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San Diego Celebrates Opening of First Senior Housing Community Designed to Support LGBT Seniors
The North Park Senior Apartments were created in partnership with the San Diego LGBT Community Center. Inside, they have an office to help connect residents with nearby resources.
“You’re always represented by the center as well as our apartment complex,” said Paul Stewart who lives in one of the new units. “To make sure that both sides of whatever is happening or needs to be addressed is heard.”
Developers said this is the first affordable senior housing community designed to support LGBT seniors.
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San Diego Celebrates Opening of First Senior Housing Community Designed to Support LGBT Seniors
The North Park Senior Apartments were created in partnership with the San Diego LGBT Community Center. Inside, they have an office to help connect residents with nearby resources.
“You’re always represented by the center as well as our apartment complex,” said Paul Stewart who lives in one of the new units. “To make sure that both sides of whatever is happening or needs to be addressed is heard.”
Developers said this is the first affordable senior housing community designed to support LGBT seniors.
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EVENTS: LGBTQ+ Health Care Symposium, May 10 (Charlottesville, VA)
There are an estimated 700,000 people in this country who consider themselves transgender. Add in those who are openly gay, lesbian or bisexual and the number rises to nine million. They find growing acceptance in society, but many people – including doctors and nurses — remain uncomfortable when dealing with the LGBT community. That’s why UVA is hosting a special conference on May 10th.
Ken White is an associate dean of nursing at the University of Virginia. He’s also a gay man, yet no doctor has ever asked about his sexual history, and he knows many health care professionals who are even more uncomfortable with transgender men and women.
“They don‘t know what to say,” he explains. ” They don’t want to make a mistake, so they don’t say anything, and that makes patients feel isolated.”
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EVENTS: The Publishing Triangle’s Annual Awards Ceremony, April 26 (with Finalists’ Reading April 25, NYC)
April 25, 2018, 7 p.m.: The Publishing Triangle will sponsor a reading by a select group of finalists for this year’s awards at the Bureau of General Services–Queer Division, the bookstore inside the LGBT Community Services Center at 208 West 13th Street, Manhattan. The participating finalists for this free event will be announced closer to the event. Books by the readers will be sold at the event.
April 26, 2018, 7 p.m.: Join us for the Publishing Triangle’s annual awards ceremony at the New School’s Tishman Auditorium, 63 Fifth Avenue, in Greenwich Village, New York. Reception to follow. This is a free event.
Among the readers on April 25 will be Paula Martinac, a finalist for the Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBTQ Fiction for her novel, The Ada Decades (Bywater Books). You can read my ‘6 Questions‘ interview with Paula HERE.
See a complete lists of finalists and more details at The Publishing Triangle website.
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EVENTS: LGBT Elder Initiative Teams with Jefferson Health to Launch “The Doctor Is In” Health Series for LGBT Older Adults (Spring 2018)
From the LGBT Elder Initiative
New in the spring of 2018, the LGBT Elder Initiative is partnering with Jefferson Health for a new series of programs on LGBT elder health. This program series, “The Doctor Is In,” will explore pertinent health issues that impact LGBT older adult communities, equipping participants with knowledge and resources to better manage their health and reduce the risk of certain health issues.
Workshops will be facilitated by geriatricians from the Jefferson Department of Family and Community Medicine. Workshop topics have been identified based on the results of a survey created and distributed by the LGBT Elder Initiative in early 2018. Programs will be held either at Thomas Jefferson University or the William Way Community Center.
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Events: SFO (San Francisco Airport) Museum Presents ‘A Legacy of Pride – Gilbert Baker and the 40th Anniversary of the Rainbow Flag’
A Legacy of Pride: Gilbert Baker and the 40th Anniversary of the Rainbow FlagNew exhibition illustrates the San Francisco origins of the internationally recognized symbol of pride for the LGBTQ community
SAN FRANCISCO – April 12, 2018 – Shortly after the United States Supreme Court ruling on June 26, 2015, that guaranteed same-sex couples the right to marry, the rainbow flag was unfurled from apartment balconies, attached to car windows, and appeared in the background for tens of millions of newly changed profile photos on social media accounts. This universally recognized symbol of pride and solidarity was introduced nearly forty years earlier at San Francisco’s Gay Freedom Day Parade.
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EVENT: Meet the Author, with Maurice W. Dorsey, May 17 (Baltimore)
Maurice W. Dorsey has done it again. His previous book, Businessman First, was a fascinating biography of African American businessman Henry G. Parks, Jr., and a finalist for a QBR Wheatley Book Award. His new novel, From Whence We Come, is every bit as powerful. You can read a ‘6 Questions’ with the author here at LGBTSr, and he’ll be among our monthly featured authors later this summer.
From the Pratt Library event description:
In his new novel, From Whence We Come, Maurice Dorsey tells the story of Seymour Rose, an African American man who is gay. He was born to a father who is Catholic and accepts his son unconditionally. His mother, who is born Methodist, is homophobic and tells her son throughout his life that she never wanted to have him. Seymour reflects on three generations of his family history and often tells family stories to make sense of his years of emotional insecurity and feelings of being unloved and unwanted.
Date: Thursday, May 17
Time: 6:00 p.m.
Location: Enoch Pratt Free Library, Waverly Branch
400 E. 33rd Street, Baltimore, MD 21218 -
New Musical based on 'Southern Comfort' staging at CAP21's Black Box Theater
Southern Comfort,’ about the last days of a transgender man and the annual gathering in Georgia. From the New York Times:
A new musical based on “Southern Comfort,” Kate Davis’s award-winning documentary about transgender friends in rural Georgia will be presented by CAP21 Theater Company in Manhattan this fall. The musical, also called “Southern Comfort,” features a folk-bluegrass score by Dan Collins (book and lyrics) and Julianne Wick Davis (music). The show, to be presented at CAP21’s Black Box Theater on West 18th Street, will star Annette O’Toole (“The Kennedys of Massachusetts,” “Smallville”) and Jeff McCarthy (“Urinetown,” “Beauty and the Beast”). Tom Caruso directs. Previews are to begin Oct. 5.]]> -
Marianne Faithfull at City Winery in December
In case you missed it, see Steve Barnes’s review here of Marianne Faitfhfull’s latest. She’ll be performing at SoHo’s City Winery in December, where I recently saw Rickie Lee Jones, one of my musical idols. If you’re a Faithfull fan you’ll want to catch this.]]>
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Transgender festival Sparkle kicks off in Manchester, UK
The seventh annual transgender festival known as Sparkle kicked off today in Manchester, UK. From the site: Sparkle is a celebration of all things transgender, from workshops and talks to parties, meals and fun, it is a weekend festival promoting the positive and at the same time providing support, help and friendship for those who need it. This year we plan to build on the success of 2010, with even more stalls and stands in the park for the Saturday afternoon festivities. The main stage is back too, with a great line-up of TG talent and of course the fun Tranny of the Year as well. Saturday night sees our second Sparkle Ball with live entertainment and food. From Pink News: The national transgender festival, Sparkle, has begun in Manchester. The festival, now in its seventh year, is the biggest event on the trans calendar and is billed as a “celebration of gender diversity”. Tonight’s schedule includes a launch party at AXM, a banquet meal and a comedy evening. The main event, to be held in Sackville Gardens tomorrow, will be ‘Sparkle in the Park’, with stalls and performances. Equalities minister Lynne Featherstone will open the event with a speech at 1pm. On Sunday, visitors can enjoy a lunch, church service, closing meal and a workshop on the government’s Transgender Action Plan. For more info]]>
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Doogie Howser hosting Obama fundraiser, protest planned
Everybody’s favorite gay dad by surrogacy, Neil Patrick Harris, is slated to host the Obama LGBT fundraiser in New York City this evening. A protest for equality has been planned outside the Sheraton where it’s taking place.]]>
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A toast to Rev. Pat Bumgardner, MCCNY/NY Pride grand marshal
I headed over to RF bar on Hudson Street after work to toast and fund raise for MCC New York. Our own beloved Rev. Pat is a co-grand marshal of this year’s NYC Pride parade. Frank and I can’t make it, as I have sisters from Mississippi coming to the Jersey house on Saturday, but we’ll be there in spirit. You can see my interview with Rev. Pat here.]]> -
PBS to air documentary “Out in America”
I’m looking forward to this. We’ll be somewhere in the Caribbean but that’s what DVR is for! On Wednesday June 8, 8:00 pm eastern time, PBS will be airing a documentary titled “Out in America” that highlights different individuals and some couples as they live their out lives in different parts of the country. You can watch their trailer here (it’s set to expire June 30). “OUT in America is an uplifting collection of unique, transformative stories and inspiring personal narratives told through the lens of the country’s most prominent LGBT figures and pioneers, as well as many average, yet extraordinary, citizens from Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender communities. The program weaves together diverse stories – from urban and rural America, from the heartland to New England, from San Francisco to Harlem. Deeply moving and often humorous, viewers will get a glimpse of awakenings, first crushes, unlikely soul mates, intimacy and liberation. While separated by circumstance and upbringing, the film’s subjects are all united in their shared experiences of self-discovery, coming out, pride and love as well as a triumph over adversity and a true sense of belonging. Against the backdrop of historical events, each also traces their own hopes, struggles, influences and contributions towards advancements in equality and broad social change.”]]>