FOOD WHERE TO FIND EXCITING TASTES
GAY & LESBIAN
CITY LIVING
|
ICON CAROLE POPE IS STILL THE BOSS
JUNE 2012
ARAB CANADIANS
KAMAL AL-SOLAYLEE’S SEARCH FOR HOME HIP HOP FROM MC JAZZ
THE POETRY
OF PRIDE
E! D I R P EVIEW PR
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intorontomag.com PUBLISHER Patricia Salib EDITOR Gordon Bowness DIRECTOR OF SALES & MARKETING Ryan Lester DESIGNERS Nicolรกs Tallarico, Jenny Watson OUR MISSION Inspire gay men and lesbians to live life to the fullest. Expand the gay and lesbian community by valuing diversity and individual choice. Celebrate Toronto. Provide readers with compelling news, information and entertainment. ADVERTISING & OTHER INQUIRIES (416) 551-0444 info@intorontomag.com EDITORIAL INQUIRIES (416) 551-0449 editorial@intorontomag.com PRODUCTION ads@intorontomag.com In Toronto is published by The Mint Media Group all rights reserved. 542 Parliament St, Toronto, ON, M4X 1P6 THE MINT MEDIA GROUP PRESIDENT Patricia Salib DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS Reggie Lanuza DIRECTOR OF SALES & MARKETING Ryan Lester EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT Lidia Salvador THIS ISSUE CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Paul Gallant, Krishna Rau PHOTO CREDIT Meaghan Ogilvie, Untitled 4, Underwater Series ll
CONTRIBUTORS Nicola Betts, Mary Dickie, Derek Dotto, Alice Lawlor, Glenn Mackay, Adam Segal, Margaret Webb, John Webster, Andrea Zanin
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PhoTo | VidEO | digital | SalES | rEntalS | SErViCE
CONTENTS
ISSUE 25
VIEWS | LIVING & DESIGN | INSIGHT | LISTINGS | ART & ENTERTAINMENT | SEX
8
11
8 11 22 24
22
THIS IS EAST YORK? John Harvey and Eric Bianchini’s modern haven by Derek Dotto WHERE EXCITING TASTES ARE HAPPENING A radical new breed of chef is taking root in Toronto by Margaret Webb THE FIFTH SEASON Luminato’s Jorn Weisbrodt and festival preview by Gordon Bowness THE QUEER HIP-HOP MOVEMENT The grand, gorgeous ambitions of MC Jazz by Mary Dickie
7
WHERE’S ROB FORD? Readers sound off
15
BI-CURIOUS MAMA with Adam Segal
16
JUNE EVENT CALENDAR & LISTINGS
18
VICTORINOX SWISS ARMY by Derek Dotto
19
PRIDE PREVIEW by Gordon Bowness
29
CAROLE POPE MAKES LANDFALL by Mary Dickie
31
KAMAL AL-SOLAYLEE’S LOVE LETTER TO TORONTO
by Alice Lawlor
33
THOSE PESKY ERECTIONS with Andrea Zanin
34
CAUGHT IN THE ACT scene photography
24
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TORONTO TALK EXCHANGE
John Webster
SOUND OFF WHERE’S ROB FORD?
→ Notwithstanding Mayor Rob Ford’s attendance at a PFLAG event in May, his ongoing refusal to
attend Pride over its 10-day run has inspired our readers to suggest all manner of events he might find appealing
ROB FORD BAKE SALE?
“Since we have to close the streets off anyway, why not
only fitting that a boat cruise in
extend the festival by one
his honour, the Big Gay Gravy
night and have Rob Ford Pride
Boat Cruise, become an event,
Kick Off Street Closing Gala?
not only for this year, but going
Do a Mardi Gras North theme.
forward, leading up to World
Permit the area so that the bars
Pride.”
can serve on the street. Charge
MICHAEL MULLEN, PETERBOROUGH
a toonie to cover costs and
What would your Rob Ford Pride event, real or imagined, look like? Let us know. Send suggestions to editorial@intorontomag.com or post a comment on our website. There’s a prize! All submissions received before Mon, June 11 will be entered in a draw for two tickets to the Digital Dreams Music Festival over Pride/ Canada Day weekend at Ontario Place.
the remainder gets donated “The Rob Ford Sprint... con-
to the gay-related charity of
testants must ride a bike, wear
his choice. We get an awe-
pink or be a reporter (for the
some party, he gets in our good
Star).”
books, the timing doesn’t inter-
RYAN L, TORONTO
rupt his family weekend, a
PRIDE UP CLOSE
charity gets cash and a prec-
get Mr Ford to attend the Pride
edent is set for an awesome
Parade: Substitute floats with
Dumpty’s Pride Goeth Before a
mayoral traction moving for-
subway trains riding down
Fall Quiche Eating Contest?”
ward. Win-win-win-win... n’est
Yonge. The mayor gets to lead
WALTER P, TORONTO
ce pas?”
the caravan of revellers along-
ROB L, TORONTO
side his brother.”
“How about Humpty
Check out our interview with Pride Toronto executive director Kevin Beaulieu discussing his first year at the helm of Toronto’s largest festival, online at intorontomag.com.
“My picture shows a way to
OCTAVIO CONTRERAS, TORONTO
Michael Erickson
“Given Rob Ford’s absence, yet again, from Pride, it seems
intorontomag.com
7
LIVING & DESIGN
O PE N H O U S E
SHARP ANGLES Medical illustrator John Harvey and Eric Bianchini, who works for Ontario’s Minister of Natural Resources, have carved a niche for themselves, quite literally, gutting an old commercial space in East York and turning it into a modern industrial haven →
Story Derek Dotto | Photography Nicola Betts
8
June 2012
LIVING & DESIGN
From the outside, you wouldn’t think anyone could live here. What did this place used to be? JH: It was called Maple Leaf Hair Styling. We have a feeling it was quite a large salon at one time. EB: When we first looked at the building, the barber shop had been reduced to the first 10 feet of the ground floor and the rest of it was divided into two separate apartments.
One of the industrial aspects, aside from the use of exterior lighting inside, is the ceiling. JH: Once the place was gutted, we decided to sandblast the exposed beams. I like the combination of surfaces. The darkness and the warmth of the wood — the nail holes and the screws sticking out — it’s a relief from the white, plainer surface of the drywall. It makes a nice combination.
Was it necessary to completely gut the building? EB: The apartments were pretty awful but we saw the potential. We basically tore it down to the bare bones. JH: Our architect convinced us that the right thing to do was to start from scratch. So we started with a concrete block, beams and a subfloor.
Another great feature is the kitchen island. JH: Our architect told me about this steel frame sitting in an alley. It was all rusted up. I picked it up and brought it here. I sanded all the rust off and coated it with a urethane. I had the electrician electrify it for appliances. We love the industrial look. This really represents what we had in mind.
You received possession of the building in the spring of 2009 with ambitious plans to overhaul it in six months. How did that go? JH: I was blissfully ignorant at first. Well, maybe not so much blissful but definitely ignorant. It was only after we hired the framer that I realized there was no way I could have attempted this by myself. But we kept plugging ahead. EB: Money was the biggest issue and things kept getting pushed back month after month after month. You finally moved in last September, after a year and a half of renovations. The place has more warmth than you’d expect from an industrial space. JH: It ended up being a little homier and cozier than we planned. It’s still a modern angular space. You’ve got wood. You’ve got metal. And you’ve got drywall. I like that it’s very plain. I really enjoy seeing the sharp angles, the square angles. EB: There’s nothing we’ve done to the house that we regret. We’ve never said, “Oh my god, we shouldn’t have done that.” → PROJECT ROOMS John Harvey and Eric Bianchini (above) kept the industrial concrete floor on the main floor where Harvey’s workspace is (next page, second from the bottom) — great for mucking about with paint. Much of the art in the home is by Harvey, from his art school days. All the living spaces are on the second and third floors.
There are also some very refined features. Why did you decide to go with hardwood flooring? JH: The original plan was to have a raw plywood subfloor coated in a clear epoxy but for various reasons, a lot of which had to do with my exhaustion, we switched to hardwood. The aesthetic would have been more complete. With this floor it went in another direction. It went a little more suburban and a little less industrial. But I’m glad we switched. EB: I like the contrast of the new floor with the old ceiling. What made you want to move into a commercial space? JH: Houses are generally broken into little rooms, rooms for the kids and parents. They don’t lend themselves to, say, painting, making a mess, sculpting, which are things I’ve been wanting to get back to. I wanted enough space to muck about, drop paint on the floor and not worry about ruining it. The ground floor is concrete, so I can just wipe up or paint over it. EB: Before this we were living in an open concept loft space on King West and we liked it so we wanted to find something similar. King West to East York, that’s quite the change of neighbourhood. EB: I was a little apprehensive at first. Continued on page 10
intorontomag.com
9
LIVING & DESIGN Continued from page 9
I’ve lived in the east end but never this
I’m sensing this “love of stuff” was
far east or north. But it’s great: There
a bone of contention when you two
are a lot of mom and pop shops.
decided to move in together.
JH: I really like that about this area. It’s
JH: Yes, it was.
still got family-owned grocery stores and
EB: There were a few arguments. Even
butcher shops that are excellent. I was
now, I don’t think there’s any clutter,
living under the impression that we’d be
but John feels I have too many things
on the frontier. You know when you’re
around.
downtown for a long time and you just
JH: He has a coffee mug collection and
imagine that there’s nothing out there.
he doesn’t drink coffee.
There’s also something about not having a highrise in your line of sight.
How long have you been together? JH: Six years? We were just trying to fig-
Speaking of elevation, you decided to
ure that out, weren’t we?
add a third floor early on.
EB: We don’t really know when we met
JH: It just wasn’t enough room. We
so we say December first.
couldn’t have any residential use of
JH: We DO know when we met.
the ground floor, so basically all liv-
EB: We met on the swim team [Toronto’s
ing space would have been limited to
LGBT Downtown Swim Club] in 2005.
the second floor and it wasn’t enough.
John was the first guy I ran into. We were
Our architect convinced us to add a
both locking up our bikes in front of the
third storey. At the last minute, a con-
pool. I was like, “Oh my God, if they’re all
flict arose between the building code,
as good-looking as John, I’m going to be
our designation and city zoning. So
in trouble.” I asked him, “Is this where
that was pretty stressful. In the end
they swim?” He said, “Yeah, I’ll take you
we only had to make minor changes to
in.” He introduced me to the coach and
the drawings: It mostly involved paying
some of the other swimmers. That was
more money. The whole place is still
nice. We started dating about a year later.
under 2,300 square feet. So if you survived the gutting and Was it overwhelming having such a
rebuilding of a house, you can prob-
large blank slate to work with?
ably survive anything, right?
JH: Our architect, Breck McFarlane,
JH: It was very stressful. I was publish-
gave us some books to look at and I also
ing a book at the time. It was insane.
trusted his aesthetic. I knew him and
If Eric hadn’t been there it would have
his aesthetic and it’s very sophisticated
been unimaginable for me. Even with
and restrained. He had seen our apart-
all our fights.
ment and knew what we liked.
EB: We didn’t have that many fights.
EB: We like things pretty simple.
I think the hardest thing for me was
JH: You like a little more stuff than I do.
paying rent and mortgage a year longer
EB: A little bit.
than I had planned.
JH: Eric likes stuff and I’d be happy with hardly anything.
You said you still have some minor
EB: I manage to place things without
work to do including building a deck
creating clutter.
extending out of your third floor bedroom. Then what?
I did notice a lot of knickknacks,
EB: [to John] I don’t know what you’re
including a china cabinet full of
going to do when you’re done. You love
superhero-laden tumblers.
working on these small projects.
EB: A lot of it is me, I guess. I like to col-
JH: I really do. I love working on the
lect things but I have to restrain myself.
house. I can’t let things sit. I guess I’ll
Growing up, I was into Dungeons and
have to finally get back to my art. I won’t
Dragons, comics and all that, so some
have a choice. But that was the reason
of that’s still with me. I’ve actually
for moving here in the first place. •
DE-cluttered.
10
June 2012
LIVING & DESIGN
FOOD
RADICALS OCCUPY (THEIR OWN) RESTAURANTS → The
personal is political… and what’s more personal than the food you put in your body? Story Margaret Webb | Photography Nicola Betts
I
haven’t felt this giddy about the eating scene since the local food movement exploded nearly a decade ago. Why go out to restaurants that serve bland industrial slop when I can get picked-that-morning tastiness at my favourite city farmers’ markets? I’ve connected with local farmers to fill our freezer with “organic-plus-plus” meats — heritage, grass-fed, free-range — that shame factory-farmed meats and
the chefs who serve them. Heck, the chickens we get from Lover’s Creek Farm are so free range I have to take care not to run over them when I pull into the lane for my order (along with the orders of a half dozen friends who are turning our Mini into a delivery truck). Having grown up on a farm, I get the economics — if we don’t support our local farmers, we’ll lose them, and be condemned to suckle on the
teat of big food and agribusinesses who reap profits from addicting eaters to cheap, high-fat/salt/sugar processed food. Our globalized industrial food system not only tastes bad, it’s killing us. You’ve heard about sky-rocketing obesity, cancers and diabetes. Consider why: When we eat something, we’re basically having sex with that food as well as everything that food has taken into its system. After all, we take those
substances into our deepest bodily recesses where they, in turn, feed the reproductive processes of our cells and become part of us. Do you really want to be having sex with the likes of Monsanto and their genetically engineered soybean and corn seeds grown in chemically laced soils often fertilized with barely processed sewage sludge? Or meats Continued on page 12
intorontomag.com
11
LIVING & DESIGN Continued from page 11
12
pumped with antibiotics and growth
For Cod and Country, called on chefs
hormones?
to take the lead in resetting expecta-
The only condom to shield you
tions about food as desire — fetishiz-
from that nastiness is to eat organic.
ing the rare, the expensive, the insa-
(I wish I could claim credit for
tiable appetite. “We face a crisis
this
you-are-the-food-you-have-
of scarcity,” he said. “Chefs [with
sex-with idea, but it comes from
their food choices] have the power
esteemed University of Guelph pro-
to make people and the earth sick.
fessor of veterinary science, David
So we have the power to make
Waltner-Toews, author of Food, Sex
the earth and people healthy.” He
and Salmonella).
urged restaurants to stop dishing off responsibility to diners to
Toronto chefs have come to real-
make ethical choices, pulling out
ize that the ingredients they serve
the sustainable seafood charts and
have to be at least as good as what
haranguing servers about whether
savvy eaters are enjoying at home.
the fish was raised or caught sus-
Or why go out? Yet the monumen-
tainably or swam in the pesticide
tal challenges — sourcing scarce
swill of some factory farm. Instead,
supplies, forging new connections
chefs should limit themselves to
near Cambridge who are showing us
with local farmers and fishers,
serving only sustainable options,
how to turn that strange bounty into
learning the politics, health impli-
then unleash their creativity to
exotic treats.
cations and cooking techniques —
make those “limits” delicious. That
Toronto chef Doug McNish, author
can hamstring creativity. Menus
way, we can all relax and get back to
of Eat Raw, Eat Well, is one of the
often featured the work of the pro-
enjoying dinner.
local young radicals dishing on the
Jason vanBruggen
Over the past decade, the best
→ T ERROIRISM Chef Michael Stadtländer near Honeywood, Ontario, at last fall’s Foodstock protest against the proposed Mega Quarry. Look for a similar event, Soupstock, in Toronto this fall.
ducer (rightly so) and the accoun-
Tama Matsouka Wong, author of
possibilities of a more plant-based
The chef cooks for just 12 guests at
tant (passing on increased costs)
Foraged Flavour, sees through the
future. The guy turned his body
a time, and he grows about 60 per-
with little more than a side-serv-
doom and gloom of scarcity to a
into a laboratory of radicalism and
cent of the ingredients on his 100-
ing of righteousness from the chef.
future of more possibility. Indeed,
lost more than 100 pounds on an
acre farm, sourcing the rest from
It was tasty and expensive and then
she sees a delicious future in weeds.
organic vegan diet (with a little exer-
nearby farms. As Stadtländer says,
it got boring.
The
forager
cise thrown in). Like many chefs, he
when you eat here, “You are eat-
But now we have a generation of
pointed out that our industrial food
started out cooking pub grub and
ing the land.” The restaurant has
chefs raised on the ethos of local
system has narrowed food choices
watched his weight soar and health
been named one of the 50 best in the
food champs such as Jamie Kennedy.
to about 60 plants (the majority of
plummet. Now the 27-year-old pro-
world and is easily Canada’s most
With the protocols and politics in
our calories are supplied by just 12
motes “kale as the new beef.” In
interesting. He recently opened a
place, these young upstarts are start-
industrial plants.) “Most modern
minutes, he whipped up vegan kale
more affordable sister restaurant,
ing to strut their stuff. Impatient to
health problems are not diseases,”
crisps that tasted like the richest
Haisai,
flex their creative vision, they’re giv-
she said, “but nutritional deficien-
sour-cream-and-onion chips, prov-
Worth a stop and a sleepover is the
ing the finger to big investors, indus-
cies.” Letting nature do its thing and
ing that a raw vegan diet can be deli-
historic village of Creemore, home of
trial food suppliers, show-off wine
collecting that bounty can expand
cious and easy. “I want no chemicals
Creemore Springs Brewery, the 100
lists, white tablecloths, and the suits
our choices to the thousands and
in my body,” he said. “Most of our
Mile Store and several art galleries.
and ties, instead taking up power
gives us the healthier and more
food is from agribusiness, grown by
What I love most about these
tools to bang together DIY hole-
diverse diet our hunter-and-gath-
huge corporations. I want to support
food radicals is that they’re no lon-
in-the-wall eateries in sometimes
erer ancestors enjoyed. Turning us
people doing the right thing and the
ger content just to source locally:
grotty pockets of town to serve real
into a nation of weed eaters is pretty
food tastes better. [Raw, vegan, nat-
They’re
local food with sizzling style and tat-
far-fetched in the short term, but
ural] is what food was for our ances-
beyond our palates, to the street.
tooed attitude. At affordable prices.
innovative chefs and foragers (who
tors.” It will soon be the food of the
Stadtländer teamed up with chefs
And people are packing the joints.
serve as their think tanks) can show
Über-rich too as the luxury Muskoka
across Canada to start the Canadian
They recently gathered, these
us the way. And when some dis-
resort Taboo recently hired him as a
Chefs Congress, which promotes
“New Radicals” as they’ve been
ease infects single-species corn or
consultant to inject a little raw into
education of local food systems. And
dubbed, at the Terroir Symposium
soybeans or those seeds unleash
their menu.
last fall, again led by Stadtländer,
on local food in Toronto, to explore
some
hor-
But the most rad leader of the local
some 70 Toronto-area chefs hosted
how to push farther into sustain-
ror, we’ll be thanking the likes of
food movement remains an old rad-
Foodstock to protest a proposed
able food frontiers — without los-
farmer Mark Trealout
(Kawartha
ical, Michael Stadtländer; a weekend
mega quarry that would destroy
ing the fun.
Ecological Growers) who uses down-
trip out of the city to his Eigesninn
2,000 acres of prime farmland in
One speaker, Barton Seaver, a
time to gather wild greens as well
Farm restaurant near Creemore and
Central Ontario and threaten the
Washington, DC, chef and author of
as chefs at Buca and Langdon Hall
Collingwood is a foodie dream trip.
water supply of the entire region.
June 2012
lawyer-turned-food
genetically
modified
in
nearby
taking
Singhampton.
food
politics
LIVING & DESIGN
Farmers wondered if anyone would
from domination by transnational
show up on that brutally cold and
corporate food companies.
rainy October day. But some 28,000
This may well be the food move-
concerned eaters donned rubber
ment’s
boots and bussed it two hours to the
Stonewall. The shame is that the
defining
moment,
its
hinterland to show their support.
LGBT community has not joined
This fall, chefs and eaters will take
with the “occupy food” forces in any
the fight to the streets of Toronto
numbers, which is odd as it fights
with Soupstock. They’re fighting
for things queer folk hold dear: The
to protect the best farm land in
right to decide what you put in your
Canada and also our food system
body and who puts it there.
NEW RADICALS WHERE EXCITING TASTES ARE HAPPENING
Beast Meat with a twist. 96 Tecumseth St. (647) 352-6000. thebeastrestaurant.com The Bellevue A delirious diner experience. 61A Bellevue Ave. (647) 350-8224. thebellevue.tumblr.com. Buca Artisinal charcuterie, Italian style. 604 King St W. (416) 865-1600. buca.ca. Cowbell Pioneer in the whole-animal movement. 1564 Queen St W. (416) 849-1095. cowbellrestaurant.ca. The Gabardine One of the only hip places in the financial district. 372 Bay St. (647) 352-3211. thegabardine.com. Grand Electric Fantastic Mexican. 1330 Queen St W. (416) 627-3459. grandelectricbar.com. Hopgood’s Foodliner East Coast fare updated. 325 Roncesvalles Ave. (416) 533-2723. hopgoodsfoodliner.com. Keriwa Café Local, seasonal, aboriginal-inspired. 1690 Queen St W. (416) 533-2552. keriwacafe.ca. Parts and Labour Hipster scene, stylish food. 1566 Queen St W. (416) 588-7750. partsandlabour.ca. Raw Aura Organic Cuisine Familiar foods prepared in a novel way (nothing heated above 43C). 94 Lakeshore Rd E. Mississauga. (905) 891-2872. raw-aura.com. Ruby Watchco Fresh and fantastic, like dining with a chic family, but dished up by TV’s Pitchin’ In star, chef Lynn Crawford. 730 Queen St E. East (416) 465-0100. rubywatchco.ca. Yours Truly Prix-fixe fare inspired by availability. 229 Ossington Ave. (416) 533-2243. yours-truly.ca.
WORTH THE TRIP OUT OF TOWN
Eigesninn Farm Michael Stadtländer’s original playpen; considered one of the best restos in the world. Private bookings only. (519) 922-3128. No website. Haisai Restaurant and Bakery Stadtländer’s whimsical new resto in town. 794079 Country Rd, RR2. Singhampton. (705) 445-2748. haisairestaurantbakery.com. 100 Mile Store Local and organic produce. 176 Mill St. Creemore. (705) 466-3514. 100milestore.ca.
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LIVING & DESIGN
RELATIONSHIP ADVICE
— with Adam Segal → “I’ve been married to my husband for seven years and we have a wonderful five-year-old little boy. Our relationship is mostly good but I can feel disconnected from him. Our lives are increasingly busy — our time together doesn’t always feel inspired. Recently, I’m having more and more thoughts and fantasies about women. I’m a woman and have always identified as straight (and been very aroused by men), but have also had occasional bisexual feelings. Lately, though, I’ve been craving a sexual experience with a woman. It’s starting to feel very distracting, an obsession. I’d like to tell my husband but I’m not sure how to go about it and I’m terrified that he’s going to freak out and feel very threatened.” Sandra While your question seems fairly straightforward
(Should
I
present and that the draw toward
tell?
women is more occasional. Sounds
And, if so, how?), you’re in for a
like you’ve been comfortable iden-
fairly complex answer. I think
tifying as straight until now and
there is more going on here than a
it’s totally up to you whether you
little bi-curiosity. Anytime we find
want that to change. If not having
ourselves on a fantasy binge, it’s
a chance to be sexual with women
usually a sign that we are having
leaves you deprived, you’ll have to
some unmet needs or sitting on a
consider if you want to change the
heap of unresolved feelings. I just
boundaries of your relationship.
think it’s vital that you investigate
Moving a relationship into non-
why these fantasies have surfaced
monogamous territory is a huge
so intensely at this time and what
undertaking and would take a lot
they could be helping you escape.
of careful and honest negotiat-
It may sound obvious, but I want
ing. If you don’t realistically want
to assure you that there is noth-
to hook up with women at this
ing wrong with same-sex desire
time, then the question is whether
nor with daydreaming about being
it would simply feel freeing to
with other people. Before voicing
let your hubby know about your
your occasional same-sex desires
desires and have this part of your
to your husband, sort out how
sexuality come out of the shad-
you, yourself, are feeling about all
ows to live a little. You’re right to
of this and what you might want
think that your news could shake
from him — if anything. Are you
him up — there’s no perfect way
wigged out because you’ve been
to tell him. The potential benefit of
so consumed by fantasies in gen-
your disclosure is that such hon-
eral or because it’s been lady lust
esty creates intimacy — and could
in particular? If there is a therapist
help create the kind of connection
or friend you can speak with about
you’ve been missing.
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all of your feelings, it will help you approach your hubby with more confidence. Your letter indicates that your attraction to men has always been
ADAM SEGAL The writer and therapist works in private practice in downtown Toronto. Ask him your relationship or mental health question at relationship@intorontomag.com.
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LISTINGS & EVENTS
JUNE IN THE CITY
1 AH WILKENS Porcelain auction, first of two days
10
14
VIVEK SHRAYA Screens What I Love About Being Queer
RUFUS WAINWRIGHT Free gig at Luminato
CLASSY LADY Sandra Battaglini opens
David Hawe
PATRICK WANG In the Family opens
9
16 DAWN WHITWELL Hosts Comedy Girl at Buddies
Art & Photography LOOKING FORWARD, LOOKING BACK The Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives presents a retrospective of the the first 25 people inducted into the National Portrait Collection back in 1998. Included are kd lang and Svend Robinson by Maurice Vellekoop, Richard Fung by Gilberto Prioste, Gloria Eshkibok by Millie Knapp and Jane Rule by Catherine Grant. 7:30pm10pm. Tue-Thu. Until Mon, June 11. CLGA. 34 Isabella St. (416) 845-3290. clga.ca. BEING SCENE Workman Arts’ travelling group show exploring mental illness, curated by Jamie Angell, Christina Zeidler and Lisa Walter. Featuring Claudette Abrams, Joey DAMMIT!, Lisa Faiz, Vija Francis-Celmins, Michael Morbach, Alan Parker, HMS Skycastle, Jane Watson, among others. 9am-9pm daily. Until Sun, July 29. Hart House. 7 Hart House Circle. workmanarts.com.
17 KATY PERRY Performs at MuchMusic Video Awards
23 BETTYE LAVETTE Heats up Nathan Phillips Square for the jazz fest
THAT’S SO GAY Sholem Krishtalka curates a group Pride show featuring Stephen Beckly, Cecilia Berkovic, Johnny Forever, Hannah Jickling, Helen Reed, Kyle Lasky, Elisha Lim, Mikiki, Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay, LJ Roberts and Andrew Zealley. Noon-5pm. Wed, June 6-July 29. Reception. 7pm-10pm. Thu, June 28. Gladstone Hotel. 1214 Queen St W. (416) 531-4635. gladstonehotel.com. TEL-TALK What is telling, what is talking, what is private, what is public? New book and exhibit documents the nine-month series of installations involving that endangered species, the phone booth. Featuring Julie Voyce, Hitoko Okada, Sheila Butler, Stuart Keeler, Dyan Marie and more. 6pm-9pm. Fri, June 15-July 14. Telephone Booth Gallery. 3148 Dundas St W. (647) 270-7903. telephoneboothgallery.ca. DEREK ROOT Obscured by Clouds, minimalist but lush new paintings from the
28
PAUL HUTCHESON Comedy at Buddies
Vancouver artist. Opening. 6pm-8pm. Thu, June 7. Until July 7. Monte Clark Gallery. 55 Mill St, bldg 2. (146) 703-1700. monteclarkgallery.com. FEET AND MIRRORS The National’s principal dancer Aleksandar Antonijevic’s evocative photographs of the company backstage and in rehearsal. Sun, June 3-17. Four Seasons Centre lobby. 145 Queen St W. (416) 345-9595. 10X10 LGBT photo portraits by Adamo de Pax, Allyson Scott, Sonja Scharf, John Monteith, Sue Lloyd, Renee Navarro, Alex Nursall, Guntar Kravis and JJ Levine. Opening. 7pm. Thu, June 28. Until July 20. Gladstone Hotel. 1214 Queen St W. (416) 531-4635. 10by10photographyproject.com. PAUL PETRO CONTEMPORARY WinWin, recent biotechnology-inspired video/ audio work by Nell Tenhaaf. And new work from Olia Mischenko. Opening. 7pm-10pm. Fri, June 15. 11am-5pm.
30 DJ PAULO Prism’s main event
Wed-Sat. Until July 14. 980 Queen St W. (416) 979-7874.
Dance NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA The North American premiere of Hamlet by Germanbased US choreographer Kevin O’Day, created in 2008 for Stuttgart Ballet. In the lead role Guillaume Côté, Piotr Stanczyk and Naoya Ebe will offer fascinating studies in contrast. Heather Ogden, Sonia Rodriguez and Elena Lobsanova switch off as Ophelia, with Jirí Jelinek reprising his role as Claudius, along with Keiichi Hirano and McGee Maddox. The music/soundscape is by John King with set and costumes by Tatyana van Walsum. $25-$177. 7:30pm. Fri, June 1, 2, 6, 7, 8. The spring mixed program remounts Wayne McGregor’s Chroma, a sensation from 2010, surely one of the sexiest things ever done by the
LISTINGS & EVENTS
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National. Set to unsettling music by Jack White, arranged by Joby Talbot. It’s a must-see. Performed with Maurice Béjart’s Song of a Wayfarer, a duet for two men that explores youthful despair, set to Gustav Mahler’s luminous songcycle. Plus the deceptively simple, endlessly delightful Elite Syncopations by Kenneth MacMillan with music by Scott Joplin. $21.50-$151.50 Wed, June 13-17. Four Seasons Centre. 145 Queen St W. (416) 363-8231. national.ballet.ca.
Fashion & Design NORITAKE PORCELAIN A large auction of Noritake and other Japanese art deco pottery and porcelain, from the collection of the late Marilyn Derrin. Preview. 2pm5pm. Auctions. 7pm. Fri, June 1. 11am. June 2. AH Wilkens. 299 Queen St E. (416) 360-7600. ahwilkens.com. JADE RUDE Hold Me, over-sized
illuminated text installation by the local designer and artist. 11am-7pm. Tue-Fri. 11am-6pm. Sat. Until Sat, June 30. Made. 867 Dundas St W. (416) 607-6384. madedesign.ca.
Film & Video IN THE FAMILY Patrick Wang’s first
feature is a tearjerker drama about the legal limbo a US father (played by Wang) has to endure after his partner — and biological father to their child — is killed and their six-year-old son is taken away. Starring Sebastian Banes, Trevor St John and Brian Murray. Opens Fri, June 1. inthefamily.com. WORLDWIDE SHORT FILM FESTIVAL Runs Tue, June 5 to 10. Always plenty of LGBT offerings. On the Canadian front: a new comedy from Josh Levy, The Immigrant, stars Scott Thompson as a washed-up comedian deported back to Canada; Liar Continued on page 18
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LISTINGS & EVENTS
Continued from page 17
IN SPOT VICTORINOX SWISS ARMY Story Derek Dotto
Versatile, reliable, sharp: Three words that define Victorinox Swiss Army’s famous knife — equally applicable to the company’s fashion offerings. “It combines functional design with innovative materials to ensure comfort and ease,” says Joachim Beer, president of the brand’s parent company, Global Fashion and Retail. Finally, Canada is getting more than just a taste. Since 1891, when founder Karl Elsener first invented that pocket knife in Ibach-Schwyz, Switerland, the goal was to remain on the cutting edge. “Our philosophy is based on combining flawless quality with reliability,” says Beer, “functionality with innovation, refined features with absolute perfection and iconic design.” Victorinox will try to carve a new niche in the Canadian market at its first North American flagship location in the heart of Yorkville, at the corner of Bloor and St Thomas. While the brand is already available at other retailers in Canada, this is the first chance for Canadians to have the full product range at their finger tips — iconic cutlery pieces flanked by travel gear, timepieces and fragrances. Located on Toronto’s Mink Mile, the main attraction is likely to be apparel. The ready-to-wear collection aligns function and form to create an elegantly restrained aesthetic. 18
June 2012
→ FUNCT IONAL S T YLE With Victorinox apparel think The North Face meets Prada.
Think The North Face meets Prada. “Victorinox customers are youngminded urban individuals who are active, mobile and appreciate quality, iconic design and innovation,” says Beer. That travel-conscious innovation comes in the form of water-repellent blazers, dress shirts with underarm ventilation, and swim trunks in microlight nylon. These pieces can be found in Victorinox’s classic, if not conservative, palette of red, navy and black which is enhanced this season by fresh citrus hues. Not to be outdone, the space itself is a marvel of design with a nod to both the past and the future. Developed by international architecture and design firm Blocher Blocher Partners, the 3,400-square-foot space combines natural materials such as oak walls and exposed brick with industrial elements like concrete floors and steel fixtures. Once Victorinox has dipped its toe into the chilly white north and decides the temperature is just right, we could start to see its familiar cross logo pop up all over the country. But for now, it’s one more thing Toronto can brag about. VICTORINOX SWISS ARMY 95 Bloor St W. (416) 929-9889.
by Adam Garnet Jones; and The Myth of Robo Wonder Kid, an anime music video from Joel Mackenzie. Also look for the US comedy Cougar Lesbians Go to College by Joshua Funk. worldwideshortfilmfest.com. WHAT I LOVE ABOUT BEING QUEER The Almost Not Quite Collective presents the premiere of Vivek Shraya’s new short film featuring 34 queers speaking to one big question. Followed by a Q&A, a special performance by Opera Arcana featuring GB Jones and Minus Smile and dance party with DJs Mama Knows, VS and Leila P. Installation by Jes Sachse. $5$10 sliding scale. 8:30pm doors. 9pm screening. 10:15pm performance & dance. Sat, June 9. CineCycle. 129 Spadina Ave. vivekshraya.com. HOWARD’S END As part of TIFF’s Books on Film series, celebrated director James Ivory discusses his Oscar-winning film from 1992, the third Merchant Ivory production based on an EM Forster novel. Eleanor Wachtel hosts. $35. 7pm. Mon, June 18. TIFF Bell Lightbox. 350 King St W. (416) 599-TIFF. tiff.net.
Print & Readings FLAMINGO RAMPANT BOOKS Local indie publisher launches two gender-independent kids’ books written by S Bear Bergman, The Adventures of Tulip, Birthday Wish Fairy, illustrated by Suzy Malik, and Backwards Day, illustrated by KD Diamond. 3pm-5pm. Sun, June 17. The 519. 519 Church St. flamingorampant.com. PROUD VOICES Pride’s reading and spoken word series moves offsite to Glad Day Bookshop and Toronto Women’s Bookstore. From Fri, June 29 to July 1, everyone from Nina Arsenault and Alec Butler to Kristyn Dunnion, Sky Gilbert and Waawaate Fobister parade through Glad Day. 598A Yonge St. (416) 961-4161. TWB events TBA. 73 Harbord St. (416) 922-8744. womensbookstore.com.
the top tier of Canadian singers: Jill Barber, Emilie-Claire Barlow, Ranee Lee, Elizabeth Shepherd, Jackie Richardson, Diana Panton, Lily Frost, Carol McCartney and host Heather Bambrick ($40.50-$45.50. 8pm. June 26. Koerner Hall. 273 Bloor St W). Also look for Bambrick to join Richardson and the Russ Little Trio ($20. 7:30pm. June 30. Old Mill. 21 Old Mill Rd), Sondheim Jazz Project with vocalist Alex Samaras bending Broadway to his own devices ($10. 7:30pm. June 24. Cherry Street Restaurant. 275 Cherry St.) and Ori Dagan ($15. 10pm. June 30. Now Lounge. 189 Church St). Fri, June 22-July 1. torontojazz.com.
Jazz & Classical
Rock & Pop
TORONTO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Your ears will bleed for joy in this version of Symphony of a Thousand, Mahler’s Symphony No 8. Featuring vocalists Adrianne Pieczonka, Erin Wall, Andriana Chuchman, Susan Platts, Anita Krause, Richard Margison, Tyler Duncan, Robert Pomakov, Amadeus Choir, Elmer Iseler Singers, Toronto Mendelssohn Choir and the Toronto Children’s Chorus joining an expanded TSO under the baton of Peter Oundjian. $49-$179. 8pm. Wed, June 13 & 14. There’s also a cool, late concert of Shostakovich’s Symphony 11. $25-$59. 10:30pm. June 9. Roy Thomson Hall. 60 Simcoe St. (416) 593-4828. tso.ca. TORONTO JAZZ FESTIVAL Some of the marquee concerts include superstar funkstress Janelle Monae on opening night ($62.50. 8pm. Fri, June 22. Nathan Phillips Square. 100 Queen St W), Detroit soul queen Bettye LaVette with the Big Sound opening ($25. 8pm. June 23. NPS), guitar wizard George Benson with Teresa Levasseur opening, ($72.50. 8pm. June 26. NPS), Canadian legend Peter Appleyard and the Sophisticated Ladies, aka
RUFUS WAINWRIGHT As part of Luminato, Wainwright gives a free concert, featuring the first-look at his new unabashed pop CD Out of fhe Game, produced by Mark Ronson. 9:20pm. Sun, June 10. Preceding his concert is The Rufus Songbook, where musicians like Krystle Warren, Teddy Thompson, Royal Wood, Alejandra Ribera, Sarah Slean and Andrew Rodriguez interpret Wainwright’s music. Free. 8pm. David Pecaut Square. 55 John St. luminato.ca. NXNE North by Northeast music and film festival runs Mon, June 11 to 17. There are free outdoor shows at Yonge-Dundas Square throughout the fest. Big names like The Flaming Lips, Bad Religion and Matthew Good headline. For a fresh dose of queer rock, check out the new acidjazz sound of Kelly and the Kellygirls. 11pm. Fri, June 15. El Mocambo. 484 Spadina Ave. $50 music pass; $25 one-day. nxne.com. CAROLE POPE Thu, June 21 at Buddies in Bad Times. See page 29. FORTE The Toronto Men’s Choir presents Songs My Brother Taught Me, a
LISTINGS & EVENTS
→ T HE LOOK Kris Knight by Adamo de Pax and Patricia Wilson by Guntar Kravis, in 10x10 at the Gladstone.
program of songs by gay composers like Benjamin Britten, Cole Porter and Elton John, plus premieres of commissioned works by James Collins and Jeff Straker. $30. 7:30pm. Sat, June 23. Church of the Holy Trinity. 10 Trinity Sq. (416) 323-3358. forte-chorus.com.
Sports ANNE MURRAY CHARITY GOLF CLASSIC
Anne Murray, Tom Cochrane, Roberta Bondar, Kurt Browning, Blake McGrath and more tee off in pantsuits to raise money for Colon Cancer Canada. Tue, June 26. Angus Glen Golf Club. Markham. coloncancercanada.ca. PRIDE AND REMEMBRANCE RUN The 17th edition of this fun 5km run and 3km walk raises money for the Lesbian Gay Bi Trans Youth Line and the HIV and AIDS Legal Clinic of Ontario. 10am. Sat, June 30. Starts at the corner of Church and Wellesley. priderun.org. CANADA CUP The Cabbagetown Gay Softball league hosts a popular softball tourney, again returning to the Lakefront West Park in Oshawa. Fri, June 29-July1. cgslsoftball.com.
Stage SANDRA BATTAGLINI Classy Lady, the Canadian Comedy Award-winner’s new one-woman show charting her rise to “ladyhood.” $25. 8pm. Thu-Sun. Thu, June 14-24. Alumnae Theatre. 70 Berkeley St. (416) 591-1417. brownpapertickets.com. FUNNY GIRLS AND DYNAMIC DIVAS The music and comedy cabaret celebrates 10 years supporting Sistering, a local agency serving homeless, marginalized
and low-income women (sistering.org). Featuring Liberty Silver, Sandra Shamas, Elvira Kurt and more. $75. 6pm. Thu, June 14. Bluma Appel Theatre. 27 Front St E. (416) 366-7723. stlc.com. BUDDIES IN BAD TIMES The LGBT cultural hub presents Queer Pride, a great series of cabarets, comedy, theatre, parties and more. Includes O Manada, Boylesque TO’s stripped-down and dirty homage to the true north. $20 adv; $25 door. 9pm. Fri, June 15. Strip Spelling Bee is what you think it is… demented fun. $10. 11pm. June 15. Tallulah’s Cabaret. Body Politic is a reading of Nick Green’s play looking at the rise and fall of the seminal Torontobased gay and lesbian publication. PWYC. 2pm. June 16. Comedy Girl is funny queer women daring you not to laugh. With Zoe Whittall, Carolyn Taylor, Allyson Taylor, Heather Gold, Andrya Duff, Lindy Zucker, Ashley Moffatt and Mariko Tamaki; Dawn Whitwell hosts. $15. 8pm. June 16. Free Jane is Sky Gilbert’s open mic night featuring a sneak peak at Hope Johnson’s new play. Free. 8pm. June 17. PrideCab is the hallmark of Buddies’ Queer Youth Arts Program, featuring Sean Casey, Reece McCrone, Ethan Resendes, Jackie Rowland, Shauna Sloan, Katherine Sly and Philip Turkiewicz. Free for 25 and under; $10 for the rest. 8pm. June 20. Shawn Hitchins’ Fire (Crotch) Sale is Hitchins’ “final” farewell cabaret performance featuring new and pre-loved material, Sue Newberry, Andrya Duff and others. $20. 8pm. June 21. Young, Gifted and Black is a reading of a new play crafted by Project: Humanity. PWYC. 8pm. June 27. Tallulah’s. At 6:30pm is Café Scientifique, a panel discussion front-line service providers and community experts. black-cap.com. Paul Hutcheson’s Pride Package II is throbbingly funny comedy from Hutcheson and guests Mike Albo, Kristen Becker, Susan Fischer, D’yan Forrest, Robert Keller and more. $10-$20. 8pm. June 28. Bitch Salad Gives Back finds Andrew Johnston returning to host a night of fierce female comedy featuring Christina Walkinshaw, Emma Hunter, Julia Hladkowicz, The Cheeto Girls, Gavin Crawford and more. Partial proceeds go toward the AIDS Committee of Toronto and Buddies in Bad Times Theatre. $20. 8pm. June 29. Homo Night in Canada comedy showcase returns with Kristen Becker, Ian Lynch, David-Benjamin Tomlinson, Marco Bernardi, Richard Ryder, Dawn Whitwell and the Queer Comedy Collective, among others; The B-Girlz host. $25. 8pm. Sat, June 30. Buddies in Bad Times. 12 Alexander St. (416) 975-8555. buddiesinbadtimes.com.
Causes & Events FRIENDS OF COMMUNITY SCHOOLS SCHOLARSHIP BANQUET In support of
the Triangle Program’s Scholarship Fund for kids wishing to pursue postsecondary education. With host Luba Goy and an appearance by Rick Mercer. $60. 6pm-10pm. Thu, June 7. Dim Sum Continued on page 20
IN SPOT PRIDE PREVIEW Story Gordon Bowness
coinciding this year, Sun, July 1 is
→ ROCK ON , SIS T ER Bif Naked makes her Toronto Pride debut on Fri, June 29.
the perfect opportunity to cele-
fresh (aka Melleny Brown, owner
brate uniquely Canadian values like
of Play Records) joining up with
diversity, equality and tomfoolery.
SpekrFreks
With Canada Day and Pride Day
and
Billy
Newton-
Pride changes up a few things
Davis at the Central Stage Saturday
this year: There’s a new stage and
evening. Over at the Wellesley
extended performance hours over
Stage that night, Don Berns, aka
Pride weekend, Fri, June 29 to July
Dr Trance, hosts the evening por-
1. The new North Stage and Trans
tion of Dirty Disco, 12 hours of
Space will be at Dundonald and
great DJs, including Tom Stephan
Church, Friday evening to Sunday.
of Superchumbo.
And main stages will run until 1am
The Brown Out program (7:15pm
certain nights: The DJ Central Stage,
to 8:45pm) Saturday evening on
on Church between Alexander and
the Village Stage at Church and
Maitland, and the South Stage at
Wellesley features Sikh Knowledge
Church and Wood, will stay open
from Montreal — East meets the
’til 1am on Friday and Saturday;
West Indies with his unique hip-
the big Wellesley Stage, across from
hop fusion. The stage closes with a
the subway, will run ’til 1am on
blowout from Scissors DJs Fawn Big
Saturday.
Canoe and Sokes going ’til 12:30am.
Another
new
wrinkle
finds
Because there is no beer garden at
the Dyke March ending in Allan
the Village Stage there’s more free-
Gardens.
that
dom of movement; it’s easy to join
marchers will welcome a chance
in the dancing. And DJ Blackcat gets
to relax and gambol amongst the
the coveted final spot of the week-
greenery. And see the opposite page
end, finishing up at 11pm.
Organizers
think
for changes to the Proud Voices literary series.
Also
on
Sunday,
much-loved
Blockorama returns to the Wellesley
Pride weekend kicks off at the
Stage with superstar DJ and pro-
South Stage on Friday evening
ducer from Montreal, jojoflores,
with a new party, the KiSS FM
expected to again to bliss out par-
Kiss Off, at 7pm, followed by sta-
tiers just after 10pm.
dium rockers The Cliks (8:30pm) and Canadian writer and rocker Bif Naked (9:30pm). Other highlights include Mellee-
PRIDE TORONTO For updates go to pridetoronto.com. intorontomag.com
19
LISTINGS & EVENTS Continued from page 19
→ KELLY & T HE KELLYGIRLS Rock the El Mo for NXNE on Fri, June 15.
King. 421 Dundas St W. (416) 596-2280. triangleprogram.ca. POWERBALL The Power Plant celebrates 25 years of innovative contemporary art with LA DJ Alex Merrell and art from Philippe Blanchard, Sarah Febbraro, Jesi the Elder and more.. $165. 8:30pm. Thu, June 14. 231 Queens Quay W. (416) 973-4018. thepowerplant.org. INSPIRE AWARDS Community celebration produced by the Pink Pages with hosts Paul Bellini and Mandy Goodhandy and DJ Craig Dominic. $40. 8pm reception; 9:30pm awards. Fri, June 15. Casa Loma. 1 Austin Terrace. inspire-awards.ca. MUCHMUSIC VIDEO AWARDS A performance by Katy Perry ups the pandemonium quotient. Airs live. 9pm. Sun, June 17. MuchMusic. NATIONAL BALLET OF CANADA GALA
The Diamond Gala, in celebration of the company’s 60 years, features an hour-long performance of short works, including recent work by Matjah Mrozewski and world premieres by Robert Binet and Guillaume Cote. Followed by a glamorous cocktail reception. VIP tix include a post-show dinner. $1,500
gala dinner; $55-$133 performance and reception. 6:30 performance; 7:30 reception. Wed, June 20. Four Seasons Centre. 145 Queen St W. (416) 345-1944. national.ballet.ca. AIDS VIGIL Songs, readings and performances of healing and recovery. Free. 9pm-10:30pm. Thu, June 21. AIDS Memorial. Cawthra Square Park. 519 Church St. (416) 392-6878. the519.org. RAINBOW FLAG RAISING City Hall (but probably not the mayor) officially proclaims Pride Week. Noon. Fri, June 22. Nathan Phillips Square, at the stage. 100 Queen St W. pridetoronto.com. BACK TO OUR ROOTS 2 An indie Pride celebration commemorating the actual anniversary of NYC’s Stonewall riots. Music, workshops and more with Blackness Yes!, Kiki Ballroom Alliance and Six Degrees Community Accupuncture Free. 1pm-11pm. Sun, June 24. The 519 and Cawthra Square Park. 519 Church St. THE PRIDE PROM Under the Queer Blue Sea, end-of-year celebration and grad party for Toronto’s LGBT high school students and their friends. With hosts The House of Monroe and beats by DJs Lauren and Quinces.
Sponsored by The Triangle Program and Supporting Our Youth. $15. 8pm1am. Mon, June 25. Buddies in Bad Times. 12 Alexander St. (416) 324-5077. soytoronto.org.
Parties & Dancing UNMASKED A masquerade dance party with open bar to raise money for the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research (CANFAR), Canada’s only charitable foundation dedicated to eliminating HIV/AIDS through research. The theme is “fire and ice.” With DJs Eddie Martinez, Jamal and a performance by Sofonda Cox. $100. 9pm-4am. Sat, June 2. Polson Pier. 11 Polson St. canfar.com/unmasked. THE MONSTROUS BALL Buddies’ mix of performance art, fashion, music and dancing. Featuring a Gaga runway show, performances by Tyson James, Kimberly Persona and Nina Arsenault, plus a full-facility late-night party with DJ Miss Margot and Cassandra Moore. $10. 10:30pm. Thu, June 28 (dance parties Friday and Saturday, too). Buddies in Bad Times. 12 Alexander St. (416) 975-8555. eccehomotheatre.com.
GREEN SPACE ON CHURCH The 519’s series of free outdoor parties returns offering the perfect mix of high energy music, easy-going vibes and community get-together. Thu, June 28 to July 1; all proceeds support The 519’s amazing programs. Kicks off with Starry Night with celebrity bartenders and performances by the Toronto AllStar Big Band, Sofonda Cox and music by Alessandro and Phil V. 7pm-midnight. June 28. One World sees superstar DJ Frankie Knuckles teaming up with local star Deko-ze and more. 4pm-midnight. June 29. Backyard Beats during and after the Dyke March has Yes Yes Y’All and Delicious setting the stage for headliner DJ Ana Paula. 1pm-midnight. June 30. the519.org. LIBIDO The Dyke March fundraising party with DJ Linguist, Dainty Box and more. 9pm-2am. Wed, June 27. Gladstone Hotel. 1214 Queen St W. (416) 531-4635. gladstonehotel.com. PRISM A series of six circuit parties running from Thu, June 28 to July 1; $170 all access pass. The outdoor Aqua party moves back to the lakeshore at Sugar Beach with DJs Manny Lehman, Honey Dijon, Aron and more. Price TBA. 2pm-9pm. Sat, June 30. 137 Queens Quay E. The Main Event features DJs Chus & Ceballos, Paulo, Micky Friedmann and more. The Guvernment/Koolhaus. $65. 10pm-8am. June 30. 132 Queens Quay E. Revival feature Peter Rauhofer, Dave and Gerardo, Javier Medina and Sofonda Cox. $70. 10pm-8am. July 1. The Guvernment/Sky Bar. Tickets from Priape. 501 Church St. prismtoronto.com. DIGITAL DREAMS FESTIVAL Afrojack, Richie Hawtin, Duck Sauce, Steve Lawler, Chuckie, R3hab, A-Trak, Hed Kandi, Dubfire, Nic Fanciulli, Mark Knight, Designer Drugs, Art Department and more. $70 one day; $110 for both. Noon-midnight. Sat, June 30 & July 1. The Flats, Molson Canadian Amphitheatre. Ontario Place. ticketmaster.ca. •
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A RT & E N T E RTA I N M E N T
L U M I N AT O
SUMMER STORM → Jorn Weisbrodt
rides a tornado of creativity into town
Story Gordon Bowness | Photography Lucie Jansch
L
uminato, Toronto’s sprawling arts festival in June, is a strange beast. New Yorker writer Hilton Als… a War of 1812 installation… Yves Saint Laurent’s makeup artist… Somali-Canadian rapper K’Naan…. How is this one festival? The festival’s new artistic director, Jorn Weisbrodt, is undaunted by Luminato’s identity problem.
22
June 2012
In fact he’s excited by the possibilities presented by all the oddly shaped spaces between seemingly ill-fitting festival offerings. “It felt like it wasn’t one festival,” says Weisbrodt. “It felt like it was seven festivals. It was music, it was dance, it was theatre, it was magic, it was this, this, this and this. “My approach is to try to bring
these art forms into one room and try to connect artists and their work, really make it a place for creation, where artists of different backgrounds and nationalities meet to have an exchange and an opportunity to create something new.” Much of this year’s programming was set by the time Weisbrodt came on board. “The big blocks
were already in place,” he says, “thrown down on the grounds of the festival. You still have to put them together to create the building that is the festival. “How do you connect the different programming? How do you connect artists and their ideas? How do you enrich the experience of the festival? How do you encourage people to move from
A RT & ENTERTAINMENT
→ ONCE IN A LIFE T IME Luminato artistic director Jorn Weisbrodt (right) calls Einstein on the Beach (opposite page) one of the great masterworks of the 20th century.
JUST CONNECT: WEISBRODT’S MUST-SEES AT LUMINATO
one aspect of the programming to the next?” The
ancillary
programming
around a Beethoven concert is one example of Weisbrodt’s connective
drive.
Toronto
pianist V Tony Hauser
Stewart Goodyear will play all 32 of Beethoven’s sonatas in one sitting (though broken up into three concerts one after the other). “That’s 11 hours of music by heart,” says Weisbrodt. “It’s like running three
before each performance. There’s
marathons in a row. When I first
also a panel after one performance
heard about this, I thought of it
with scientists from the Perimeter
almost as a performance art piece
Institute for Theoretical Physics in
in a gallery…. So to emphasize
Waterloo discussing the science of
this, we commissioned Indonesian
the opera.
artist Melati Suryodarmo to create
Weisbrodt did bring another
a performance art piece that you’ll
high-profile project to Luminato:
see at the same time.”
the first stop of boyfriend Rufus
Weisbrodt
also
Einstein on the Beach “It is probably the most important opera of the last 50 years and ranks among the finest works of art like Munch’s “Scream,” Pollock’s drip paintings, Wagner’s Ring, or “Strawberry Fields Forever” by the Beatles. Would you miss a Beatles concert if a friend offered you a ticket?” $49-$175. 6pm. June 8 & 9. 3pm. June 10. Sony Centre. 1 Front St E. Stewart Goodyear: The Beethoven Marathon (with performance by Melati Suryodarmo) “Find out if what you see will help you to hear better. And then stroll over to the ROM to see Jorinde Voigts drawings, a silent version of Beethoven’s Sonatas for the eyes.” $35-$85 (per concert). 10am. 3pm. 8:30pm. June 9. Koerner Hall. 273 Bloor St W. Robert Lepage’s Playing Cards “For everyone who wants to know how the drama of the Iraq War can affect even the superficiality of Las Vegas and ever wondered how you can create a tornado on a stage.” $45-$90. 7:30pm. June 13-16. 2pm. June 17. Four Seasons Centre. 145 Queen St W. Carretilla Initiative “For the really culturally hungry, who want to eat an artwork to consume more art, I suggest you check out Rainer Prohaska in a different venue each day as he assembles modular kitchen units to ever new sculptural configurations depending on the recipe that is being cooked.” Free. June 9-17. Various locations. La Belle et la Bête “For everyone who thinks their relationship sucks and does not believe that opposites attract. Here live actors and holographic imagery create a new form of theatre for all adults and those who will be over 12.” $49-$99. 7:30pm. June 8, 9, 11 & 12. 2pm. June 9. 3pm. June 10. Bluma Appel Theatre. 27 Front St E.
commissioned
Wainwright’s North American tour
rising German art star Jorinde Voigt
supporting his new Mark Ronson-
to create a cycle of large drawings
produced pop album, Out of the
based on the Beethoven sonatas.
Game. Wainwright also joins the
at the city. By way of example he
improvisations. It was an incredi-
“Her show is at the ROM so you can
already programmed tribute to his
talks about being in Berlin in 1995
ble atmosphere. That’s kind of the
stroll over and see it after the con-
mother Kate McGarrigle who died
when environmental artist Christo
ideal, the dream that a festival can
certs. So you’ll see how another
in 2010.
wrapped the parliament building,
inspire.”
artist interprets Beethoven.”
“I made sure everyone at the fes-
the Reichstag, in fabric. “At first
Certainly not on the grand scale
The highlight of the festival is
tival was on board about the Rufus
I wondered if it was really neces-
of Christo, but the newly config-
a remount of Robert Wilson and
concert. There is nothing worse
sary… Christo,” he says rolling his
ured festival hub at David Pecaut
Philip
groundbreaking
than the artistic director push-
eyes. “But it really was the most
Square will help give Luminato its
opera, Einstein on the Beach. Of the
ing his mediocre wife soprano to
incredible experience. It changed
own special vibe. The hub is home
four-plus hour opera, Weisbrodt
get the starring role at an opera
the city; people were transformed.
to all the free concerts and more
says, “It is really like looking into
house,” he says, laughing. “Luckily,
Everyone was so friendly… and
and is defined and shaped by the
paradise. There were so many
Rufus is not a mediocre artist and
Berliners are not a friendly people.
“Windscape” ribbon installation
scenes where I started crying
the family are not mediocre art-
There was this lightness to every-
by architects Jack Diamond and
because it is so beautiful.” Again
ists. They are Canadian and they
thing, the idea that you could have
Donald Schmitt.
while he didn’t program the opera,
belong to the best of music in
a new start, that we were released
“A festal is like a living organism,”
his fingerprints are all over it. For
Canada.” Modelled after a similar
from this oppressive, dark, brood-
says Weisbrodt. “I often describe it
the past four years, Weisbrodt
McGarrigle tribute last year in New
ing symbol of Nazi Germany that
like a fifth season, because it has
was the director of The Watermill
York, Love Over and Over features
hadn’t been used for decades.
a very defined period and it comes
Center in Long Island and execu-
Kate’s sister Anna, her daugh-
And all of a sudden when Christo
back every year at the same time.
tive director of RW Work, repre-
ter Martha Wainwright and other
threw this light grey shimmering
And I hope this festival brings its
senting and managing Wilson’s
family members joined on stage by
fabric over it, it grew into noth-
own set of emotions, and thrills
work.
approached
Emmylou Harris, Bruce Cockburn,
ing… it was gone. You could pull
and experiences, and that it really
Luminato four years ago about the
Ron Sexsmith, Jane Siberry and
it away and it was gone. It had
sweeps you off like a beautiful
revival of Einstein. “I put together
others.
this lightness that competed with
summer storm.”
Glass’s
Weisbrodt
all the co-commissioning partners
Out of all the festival’s interdis-
the clouds and the sky. And peo-
so I was a driving force behind this
ciplinary dialogue, the German-
ple gathered… and communicated
revival,” says Weisbrodt, who’ll
born Weisbrodt is hoping for noth-
with each other. They used the
discuss the opera 45 minutes
ing less than a new way of looking
fabric backdrop for their own little
LUMINATO Festival hub: David Pecaut Square. 55 John St. Fri, June 8-17. (416) 368-4849. luminato.com. intorontomag.com
23
A RT & ENTERTAINMENT
MUSIC
ALL THAT JAZZ → Egyptian,
queer, female and Muslim — a gutsy newcomer shakes up Toronto’s hip-hop scene Story Mary Dickie | Photography Glenn Mackay
T
here’s no doubt it takes
encing this, being a female in hip
tion. “We came here because my
guts to be a female hip-
hop. I hear it over and over: ‘The
uncle said they needed profes-
hop artist. So what does
sound of a female rapper is wack.
sionals, and it seemed like the
was the growing realization that
it take to be a gay female Muslim
A woman rapping is not normal.’”
kind of place where a bunch of
she was gay. Jazz, who had been
hip-hop artist? A lot of guts. As far
Still, Jazz says that some of the
different species would meet and
writing poetry since she was a lit-
as she knows, MC Jazz is the only
fiercest opposition she faces has
make this giant utopia,” she says.
tle girl, found that creative expres-
one brave enough to wave that
nothing to do with her sexual or
“But it was not what we hoped it
sion in the form of writing and
particular flag, at least in Toronto,
musical identity. “Honestly, in the
theatre classes helped her deal
but she is trying to encourage
queer community it’s about being
with the negative messages she
other
to
an out Egyptian person of colour
show their colours by establishing
whose identity is Muslim,” she
the Queer Hip-Hop Movement —
says. “As much as I’m not a prac-
which is also the title of her debut
tising Muslim and I’m not reli-
EP. “I love hip hop, but there’s
gious, it’s still part of my identity,
so much homophobia in the lyr-
and if someone starts trashing
ics, and nobody can come out,
Islam, I have to defend it.”
would-be
performers
because you have to be like that to be in it,” she says. “I’m experi→ MOVING MESSAGES MC Jazz can craft righteous politics into a fun, sexy vibe.
“THE KIND OF DREAMS I GOT ARE TOO BIG FOR A CLOSET.”
Muslim after 9/11, I was bullied.” Further
complicating
matters
was receiving, including the disapproval of her family, who sent her to “gay therapy” in an attempt to reset her sexual orientation. “I didn’t know what was going on with me,” she says. “I had these
would be. We’re still stuck in the
feelings and I was questioning
is
mentality of ‘You’re the immi-
my sexuality, but I didn’t know
Yasmeen Kamal, grew up in Egypt
grant, you don’t belong here.’ It
the first thing about question-
and Kuwait and moved to Canada
was more than culture shock; it
ing my sexuality. I didn’t know
with her family in 2000, when she
was like a new kind of oppression.
that gay was something that you
was 15. It was a difficult transi-
And as someone who identified as
Continued on page 26
Jazz,
whose
real
name
intorontomag.com
25
A RT & E N T E RTA I N M E N T
Continued from page 25
could be. I didn’t know the word
rhymes and you go, ‘Oh my God,
her debut full-length album, due
on gay bashers. “I felt it was really
‘queer.’ I didn’t know that what-
did he just say what I think he
in late July, with DJ/producer
important to show that this is how
ever I was was just me, and that I
said? Am I really dancing to this?’
Paula Burrows, aka Cozmic Cat.
we support each other,” she says.
had to accept it before I told other
And that’s where the drive came
The two met when Jazz’s fian-
“Maybe me and a gay man don’t
people who I was.
from. I noticed that queers in gen-
cée took her to one of the Cherry
have much in common in some
“But my poetry got more com-
eral were not that receptive to hip
Bomb events hosted by Burrows
ways, but I wanted to reach out
plex and smarter as I got smarter,
hop, and that most mainstream
and Denise Benson as a birthday
and say I’m thinking about them
and I thought, ‘Holy shit, I’ve got
music is quite misogynistic and
treat, and asked Burrows to give
too, and people of colour. The
something to say.’”
homophobic, and I just thought:
Jazz a shout-out. They became
album expresses the way I feel
Jazz, who now has a day job as
This is what I want to do, inclu-
friends, and Burrows invited Jazz
about all those people and myself
a theatre technician at Buddies in
sive music, so when I’m dancing
to perform at another Cherry
— it’s my story of coming out, of
Bad Times, was thrilled to learn
I don’t have to worry about what
Bomb night. “I walked into the
confronting prejudice, of stand-
that her late grandfather had been
I’m dancing to. I’m not doing this
booth, she put on ‘Push It’ by
ing up for people who don’t have
a poet and a playwright in Egypt.
just for me, I’m doing this to make
Salt-n-Pepa, I started rapping and
a voice. It’s political, but it’s also
That knowledge countered her
a change, a drastic change, in hip
everybody went nuts,” Jazz recalls.
fun and sexual. My goal is to make
feelings of isolation and made her
hop.”
“And she looked at me and gave
changes in our communities, and
me the thumbs-up. She said, ‘I’m
for female MCs to be taken seri-
going to be your producer.’”
ously, because they are a pivotal
feel both connected to her heri-
It’s a mighty tall order, but MC
tage and justified in her artistic
Jazz is nothing if not confident,
pursuits. “I was like, hey, this is where I got it from!” she says. “I was kind of a drama geek in school — that’s where I felt safe, and it nurtured my work. Doing improv and acting kept pushing my writing forward. And then I started listening to hip hop.” On the surface, hip hop seemed like the perfect vehicle to combine Jazz’s theatrical and poetic interests. But while she loved the
Jazz
“AS MUCH AS I’M NOT A PRACTISING MUSLIM AND I’M NOT RELIGIOUS, IT’S STILL PART OF MY IDENTITY, AND IF SOMEONE STARTS TRASHING ISLAM, I HAVE TO DEFEND IT.”
beats, she was often turned off
brims
with
enthusiasm
about the creative relationship
part of changing not just hip hop but our image as women.”
she enjoyed with Burrows as they worked on the album. “It felt natural. She’d come up with some beats and I’d try and match them with some of my writing, and we’d go back and forth with it. I told her it was important to me to incorporate tabla and oud [an Arabic stringed instrument]. It makes it original. Because this is about embracing my heritage and every-
by hate-filled lyrics. So it became
armed with her five-song Queer
thing about who I am. I’m not just
her mission to make hip hop
Hip-Hop Movement EP — which
a queer person, I’m not just an
more female- and gay-friendly. “It
covers Egypt, lust, politics, paren-
Egyptian person, I’m not just a
wasn’t until recently that I started
tal conflict and dancing, among
woman and I’m not just a rapper,
learning about the history of it, the
other things, and features per-
you know? I’m all those things.”
roots,” she says. “The way they
haps her defining statement: “The
One of the songs on the as-yet-
rhymed in the early days is not
kind of dreams I got are too big for
untitled new album, “Boys Like
like it is now. Now it’s just a really
a closet.” As well, she’s currently
This,” is a rant that promises to
good beat and then you hear the
putting the finishing touches on
bring the whole community down
WORK IT The Queer Hip-Hop Movement presents a hip-hop showcase, with young MCs throwing down their rhymes for a chance to win cash prizes. MC Jazz hosts, with DJ Nix. Free before 10pm; $7 after. 9pm doors; 10pm show. Fri. June 22. Buddies in Bad Times Theatre. 12 Alexander St. (416) 975-8555. DYKE DAY: THE RHYTHM, THE BEAT, THE BOOGIE MC Jazz and Cozmic Cat join the hiphop and R&B program on Pride’s South Stage, Church and Wood, following the Dyke March. 4pm-7:30pm. Sat, Jun 30. Jazz and Cat go on around 6pm. BLOCKORAMA MC Jazz also joins Blackness Yes!’s all-day lineup (schedule TBA) at Pride’s Wellesley Stage, across from the Wellesley subway station, on July 1.
YOU COULD INSTANTLY
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June 29th, 30th & July 1st Pride Parade on Sunday, July 1st at 2PM.
pridetoronto.com
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MUSIC
‘LET’S DO EVERYTHING!’ → Carole
Pope’s raucous musical influence Story Mary Dickie
T
he word “icon” is grossly overused these days, but one person it does apply to is Carole Pope. The subversive diva might live in New York now, but it’s hard to imagine what this city’s musical history would have been like without her. (Would we have had the Viletones? The Dishes? Peaches?) And while she’s in her early sixties now, carrying a lower profile than she did when her lascivious performances thrilled and shocked staid old Toronto, she is still making music, still railing against oppression and idiocy, still performing with that unmistakable voice and unerring sense of theatrical spectacle. When Rough Trade, the band Pope formed with Kevan Staples in 1974, emerged from the Yorkville hippie scene, they were not like anything Toronto had seen before. For one thing, they were inspired more by theatre and cabaret than by music; and then there was Pope, dressed in leather and bondage gear and singing frankly about desire as she shoved the mic down her pants. Lots of performers might have been considered “sexually ambiguous” at that time, but there was nothing ambiguous about Pope. She was defiantly and provocatively out before pretty much anyone else was, and the shows were incendiary. “I was just doing what made me happy,” she says. “I wasn’t influenced so much by musicians — which I think you can tell, because Rough Trade was all over the place — as by theatre and writers: Jean Genet and Brecht/Weill and fem-
inist writers. Certainly Rough Trade songs like ‘Softcore’ are Brechtian, and ‘Beg for It’ was like a little cabaret.” And when Lindsay Kemp, the English dance legend with the visually arresting style who taught David Bowie and Kate Bush, brought his company to Toronto Workshop Productions in 1978, Pope was renting a room from TWP’s general manager, June Faulkner. “That was the best thing ever,” she recalls. “I got to meet them all. I couldn’t get enough of that. It was one of the most brilliant things I’ve ever seen. You can tell that Bowie was really influenced by him.” Rough Trade hit the club scene in 1976, just before the explosion of Toronto punk. As Don Pyle, author of Trouble in the Camera Club, has pointed out, it was a shared Rough Trade influence that united the city’s three-chord tough guys and glam synth-and-sax players into one very interesting scene. “I don’t know — we were doing it first, but back in those days everybody was supportive of everybody, we all went to see everybody and we all hung out,” she says. Somewhat shockingly, in the early ’80s, Rough Trade songs like “All Touch” and “High School Confidential” got played on commercial radio, and the band even won Juno awards. “Yeah, I was amazed too!” she says with a laugh. “I think the beauty of it was that the mainstream didn’t get how subversive we really were, which I loved.” Now, Pope is touring her latest
solo album, Landfall, which came out last November. Co-produced with guitarist Tim Welch, with whom she’s worked since Rough Trade’s demise in the ’80s, it’s a collection of new songs that wanders all over her musical map, from rock to synth-pop to orchestral, and features a duet with Rufus Wainwright on the irresistible title track. “I’m into all those styles,” she says. “I like all kinds of music, and I was like: Let’s do everything! Except for jazz fusion. But I thought I’d kind of put all my influences on there, and I’m just excited to do more. I’m always pissed off and appalled at the stupidity that’s going on in the world and the dumbing-down of people, so there are a million things to write about.” Pope plays a Pride show Thu,
→ L ANDFALL Carole Pope’s recent album contains an irresistible duet with Rufus Wainwright.
June 21 at Buddies in Bad Times — coincidentally, TWP’s former home. “I do miss the old days, when Pride was a stage on Church Street and I got laid more,” she says. “It was more intimate. Now it’s too big and commercial. I mean I don’t mind that, but I do miss the ’90s, when we’d all go to Buddies and misbehave. I’m not a nostalgic person, but I don’t have as much fun as I used to. “I always love working at Buddies, though. I get to be a theatre queen for a night, and the audiences are always fantastic.” CAROLE POPE Joined by Slanty Eyed Mama. $20. 8pm. Thu, June 21. Buddies in Bad Times. 12 Alexander St. (416) 975-8555. intorontomag.com
29
On Behalf of the Stephen Lewis Foundation we would like to thank the designers, models, fundraisers, attendees, volunteers, auction donors and the sponsorsfor making Dare to Wear Love 2012 a huge success! Using The Power Of Fashion For Good
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A RT & ENTERTAINMENT
B O O KS
CROSS-CULTURAL ODYSSEY → With
a welcoming endpoint in Toronto Review Alice Lawlor
I
ntolerable is a coming out story with extra balls. It goes way beyond the usual boymeets-boy narrative, mapping the author’s journey from cultural isolation in the Middle East to acceptance in Canada. Written by Ryerson journalism prof and former Globe and Mail theatre critic Kamal Al-Solaylee, it’s an inspiring story of his own Yemeni family persevering in spite of adversity. But it’s also a first-person account of how being different from that family — and escaping their world — sets him free. That tension runs throughout the book. As Al-Solaylee says in the introduction: “How do you write about, rationalize and call your own a family that still believes AIDS is a form of divine retribution, and that a woman’s place is in the kitchen, when you have no problem describing people who espouse similar views as bigots?” The story is set in Yemen and Canada, by way of Egypt, Lebanon and England. The political struggles of each country form the back-
drop to daily life. Al-Solaylee is skilled at taking major events and showing how they’re reflected on a smaller scale. As his brother embraces Islam, for example, his sisters are subject to new household rules. The same girls that Al-Soyalee once joined on shopping trips for bikinis must now be covered head-to-toe before they leave the house. Their successful careers ebb away, simply because of their gender. And Al-Solaylee’s own burgeoning sexuality is culturally invisible. “There’s no such thing as sexual education in the Arab world,” he writes. “I had no concept of homosexuality or even much of an awareness of such rites of passage as reaching puberty.” Nevertheless, Al-Solaylee finds his people. The hilarious sections on Barbra Streisand and Olivia Newton-John and the role they play in his self-discovery have to be read to be believed. After a confidence-boosting visit to England, he calls a gay helpline and, to his surprise, locates a bar in Cairo. His first visit reads like anyone’s
→ CONFLICT S BIG & SMALL Ryerson journalism prof and former Globe and Mail theatre critic Kamal Al-Solaylee has written a moving memoir.
first gay bar in any smaller scene in the world. “The men were all looking around, trying to catch each other’s eye. Older white men. Younger Egyptians. Lots of furtive glances and nervous laughter.” A Swiss businessman catches his eye, raises his glass — and the rest is history. Writing about life in the Middle East often gets bogged down in the details of conflict. Al-Solaylee captures the historical moment in a way that’s real and compelling because it’s focused on just one family. It’s moving, too, because his journey ends right here in Toronto. In fact, the book is inscribed “To Toronto, for giving me what I’ve been looking for: a home.” A sentiment that no doubt rings true for many of us — from Church Street to the burbs and beyond.
INTOLERABLE: A MEMOIR OF EXTREMES By Kamal Al-Solaylee. Harper Collins. $25. KAMAL AL-SOLAYLEE Joins (Image)ning Queerness authors panel. 5pm-7pm. Wed, June 20. UTAC Art Lounge. 15 King’s College Circle. (416) 978-1838.
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S EX s p o n s o r e d b y s p a e x c e s s
ASK THE SEX GEEK — with Andrea Zanin
I’m a male nude model and during my last gig I got a full-blown erection. I was so embarrassed! Is there any cream or advice you could give on keeping it down? James →
→ I’m
a registered massage therapist. Yesterday, an 18-yearold man came in. He was very socially inexperienced and so nervous he could barely have a conversation. He chose to completely undress and I began a Swedish massage. When he turned over and I began on his thighs he immediately became erect. His thingy was twitching uncontrollably, so I moved down to below the knee. Then I looked back up, and his face was bright red and his whole chest was covered in cum. I was shocked. He said it just happened without touching himself! Is that even possible? Can you offer me some advice for future occurrences? I just feel a bit dirty, I guess! Chris
Seems like everyone’s having
sometimes occur with touch and
trouble keeping their dicks down
deep relaxation. If a client is embar-
these days!
rassed, they suggest tossing on a
Penises are famously eager in
heavy blanket, possibly one chilled
adolescence, but they occasionally
in the refrigerator. If a client pushes
pop up at inconvenient times even
for a happy ending, set your bound-
in adulthood. And yes, ejaculation
aries verbally, and leave the room
can happen without touch. Doc,
if necessary. You are a non-sexual
my favourite sex-positive physi-
service provider, and people who
cian, tells me that while research
want more can pay for it elsewhere.
is scarce, it’s known to happen in
James, when it comes to keep-
two ways: during anal penetration
ing your own boy down, unfortu-
without the penis being touched;
nately, I have little to offer from
and completely hands-free, espe-
a medical standpoint. Doc says,
cially in cases of hyper-arousal.
“Erections are healthy. They’re
Chris, in addition to sheer youth,
signs of healthy blood vessels.
your massage client was likely
Some treatments can shunt blood
experiencing hyper-arousal partly
away from non-essential organs,
from nervousness and partly from
but they tend to be strong vaso-
being touched in a very pleasant
constrictors, which aren’t really
way he wasn’t used to. He may
safe in non-emergency situations.”
have snuck in a quick wank, or he
That said, the heavy blanket trick
may have ejaculated hands-free.
might work for you too. Keep one
Either way, the point is that he
handy, and if things get perky, call
made you uncomfortable. That’s
break time and cover up. At worst,
not cool and it’s not your fault.
you could fake a groin pull and bring
I polled a dozen massage thera-
along an ice pack for “treatment!”
pist friends, and most said that at first they’d ignore a client’s erection — it’s a natural bodily response due to nerve or vascular reactions that
ANDREA ZANIN The Sex Geek blogs at sexgeek.wordpress.com.
577 Yonge Street, Toronto, Ontario M4Y 1Z2 T 416-966-6969 | info@seduction.ca shop online
seduction.ca intorontomag.com 33
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