could feel part of the community.”
Money was never the real reason; it was about community. People with HIV needed services and medication, and there were people of all income levels locally who wanted to support them. “Everyone was able to participate and give somehow,” says Marshall. “You could take $25 and go to the bar by yourself, have a couple of drinks, and throw the change into the tip jar.”
When Les Dames first started, they charged $3 at the door at the bars. Eventually when they started playing the ballrooms, prices went up to $20 and $25. “I wouldn’t let them go any
higher because I said, the idea of Les Dames du Soleil was founded on the premise that we wanted to include everyone. And we wanted everyone in the community to feel part of the community.”
“It might not have seemed like a lot of money, but every bit helped,” says Ron Christenson.
As fundraising events and venues went bigger in the 2000s, Les Dames du Soleil were in their element as they remained sought after in Palm Springs philanthropy, supporting many Coachella Valley non-profits, including The Center, AAP Food Samaritans, Jewish Family Service of the Desert, and Mizell Center. However, they never stopped entertaining and making appearances at events where folks on a regular salary could show their pride with smaller sum donations.
Fans Supported the Cause Tirelessly
“What still gets me is the memory of a man who was terminally ill with AIDS, sitting in the audience and holding up a check for us,” says Douglas. “It was to honor the love of his life who had lost the fight himself.” It meant the world to Douglas, because even in this man’s grief and with failing health, he wanted to come to the show, where he knew he was with friends, and he knew he belonged. Everyone was welcome,” says Marshall.
Giving Back Worked Both Ways
Earlier in the AIDS crisis, Douglas felt an urgent need to make a difference by speaking at support groups for families who had lost loved ones. Despite their grief many families still carried so much homophobia. Expressing it in therapy was part of their journey, but he knew he could not handle the toxicity. Then he saw the magic that was possible with a show, friends, and fundraising — no matter what the venue. “Now this, I can do!”
Marshall found a way to feel connected, and it was through using drag and cabaret for the well-being
Talented Design Team Infused Heart
Volunteering his time and expertise for this project came naturally for Beau Stinnette, who together with Dann Foley make up Foley “I knew I had to be careful and consider everything as a whole,” he says. “The memorabilia, the mural, the flooring, and the odd shape of the corridor were all part of the new plan.” Foley & Stinnette selected the paint colors, the new Revivals chairs and tables, and the new diamondshaped wall sconces.
The mural is a big part of the plan, and it spans almost 15 feet and is hugely colorful, he says. “As people begin to see and use the new space, all eyes will be up, not on the floor.” As if with a cosmic wink, the spirit of HIV awareness and prevention made its way into every detail, even in the name of the paint that was used.
& Stinnette Interior Design. “This project was truly an honor for me in many ways. I have lived in Palm Springs since 1999 and I was a DAP client from 2000 to 2002.” Sherwin Williams “Positively Red” was chosen, but Beau had selected the paint color before he knew the actual name. “When I saw ‘SW6871 Positively Red,’ I was elated, and I knew it was all meant to be.”
About Foley and Stinnette
Maude and Dottie, played by Douglas and Marshall, were part of Beau’s memories from his early Palm Springs days, and as the years went by he came to know the incredible impact they were making, and how they shined their bright light on the DAP community. “I needed to be true to the festiveness that’s already happening with these ladies,” says Beau. To do this, Foley & Stinnette used color palettes of red, blue and purple.
Interior designers Dann Foley and Beau Stinnette have built a reputation for great style, taste, and quality through their namesake firm Foley & Stinnette Interior Design. For more than 25 years, they have honed their it interior design craft with clients in the U.S. and Canada. was about community
It also meant keeping the existing floor, already with a distinctive design and many more years of usefulness left. “We also needed to be bolder than the floor,” says Beau. The floor in the designated corridor is very specific with colors of dark tan and navy blue that run in a swirled pattern.
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