Queer Memoir: Friends, Lovers, and Exes

Friends, Lovers, and ExesLGBT Community Center
208 W 13th Street
New York, NY

$5 – 7 suggested donation at the door.

Announcing the line-up in our first regular salon as part of the 2010/2011 series. Featuring, for the first time, solo *and* collaborative memoir/storytelling!

JOIN STORYTELLERS:Stacy Bias and Kelli Dunham (collaborative memoir)
Diana Cage
Ignacio Rivera
Genne Murphy and Kelli Dunham (collaborative memoir)
Lea Robinson and Elizabeth Whitney (collaborative memoir)
R. Eric Thomas

Theme: FRIENDS, LOVERS, and EXES.

$5-7 suggested donation at the door, no one turned away for lack of funds.

(We no longer have a free space, so it’s much appreciated!)

A note about the venue:

The venue for this show is wheelchair accessible and all ages.

PLEASE NOTE CHANGE OF VENUE!

Queer Memoir is a salon for new work inspired by a monthly theme; a safe space to share memoir writing and performance; an opportunity to give voice to our collective queer experiences, and preserve and document our complex queer history; for writers, performers, and anyone with a queer story to tell. We attempt to provide an avenue to share queer lives and celebrate the ritual and community-building value of storytelling.

https://queermemoir.com/

STORYTELLER BIOS

STACY BIAS is the co-owner of the wind-powered web host Taproot Green Web Hosting in Portland, Oregon and the founder of DykeTees.com, which specializes in smartly designed LGBT t-shirts in sizes to 32/34. This entrepreneur and activist was also the brains behind TechnoDyke.com, which she founded in 2000 and was one of the most popular lesbian websites, with over 50,000 visitors a month until it closed in 2008. Bias helped create a number of size-positive activities in Portland such as ChunkyDunk swim parties, FatGirl Frock Swaps and was the founder of the FatGirl Speaks conference. She says, “It is my hope that I can help eradicate a little bit of shame from the lives of women by demystifying marketing tactics, encouraging compassion of self and others, facilitating heartfelt dialogue and sharing my own process of fighting through all the compare and contrast to simply love myself as I am.”

DIANA CAGE is the author of many hilarious and informative books on sex and relationships, including Girl Meets Girl: A Dating Survival Guide and Box Lunch: The Laypersons Guide to Cunnilingus. Her obsessions include high heels, fashion week, Luce Irigaray and extreme lesbian processing. She’ll pretty much talk about sex with anyone who asks.

KELLI DUNHAM is a ex-nun, butch-identified stand-up comic and author of four books of humorous non-fiction, including two children’s books being used by a conservative home schooling association in their science curriculum. She has appeared on Showtime, the Discovery Channel and was once asked to emcee a livestock auction. Her website is kellidunham.com. She is the co-founder, with Genne Murphy, of Queer Memoir. To celebrate her 15 year anniversary of leaving the convent, her one woman show “Bad Habit” (sistermercy.com) which premiered at the Fresh Fruit Festival will be returning to New York on 10/23 as the Bad Habit Brunch. This time there will be dancing girls.

GENNE MURPHY is a Philadelphia native, playwright, and arts educator. She is the co-founder, with Kelli Dunham, of Queer Memoir (queermemoir.com). She’s passionate about the intersection of the arts, social change, and community-building. Genne works for Philadelphia Young Playwrights, a local arts education non-profit, and is involved with initiatives to expand new play development in her hometown.

IGNACIO RIVERA aka Papí Coxxx who prefers the gender-neutral pronoun “they”is the creator of Poly Patao Productions. Ignacio is a Black-Boricua gender fluid Trans-Former sex educator, sex worker, performance artist and new filmmaker.

LEA ROBINSON is a multi-talented butch artist. NYC credits include ROOM FOR CREAM (Two-headed Calf/La MaMa), BUTCH MAMAS (WOW Café), The Bulldyke Chronicles (Dixon Place), and The Femme Show. She recently shared a bill with Elizabeth Whitney in the HOT! Festival at Dixon Place in SYRUP IN OUR SHORTS, AND OTHER SOUTHERN PLEASANTRIES, and she is currently working on a new solo show, YOU AIN’T SPECIAL. She also organized and emceed Boxers Off! An Evening of Butch Burlesque at Stonewall—a benefit for the upcoming Butch Voices Conference. She was featured in GO Magazine’s 2009 Edition of 100 Women We Love. www.learobinsonactor.com.

R. ERIC THOMAS is a playwright, storyteller and essayist. He is the author of the plays “Lost Boy”, “The Spectator”, and “The Affair”. He recently won Best Presentation and Audience Favorite at the Philadelphia First Person Arts Summer Grand Slam for his story “My Mother Hates the Facebook”. Eric is currently working on a collection of non-fiction entitled “Enormously Awkward: (Mostly) True Stories + Things That Are Better Left Unsaid” and workshopping a new play. He can be cyber-stalked at enormousawkward.blogspot.com.

ELIZABETH WHITNEY is an actor and a writer/performer with a penchant for campy comedy who was most recently seen as “Patty” in THE SECRETARIES (Best Ensemble NYC Fringe 2010). Other recent performances include SHOWGASM (Ars Nova), The Bulldyke Chronicles and the HOT! Festival (Dixon Place), Drunken Careening Writers, the Famous Lesbian Comedy Road Show, and The Femme Show. This fall she will be in LET THEM EAT CAKE at Dixon Place, a new comedy about gay weddings by Holly Hughes and Moe Angeles and directed by Megan Carney. She is currently collaborating with her partner Lea Robinson and director Melissa Li to develop SYRUP IN OUR SHORTS, a very true love story about being a queer, interracial couple. www.elizabethwhitney.com

Queer Memoir SOBER

Well, we have our very first guest curated Queer Memoir! This Saturday July 24 at 8 PM.

About the storytellers:

Cora Leighton recently moved to Brooklyn from Philadelphia. She is a resistant performer who writes and performs about bodies, queer identity, and community. She was recently named one of 1812 Productions’ Solo Performance Residents and will be performing at the Queer Bodies Event in Philadelphia in the next few months. Check out her website for more info:
coratheperformer.com

Joshua Bastian Cole is a femme FTM stage and screen actor, writer, and playwright who has been featured in such publications as Out Magazine, the Village Voice, Time Out New York, London Metro, and the syndicated column: Trans Nation. He has been seen in leading roles in films including Jules Rosskam’s ‘against a trans narrative’ and the staged reading of Tom Leger’s play White Boys in Paradise. Cole has been published in the anthologies: Trans Forming Families, Beyond Masculinity, and Femmethology. He is currently developing two new projects: a play called The Course and a musical called Now Serving. Cole is an alumnus of James Madison University’s School of Theatre and Dance and next month, he will begin Brooklyn College’s graduate program in theatre history and criticism. He wants to be a dancer.

Katie Liederman has written for Nerve, GO, Curve, Rap-Up, Velvetpark, Penthouse Forum, V, V Man, Lumina, Looserecord.com, The Archive, and was a resident blogger on Showtime’s Ourchart.com. She received a Bachelor’s degree in English from Cornell University and an M.F.A. in Nonfiction Writing from Sarah Lawrence College. She was born and raised in New York City.

Melissa Febos is the author of the critically acclaimed memoir, WHIP SMART (Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin’s Press), which Kirkus Reviews said, “Expertly captures grace within depravity.” She has been featured on NPR’s Fresh Air with Terry Gross and the cover of the NY Post, among many other national publications. Her writing has been published in venues such as Hunger Mountain, The Southeast Review, Redivider, The Rambler, Storyscape Journal, The Huffington Post, The New York Times online, Bitch Magazine, and on The Nervous Breakdown, where she regularly blogs. She co-curates and hosts the Mixer Reading and Music Series at Cake Shop, teaches at SUNY Purchase College, The Gotham Writers’ Workshop, and NYU, and holds an MFA from Sarah Lawrence College. This summer, she will be a McDowell Colony fellow. She lives in Brooklyn. More information about her work and projects can be found at melissafebos.com.

Sophia Pazos is a thirtysomething married woman who will not age gracefully anytime in the near future and will go kicking and screaming into that good night. Her mild mannered social worker persona is a useful cover for her other selves: Queer Latina femme, foul mouthed recovering addict and alcoholic, liberal leftist carnivore, snarky Scorpio, church deacon and Sunday School co-leader. When not playing on her blog, twitter, facebook, or foursquare Sophia enjoys reading books from the library, knitting bad looking scarves, makeup shopping, Tarot Cards, showing as much cleavage as possible and being the token lesbian fag hag at NYC AA meetings.

Terence is a femme ally and a tomboy pirate. She writes plays, tells stories, and contributes to Curve Magazine and Best Lesbian Erotica. She has two heroes: The first is Cotton Mather the Puritan Minister who railed against idle hands and, the second is Tom Hodgkinson, the Brit author of “How to Be Idle” and “The Freedom Manifesto” who promotes idleness as a virtue.
You will often find Terence taking a nap, staring into space or pondering what Cotton Mather would do when faced with a 30-lbs load of laundry. Terence likes her drinks virginal and her women sultry and bookish.She loves participating in Queer Memoir and thanks Cheryl, Kelli, and Genne.

Tina Goerlach is a twenty-four year old artist, focusing specifically on abstract oil paint and writing poetry. In her words, “I love who I am, I love being a lesbian and I love to create. I have been clean for almost two years and actively participate in doing what I can to give back. I go to Tyler school of Art. My major is painting and soon to be art education. Recovery is my new found life.”

About the guest host:

Cheryl B. is an award-winning writer, poet and performer. Her work has appeared in dozens of print and online publications, including; Ping Pong, Word Warriors: 35 Women Leaders in the Spoken Word Revolution (Seal Press, 2007) and The Guardian. Known for intense, humorous narratives, Cheryl has appeared at most major NYC literary evenings and toured throughout the U.S, Canada, and the U.K. Her awards include a 2003 Poetry Fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts, a residency at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts and an honorable mention in Poetry from the Astraea Lesbian Writers Fund Awards in 2009. Cheryl is the co-founder/co-host of the popular NYC monthly reading series, Sideshow: The Queer Literary Carnival, “serious literature for ridiculous times.” She is proud to be sober for over nine years. Her website is cherylb.com.

The venue for this show is wheelchair accessible and all ages, We’re using a performance space at the Queers for Economic Justice offices that we’re really really excited about. Check out the QEJ website at http://q4ej.org/

Please note that this event is still free, however, we are needing to reimburse QEJ for the costs associated with the space. We’re asking folks who can to kick in five bucks or more, but don’t let that keep you away, if you want to come, come!

July 20 – “Sticks and Stones” (in Philly!)

Our first Philadelphia salon, in Partnership with First Person Arts!

Tuesday, July 20, 2010, 8pm

The Rotunda, 4014 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104

Tickets- $10 ($8 for First Person Arts Members)

Advance tickets at salons.firstpersonarts.org

Or visit our facebook event page to RSVP and purchase tickets.

PHILADELPHIA- First Person Arts is proud to partner with the NYC-based salon series Queer Memoir for an evening of storytelling through the lens of queer experiences.  The theme “Sticks and Stones” will guide a line-up of queer and LGBT storytellers as they share real stories drawn from their own lives.

Presenters are noted Philadelphia theatre artists, writers, storytellers and community organizers, including:

  • Chris Bartlett, Executive Director of the William Way LGBT Community Center
  • Rae Drew, First Person Arts storyteller
  • Kevin Glaccum, Producing Artistic Director of Azuka Theatre
  • Justin Jain, actor with the Arden Theatre Company and Berserker Residents
  • Maura Kelly, co-founder of the Philadelphia Dyke March
  • Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, award-winning author
  • R. Eric Thomas, First Person Arts storyteller

Co-hosted by Queer Memoir founders Kelli Dunham and Genne Murphy. (www.queermemoir.com)

STORYTELLERS

Chris Bartlett is the Executive Director of the William Way Community Center and a gay men’s health community organizer. Throughout the 1990s he directed the SafeGuards Gay Men’s Health Project in Philadelphia. He also led the LGBT Community Assessment in Philadelphia, a project that gathers data about LGBT communities in order to make recommendations regarding community organizing, health, housing, and economic development. He co-facilitates the Gay Men’s Health Leadership Academy, and has helped to convene the Gay Men’s Health and LGBTI Summits. He can be found on Twitter at http://twitter.com/harveymilk.

Rae Drew is a transgender-identified human who often feels like an odd weed growing through a crack in the sidewalks of our binary gender system.  Rae is a professional creative manipulator of words and images, and an unprofessional outdoors [hu]man who hikes, bikes, and kayaks as often as possible.

Kevin Glaccum is the Producing Artistic Director of Azuka Theatre and has been a member of the company since he created the role of Guillaume in Azuka’s inaugural production of La Rue des Faux. For Azuka he has directed productions of Whisky Neat, Greek Active, Kid Simple, and Hedwig and the Angry Inch (Barrymore Nomination; Best Director of a Musical, Philadelphia Weekly). Other credits include The Rocky Horror Show (Arcadia University) and Iron Kisses (Philadelphia Gay and Lesbian Theater Festival). Before turning to directing he appeared in Azuka’s productions of Metamorphosis, Friends and An Artist’s Workshop. Kevin is a member of The Lincoln Center Directors Lab.

Justin Jain loves making original theatre. In addition to working with Swim Pony Collaborative Arts, Justin is a founding member of The Berserker Residents, whose original work includes Philly Fringe hits The Jersey Devil, The Giant Squid, and The Annihilation Point. As a performer, Justin has worked with the Arden Theatre Company, Azuka Theatre, Theatre Horizon, People’s Light, and several others. Justin is a proud 2010 graduate of Artists U! Up next: A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Shakespeare in Clark Park and The Very Xmas Christmas Carol Holiday Pageant with Theatre Horizon. http://www.berserkerresidents.com

Maura Kelly has lived in the Gayborhood for 17 years and has no plans of leaving it.  She works at a (you guessed it) non-profit.  Her favorite claim to fame is being one of the founding members of the 1998 Philadelphia Dyke March. She is most happy when surrounded by awesome, lovely queers who, having a shared experience of oppression, lift each other up with love, flirting, support and fierce community.  Okay, mostly the flirting.

Mecca Jamilah Sullivan is a writer from Harlem, New York. Her fiction has appeared in publications worldwide, including Callaloo, Best New Writing, Crab Orchard Review, The Minnesota Review, Bloom, Lumina, Philadelphia Stories, Baby Remember My Name, Baobab: South African Journal of New Writing, X-24:Unclassified, and others. A 2006 Best New American Voices nominee, she has received numerous honors and awards from Temple University, The Boston Fiction Festival, New World Theatre, the NAACP, among others. She holds a B.A. from Smith College and an M.A. from Temple University. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate in English Literature at the University of Pennsylvania, and is completing her first novel.

R. Eric Thomas is a playwright, storyteller and intermittent blogger. He is currently finishing a collection of essays entitled “Enormously Awkward: (Mostly) True Stories + Things That Were Better Left Unsaid.”

CO-HOSTS

Kelli Dunham is an ex-nun, award-winning stand up comic and author. Her books include How to Survive and Maybe Even Love Nursing School (FA Davis, 2004), How to Survive and Maybe Even Love Your Life as a Nurse (FA Davis, 2005), The Boy’s Body Book: Everything You Need to Know for Growing Up YOU (Applesauce Press, 2007) as well as the 2008 version for girls. She is a contributor to numerous humor anthologies including Love’s Funny That Way (Sterling Press, 2006), Squeaky Clean Comedy (Andrew McNeil Press, 2005), She’s So Funny (Andrew McNeil Press, 2004), and Dangerous Families (Haworth Press, 2004). She is the co-founder, with Genne Murphy, of Queer Memoir. http://www.kellidunham.com
Genne Murphy is a Philly native and playwright. She is the co-founder, along with Kelli Dunham, of Queer Memoir. Genne is the General and Program Manager for Philadelphia Young Playwrights (and a 1999 alum), sits on the task force of the Philadelphia New Play Initiative, and is a member of the InterAct Theatre Company Playwrights Forum. Locally, she has had readings or performances of her plays and monologues with Azuka Theatre Company, Flashpoint Theatre Company, Madhouse Late Night Cabaret, and in the Philadelphia Fringe Festival.

ABOUT THE PRESENTERS

Queer Memoir is a New York-based salon for new work inspired by a monthly theme, a safe space to share memoir writing and performance, an opportunity to give voice to a collective queer experience, and preserve and document a complex queer history. Queer Memoir provides an avenue to share queer lives and celebrate the ritual and community-building value of storytelling. http://www.queermemoir.com

The First Person Salon Series is a forum for established and emerging artists to present memoir and documentary art. Focusing primarily on local artists working across various media, the First Person Salon Series provides an opportunity for artists to share their work, processes and inspirations. Past presenters have included poet Sonia Sanchez, photographer J.J. Tiziou, writer Lorene Cary, and muralist Steve Powers.

About First Person Arts: Founded in 2000, First Person Arts transforms the drama of real life into memoir and documentary art to foster appreciation for our unique and shared experience. First Person Arts believes that everyone has a story to tell and that sharing our stories connects us with each other and the world. First Person Arts supports the development of memoir and documentary work by artists from all walks of life and provides opportunities for their stories to be heard in programs throughout the year. Regular programming includes twice monthly StorySlams at World Cafe Live and L’Etage, quarterly Edible World events, the First Person Salon Series and the annual First Person Festival of Memoir and Documentary Art at the Painted Bride (November 10-14, 2010). Visit www.firstpersonarts.org.

May 22 – “The Next Morning”

New York’s queer storysharing event!

Join us for the next Queer Memoir salon! THEME: The Next Morning

Queer Memoir: The Next Morning
Saturday, May 22, @ 8 pm
Brooklyn, NY
FREE

The event is FREE, but we’ll pass the hat for cash to help support the future of QM. To learn more about Queer Memoir and how you can share your work at upcoming events, check out queermemoir.com.

With storytellers:

André Azevedo
Kelli Dunham (host)
Nedra Johnson
Kestryl Cael Lowrey
J.L. Mecum
Genne Murphy (host)
Stephanie Schroeder
Venn Diagrams
* * * * *

BIOS

ANDRE AZEVEDO – is a self-identified foreigner and tranny fag bulldyke. He’s also been known to make art and good Brazilian food; his favorite thing in life is to sit around a table and talk with people. He’s a sex-positive, kink-positive polyamorous person who is always dancing on the thin line between enthusiastic optimism and abject cynicism.

KELLI DUNHAM is a ex-nun, butch-identified stand-up comic and author of four books of humorous non-fiction, including two children’s books being used by a conservative home schooling association in their science curriculum. She has appeared on Showtime, the Discovery Channel and was once asked to emcee a livestock auction. Her website is kellidunham.com. She is the co-founder, with Genne Murphy, of Queer Memoir.

NEDRA JOHNSON – Nedra Johnson is a singer/songwriter multi-instrumentalist born & living in New York City. Her unique style of guitar playing is unmistakably informed by her many years as a professional bassist and keeps her live solo acoustic performances more on an R&B tip then what one might expect of a “girl with a guitar.” Nedra’s self-titled sophomore release is a 2006 OUTMUSIC Award (OUTSTANDING NEW RECORDING – FEMALE) winning, joyful mix of R&B, funk, rock and gospel. Honest in integrity to the music as well as the lyrical content, each song is a testimony of her experience as a black openly lesbian woman in love, spirituality, community and or politics. Nedra has performed internationally at jazz, blues, pride & women’s music festivals as a solo artist and a tuba player/vocalist with her father Howard Johnson & his group, Gravity. She surprised and impressed jazz audiences in Paris, Nime, Berlin, Vienna, Kassel, Macedonia, Muchen, Leverkusen, Los Angeles, New York & New Orleans when she put down her tuba and sang original songs with Gravity garnering such praises as from The Orange County Register, “A little thing [an original from the CD Testify ] called Working Hard for the Joneses had the crowd on its feet and whooping.” As a soloist, she has performed in New York, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Oakland, Cleveland, Madison, Chicago, New Caledonia and more! Whether in front of an intimate audience such as at New York City’s Rockwood Music Hall or a large festival audience of 7000 like Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival, Nedra has the ability to perform with both a strength and a vulnerability that makes each listener feel like they are getting to know her on a personal level. Her thoughtful choice of words reflect not only who she is, but speak to the heart in a way that mirrors emotions many find difficult to express, allowing her a fan base diverse in ethnic, cultural and spiritual background.

KESTRYL CAEL LOWREY – Whether on-stage or behind a podium, Kestryl Cael Lowrey considers it his artistic duty to engage his audiences in provocative dialogue without letting them take him (or themselves) too seriously. Kestryl Cael was a member of “The Language of Paradox,” a performance ensemble founded and directed by Kate Bornstein. His writing appears in anthologies such as Kicked Out, and he is half of the performance duo, PoMo Freakshow. His one‐queer‐show, XY(T), has delighted and stimulated audiences from coast to coast, provoking dialogue and fostering change at colleges and communities across the country. It has received critical acclaim, described as “provocative,” “appealingly wry,” “profound,” and “essential.” Kestryl Cael is currently developing 348, his newest solo performance piece. 348 is a searing examination of the troubled teen industry and madness in America, rooted in Kestryl’s own experiences of being held against his will in a “therapeutic boarding school” as a teenager. In addition to performing, Kestryl Cael also lectures and leads workshops for colleges, conferences, community groups, and other organizations. He has appeared at conferences, colleges, festivals, and local theatres across North America. Recent appearances include Kingsborough Community College, Man Enough: The NYU Colloquium on Masculinity, Bard College, the Lewis & Clark College Gender Studies Symposium, and The Inhumanity Conference at York University.

J. L. MECUM was born in a plaid button-up on a cold December morning. The doctors swaddled her in the latest issue of Entertainment Weekly and the warmth of its pages secured her destiny. Once freed from the Lower-Middle Class School District of Elmira Heights, NY, she enrolled in NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts to study playwrighting alongside classmate and future-Queer Memoir organizer Genne Murphy. (In fact, the last time she performed was in Genne’s piece entitled “Coney Island.”) These days she can be found in Brooklyn training her tortoise to update her Netflix queue, putting cheese and hot sauce on anything or having passionate arguments with the Pantone Color Matching System. She plans to be a lawyer and pass away in a very nice pair of shoes.

GENNE MURPHY is a Philadelphia native, playwright, and queer femme. She’s passionate about the intersection of the arts, social change, and community-building. Genne also works for a Philadelphia-based arts education non-profit, and is involved with initiatives to expand new play development in her hometown. Genne likes to hang out with fellow storytellers, dreamers, and schemers. She is the co-founder, with Kelli Dunham, of Queer Memoir.

STEPHANIE SCHROEDER is an anti-assimilationist queer feminist dyke who lives and works as a freelance writer in Brooklyn. She is a Contributing Editor at Curve Magazine and writes the Hooked-Up Blog for Curve’s website. She also writes for Shewired.com, Go! Magazine and is the movie reviewer/celebrity interviewer for Lesbian Life at About.com. Schroeder has been working on her memoir, Beautiful Wreck: Sex, Lies & Suicide, for far too long. She is definitely going to finish the book this summer. You can read more about Schroeder and find some of her journalism at http://www.stephanieschroeder.com

VENN DIAGRAMS: Jeffrey Marsh and Rick Sorkin have been working together since 2001. They blend classic cabaret, modern composition / performance and audience interaction. Basically, if they like it, it makes it into the show. That can be a joke about The Golden Girls or a 1930’s German war song. The duo cut their teeth playing the night club circuit in the early days, touring the act around NE America. Highlights have included a project with an 11 piece rock orchestra and SRO shows in venues like Joe’s Pub, Knitting Factory and World Cafe Live.

April 3 – Queer Memoir: SCARS

Did you miss January’s event; Queer Memoir: First Kiss?

Join us for the next Queer Memoir salon! THEME: Scars

Queer Memoir: Scars

Saturday, April 3, @ 8 pm
@ Collect Pond 45 Berry Street
(L train to Bedford Avenue)
FREE

Queer Memoir is a salon for new work inspired by a monthly theme; a safe space to share memoir writing and performance; an opportunity to give voice to our collective queer experiences, and preserve and document our complex queer history; for writers, performers, and anyone with a queer story to tell.

Even as LGBT characters and “out” celebrities become more common in pop culture and mainstream media, the richness and complexity of real queer lives is still undervalued and often invisible. Queer Memoir attempts to provide an avenue to share queer lives and celebrate the ritual and community-building value of storytelling.

Queer Memoir’s April event will center around the theme “Scars” with readings/performances/sharing by: Kelli Dunham, Ryn Hodes, Tania Katan, Adrian Khactu, Sassafras Lowrey, Genne Murphy, and Mecca Jamilah Sullivan. One or two more performers TBA.

The event is FREE, but we’ll pass the hat for cash to help support the future of QM. To learn more about Queer Memoir and how you can share your work at upcoming events, check out the rest of the site, including our submissions page.

Performer Bios:

KELLI DUNHAM is a ex-nun, butch-identified stand-up comic and author of four books of humorous non-fiction, including two children’s books being used by a conservative home schooling association in their science curriculum. She has appeared on Showtime, the Discovery Channel and was once asked to emcee a livestock auction. Her website is kellidunham.com. She is the co-founder, with Genne Murphy, of Queer Memoir.

RYN HODES is a fifty–something, third–generation New York native, who was recently published in “Visible: A Femmethology.” Ryn is a social worker and domestic violence advocate, a self–defense teacher, a mother, and a passionate, cranky, skeptical, hopeful, old–school femme.

TANIA KATAN is an author, playwright and performer. Her memoir My One-Night Stand With Cancer is the winner of the 2006 Judy Grahn Award in Nonfiction, an honoree of the 2006 American Library Association’s Stonewall Book Award in Non-Fiction, and a finalist for the 2006 Lambda Literary Award. Rock-n-Roller Melissa Etheridge said of Tania’s memoir, “This book rocks! It’s passionate, playful, and downright beautiful,” and the Library Journal gave the book a Star Review. Since the success of her first book, Tania has been performing her one-woman show, Saving Tania’s Privates (adapted from My One Night Stand With Cancer), which made its European premiere at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival in August 2008 where it was a critical success! In the U.S. Saving Tania’s Privates has been seen at such prestigious venues as ACT in Seattle and The Painted Bride Art Center in Philadelphia. Katan is a regular contributor to The Advocate, Compete Magazine, Stand Up To Cancer’s online magazine, and others. And because of her unique ability to write and perform she has become a regular performer at Comedy Central’s Sit-n-Spin. As a public speaker and teacher, Tania is invited to teach writing workshops and give performance-style lectures around the world. Most recently Katan was in Iceland teaching a “Performing for the Camera” workshop as part of the Iceland 700.is Experimental Film and Video Festival. Her work has been written about in The New York Times, Bust, Curve, Running Times, DIVA, GCN Ireland, The Scotsman, and other publications. Tania is extremely proud to be a graduate of the New York Artist in Residence program at the Creative Center, an organization that brings the art making process to the bedsides of people in the hospital dealing with cancer. For more information please visit: http://www.taniakatan.com

ADRIAN KHACTU’s work has been published or is forthcoming in the Atlantic Monthly, Carve, Heritage, and In/Vision. He has won the Richard Moyer Prize in Fiction and the Ezra Pound Prize in Literary Translation, as well as fellowships from Clarion West and Vermont Studio Center. Adrian currently lives, studies, and works in Philadelphia, and he holds shiny, though not entirely profitable, creative writing degrees from Stanford and Temple Universities (where he was a student of Samuel Delany).

SASSAFRAS LOWREY is an internationally award-winning storyteller, author, artist, and educator. She believes that everyone has a story to tell and that the telling of stories is essential in the creation of social change. Sassafras is the editor of the Kicked Out anthology which brought together the voices of current and former homeless LGBT youth. Sassafras regularly teaches LGBT storytelling workshops at colleges and conferences across the country, she is a monthly columnist for Curve magazine, and her prose have been included in numerous anthologies.

GENNE MURPHY is a Philadelphia native, playwright, and queer femme. She’s passionate about the intersection of the arts, social change, and community-building. Genne works for a Philadelphia-based arts education non-profit, and is involved with initiatives to expand new play development in her hometown. She is a graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, and has had readings or productions of her plays in Philadelphia and New York. Genne likes to hang out with fellow storytellers, dreamers, and schemers. She is the co-founder, with Kelli Dunham, of Queer Memoir.

MECCCA JAMILAH SULLIVAN’s fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in publications from the US, the UK, and South Africa, including Callaloo, Best New Writing, Bloom, Crab Orchard Review, Lumina, Baobab, X-24:Unclassified, Baby Remember My Name, Philadelphia Stories, and others. A graduate of the Bread Loaf Writers Conference, the Key West Literary Seminars, the Pan African Literary Forum in Ghana, and other workshops, Mecca’s awards and honors include the Charles Johnson Fiction Award from Crab Orchard Review, the James Baldwin Memorial Playwriting Award from New WORLD Theatre, Shortlist Finalist placement for the 2009 Eric Hoffer Prose award from Best New Writing, and second place for the 2010 American Short Fiction Short Story Contest, judged by Rick Moody. She has held residencies and scholarships from the New York State Summer Writers Institute, the Hedgebrook Writers Retreat, and others. Mecca holds a B.A. in Afro-American Studies from Smith College and an M.A. in English and Creative Writing from Temple University. Born and raised in Harlem, New York, she is currently a Ph.D. candidate in English Literature at the University of Pennsylvania, and is completing her first novel.

January 23- Queer Memoir debut!

Queer Memoir’s first event will center around the theme “First Kiss” with readings/performances/sharing by: Renair Amin, VA, Cheryl B, Kelli Dunham, Tara Ellison, Taueret Manu, Genne Murphy and Joel Nichols.

Saturday, January 23, @ 8 pm @  Collect Pond 45 Berry Street (L train to Bedford Avenue). The event is free, but we’ll pass the hat for cash to help support the future of QM. To learn more about Queer Memoir and how you can share your work at upcoming events, check out queermemoir.com.

PERFORMER BIOS:
Philadelphia, PA native Renair Amin is no stranger to the arts. As an author, she has written for various print and on-line publications including Gay Black Female Magazine, SABLE Magazine and DEEP HUES e-zine. She has been featured on the Nghosi Books, Femme Noir, Sistahs for Sistahs, Soulful Pen Xpressions and Kuma.com websites. Her work also appears in the Nghosi Books anthology, Longing, Lust & Loving. As a spoken word artist, Renair has performed extensively, gracing stages in Atlanta, Rochester, Los Angeles, Philadelphia and in New York City, where she hosts Speak Your Myne, a monthly open mic showcase of her creation and she recently joined the Punany Poets, a world-renowned performance collective.  . In 2006 Renair formed Pmyner, Ltd., a media and entertainment company created to provide services to the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender literary, visual and performance arts communities. Renair’s vast accomplishments have not gone unnoticed, garnering her an appearance on The Best Shorts, a BETJ offering that profiles the best in African American short films.  Later, Renair joined the OutFM Collective on WBAI (99.5 FM) radio as a host and associate producer. She currently resides in Far Rockaway, NY.Virginia Ahearn (aka ‘VA’) is a femme lesbian, anti-war and anti-nuclear activist, herbal medicine practitioner, women’s basketball fan, avid hiker and lover of lipstick. If she had to choose between giving up hiking or lipstick, the choice would be easy. She would give up lipstick. She came out as a lesbian in 1991, as a femme in 1999, and as a power femme in 2005, shortly after finding her home in the Butch-Femme Community.  Her claim to fame?  Founder of the Femme Parade at the Michigan Womyns’ Music Festival. Virginia’s first lesbian kiss was on a freezing cold night in December of 1987 in New Brunswick NJ.

An award-winning poet and writer, Cheryl B. has performed her humorous, narrative work at venues throughout NYC and abroad. Her poetry and prose has been published in numerous publications such as the literary journal Ping Pong and the anthology Word Warriors: 35 Women Leaders in the Spoken Word Revolution (Seal Press, 2007), among many others.  Her website is http://www.cherylb.com.

Kelli Dunham is a ex-nun, butch-identified stand-up comic and author of four books of humorous non-fiction, including two children’s books being used by a conservative home schooling association in their science curriculum. She has appeared on Showtime, the Discovery Channel and was once asked to emcee a livestock auction. Her website is kellidunham.com. She is the co-founder, with Genne Murphy, of Queer Memoir.

Tara Shuai is a twenty-something biracial high femme New Yorker by way of DC and Richmond, VA. She’s written and blogged about fat, fashion, race, sex, love, and living fabulously on a dime for the past 8 years, and is a co-moderator of the fatshionista livejournal community, the fatshion and beauty correspondent on FemmeCast: The Queer Fat Femme’s Guide to Life, and contributes to both fatshionista.com and The Pretty Year. Among other things, she’s a wee bit obsessed with scrabble, foodie dilettantism, Joan Holloway-inspired fatshion, cat videos on Youtube, and the intrigue of international travel.

Taueret Manu is a New Yorker to the marrow. She loves the divine, sriracha, pitbulls, friction, hibiscus juice, pink prosecco, sexual currency, poetry, and rioting. She dislikes White Santa/White Jesus/White Male God, the prison industrial complex, and the NYPD. She is also the co-editor of the zine Glutton for Fatshion.

Genne Murphy is a Philadelphia native, playwright, and queer femme. She’s passionate about the intersection of the arts, social change, and community-building. Genne works for a Philadelphia-based arts education non-profit, and is involved with initiatives to expand new play development in her hometown. She is a graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts, and has had readings or productions of her plays in Philadelphia and New York. Genne likes to hang out with fellow storytellers, dreamers, and schemers. Genne is a co-founder of Queer Memoir.

Joel Nichols was born in Vermont, studied at Wesleyan University and has an M.A. in Creative Writing from Temple University. His fiction has been published on Velvet Mafia, in Best Gay Love Stories, Ultimate Gay Erotica and in many other anthologies. He works as a Children’s Librarian and lives in Philadelphia.

First Queer Memoir – “First Kiss” on January 23

Save the date! More info coming soon, including a full list of performers.