Category Archives: Uncategorized

Queer Memoir: Inlaws and Outlaws

Our April line-up. For last minute details, check out the event on facebook.
Ashley M Young
Barry Katz
Chella Quint
Grace Moon
Katie Liederman
Lenny Zenith

with hosts Kelli Dunham & Genne Murphy

ASHLEY M YOUNG
Ashley is a black feminist queer dyke; poet, non-fiction writer and teaching artist. She is the creator of an online writing project for women of color called Brown Girl Love (www.browngirllove.com) and recently completed a chapbook inspired by the project. She is a non-fiction 2011 Lambda Literary Fellow and a 2010 poetry participant of Voices of Our Nations Arts Foundation Retreat for Writers of Color. Under the name Indigo, Ashley writes a blog called Indigo’s Theory about her journey through sexuality, Polyamory and womanhood. She also writes a column called “Indigo’s Poly Beginnings” for Fearless Press, an online magazine about relationships and sexuality. Her erotica has been featured in Salacious Magazine and she will be a featured writer in “Perverts of Color” alongside her partner Sara Vibes. She has read her erotica throughout New York City and teaches sex positive workshops in the LBGTQ community. Ashley makes a living as non-profit arts administer and is currently working on her memoir.

BARRY KATZ
After twenty-eight years of marriage, and the raising of two children, both now adults, Barry Katz turned his life upside-down. His memoir, “A Double Life,” tells the story of coming to grips with his sexuality and starting over late in life. The title refers both to the experience of having lived most of his life as one person on the outside, and a very different one on the inside; and also to his rebirth as a gay man, a starting over in middle age—closing the book on one life, and embarking on another.
Barry Katz is a writer, designer, and custom homebuilder based in Norwalk, Connecticut. A part-time painter and amateur pianist, Katz’s published writings include newspaper columns on home improvement; magazine articles on architecture, the arts, and green building; and a book, “Practical Green Remodeling: Down-to-Earth Solutions for Every Day Homes,” (Taunton Press 2010).

CHELLA QUINT
Chella Quint is a comedy writer, performer and old school zine girl who was born in Brooklyn but ran away to Sheffield, England when she was 21. She swears the two cities are identical in every way except for the commute to Manhattan. She is best known for writing and editing Adventures in Menstruating – a zine and live show deconstructing feminine hygiene adverts with brute force when necessary. Chella’s comic essay about interfering in-laws, “Getting Civilized”, was recently published in the anthology Here Come the Brides: Reflections on Lesbian Love and Marriage (Seal Press, March 2012). www.chellaquint.com

GRACE MOON
Grace Moon is an artist, writer, professor and founder of Velvetpark Media the arts and culture site for queer women.

KATIE LIEDERMAN
Katie Liederman has written for The Huffington Post, Nerve, V, Curve, Penthouse Forum, GO, Rap-Up, Velvetpark, The Archive, The New Gay, PrettyQueer, and was a resident blogger on Showtime’s Ourchart.com. She has a Bachelor’s degree in English from Cornell University and an M.F.A. in Nonfiction Writing from Sarah Lawrence College.

LENNY ZENITH
Lenny Zenith is a writer and musician from New Orleans, who currently lives in NYC with his wife Anne and cat Seymour where he works as a web manager, and still performs music intermittently. He identifies as a queer transman, and excerpts of his upcoming memoir were recently published in Obsolete! magazine. He’s often featured at NYC’s “Loser’s Lounge, and “The Car Song” by his 90’s band Jenifer Convertible was featured on the Trans-Genre CD compilation. Over the years his bands have opened for XTC, Gang of Four, X, Iggy Pop and U2 among others. He has also played The New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival several times and has toured the U.S., Canada and UK. His latest band was Minor Planets (http://myspace.com/minorplanets) He is currently completing his memoir “Before I Was Me”.

With Queer Memoir producers/founders/hosts

GENNE MURPHY
GENNE MURPHY is a Philadelphia native, playwright and arts educator. Her work has appeared on Philadelphia stages and radio. Check out the upcoming production of her play, HOPE STREET AND OTHER LONELY PLACES with Azuka Theatre March 15-April 1: http://azukatheatre.org/show.php?prod=42. Genne is the co-producer, with Kelli Dunham, of Queer Memoir (queermemoir.com).

KELLI DUNHAM
KELLI DUNHAM is a ex-nun, genderqueerious stand-up nerd comic, one of Velvet Park Magazine’s 25 Significant Queer Women of 2011 and author of four books of humorous non-fiction, including two children’s books being used by Sonlight conservative home schooling association in their science curriculum. Kelli is currently organizing a southern states Good Ol’ Fashioned Queer Comedy Revival Show.

Queer Memoir: Speaking the Truth to Power

We’re so looking forward to our November NYC event, returning to the Queers for Economic Justice space. Bios of our amazing storytellers below; don’t forget to RSVP on facebook.

Ryann Holmes

Amber Dawn

Nick Krieger

Dan Horrigan

Lea Robinson

RYANN HOLMES

Born in Washington, DC and raised in neighboring PG County, Maryland, Ryann Makenzi Holmes, is an entrepreneur, student and community organizer. After completing her undergrad in Business and Marketing at George Mason University, she is now completing her final semester of graduate work in Baruch College’s MBA program. From her innovative event planning work with the Women’s Sports Foundation to her dedicated work with Public Interest Projects and The Audre Lorde Project, Ryann is committed to a life lived with integrity.

Settling in Bed Stuy, Brooklyn just over 5 years ago, the city and its energy felt vibrant, artistic and inspiring—all traits that she continually seeks to embody in her personal and professional endeavors. As a founder of bklyn boihood she spends much of her time working on providing visibility and promoting the empowerment of masculine of center folks of color.

After the successful launch of their visionary 2010 calendar, Ryann has set her sights high, committing to the creative expansion of the collective through hosting opportunities for networking, substantial program development and using social innovation to empower individuals and community efforts on a local to global scale.

 

AMBER DAWN

Amber Dawn is a writer, filmmaker and performance artist based in Vancouver. She is the author of the novel Sub Rosa (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2010), editor of the Lambda Award-nominated Fist of the Spider Woman (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2008) and co-editor of With a Rough Tongue: Femmes Write Porn (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2005). Her award-winning, genderfuck docu-porn, “Girl on Girl,” has been screened in eight countries and added to the gender studies curriculum at Concordia University. She has toured three times with the infamous Sex Workers’ Art Show. Currently, she is the director of programming for the Vancouver Queer Film Festival.

 

NICK KRIEGER

Nick Krieger is the author of the memoir NINA HERE NOR THERE: MY JOURNEY BEYOND GENDER, an exploration of the land between man and woman. Reviewers have called it “revolutionary,” “honest,” “funny,” “moving,” and “heartfelt.” Krieger’s writing has earned several travel-writing awards, has been published in multiple travel guides, and has appeared in numerous outlets, including 365gay, Original Plumbing, and the Advocate. A native of New York, Krieger realized at the age of twenty-one that he’d been born on the wrong coast, a malady he corrected by transitioning to San Francisco. He is passionate about activism through art, yoga, and queering all that he can. www.nickkrieger.com.

DAN HORRIGAN

Dan Horrigan got his start telling stories to anyone who would listen at bars and cocktail parties across New York. Dan is thrilled to be bringing his tales to a slightly more sober audience. Another incarnation of The Big A was produced in New York in February of 2010. In addition to being a writer / performer Dan is also a co-founder and Artistic Director of At Hand Theatre Company. At Hand is an independent, non profit theatre company in New York City that produces new plays while using eco-friendly practices. Dan likes to make you laugh and he likes trees and plays! He is proud to have produced Anton Dudley’s Letters to the End of the World, Mark Snyder’s Lila Cante, One Nation Under by Andrea Lepcio and 4 seasons of POP! Dan has directed At Hand’s productions of Cake And Plays Without The Cake by Jono Hustis, Silence! by Brian Dykstra and John Patrick Bray’s Trickster at the Gate. Last season, Dan was honored to have At Hand present his autobiographical solo show, MY AiDS. Other directing credits include Nicky Silver’s The Altruists (Access Theatre), Cindy Lou Johnson’s Brilliant Traces and PS Your Cat is Dead by James Kirkwood. Dan’s television appearances include Cash Cab, playing the role of Gay Guy In The Backseat With All The Wrong Answers (uncredited). He also appeared in Kathy Griffin’s My Life On The D-List playing Laughing Gay Guy in the 3rd Row At The WaMu Theatre (surprisingly, also uncredited). .

 

LEA ROBINSON

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.

Queer Memoir: LETTERS

Because of the illness and death of Kelli’s partner Cheryl, Queer Memoir has been on hiatus since March. For our first post-hiatus event, we’re partnering with the amazing organization Queers for Economic Justice, to present QUEER MEMOIR: Letters. It’s going to be an amazing evening, so please RSVP on facebook and come!

ABOUT OUR STORYTELLERS:

ASHLEY M YOUNG
Ashley is a black feminist queer dyke; poet, non-fiction writer and teaching artist. She is the creator of an online writing project for women of color called Brown Girl Love (www.browngirllove.com) and recently completed a chapbook inspired by the project. She is a non-fiction 2011 Lambda Literary Fellow and a 2010 poetry participant of Voices of Our Nations Arts Foundation Retreat for Writers of Color. Under the name Indigo, Ashley writes a blog called Indigo’s Theory about her journey through sexuality, Polyamory and womanhood. She also writes a column called “Indigo’s Poly Beginnings” for Fearless Press, an online magazine about relationships and sexuality. Her erotica has been featured in Salacious Magazine and she will be a featured writer in “Perverts of Color” alongside her partner Sara Vibes. She has read her erotica throughout New York City and teaches sex positive workshops in the LBGTQ community. Ashley makes a living as non-profit arts administer and is currently working on her memoir.
KAY ULANDAY BARRETT
A CAMPUS PRIDE 2009 Hot List artist, Kay Ulanday Barrett is a poet, performer, educator, and martial artist navigating life as a pilipin@ transgender/queer in the U.S. with struggle, resistance, and laughter. Based in NY/NJ, their work has featured on stages nationally and internationally; from the NJ Performing Arts Center to the Chicago Historical Museum, Brooklyn Museum to Dublin’s Lesbian Arts Festival. Kay’s bold work continues to excite and challenge audiences. Previously, Kay has served on the Board of Directors for Beyondmedia Education and the Advocates Committee for freeDimensional, a social justice resource for the arts activist global community. Honors include: LGBTQ 30 under 30 awards and Finalist for The Gwendolyn Brooks Open-Mic Award. Kay’s work has appeared in several anthologies and journals such as: Make/shift magazine, Kicked Out Anthology, Philippine American Psychology, and Asian Americans for Progress. Kay. turns art into action as a dedicated activist who serves LGBTQ communities and youth. As a critical foodie of color, Kay’s next project is a documentary called Recipes for the People. Check out K. online: http://www.kaybarrett.net/ and http://www.recipesforthepeople.com/

BRYN KELLY
Bryn Kelly is all about the story. She has shared her written work at NYC-based performance series Gayety!, Low Standards, and Queer Memoir; on Showtime’s OurChart.com; and in the forthcoming anthology, Trans/Love: Radical Sex, Love and Relationships Beyond the Gender Binary. She was a cofounder of Theater Transgression, a multimedia performance collective, and has appeared in Dixon Place’s HOT! Festival; in As You Like It at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe; and on NBC’s Law and Order: SVU. She lives in Brooklyn.

JAY TOOLE
Jay Toole is the director of QEJ’s Shelter Project and a real, live superbutch.

R. ERIC THOMAS
R. Eric Thomas (@oureric) is a playwright, teaching artist and storyteller. He is the author of four produced plays, including “The Spectator” (Run of the Mill Theater Company, Baltimore). Eric has read or performed for Second Stories at the Dive, Rant-o-Wheel, Queer Ignite, Superheroes Who Are Super!, Queer Memoir, “Live at Kelly Writers House” on WXPN and Philadelphia’s First Person Arts Story Slams, at which he has competed in the Grand Slam three times. His writing has appeared in Columbia University’s The Collection and the literary magazine, The Q Review. His solo show, “Will You Accept This Friend Request?” premieres November 14 and 15 as part of the First Person Festival. Facebook.com/R.Eric.T

GENNE MURPHY
Genne Murphy is a Philadelphia native and playwright.. She’s passionate about the intersection of the arts, social change, and community-building. She has had readings or productions of her plays in Philly with Azuka Theatre Company, Flashpoint Theatre Company, Madhouse Late Night Cabaret, the Cardboard Box Collaborative, the Annenberg Center/Merge, LIVE at the Kelly Writers House (radio), and in the Philadelphia Fringe Festival. Check out her first full-length play, HOPE STREET AND OTHER LONELY PLACES to be produced by Azuka Theatre in spring 2012. Genne is the co-producer, with Kelli Dunham, of Queer Memoir (queermemoir.com

KELLI DUNHAM
Kelli Dunham (www.kellidunham.com) is everyone’s favorite nerd gone wild (mild?) stand up comic. She has appeared at colleges, clubs, fundraisers, the occasional livestock auction and on Showtime and the Discovery Channel. You can catch her full length show “Why Is the Fat One Always Angry: Kelli Dunham’s I’m Still Funny Dammit 43 Birthday Show” on October 1 at the Stonewall Inn. You can find her on facebook, youtube, twitter and any future social media platforms still to be invented as (get this cleverness) kellidunham.

Growing Up (Philly salon!)

Join us for this special salon in Philadelphia on Saturday, March 5 @ 8pm!

The Free Library of Philadelphia invited Queer Memoir to create a special salon as part of One Book, One Philadelphia, and inspired by themes in the writings of author Sherman Alexie.  Queer and LGBT storytellers of all ages will be sharing that night on the theme of “Growing Up.” The salon will be hosted at the local William Way LGBT Center.

Storytellers include:
Chris Bartlett – Executive Director of the William Way
Leyla Eraslan – writer
Staci Priano – Nurse/writer Philadelphia native
R. Eric Thomas – Playwright and First Person Arts story slam winner local
TS Hawkins– Author/Performance Poet
Queer youth from the Attic Youth Center!

BIOS
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.

LEYLA ERASLAN owes her unrepentant weirdness to a South Jersey upbringing and reading too many books. Currently an employee of a Philadelphia arts education nonprofit, Leyla lives in South Philly, or so it is rumored. In 2008, she wrote, directed and co-produced “Love After Death” for the Philadelphia Fringe Festival. She frequents the Walking Fish Theatre Open Mic and has participated in The Five Minute Follies. She has been involved in a smattering of artistic endeavors, and likes the word ’smattering’. Leyla’s passions include art, helping people, and drawing lips in the corners of her notebook.

STACI PRIANO is a 45 year old Lesbian, Nurse, Mom, perpetual student, slightly twisted looker at life, and a Grandmom to boot. She’s been around the block a time or two and has gathered very little moss but has retained a tale or two about the journey; cautionary, maybe, interesting, hopefully. Poignant, funny, gripping? Well, you’ll be the judge.

R. ERIC THOMAS is a playwright, storyteller and essayist. He is the author of the plays “Lost Boy”, “The Spectator” (Run of the Mill Theater Company, 2005), and “The Affair” (LateNite Theater, 2001). He recently won Best Presentation at the First Person Arts Summer Grand Story Slam for his story “My Mother Hates The Facebook”. He is delighted to be reading at his third Queer Memoir and is starting Philly’s own LGBT literary salon this summer. Presently, Eric is working on plays about time travel, Santa Claus, bureaucracy and swimsuit models; cyber-stalk him here: enormouslyawkward.blogspot.com.

TS HAWKINS is an internationally recognized author and performance poet. Her previous publications, Sugar Lumps and Black Eye Blues and Confectionately Yours have been well received in print and radio media since 2007. Expanding her writing skill set, Hawkins will release her first book for teens titled Black Suga: diary of a troublesome teenager, which will debut in early 2011 along with Mahogany Nectar. Recently featured on the Authors Under 30 Book Tour, she is grateful to have traveled around Canada and the United States to share her work with other talented performers/writers. Taping into her theater foundation, Hawkins has been traveling with the American Family Theater for their national tour of Black Journey! For more detailed information, visit http://www.tspoetics.blogspot.com

RSVP on Facebook!

ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY SHOW: HELLO/GBYE

We’re really excited about our upcoming One Year Anniversary Show, with the theme Hello/Goodbye.  We have some amazing storytellers, including Suzanne Kogan, Kay Ulanday Barrett, Jonathan Hollingsworth, Emy Moya, Akiva Penaloza  and Tara Shuai. There will be some awesome edible treats in celebration of our event birthday as well as many more surprises!

January 29: Queer Memoir: CRUSH

Queer Memoir CRUSH is going to be one of our best events yet.  Yeah we say that every time. And it’s true every time!

For more info about the storytellers and the latest updates, check out the event on facebook.

Queer Memoir: Family

Ah family! In this special holiday edition of Queer Memoir, storytellers will share about about the folks we call family…and the families we make ourselves.

Saturday, December 4 · 2:30pm
LGBT Community Center [Room 410, W/C accessible]

208 w 13th street
New York, NY
$5-7 suggested donation. Includes tasty snacks!
With our amazing storytellers….
Arun
Kelli Dunham and (her sister) Elizabeth Dunham Toner
Paris Harris and Eshey Scarborough
Glenn Marla
Genne Murphy and (her pop) Frank Murphy
YaliniDreamPlease note this special edition of Queer Memoir STARTS IN THE AFTERNOON – plus there will be special snacky treats!

We are featuring several collaborative memoir duos, and one storyteller will include an edible/food portion to his memoir!

BIOS

ARUN is an Irish-Trinidadian mixed-media and performance artist who has contributed to Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender and Queer (LGBTQ) community arts in Canada and the United States for over a decade. An arts scholarship recipient, he studied at the University of Toronto and graduated with a degree in gender studies and visual arts. His mixed-media work reflects his larger interest in social justice, specifically LGBTQ rights. His current “urban installation” pieces address the simultaneously hypervisible/invisible nature of queer sexuality “Bad Habit,” a collaboration with with internationally known lesbian author, comic and former nun Kelli Dunham, reflects his interest in the relationship between trauma and humor in queer narratives and the interplay between visual media, text and performance. In his spare time, he enjoys fashioning absurdly fabulous performance costumes as well as writing and illustrating short stories for his partner and friends. He is currently based in New York.

KELLI DUNHAM and ELIZABETH DUNHAM TONER – Kelli Dunham and (her straight sister) Elizabeth Dunham Toner are both writers and nurses and the last two of seven children who share various different mother/fathers configurations. Elizabeth has run more than two dozen marathons…voluntarily, ie while not being chased by wild animals or other predators. She works in long term care as a nurse and has a fulltime corporate writing job in the financial services industry. She has had stories published in various Star Trek anthologies and is raising three children as nerdy and wonderful as she is. Kelli Dunham is a comic, author of four books, and the co-producer of Queer Memoir.

PARIS HARRIS and ESHEY SCARBOROUGH – New York natives Paris and Eshey are the founders of Positive Encounters an L.G.B.T. community based organization. Their mission is dedicated to supporting those gays, lesbians, bisexuals and Trans-gendered who seek to have more positive encounters and honorable relationships with their partners and others. Paris and Eshey as writers create and perform works that are directed at educating, energizing, uplifting and entertaining the lesbian and gay community. Using their “Moving in Love” concept, they design and facilitate relationship-centered workshops that promote safer and healthier encounters. Two of these, “The Lost Art of Flirting” and “Cheating…Why Do We Do It?” received rave reviews at The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender Community Center in NYC. They both held positions for award nominated SABLE Magazine for Lesbian Women of Color. Eshey also has written a popular column for the Sable Silver section where she focuses on the concerns and interests of senior lesbians. They are performance artists as a couple and they write and perform their original poetry and comedy within the NYC L.G.B.T. community. They were well received presenters at the 7th Annual A.A.L.L.U. [African, Asian, Latinas Lesbians United] Conference of 2004 and The 8th Annual AALLU Conference where they introduced their workshop “De-mystifying the Roles: The Butch, Femme, Androgynous Mystique” in 2005. And in 2007 the presented a couples workshop at The 10th Annual AALLU Conference in Newark, New Jersey.

Paris is the Founder of “Sophisticated Aggressive Gents” a support group strictly for women who identify as Butch, Aggressive, Stud or Male of Center. The group meets monthly to serve the local lesbian community at the LGBT Center. Paris and Eshey are currently both state certified host parents for the New York City Administration for Children’s Services. They have also been certified by O.C.F.S. (Office of Children and Family Services) and began as foster parents by hosting transitioning incarcerated teens. Paris and Eshey have invested in the L.G.B.T. intergenerational community and through their visibility as agents of change have shown that they are passionate about their life’s work making a difference in the community. After a three year courtship they were married in Las Vegas, Nevada at the Annual International Butch Femme Conference on Oct.5, 2003. They currently reside in the Bronx, New York with two of their own daughters.

GLENN MARLA (performer/writer) is a Brooklyn-based performance artist, tranny superstar and beauty pageant queen (Miss LES 2006 and the reigning Mr. Coney Island). The Portland Phoenix calls Glenn Marla’s work, “performance art that pushes the envelope without pushing the audience away,” Time Out New York Calls Glenn a “downtown prophet” and The New York Times calls Glenn “an obese transvestite in tights.” Glenn Marla is a firm believer that if you don’t fit in anywhere you can fit in everywhere. Most recently you may have caught Glenn touring his solo piece Tragic Magic. This year he has also been seen gracing the stage as a giant gay flower both in Dave End’s F.A.G.G.O.T.S the Musical playing Pansy or in Taylor Mac’s Obie Award winning epic play The Lily’s Revenge as Poppy. This Fall Mr. Marla got to collaborate with Mx Justin Bond again along with some of New York’s finest performance witches to play the Queen of the Underworld in Galli Blonde:Re A Sissy Fix. Glenn is thrilled to be sharing new work at Queer Memoir.

FRANK MURPHY and GENNE MURPHY – Frank Murphy is a Philadelphia native, community organizer, and educator, serving as a school teacher and principal in Philadelphia for over 35 years. He recently retired as the principal of G.G. Meade Elementary School in North Philadelphia. He currently blogs for the Philadelphia Notebook (thenotebook.org – an independent forum for educators, parents, students and friends of the Philadelphia public schools), and is the creator of CitySchoolStories.com – a blog devoted to telling the story of urban public education in America today. His site provides a forum for sharing real life stories from the perspectives of the principals and teachers who daily work and live in city school communities. Frank is also the father of Genne Murphy, the co-founder of Queer Memoir. Genne is a playwright, queer person, arts educator and Philadelphia native.

YALINIDREAM; Sri Lankan Blood, Manchester Born, Texas bred and Brooklyn steeped, YaliniDream is a Queer artist, activist, and facilitator. She conjures spirit through her unique blend of poetry, theater, song, and dance– reshaping reality and seeking peace through justice in the lands of earth, psyche, soul, and dream. One of the South Asian American community’s most prominent performance poets, YaliniDream has toured nationally throughout the US as well as performing in Canada, England & Sri Lanka. As a director & facilitator, YaliniDream works to bring under-represented voices to center stage through community based theater productions. Through experimental collaboration she seeks to build artistic work that reflects the strength of communities while cherishing difference. YaliniDream was the director and facilitator of Andolan’s Sukh aur Dukh ki Kahani–a storytelling project with Bangladeshi and Indian domestic workers in Queens, NY. She has been a long term volunteer with the Audre Lorde Project’s SOS(Safe Outside the System) Collective in Brooklyn working to address homophobic and transphobic violence against people of color. YaliniDream is also a trained aerial dancer in corde lisse who loves to fly– challenging notions of the seemingly impossible.

Queer Memoir: Subway

QUEER MEMOIR: SUBWAY
With storytellers: Danielle Abrams, Kelli Dunham, Michele Hunt, Shareef Hadid Jenkins, Bryn Kelly, Genne Murphy and Charlie Vázquez

Saturday, November 13 & 8:30pm. $5-7 suggested donation. Please note there was NOT a wheelchair accessible room available this day, so for this ONE TIME ONLY this is not a w/c accessible event, although it is all ages.

RSVP on Facebook HERE.

BIOS :
DANIELLE ABRAMS is an interdisciplinary artist who works in performance and video. She is a monologist, talk-show host, ballroom dance teacher, ballerina, and a stand-up comedian of yesteryear. Family and social histories are the material Abrams kneads to create contemporary moments with people and places. She channels a multiracial cast of family members, and incites participatory extravaganzas. Abrams’ characters wax poetic from park benches, barbeque “butch burgers”, and lead Conga lines through a Borscht Belt mirage. She utilizes the tropes of personae to inquire about social relationships and cultures, challenge our reliance upon origin and biography, and reveal the frolic, poignancy, tensions, and revolutionary potential that is created at the intersection of diverse communities.

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.

SHAREEF HADID JENKINS has been writing plays since the 2nd grade but never finished a single one. One day in his senior year at Temple University, Shareef woke up at 5am from a dream of 3 Women telling their stories of mothering one boy whom they loved and raised the best way they could. When Shareef woke up from that dream the women were still talking and his first play “The Three Mothers of Zachary”, was born. Shareef currently lives and writes on Harlem, New York, and is Artistic Director of Gladys Productions. His latest play, Crystal-meth, 2 boys and a Tranny It’s all about “Getting Your Life” debuted in last years Philly Fringe Festival and you can “FOLLOW” Shareef’s work every day on his blog www.shareefHadidJenkins.blogspot.com

MICHELE HUNT Michele Hunt lived in NYC from 1999-2007, experiencing the wonders of the subway pretty much every day while working in the jewelry district of Manhattan (along with a brief period of working on the Upper East Side). Now living in Portland, Oregon, she works in a new career as a banker (!) and practices on her photography.

BRYN KELLY is a theater artist, producer, writer and musician living in Brooklyn, New York. She recently wrapped a production of ANTIGONE with an all-transgender cast (Theater Transgression); played Rosalind in AS YOU LIKE IT at the Nuyorican Poetry Cafe with a cast of Manhattan Community College drama students; and, most recently, will have played Shelby in a very emotional presentation of a scene from STEEL MAGNOLIAS at Sugarland under the direction of avant-auteur Heather Acs. Though she has given public memoir readings before, this is the first time she has presented in the dramatic idiom *(with the exception of that piece about sucking dick in the stacks of the Ohio State University library system, which received rave reviews) Let’s just hope for the best, shall we?

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.

CHARLIE VAZQUEZ is a radical Bronx-bred writer of Cuban and Puerto Rican descent. His fiction and essays have been published in various anthologies and have appeared in print and online publications such as The Advocate, Chelsea Clinton News, New York Press, and Ganymede Journal. Charlie hosts a monthly reading series called PANIC! (in the East Village), which focuses on unusual and original fiction and poetry. He is a former contributor to the Village Voice’s Naked City blog and a retired experimental musician and photographer. His second novel Contraband, was published by Rebel Satori Press in spring 2010, and his third, Corazón, is wrapping up for future publication. He is also working on a short story collection and co-editing a gay Latino fiction anthology with novelist and cultural producer Charles Rice-González. Info: http://www.firekingpress.com/

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!