Arts & Entertainment
Galactica, Pods unveil new act
Special Agent Galactica will be performing with Captain Satellite and the Escape Pods in a new live show “Rapture!” tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Black Fox Lounge (1723 Conn. Ave., N.W.).
The show will feature all new material including covers of songs by the Rolling Stones, Captain and Tennille, Judy Garland, Dolly Parton, Kristin Chenoweth, No Doubt and more.
Tickets are $15 and can be purchased online at pinkhairedone.com.
Music & Concerts
Hereās everything queer that just happened at the 67th Grammy Awards
LGBTQ megastars among winners, performers
The 67th Grammy Awards featured debut performances by LGBTQ megastars Chappell Roan, Sabrina Carpenter, and Doechii ā all of whom also won awards at Sundayās awards ceremony, making the gay sons and thot daughters of the queer and trans world rejoice.
Though Roan was the only queer artist to take home one of the “Big Four” awards ā Best New Artist, Doechii, Carpenter, Charlie XCX, Billie Eilish, and Lady Gaga were also all nominated for one or more of the “Big Four.”
Carpenter, Roan, and Doechii also shocked audiences with their debut performances, showing us what it really means to be out and loud.
Doechii
The self-proclaimed swamp princess from Florida took home a well-deserved win for Best Rap Album (āAlligator Bites Never Healā).
She stunned audiences with her performance and her speech, dedicating her win to Black women everywhere. Only two other women have won the award ā Lauryn Hill and Cardi B since the category was introduced in 1989.
āI know there are so many Black women out there that are watching me right now and I want to tell you: You can do it. Anything is possible,ā said Doechii during her acceptance speech.
Chappell Roan
Roan won the Best New Artist award, prompting her to whip out her notebook and deliver a speech about her struggles with the healthcare industry after getting dropped by her first record label radicalized her.
On the carpet, she served looks on the red carpet while delivering Jean Paul Gaultier vintage realness and thanking the trans girlies who made her who she is today.
āTrans people have always existed and they will forever exist. They will never, no matter what happens, take trans joy away and [they] have to be protected more than anything because I would not be here without trans girls,ā said Roan on the red carpet.
She also served during her debut Grammys performance, turning Crypto.com Arena into the Pink Pony Club while dedicating the performance to Los Angeles ā the city that embraced her when she wanted to break into the industry. She used her acceptance speech as her opportunity to shine a light on her journey toward becoming the icon she is today ā and to no oneās surprise, it didnāt come easy to her.
Roan opened up about her struggles with healthcare and being dropped as an artist in L.A., leaving her without health coverage and scrambling for solutions. Seems like the healthcare system has radicalized yet another one.
St. Vincent
St. Vincent revealed that she has a wife and daughter during her acceptance speeches, thanking them after winning three Grammys for Best Alternative Music Album (āAll Born Screamingā), Best Alternative Music Performance (āFleaā), and Best Rock Song (āBroken Manā).Ā
During her red carpet interview, reporters asked Clark about the shocking news about her mentioning her wife and daughter, she responded āMost people were [unaware]. Itās young, so weāve kept it under wraps.ā The reporter then continued his line of questioning, meanwhile intrusive thoughts quickly got ahold of Clark, prompting her to interrupt the reporter to clarify that she meant the child is young, not the person in the relationship sheās in.
Girl, youāre good.
Sabrina Carpenter
Though Carpenter didnāt win any of the “Big Four” categories, she did win Best Pop Vocal Album for (āShort nā Sweetā) and Best Pop Solo Performance for (āEspressoā).
According to E!, Carpenterās acceptance speech was apparently censored, cutting her off after she said: āThank you, holy sh*t, bye!ā
The pop star was nominated for Record of the Year (āEspressoā), Song of the Year (āPlease, Please, Pleaseā), Best New Artist, Best Pop Vocal Album (āShort nā Sweetā), Album of the Year (āShort nā Sweetā), Best Remixed Recording (āEspresso – Mark Ronson x FNZ Working Late Remixā), Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical (āShort nā Sweetā) ā all within her first year as a record-releasing musician.
Charli XCX
Charlie XCX truly brought the brat energy to the Grammys with her performance of (āVan Dutchā), also taking home the wins for Best Dance/Pop Recording for (āVan Dutchā) and Best Dance/Electronic Album for (āBratā).
Lady Gaga
Best Pop Duo/Group Performance went to Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars. Gaga used her acceptance speech to advocate for trans people stating that we all need love and to be uplifted.
āTrans people are not invisible. Trans people deserve love. The queer community deserves to be lifted up. Music is love. Thank you,ā said Gaga.
No, thank you mother.
Last, but not least
It is also worth noting that our tried and true ally, Alicia Keys used her moment on the Grammys stage to advocate for the restoration of DEI initiatives.
“This is not the time to shut down the diversity of voices,” said Keys. “We’ve seen on this stage talented, hard-working people from different backgrounds, with different points of view, and it changes the game. DEI is not a threat, it’s a gift ā and the more voices, the more powerful the sound.ā
Out & About
Are you down for a queer rock experience?
‘Unfiltered Night of Alt Rock & Pop’ scheduled for Feb. 10
Jammin Java will host āAn Unfiltered Night of Alt Rock & Popā on Monday Feb. 10 at 6:30 p.m. at its location on 227 Maple Ave. E., Vienna, Va.
This will be an unforgettable evening as four critically acclaimed queer artists bring their raw energy to the stage for a cathartic, high-octane alt rock and pop experience. Thereāll be bangers about trauma, drama, pterodactyls, situationships, witchy business, and queerness, all pan seared and served up fresh with more hooks than Peter Panās nemesis.
Tickets start at $15 and can be purchased on Jammin Javaās website.Ā
Theater
Broadway vet Ashley Blanchet tackles āBedwetterā at Arena
Sarah Silverman memoir a funny, poignant story of struggling with depression
āThe Bedwetterā
Feb. 4-March 16
Arena Stage
1101 6th St., S.W.
$69-$119
Arenastage.org
Skilled and experienced at comedy and drama, Broadway vet Ashley Blanchet says thereās a big difference between the two. She explains, āComedy is right or wrong, you nail it or you donāt; whereas with drama thereās room for subjectivity. Because I started out as a dancer, being able to hit the mark makes a lot of sense to me. Thereās a lot of rhythm to comedy.ā
Currently Blanchet is eliciting laughs as Miss New Hampshire in āThe Bedwetterā at Arena Stage. A musical based on comedian Sarah Silvermanās bestselling memoir, itās the funny yet poignant story of a hairy 10-year-old girlās struggle with clinical depression and bedwetting.
Blanchetās Miss New Hampshire is a kind of fairy godmother character.
āMost of the time Iām in Sarahās head. She first sees me on TV in Miss America, and soon I start talking to her.ā
By the end of the piece, Sarah learns that Miss New Hampshire is also a bedwetter. Subsequently, the future comedian turns her weaknesses into strengths, taking her depression and bedwetting and using it to fuel her creativity and eventual career.
This isnāt Blanchetās first time as Miss New Hampshire. She initially auditioned in 2019 and eventually created the role off-Broadway at Atlantic Theater Company in 2022.
She recalls going into the audition mostly cold. Only knowing that Miss New Hampshire is a pageant girl who unwittingly says some funny things, she partly fashioned her on Kristin Chenowethās ditzy Glinda in āWicked.ā
āSarah [Silverman] and the showās director Anne Kauffman, were laughing. I thought they were just being polite. Turns out, they really liked what I did.ā
Although Blanchet, 37, doesnāt claim a personal connection to bedwetting, she can relate to the depression described in the show. Like Sarah, she had a difficult time transitioning into her teenage years. In fact, she credits theater with saving her life.
At 14, Blanchet left home to attend Walnut Hill School, a private performing arts high school in Massachusetts. From there, she moved on to University of Michigan, a great preparatory place for theater, she says. After graduating with a BFA, she went straight to New York where she made her Broadway debut as part of the ensemble in āMemphis.ā Soon she began progressing to parts with words and songs.
Because so many musicals thematically touch on being different, Blanchet says bisexuality helps in her work.
āIāve always felt a little bit of an outsider, so the concept of acceptance and learning to love yourself found in āThe Bedwetterā is something I can relate to from both a queer perspective and from being Black. As I get older, Iām increasingly grateful to be who I am.ā
Going into college, Blanchet assumed she was straight, but after becoming exceptionally fond of a female friend, growing excited whenever they made plans to hang out, it became clear to her that her feelings were romantic. They were together for three years.
āBeing bisexual, there wasnāt like a community waiting for me despite there being many bi people. I didnāt have what my gay guy friends seemed to find. For me, sexual attraction is more about energy than body parts. Coming to own that and be proud of it was a journey and is relatable to different situations including acting.ā
Blanchet has played Elsa in āFrozenā on Broadway. She was the also the first Black actor to play the title role in āRodgers + Hammersteinās Cinderellaā at Paper Mill Playhouse, a well-known regional theater in New Jersey. And Blanchet very happily led the cast as Maria in āThe Sound of Music,ā also at Paper Mill.
āThese are parts that I never knew Iād do it. Thatās kind of what itās like to be Black in this business,ā she says.
Scheduled to be in D.C. at Arena this winter, āThe Bedwetterā cast assumed theyād be in for a wild time no matter how the election played out. They werenāt wrong. Fortunately for Blanchet, sheās immersed in her work and comfortably sharing digs with her big, beloved mixed-breed dog Cosmo.
Returning to the show, a Broadway-bound production, is proving an exciting challenge. āIām like, āwhat did a I do last time? What made this joke work?ā I canāt remember,ā she says laughing. āBut itās always good to return to the show, making tweaks and changes. Iām always trying to do anything I can to improve my performance.ā
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