Tuesday, February 27, 2024
"This Arab Is Queer"
Dorian Gray on stage
As we prepare for next week's discussion of Matthew Sturgis' monumental biography of Oscar Wilde, I found this TheaterMania review of Sarah Snook's performance in a solo show based on The Picture of Dorian Gray timely indeed. With a flock of video screens floating above her, Snook (whom many of us know as Shiv Roy from "Succession") plays every single character in Wilde's text--from Dorian, to his hedonistic mentor Lord Henry Wotton, and tortured artist Basil Hallward. It sounds amazing; here's hoping it transfers from London to this side of the pond! (This just in: The Economist's reviewer is also wildly enthusiastic about the play.)

(© Marc Brenner)
Monday, January 15, 2024
Some not-so-secret gay D.C. history
Later this year, we'll discuss James Kirchick's Secret City: The Hidden History of Gay Washington. On Dec. 26, Kirchick published an op-ed in the Washington Post that was ostensibly about an eight-second video showing two men (one a U.S. Senate staffer who was immediately fired) having anal sex in a Hart Building hearing room. But that tawdry story was just a convenient hook to market his book. That's his right, of course, but I found his article's thesis less than persuasive:
"Aside from a handful of far-right outlets, Washington's chattering class has shrugged its shoulders at the scandal's gay aspect, and one gathers that the city would be just as titillated if the copulating couple were straight. Fortunately, the denizens of Gay Washington no longer live in secret, and our exhibitionist former Senate staffer is being judged not from whom he loved, but for how he behaved." Seriously?
New Year's reading resolutions
Happy MLK Day!
Wednesday, January 10, 2024
Two Queer tidbits
I am most grateful to Lee Levine for informing me that William S. Burroughs' 1985 novel Queer, which we discussed on Jan. 3, has been filmed and is now in post-production. None other than Daniel Craig (yes, the former James Bond) plays Lee, and Drew Starkey plays Allerton; Luka Guadagnino (who directed "Call Me by Your Name") directs. Leslie Manville, Jason Schwartzman and Henry Zaga are also in the cast. No word yet on a release date, but hopefully soon!
During that same discussion, Denton Welch's name came up as a major influence on Burroughs. Robert Muir kindly shares the following bio of the author, courtesy of Wikipedia:
"William S. Burroughs cited Welch as the writer who most influenced his own work, and dedicated his 1983 novel The Place of Dead Roads to him. In 1951 the English composer Howard Ferguson set five of Welch's poems (included in A Last Sheaf) as a song-cycle for voice and piano, titled "Discovery." Others who have named Welch as an influence include filmmaker John Waters, artist Barbara Hanrahan and the writers Beryl Bainbridge and Barbara Pym."