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Store hours may vary during holidays. Please call to confirm.Please call to confirm.We just need to check one thing Please take a moment to complete the CAPTCHA field below — then we’ll take you right back to shopping.UP TO 70% OFF Tonight's performance of Let's Fall in Love: Thinkin' Big Play Sinatra has been cancelled. Tickets for are currently on sale to the general public by phone at 617.547.8300, in person at the Loeb Drama Center (64 Brattle St, Cambridge, MA; Patrons buying a ticket for any show and on A.R.T.’s Loeb stage and get a discount. /TransS....What’s 10 years between queers? Born exactly 10 years apart, Johnny Blazes and are twin queens of song and glitter that share everything… except most of their cultural references. In the decade between their coming-of-age (or radically different “coming out” stories), social attitudes about gender, sexuality, and identity made some tectonic shifts. Searching for common ground, the pair walk a mile in each other’s Doc Martens, trading the endless corridors of high school hazing for the triumphant cresting of Beacon Hill in the sunshine of a Youth Pride Parade.

While one was listening to queercore punk on vinyl in a dorm room, the other was riding the bus along with Bikini Kill playing on a cassette Walkman and avoiding the leers of townies. Identities blur as the pair explores intersections and spaces between their versions of queerdom, interlacing story, song, and video to expose the gaps imposed not only in generation, but by geography, gender, and shoe size.Oakland-based people of color comedy crew Peacock Rebellion, named one of “Ten Incredible LGBTQ Artist Collectives You Should Be Watching” (), remixes their award-winning, sold-out Brouhaha Stand-Up Comedy with brand-new work for the I.D. Festival. Featuring Lexi Adsit (National Queer Arts Festival), Devi K (United States of Asian America Festival), and an award-winning cast praised in , , and , brings stand-up, storytelling, and spoken word – all hilarious, all with an activist twist.Our Lady J is known for her visionary gospel styling, powerhouse pianist skills and unforgettable live shows.

Along with the, she has been delivering a new testament of post-religious gospel music to sold out crowds at NYC’s Joe’s Pub, The Zipper Factory & Ars Nova Theatre, as well as venues all over the world. Recently, named her as one of the “Out 100,” a list of people who have shaped LGBTQ+ culture.Embark on an exploration through the documentary-musical , in which indie singer Rae Spoon takes on a playful, meditative and at times melancholic journey. Set against majestic images of the infinite expanses of the Canadian prairies – interviews, performances, and music sequences reveal Spoon’s inspiring process of building a life of their own, as a trans person and as a musician. Tim McCarthy will then moderate a discussion with Spoon and performance artist NIC Kay about accessibility, process, creation, and the challenges ahead for trans and queer artists. are steadily spreading all over the map, gathering people and stories from all over the country. New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Boston have multiple shows each month.

is open to anyone with a five-minute story to share on the night’s posted theme. The brave of heart, or those with stories they’re aching to tell, prepare personal, true tales. When the doors open, storyteller hopefuls put their names in The Moth Hat. A half hour later, names are picked, and one by one, storytellers take the stage.
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Come sign up to tell a story, or just enjoy the show! The topic of this evening of The Moth is themed around stories of gender. is an award-winning solo slam poetry theater show by Kit Yan that explores his identity as a transgender, queer, Asian American from Hawaii. Kit asks what queer hearts and families are made of, and interrogates the forces that constantly work to break them apart.
majesty curtains and valanceis a testament to the resilience of queer love in all its forms – between cis and trans siblings, lovers, pride parade attendees, and many more – in the face of heartbreaking barriers everywhere from the dating pool to the medical establishment.
target burnout shower curtainCalpernia Addams is an ex-Navy Desert Storm combat medic turned Old Hollywood showgirl. From her earliest beginnings as a child playing Bluegrass gospel fiddle in an isolated fundamentalist cult deep within the woods of Tennessee, she has experienced a dizzying ascension into her globe-spanning career as a cult-favorite musician, actress and activist for women’s and LGBTQ+ rights.

Ben & Brad - Biography Benjamin Sears & Bradford Conner have been performing together since 1989. They are among those rare performers who combine entertaining performances with outstanding historical research and who can claim Irving Berlin and George & Ira Gershwin premieres. In 1997 they made music history with Oh Kay, Oh George, a first-time concert pairing of songs and music by romantic and musical colleagues Kay Swift and George Gershwin, featuring many rarely heard Swift songs along with premieres of two unpublished George & Ira Gershwin songs. Their reputation as Gershwin performers was honored by the selection of their recordings to be part of the Interactive Kiosk at the new George & Ira Gershwin Room at the Library of Congress. Sears and Conner are the first cabaret act to be featured at Boston's Emerson Majestic Theatre, and at Boston's Wang Centre for the Performing Arts they revived a show-biz tradition by presenting a pre-show concert of Irving Berlin songs for a showing of Berlin's classic film, White Christmas.

Other appearances include the Mabel Mercer Foundation Cabaret Convention (Town Hall, New York City), Don't Tell Mama (New York), The Gardenia (Los Angeles), the International Fringe Festival (Orlando, Florida), Cabaret at Windows (Washington, DC), the Chicago Public Library (Chicago, IL), Scullers Jazz Club (Boston), the Upstairs at the Pudding Cabaret Series (Cambridge, MA), Club Cabaret (Boston), Clark Art Institute (Williamstown, Massachusetts), Mechanics Hall (Worcester, MA), and at colleges, concert series, and other venues throughout the Northeast. In June 2008 they made their European debut with a closing day concert in the historic Holywell Music Room for Fred Astaire – The Conference held at Oriel College, Oxford University in June, 2008 and attended by Astaire's daughter Ava Astaire McKenzie. In September 2011 they performed on the concert series at the American Cathedral in Paris, France. With members of American Classics they sang the National Anthem at the second game of Fenway Park's one hundredth birthday season in 2012.

On radio they have appeared as performers on MusicAmerica (WGBH-FM, Boston), The Jazz Songbook (WGBH-FM), Standing Room Only (WERS-FM, Boston), Second Stage (WMBR, Cambridge), WICN-FM (Worcester), WBET-FM (Brockton), Curtain Up (WDVR, New Jersey), and on the nationally syndicated The Connection (WBUR-FM, Boston) as commentators on the Gershwins, Noël Coward, and Fred Astaire. In 1999 they joined forces with voice and piano duo Valerie Anastasio & Tim Harbold to create and tour a Noël Coward centenary program, Noël and Cole – Together With Music. In 2001 they created a new show, Fred & Ethel – Great Songs of Astaire and Merman. Ben & Brad have participated in conferences on Broadway, Hollywood, and the Great American Songbook. In 2002 Ben gave a paper on Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire for Bing! Crosby and American Culture at Hofstra University. Ben & Brad returned to Hofstra in 2003 as performers for the conference The Broadway Musical – 1920-2020, a highlight of which was performing Irving Berlin's "Mandy" with Ziegfeld Girl Doris Eaton Travis, who had danced it in the original Ziegfeld Follies of 1919.

In 2011 they returned to Hofstra with Valerie & Tim with a program of Irving Berlin songs from the 1930s for the conference 1935: The Reality and the Promise. Sears and Conner are Producing Directors of American Classics and are founding members of the Boston Association of Cabaret Artists (BACA), an organization promoting awareness and performance of cabaret in the Boston area. Sears & Conner are known for their research in the music and lyrics of Tin Pan Alley, Broadway and Hollywood. In 1996 they rediscovered a long-lost Irving Berlin song from 1916, "Santa Claus: A Syncopated Christmas Song," which they subsequently gave its modern premiere and first recording. During their search for the Berlin song they also found an unknown Jerome Kern tune, "A Syncopated Christmas Carol," which they also premiered and recorded. Other research has led to the creation of a program of songs by "Girl Gershwins" including Dana Suesse, Kay Swift, and Ann Ronell. Their expertise on cabaret and popular song led to an invitation to be guest commentators for a special cabaret program of the AEI In-Flight entertainment, Overture, heard on USAirways domestic and international flights during May and June, 1999.