Will charitable status affect Pride Toronto’s politics?

November 19, 2009

Two months following Pride Toronto’s decision to apply for charitable status, questions remain about the benefits and drawbacks of a successful application. Pride Toronto, currently a not-for-profit, is responsible for the city’s annual Pride celebrations and for the World Pride 2014, which will take place in Toronto.

Charities are exempt from income and property taxes — and crucially, their donors are exempt from paying income tax on donations.

“Most nonprofits believe being charitable enhances their ability to raise money from the public,” explains Doug Kerr, a member of the executive committee for the Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Trans Giving Network. “Some sources of funding like foundations can only make grants to charities — organizations like community foundations and the United Way.”

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Out of the Box

October 22, 2009

Hysterical artistic power on stage at Hysteria

his month sees the return of Hysteria, Buddies in Bad Times’ biennial celebration of female artists. The 10-day festival, now in its fifth outing, features dance, film, music, theatre, spoken word and visual art. Named by festival director Moynan King after what was once considered a peculiarly female affliction, Hysteria reclaims female artistic power.

“In a way the hysterics were performers,” says King, referring to a 19th-century series of photographs taken by doctors at a hospital in Paris of women in the throes of hysteria. Women posed for the photos in an attempt to buy their way out of the institution. “There’s no way these photographs could be authentic, because photography was a long, painstaking process,” says King, “so the hysterics of all of our ideas are performance artists.”

This year’s festival features an international lineup of performers, including two queer artists based in New York — poet and novelist Staceyann Chin and drag performer milDred. Other highlights include: a retrospective by queer comedian Shawna Dempsey of her collaborations with Lorri Millan; Spin, an evening of bicycle-themed entertainment written by Evalyn Parry; and Mass Hysteria, a cabaret of five-minute performances opened by singer Sharron Matthews.

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Paradise Falls

September 1, 2009

Along with apples and sweet potatoes, September brings with it a crop of new television, including the return of campy small-town soap opera Paradise Falls. Now in its third season on Showcase, Paradise Falls is packed with queer characters such as gay B&B operator Sacha Martinelli, played by Salvatore Antonio, and bisexual goth Trish Simpkin, played by Michelle Latimer. It’s arguably the gayest Canadian drama on TV.

Paradise Falls is a tiny town in an unnamed province, the exteriors of which are filmed in scenic Muskoka. It’s a place where, as Antonio says, “anything can happen and anything does happen.” But small-town life has its drawbacks, especially for the show’s queer characters. The new season starts out well for Sacha with his wedding to boyfriend Nick (Cameron Graham). But things aren’t always so easy for Trish, who Latimer describes as “kind of an outcast in town.”

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Edmund White on Rimbaud

December 23, 2008

Edmund White is prolific. Not content with his trilogy of autobiographical novels, which span a period of three decades, White also produced a much-condensed memoir called My Lives. He is now working on another set in 1970s New York. In addition to his memoirs, White has written eight novels, one book of short stories and three biographies documenting the lives of other prolific gay writers.

The latest of these is a short but fascinating biography of 19th-century French poet Arthur Rimbaud. "I always wanted to write about Rimbaud because he was an idol of my adolescence," says White. "I think a lot of adolescents like him. He’s a favourite of Jim Morrison, Bob Dylan, Patti Smith. They’ve all written songs about him."

Boorish and hard to get along with, Rimbaud alienated almost all of his contemporaries. It didn’t help that he and an older poet named Paul Verlaine were one of the most notorious homosexual couples of their day. But by the time of his death Rimbaud had been hailed as the father of symbolism by the same people who had once shunned him.

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One Million Red Ribbons

November 28, 2008

According to the Canadian Foundation for AIDS Research, one third of Grade 11 students in Canada don’t know AIDS is incurable. Toronto’s United Youth Initiative (UYI) seeks to change that on Dec 1 — World AIDS Day — by mobilizing hundreds of young people as peer educators in a project called One Million Red Ribbons.

"We’re committed to working with our own hands to effect change and raise awareness about pressing social issues in our own communities," says Justin Lee, one of UYI’s members. In addition to organizing larger projects, UYI holds regular "mousetrap meetings" — named after an icebreaking activity at one of their early meetings — at which members volunteer all across the GTA.

One Million Red Ribbons is the brainchild of 18-year-old Ryan Tremblay, UYI’s founder, who has been working on HIV/AIDS issues since he was in high school. "I did a survey at my school and I found out only two percent of students knew the difference between HIV and AIDS," says Tremblay. "That really shocked me and the more I looked into it the more I realized how many people believe incorrect information. That was a call to action."

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Bringing Home The Bacon

November 5, 2008

Gay men earn 12 percent less than their heterosexual counterparts while lesbians earn 15 percent more than their straight peers, according to a study in the November issue of the Canadian Journal of Economics — the first of its kind.

"No one’s really looked at Canada, which is surprising given that Canada has a longer history of gay rights than the US," says the paper’s author Christopher Carpenter, of the Paul Merage School of Business, University of California Irvine.

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Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore

October 23, 2008

So Many Ways to Sleep Badly, the second novel by radical queer activist and outrageously snappy dresser Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore, comes out this month after several painstaking years in the making. "It’s about when you get to a point in your life and nothing is coming together as you expected," says Sycamore, "and you face the overwhelm of the everyday."

Sycamore has edited several anthologies of writing on queer and gender politics, as well as published two works of gloriously disjointed autobiographical fiction. Like her first novel Pulling Taffy, So Many Ways to Sleep Badly offers up the events of Sycamore’s own life in a frantically paced stream of consciousness narrative. Her writing swings between poetic and horrifying as her ambiguously gendered central character lies awake in San Francisco’s rundown Tenderloin district, disturbed by roaches and rats and the real or imagined pigeons in the ceiling of her apartment, before taking off to service a variety of seedy men in the city’s most expensive hotels.

"For me what makes it a novel is not necessarily whether the exact events that happened in the book actually happened to me — most of them did," says Sycamore. "Memoir has become that dominant publishing industry buzz word for anything considered a little different. But, as we know, most of those memoirs are just lies. So I’d rather express my truth in fiction than present lies as if they are something that actually happened to me."

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Scaring Up Support

October 23, 2008

Halloweek makes do with less money, not enough volunteers.

This month will  see the return of Halloweek, a weeklong program of Halloween-themed events taking place in the gaybourhood in honour of the homo high holiday. But with funding for the festivities down from last year creative producer David Wootton says he’s had his work cut out for him.

"I’ve been working on Halloweek since May," says Wootton, who is the coordinator of the Church-Wellesley Village Business Improvement Area (CWVBIA), adding that although there isn’t as much money for the fest this year the offerings have been expanded from three events to seven including a family-friendly Village Fair and Fete presented by the 519 Community Centre.

Fright night has been celebrated on Church St for decades, but last year CWVBIA expanded the offerings to a weeklong celebration in the hopes of drawing more tourists to Toronto, with partial funding coming from Tourism Toronto. Last year a three-year agreement was struck that saw Tourism Toronto provide funding to kickstart the festival, with diminishing amounts each year.

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Agokwe

September 25, 2008

Love on the Rez (COVER STORY)

"My ancestors are storytellers. They’ve been storytellers for centuries, and that’s what I call myself too," says 23-year-old Waawaate Fobister, whose first play, Agokwe, opens Buddies in Bad Times Theatre’s 30th season. "I want to bring back stories from my traditions, my people."

Agokwe means "two spirited" and Fobister’s piece is an exploration of homophobia in a small native community that would once have celebrated two-spirited people as an important part of society. Fobister himself grew up on an Ojibwe reservation in northwestern Ontario, and the story is based on events from his own life.

Agokwe is primarily a coming-out story, following two young men from neighbouring reserves as they take their first steps toward expressing the attraction they share. But it is also a commentary on how native communities have been changed by white intervention and the residential school system, and those communities’ struggle to recapture what has been taken from them.

"There wasn’t any homophobia before we arrived," says Ed Roy, the production’s director, with whom Fobister has been working on the piece for more than a year. "The two-spirited person was acknowledged as a person of spiritual power and authority in the community. But when they were returned to the reservations after the schools they weren’t connected to the land, to their traditions.

"In Agokwe, Nanabush [a trickster spirit popular in Ojibwe stories] explains how we’re all trying to get back to this state of equilibrium within nature and ourselves," says Roy, "and we journey with these characters, Jake and Mike, star-crossed lovers who try to meet."

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Michelle Tea

August 13, 2008

"It’s my nature and my natural instinct to be completely transparent about my life," says US author Michelle Tea. "I don’t feel any sort of shame about anything I’ve done so it doesn’t occur to me to not talk about it." Tea’s first two memoirs, The Passionate Mistakes and Intricate Corruption of One Girl in America and Valencia, follow her through hookups and relationships, temp jobs and sex work, and through myriad drunken nights in San Francisco, Boston and Tucson.

This month Tea appears at Toronto’s Writing Outside the Margins, a one-day festival of queer literary arts presented by Xtra, also featuring readings from the creator and star of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, John Cameron Mitchell, and Canadian MC, spoken-word performer and singer Kinnie Starr.

Tea’s books provide much-needed proof that it’s not just middle-class male intellectuals who can meander across America making love and poetry and relying upon a combination of their wits and luck to get by. But as she gets older Tea’s writing and her life are changing.

"I’m sitting against my wall completely hemmed in by boxes," says Tea on the phone from San Francisco where she has just finished moving house. "Yesterday I spent like $150 on this do-it-yourself put-it-together clothing rack, and it fell on me and I broke three parts of it. I just rigged up this crazy busted rack using a pole and a bike rack, it’s totally going to collapse on me. You have to lean on these particular skills when you’re moving and I don’t have them. I don’t have real-world skills."

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