Winter Party
Feb 25 - Mar 2, 2009

 
  featured events  . . . . . thursday february 26, 2009   score nightclub presents blast off featuring dj brett henrichsen . . . . . friday february 27, 2009   johnny chisholm and just circuit present five ring circuit featuring 11 djs . . . . . saturday february 28, 2009   the task force presents under one sun pool party featuring dj roland belmares . . . . . sunday march 1, 2009   the task forces presents winter party beach party featuring dj tracy young . . . . . sunday march 1, 2009   the task forces presents orbit featuring dj tony moran . . . . .

   
  Ali Forney Luscious 2006  
   
   
  2008
Join The Impact
Election 2008
Our Anniversary
Gay Flags Flying
Election 2008
Jennifer Holliday
Sobe Halloween
Save Dade Halloween
LGBT Picnic
Beach Birthday Bash
NYC Gay Pride Parade
Florent Closing
Alegria Pride 2008
Sin Morera Interview
Communion Art
Hades Music After Party
Latino Press Awards
Masterbeat Release
The Art of Life
DJ Jonathan Peters

WPF: Media Reception
WPF: Fashion Runway
Sunset T Cruise
Photogs to the Stars
DJ Joe Gauthreaux
Key West Chicken Scratch
World Erotic Art Museum

2007

DJ Abel Interview
MGLFF Benefit
Art Basel Miami Beach

Junior Vasquez Interview
Miamiambient

Janice Dickinson
Compass at Halo
RSVP Mediterranean
NYC Gay Pride Parade
DP1: NY Dance Parade
Diane Keaton Tribute
GLAAD Media Awards

2006

HX Awards 2006
NYC Pride Rally
Ali Forney Luscious
Live Out Loud Gala
Kips Bay Show House

2005
Hetrick-Martin Awards
The Pill Awards
GLWD Day of the Dead
Fife
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
Date   :   June 12, 2006
 
 
Event   :   Luscious 2006 for Ali Forney Center
 
 
Location   :   Lucille Lortel Theater, NYC
 
 
Web   :   MRNY Photo Gallery     www.aliforneycenter.org
 
   
 


Given the recent gay-bashing attack on Kevin Aviance and the attendant publicity, last night’s benefit for the Ali Forney Center, Luscious 2006 at the Lucille Lortel Theatre, was perhaps even more poignant than in years past.  Started in 2002 in response to the lack of shelter for at-risk LGBT youth, most of whom have been rejected by their families, the Ali Forney Center is eponymously named for a youth who was murdered on the streets in 1997.  Nicknamed Luscious, his murder attracted the notice of the New York Times which castigated the city for their neglect of the city’s LGBT at-risk youth.

And last night, Alan Cumming, prior to introducing the founder of Ali Forney, Carl Siciliano, made perfectly clear the connection between the current administration’s homophobic policies, as marked this week by the inflammatory Federal Marriage Amendment, and how such intolerance and hatred makes its way down to the streets.  Forty percent of gay youth who come out of the closet are rejected by their families – and Carl Siciliano told several horror stories about the responses these youth sometimes receive from their families, such as the one lesbian whose mother literally scalped her, removing a chunk of her head, and another gay boy whose father held a gun to the boy’s head and told him to leave the house immediately.  As Carl said, there are two Americas today, and those of us in relatively tolerant states often cannot fathom the degree of hostility which confronts these LGBT kids in other less-tolerant states.

And so we were there, in the Lucille Lortel Theatre, to pay respect to these kids, with performers whose own backgrounds sometimes paralleled the obstacles these at-risk youth face.  Austin Scarlett, from Project Runway, for example, spoke about his years in an Oregon high school whose principal confiscated his more fabulous crinoline confections – to what purpose?  And there was also Mario Cantone reminding us that humor is sometimes the only recourse, and doing a dead-on Faye Dunaway haranguing her Indian cabbie.  And Trai LaTrash singing a beautiful rendition of “Summertime” – and who knew that woman with the white beehive pompadour had such incredible pipes?  She owned that song.  And meanwhile, Edie was Mistress of Ceremonies, showcasing her legginess in her signature “Gotcha.”  The girl has elevation.  And for the theatre queens in the audience, there was Penny Fuller from Applause, from 1970, singing “Something’s Coming,” proving once again that, in New York, you can always find work.  And Da Lippstyxx, that tri-sexual boy band with a girl twist, following in the footsteps of the Scissor Sisters, and making a case for fabulous in the face of hate.  As one of their songs put it, “We’re the ocean, you’re the fish.”  And that’s probably an apt philosophy for attempting to deal with the irrationale hatred so often thrust on us as a community – let our energies be as wide and deep as the ocean.  We encircle the planet.  Without us, they flounder.

There was an after-party too, at Luke and Leroy, scene of Madonna’s first Gotham “surprise” appearance last autumn, and it was packed with little hotties, as well as nibbles, and an open bar, and at one point, the deejay played “Ain’t No Stopping Us Now,” and the kids served it up.  That’s the kind of faith we need now – that our journey as a community keeps us all aloft. 

Best always,
Mark and Robert
 

 
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