Ireland Rights Music community Celebrity show Love Eagle Ireland

Celebrate Valentine’s Day with one of these three plays

washingtonblade.com

For theatergoers seeking to mark Valentine’s Day with live music, love, and friendship, the DMV offers some new spins on traditional themes.

Poised to make its regional debut at Olney Theatre Center, Sara Bareilles’s hit musical “Waitress” (Feb.13-March 30) may not seem like a usual love story, but it’s a love story nonetheless. “It’s about learning to love and value yourself,” says MALINDA who plays Jenna, the show’s titular server/baker with aspirations to bake prize-winning pies and change her life. “It’s also about sisterhood.

From the start, the women involved in the show decided to be there for each other onstage and off, and it shows. For anyone with girl group love in their lives, this is an especially good show to see. “Jenna doesn’t get a lot of satisfaction out of her primary partnership.

Along with self-love she explores the antithesis of that — partner violence. Our director [Marcia Milgrom Dodge] took the lesson of community support and community love to heart.” Prior to coming out as bisexual in 2022, MALINDA considered herself more of a “quiet queer.” However, the inspiration derived from Irish music (“music of the oppressed”), which she’s famed for singing on TikTok, compelled her to go public.

Latest News

queerty.com
Laverne Cox on new sitcom ‘Clean Slate’: It’s “very human” to find “humor in the catastrophic”
Netflix‘s Orange Is The New Black, Laverne Cox is finally—finally!—getting the star vehicle she’s long deserved in Amazon Prime Video’s Clean Slate.In it, she plays Desiree, a New York City gallerist who, after a few bumps in the road, decides to head back to her quaint Alabama hometown and try to make things right with her well-meaning but long-estranged father, Harry (legendary comic George Wallace.)By design,Cox’s series has all the hallmarks of a classic TV sitcom, from the eclectic cast of supporting characters, to the charming theme song, right on down to the fact that it boasts the late, great Norman Lear among its executive producers.Subscribe to our newsletter for your front-row seat to all things entertainment with a sprinkle of everything else queer.And, like many of the iconic shows created by Lear over the decades—from All in The Family to Sanford And Son to The Jeffersons—Clean Slate uses the comforting familiarity of those sitcom trappings to subtly yet radically push the social conversation forward.Because, at a time when our administration is actively trying to erase trans and nonbinary people from the narrative, the very existence of a series like Clean Slate (on a global platform like Amazon, no less) is nothing short of a miracle.With that in mind, Cox’s new show aims to appeal to both queer audiences (who will surely relate to the way Desiree has to navigate a place that no longer feels like “home”) and the broader mainstream, hoping to change hearts and minds in the process. That it does so through humor and human connection—as opposed to force-feeding viewers “teachable moments”—makes it all the more effective.
Change privacy settings
This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.