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Monday, July 12, 2010

FIRE! NEW PLAY FESTIVAL 2010 (July 17 – 24)

July 17 – 24, 2010:
FIRE! NEW PLAY FESTIVAL 2010
Four black queer plays offer darkness and hope.

South Oxford Space (138 South Oxford Street in Ft Greene, Brooklyn)
BAAD! (841 Barretto St, 2nd FL, in the Bronx)

$5 – $10: Advance tickets at Brown Paper Tickets | Limited door tickets

Produced by Freedom Train Productions, FIRE! NEW PLAY FESTIVAL 2010 presents staged reading and barebones productions of new black queer plays that offer darkness and danger and, yes, a little artfulness and hope for these bleak post-Bush times.

As is our custom, these black queer plays are our curated – canaries in the coal mine – offerings to inspire and provoke artists and community into thought and action:

@ BAAD!, a co-production
SAT JULY 17TH, 2010 @ 2:30PM & 7:30PM
ORIGINS OF US by Jerome A. Parker
Promising cosmology graduate student, Adam, rents out his Bronx apartment’s closet to a stranger. ORIGINS is a cautionary journey through the realms of time, space, the body and the mind.

@ South Oxford Space:
THURS JULY 22ND, 2010 @ 7:30PM
SHE WHO STRUGGLES by LaTonia Phipps
A modern day Assata Shakur re-imagined, living in gentrified Harlem and in love with a white woman.

@ South Oxford Space:
FRI JULY 23RD, 2010 @ 7:30PM
MIRRORS by Azure D. Osborne-Lee
Two women mourn the loss of a loved one while sifting through the secrets of their shared past.

@ South Oxford Space:
SAT JULY 24TH, 2010 @ 2:30PM
BLACK/OUT STORIES by Steve Harper
When a writer conducts documentary theatre interviews with black LGBT people across the country about their most unusual coming out stories, he revisits his own personal challenges around being out, gay and black in America.

// Freedom Train in TIME OUT NEW YORK and NY DAILY NEWS.
// Watch a mini-documentary on the festival!

These new plays are written by citizen theatre artists. Since January, the producer artists of Freedom Train have provided safe and encouraging spaces in workshops and actor labs for these artists to create their work and test out their new ideas — independently and with collective purpose.

Every year our performances are attended by audience community members, like yourself, who care to wrestle with, laugh with, and be inspired by the ideas the playwrights and their creative team explore in the staged readings.

This year we are thrilled to announce a special barebones co-production of ORIGINS OF US by Jerome A. Parker at BAAD!, the Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance, to kick off our fourth festival and of course a powerful lineup of new play readings by Azure D. Osborne-Lee, Steve Harper, and LaTonia Phipps, a talented associate artist here at Freedom Train with whom we are thrilled to once again support.

Offstage Forums 2010, critical discussions inspired by their current work in development, precede the festival.

Major funders include The Union Square Arts Awards, a project of the Tides Foundation, Stonewall Community Foundation, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs and the Brooklyn Arts Council, and S/HEROES FOR THE FUTURE.

posted by Tawanna at 7:11 am  

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Soon Come: Poems Painted & Spoken by Yvonne Fly Onakeme Etaghene

Wednesday, June 23, 2010
6:00pm – 8:30pm
The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center
208 West 13th Street
New York, NY

Yvonne Fly Onakeme Etaghene

Yvonne Fly Onakeme Etaghene

The Center is proud to present Soon Come: Poems Painted & Spoken, a multi-media art exhibit and poetry performance by Yvonne Fly Onakeme Etaghene.

Soon Come: Poems Painted & Spoken will debut Etaghene’s visual art. Her art is acrylic and spray painted visual poems passionately splashed on canvas and wood surfaces in order to share the colors of her soul.

The space will have life-size poetry hanging around you, video art as well as a loving, tender, soul-deep performance of Etaghene’s poetry spanning the last decade of her career.

The poems shared will be about the revelry, magic, heartache and angst of love. Etaghene gives you these poems and paintings with open palms and heart, reaching to love you, ever more, ever deeper.

For tickets visit: http://www.gaycenter.org/node/5226

Seating is limited.

(Hear Yvonne Fly Onakeme Etaghene on Sippin On Ink.)

posted by Tawanna at 8:52 am  

Monday, May 24, 2010

Why Do You Write – Author Panel/Discussion (Black Pride DC)

The What: “Why Do You Write, Why Do You Read, and How Do You Succeed?” (Author Forum/Panel Discussion)

The Who: Michael-Christopher, Tuan N’Gai, Wyatt O’Brian Evans, Tawanna Sullivan and Sonya Renee

The When: Saturday, May 29th, 12 to 2pm

The Where: Hamilton Ballroom of the Pride Host Hotel (Hamilton Crowne Plaza, 14th and K Street NW)

Would love to see you there.

posted by Tawanna at 9:55 pm  

Sunday, May 16, 2010

This Is How We Do It by D. Alexandria (on sale July 1st)

This Is How We Do It

You’ve read her stories on Kuma2.net and in the Best Lesbian Erotica series. Now, D. Alexandria (aka Glitter, Pandora) has put together a sizzling anthology of her own work: This Is How We Do It: a Raw mix of lesbian erotica.

Mark you calendars – it’s going to be a long, hot (and wet) summer.

D. Alexandria:  Website | Facebook | Twitter | MySpace

posted by Tawanna at 10:19 pm  

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Kuma Recommends… Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South (Chicago)

Sweet Tea: Black Gay Men of the South
Previews April 30-May 6, 2010
Show runs May 7-29, 2010
Viaduct Theatre, 3111 N. Western Ave

There will be several post performance discussion based on specific themes. Click here for complete information, tickets, etc:
Columbia College Chicago – Sweet Tea

About The Performance

Based on E. Patrick Johnson’s critically acclaimed book, Sweet Tea is an oral history of Southern black gay men ranging in age from 19 to 93 that explores the relationship between blackness, sexuality and southern culture.

I saw a snippet of the show at Fire & Ink: Cotillion–and it was nothing short of fantastic. Having interviewed the men he portrays, Johnson seemed to disappear into each character.

If the performance comes to your town, you don’t want to miss it.

posted by Tawanna at 9:45 pm  

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Support This: Harlem Pride – 6/12 & 6/25-6/27 (NYC)

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – HARLEM PRIDE 2010
Celebrating Pride and Diversity of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Same Gender Loving neighbors and organizations in Harlem.

Harlem, NY, the historical center of African – American culture, will host to its FIRST EVER Pride celebration. Harlem Pride is pleased to announce its schedule of events for this historic celebration:

June 12, 2010
”Coming Out” Art Show A Historical Retrospective of New York’s Trailblazing LGBT Institutions
Casa Frela Gallery 47 W. 119th Street (btwn Lenox & 5th Avenues) 2pm – 10pm
Honored organizations include Black AIDS Institute, The Callen-Lorde Community Health Center, Fierce, Folsom East Street Fair New York, Harlem United Community AIDS Center, The Hetrick-Martin Institute, Human Rights Campaign, Imperial Court of New York , Leslie & Lohman Gay Art Foundation, The LGBT Center in NYC, LIVE OUT LOUD, PFLAG, SAGE and SALGA.

June 25, 2010
Harlem Pride Official VIP Launch Party Billie’s Black Bar/Restaurant//Lounge 271 W. 119th Street (btwn St. Nicholas Ave & Frederick Douglass Blvd)
7pm – 4am

June 26, 2010
Harlem Pride Day Celebration W. 119th Street (btwn Lenox & 5th Avenues)
12pm – 6pm

June 27, 2010
”Bowl with Pride” – Closing Event Harlem Lanes 2116 Adam Clayton Powell Blvd. (btwn W 125th and W 126th Street)
6pm – 10pm

The purpose of Harlem Pride is to promote Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Same Gen-der Loving Pride in Harlem by providing opportunities for networking and communication among organizations and community members in Harlem. To do that, Harlem Pride will become a com-munity partner in support of existing programs and we will also produce our own events that will celebrate LGBT & SGL pride. Lawrence Rodriguez and Carmen Neely, two Harlem LGBT activ-ists/residents saw an opportunity to celebrate the LGBT & SGL community and its role and contri-butions to Harlem’s rich history. They envisioned an annual celebration of gay liberation in Har-lem’s Mount Morris Park Historic District because the area has become a thriving “gayborhood,” and would be an excellent symbol of uptown gay pride. With thousands of LGBT residents in Har-lem and more visitors expected for general June Pride Month events, Harlem Pride’s time has come. Harlem Pride’s founding board members include Lawrence Rodriguez (Founder/Executive Director, Casa Frela Gallery), Carmen Neely (Founder, Crucial Arts), Michael Hodge (Owner, Kai & I Catering), Adriane Ferguson (Owner, Billie’s Black Bar/Restaurant/Lounge) and John Reddick (Founder, Harlemonestop.com)

Harlem Pride thanks its supporters the West 119th Block Association, Billie’s Black, Crucial Arts, Casa Frela Gallery and Gay Black Travel.

For more on Harlem Pride, our events, and how you can support. please visit our website at www.harlempride.org

posted by Tawanna at 7:21 pm  

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Call For Films – Queer Black Cinema 2010 – Deadline July 15th

posted by Tawanna at 7:06 pm  

Saturday, March 27, 2010

WORDS TO LIVE BY: Writer’s Retreat – May 21-23, 2010 (New Rochelle, NY)

WORDS TO LIVE BY: 2010 and BEYOND

Vintage Entity Press Writers Retreat

May 21-23, 2010
@
The Oaks/New Dawn Foundation
New Rochelle, New York
http://www.theoaksndf.org/

Join us for
Workshops, Networking, Open Mic, Readings, Book Selling, and Community

Invited Presenters:
G. Winston James
Cheryl Boyce-Taylor
Pamela Sneed
Curu Necos-Bloice
Herukhuti (Editing and Revising)
Steven G. Fullwood (Creating a Manuscript Proposal)
April Silver (PR and Marketing)
Lamar Ariel (Self-Publishing)
Lenelle Moïse (Reading and Performing)
Anton Nimblett (Fiction)
Ellery Washington (Creative Non-Fiction)
And More!

For additional information and/or to get a registration form, visit Vintage Entity Press.

posted by Tawanna at 7:05 pm  

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Tribute to E. Lynn Harris

Center for Black Literature
at Medger Evers College, CUNY

Presents

The Tenth National Black
Writers’ Conference TRIBUTE to

E. LYNN HARRIS

THIS SATURDAY
March 6, 2010
Brooklyn Public Library
at Grand Army Plaza
4:00 pm to 6:00 pm

This Event is FREE and Open to All

Co- Sponsored by
the Brooklyn Public Library
at Grand Army Plaza
brooklynpubliclibrary.org/central

For More Information on the
National Black Writers Conference (NBWC),
contact the Center for Black Literature
at 718.804.8884 or via email at nbwc@mec.cuny.edu

mec.cuny.edu/blacklitcenternationalblackwritersconference.org

E: info@putonblast.com · W: www.putonblast.com ·
T: 718.756.8501

posted by Tawanna at 11:03 pm  

Monday, February 22, 2010

Sippin On Ink – Alexis Pauline Gumbs & Julia Wallace (2/24/2010, 8pm)

This week’s featured guests are Julia Wallace of Queer Renaissance and Alexis Pauline Gumbs of BrokenBeautiful Press. They are the force behind A Queer Black Mobile HomeComing, a project to collect and amplify the social organizing herstories (1980′s and before) of black women who have been refusing the limits of heteronormativity and opening the world up by being themselves.

Photobucket

posted by Tawanna at 12:16 am  
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