DC Dykes.com Logo - Click to go home.
 
Newspaper

In The News

[Entertainment] [Fun Stuff] [Help Arena] [Hot Topics] [In The News] [Metro Events] [Relationships] [Resources] [Sports]

Stories Covering The DC Metro Area
Archive Page

January - April 2002

Montgomery Seeks Tax Deal For Gay Couples
Council Votes to Lift Property Transfer Levy
By Jo Becker
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, April 3, 2002; Page B08

The Montgomery County Council voted yesterday to give gay partners the same real estate tax break received by married couples.

Gay residents who transfer property into the name of a domestic partner will no longer have to pay a real estate tax levied when property changes hands. The provision was unanimously approved as part of a measure codifying a county practice that exempts spouses, former spouses and close relatives of property owners from the tax.

County Executive Douglas M. Duncan (D) is likely to sign the bill, said his spokesman, David Weaver. It would then take effect immediately.

"This is a recognition of the fact that we're living in the 21st century, not the 19th," said council President Steven A. Silverman (D-At Large).

The move is part of a national trend to put gay couples on equal footing with married heterosexuals.

Eight states and 128 local jurisdictions, including Montgomery County, extend health benefits to the live-in partners of gay government employees. Last year, Montgomery County also ratified a police labor contract that extends health and retirement benefits to homosexual and heterosexual domestic partners.

Only three other jurisdictions, however, have extended real estate transfer tax breaks to gay residents: Philadelphia, Sacramento and Oakland, Calif. A spokesman for the Human Rights Campaign, a national gay rights group based in the District, said Montgomery County's tax break approach was "relatively new and rare."

"There's a growing awareness of gay families and how laws need to be addressed to recognize them," David Smith said. "This is just another illustration of the fact that people who are married have a myriad of rights, including tax breaks, that gay people don't because of a lack of legal recognition."

But social conservatives and some religious groups view yesterday's council action as an attack on the sanctity of marriage and have mounted a national legal campaign against extending such rights to unmarried couples.

"We believe that government should not promote homosexuality as normative using tax benefits, but should promote marriage between a man and a woman," said Peter LaBarbera, senior policy analyst for the Culture and Family Institute, an affiliate of the D.C.-based Concerned Women for America. "And where does it stop? Next you'll see unmarried heterosexual couples asking for the same thing." The measure would not apply to unmarried heterosexual couples.

In Montgomery, the provision was pushed not by gay rights organizations but by the Greater Capital Association of Realtors.

Meredith Weisel, a lobbyist for the group, said real estate brokers saw it as a fair housing issue.

"In most states, gay and lesbian couples aren't allowed to marry," she said. "We think that when they transfer property, they should be entitled to the same rights as married couples, children or relatives."

To qualify for the tax break, gay couples will have to meet certain requirements. Generally, they will have to prove that they share a close personal relationship, are responsible for each other's welfare, have shared the same legal residence for at least 12 months and have intertwined finances.

The bill also makes clear that spouses, former spouses, children, stepchildren, parents, stepparents, sons-in-law, daughters-in-law, stepsons-in-law, stepdaughters-in-law, grandchildren, and step-grandchildren are exempt from the transfer tax.

It is unclear what the change will cost the county -- estimates range from $450,000 to $2 million in lost annual revenue. The transfer tax is 1 percent of the value of all residential improved property over $70,000. For instance, the tax on a $175,000 home would be $1,750.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company

Printed without permission from the Washington Post website. Read the story at the Washington Post website.

Loan Plan For Unwed Couples Dropped
Va. Housing Panel Replaces Proposal

By Lisa Rein
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, January 24, 2002; Page B01

RICHMOND, Jan. 23 -- Virginia's housing authority today killed a plan to extend state loans to gay and other unmarried couples by allowing them to pool their money to buy a home.

The proposal had drawn fierce opposition from conservative activists but had the support of Gov. Mark R. Warner (D).

Instead, the Virginia Housing Development Authority proposed rules to extend loans to single parents and make mortgages more accessible to the disabled and elderly, in an effort to make the program more broadly available.

"It's a compromise, an effort to come down somewhere in the middle and get us closer to meeting the affordable housing needs of the state," said Art Bowen, the agency's director of public policy.

William H. Leighty, Warner's chief of staff, had urged the board to extend the loan program to gay couples. But the board members, all but one of whom are appointees of former governor James S. Gilmore III (R), voted 6 to 1 to consider the revised rules. A final vote on the policy is expected this spring after a public hearing, officials said.

Virginia requires borrowers to be married or, in most cases, related by blood to qualify for low-interest housing loans. But the authority proposed eliminating the "family rule" in the fall after conducting a study of affordable housing needs across the state.

The study concluded that thousands of low- and moderate-income people were not eligible for loans because they did not fit the state's definition of a traditional family. The authority proposed eliminating the family rule for multiple borrowers, a change supported by lenders and real estate agents.

But social conservatives fought the change, calling it anti-family, and threatened to use the power of the General Assembly to keep the policy.

Virginia is the only state in which publicly backed loans generally are available only to traditional families, Bowen said. The family rule was set aside briefly in the 1990s but was reinstated in 1996, under pressure from then-Gov. George Allen (R) and other conservatives.

"We think it's important that the state continue its 300-year history of endorsing and encouraging marriage, which has the ability to procreate," said Victoria Cobb, director of legislative affairs for the Richmond-based Family Foundation, which lobbied against changes to the family rule.

By allowing unmarried couples to receive loans, the state would put itself at financial risk, Cobb said: If a relationship breaks up, there is no guarantee, as there would be in the case of divorce, that the loan would be repaid.

Del. Ryan T. McDougle (R-Hanover) filed a bill last week to write the family rule into state law. House Bill 1306 would go further than the housing agency's proposal today, prohibiting single parents from buying homes together.

Warner's spokeswoman, Ellen Qualls, declined to say whether Warner, despite his support for an expanded loan policy, would veto the McDougle bill. She called eliminating the family rule "the right thing to do."

"It would make homeownership possible for more Virginians, and that's the mission of the Housing Development Authority," she said.

Advocates for gay rights who attended today's meeting said they were disappointed that the authority backed away from its initial proposal.

"It's very obvious discrimination against gay people and those who aren't married," said Danielle Poux, of Fairfax County, chairman of the Virginia Organizing Project, a group that advocates for the rights of homosexuals and other minorities. "There are lots of ways to manifest family values."

The authority's existing policy allows the elderly and disabled to pool their money to apply for loans under a waiver system. But Bowen said the waivers rarely are granted because of bureaucratic delays.

The Housing Development Authority issued 5,500 loans last year worth about $680 million.

In other matters today, the Senate's Courts of Justice Committee gave unanimous approval to Senate Bill 575 to help the families of five victims of the Sept. 11 attacks on the Pentagon whose bodies have not been recovered.

The state would issue death certificates to the families, allowing them to claim insurance money and personal effects. Virginia waits seven years before issuing death certificates in cases in which no body is recovered. The bill, sponsored by Warren E. Barry (R-Fairfax), would reduce the time to three months for the Pentagon victims.

The committee rejected Senate Bill 10, also sponsored by Barry, which would allow Virginians opposed to the death penalty to put their names on a state registry. If they were subsequently murdered, their killers would be ineligible for the death penalty.

Also today, the Senate passed three bills that would give child-welfare workers more authority in cases where authorities are considering returning abused or neglected children to their birth families. Senate Bills 130, 210 and 219 were introduced by Sen. Patricia S. Ticer (D-Alexandria) following the death last year of Katelynn Frazier, an Alexandria 3-year-old beaten to death by her mother's boyfriend after a life in foster care.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company

Printed without permission from the Washington Post website. Read the story at the Washington Post website.

Friday January 18 07:21 PM EST

Rival plans emerge for gay TV channel
By Ann Rostow, Gay.com / PlanetOut.com Network

A second gay television venture was announced earlier this week, just days after Viacom subsidiaries MTV and Showtime went public with their own plans to launch a channel geared to the gay and lesbian audience.

On Monday, David Mckillop, Michael Airington and Mitchell Galin said that MDC Entertainment Group's Alt1-TV would be ready for viewing by the first quarter of 2003.

Unlike the MTV/Showtime channel, Alt1-TV will be entirely ad-based, and the founders are in negotiations with several cable carriers to include the channel in their packages. Mckillop says his group has gotten "a fairly enthusiastic response," in these discussions.

Both groups agree that the key to success for either venture will lie in developing quality programming. "Programs and content make a network, not the other way around," said Mckillop, who believes that Alt1-TV's emphasis on programming is the venture's greatest asset. All three founders come from a programming and production background, and Mckillop says plans for content are "fairly well along."

Mckillop acknowledges that the two Viacom subsidiaries have a big edge in infrastructure and financing, "but it's all really going to depend on what they put on that channel. I don't think you can get away with putting on reruns of 'Queer As Folk' or 'Brothers.'"

Meanwhile, a recent article in the Ontario Financial Post reports that Canada's four-month-old gay channel, PrideVision, is considering expanding into the American market.

"We have consultants looking at getting us carriage in the United States," PrideVision Vice President Anna McCusker told the Post.

McCusker said the MTV/Showtime venture "is looked upon as very positive for PrideVision," but that any talk of a cooperative relationship between the two operations would be premature.

A review of PrideVision's programming in the online magazine Slate said the channel offered varied, no-holds-barred content and "set an excellent example" for the upcoming U.S. efforts.

PrideVision hit the airways last September and just concluded a long introductory free trial. McCusker said hard numbers for income and subscribers won't be available until late January or early February, but she called the debut "very exciting."

Printed without permission from Yahoo News.

Grrrls II Men
Drag Queens Are Out. Drag Kings Rule, and Club Chaos Is Their Local Dominion.

By Teresa Wiltz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, January 9, 2002; Page C01

Sometimes, she says, it's all a bit much for the neighbors. Two disparate creatures occupying one body: There's Kendra, tall and doe-eyed, packing hourglass curves on her ladylike frame. And then there's Ken, tall and doe-eyed, packing pecs and a bulging pouch on a leather-clad frame.

It's Wednesday, Ladies' Night at Club Chaos in Dupont Circle. And, since it's the first Wednesday of the month, it's a special night. Drag kings night.

Ken's night.

"He" struts out of his apartment, all sideburns and swagger.

In the elevator, his mom, Oneica, an image consultant from Brazil, cocks her head, taking in the macho accoutrements of her daughter with a fond smile, looking at her in that way that only moms can.

"You're such a rabbit girl," she says tenderly.

Rabbit, explains Ken, is a Brazilian expression.

"It means you've got to pick me up and turn me upside down to see what I am."

There's a crisis in the ladies' room.

Elvis's manhood has fallen into the toilet.

Elvis, aka Hunter, will have to go onstage minus his, ahem, package.

Because a soggy softball sock does not a man make.

Neither, for that matter, does faux chest hair, shorn locks or a five o'clock shadow.

"Butch," says Carlos Las Vegas, the evening's emcee, "is all in the attitude."

Indeed. In the year 2K2, butch is in. RuPaul is soooo last century. You need look only as far as Club Chaos for proof.

Of late, it is drag kings, rather than drag queens, who are starting to attract attention. Drag kings such as Dred, who does a blaxploitation shtick, and the "sleazeball pig" character dubbed with a literary name (think Herman Melville) are regulars on the international circuit. Last summer, local grad students produced "Changing Room," a documentary on D.C.'s scene. MTV recently aired its own mini-documentary on the phenomenon, while a "Sex and the City" episode featured photos of kings at a photography exhibit.

The attention may be more recent, but the theatricalism of drag kinging certainly isn't. Marlene Dietrich donned men's suits long before k.d. lang discovered Armani, and during the Harlem Renaissance, blues singer Gladys Bentley sported a tux as she sang about "bulldaggers."

"It's entertainment," says Carlos Las Vegas. "But it also embodies politicalness."

It's showtime.

Ken, aka Kendra Guliga, stands alone onstage, resplendent in a floor-length pleather "python" coat and matching cowboy hat. His mouth opens to sing, and Barry White's soulful bass voice comes pouring out. She's the penultimate player in a 12-act lineup.

There is also the sweet-faced NoTo, with a wadded-up ponytail and razor-thin "mustache" and "beard," breasts hidden under a baggy shirt, dancing the Running Man to Bobby Brown's old hit "My Prerogative" as the crowd cheers.

The four-boy band "N'Sexy" dances in lockstep to 'N Sync's "Bye Bye Bye."

Then there's Hunter, playing it for laughs in a spangled jumpsuit and a furry mat of chest hair, rolling around the floor of the stage, one exceedingly boozy and rotund, "package-free" Elvis.

The academically inclined toss out terms like "butch realness," "gender play" and "gender illusionist" to describe the estrogen-flavored swirl of masculinity hogging the spotlight at Club Chaos. For many involved, being a drag king is a feminist act, the ultimate one-finger salute to patriarchal bores. For others, performing in male drag works out issues of sexual identity, of embracing one's inner boy. Perhaps it's all of the above. Ultimately, though, it's about finding a safe place to flaunt your own special brand of you.

Men can be drag kings; kinging is all about mastering the art of masculinity. Straight women can be drag kings. But lesbians dominate this world, as at Club Chaos.

Some drag queens dismiss drag kings as nothing more than women with facial hair. Some members of the transgender community complain that drag kings mock them; other trans boys and girls see drag kings as embracing the transgender experience. And there's the matter of whether a drag king event should be an all-female affair. (Then there's the interesting phenomenon of gay men who suddenly find themselves attracted to women passing for men and don't quite know what to do with it.)

Things can get awfully complicated.

But then again, sometimes it's simply about the dancing.

If you came to dance, so much the better, because there's nowhere left to sit. The bass line is thumping through the speakers, Bobby Brown's words forming a manifesto of sorts: It's the way that I wanna live. It's my prerogative. . . .

In this free-for-all of mack-daddy bravado, there are catcalls and crotch grabs, sly winks and stolen kisses. Women in the audience clench dollar bills between their teeth, staring down the performers and offering up a dare: Come here. Inevitably, a performer dances over, pausing his lip-syncing long enough to grab the other end of a dollar bill with his teeth. One set of teeth advances along the dollar. Another set of teeth advances closer still. Lips meet.

Later for the politics.

At this moment, it's all about having a funky good time.

Ken is the organizer and producer of drag king shows at Club Chaos, and this night her good friend Carlos Las Vegas has flown in from Winnipeg, Manitoba, to emcee.

Carlos is a self-proclaimed "high-maintenance drag king" -- after all, his last name is Las Vegas -- which means you can expect a lot of costume changes during the night: The more glitter, the better.

"We've got an awesome lineup tonight!" Carlos, a small-boned king with a certain Latin flair, tells the crowd. "These kids are hot!"

Some are hotter than others, of course. Safe to say that Simon Sezz, an oversize dude sporting stubble, scrubs, hypodermic needles and a necklace of heavy-duty chains, is the hottest of them all: As he mouths the lyrics to the Staind ballad "It's Been a While," he grabs two candles and, with a grand flourish, pours hot wax all over his arms and chest.

A hard act to follow, that one.

Oh, but the kids, they try.

Hours before, back in that cozy Adams Morgan apartment, Ken and Carlos are getting ready for the night to come.

Barry White croons from the stereo. Ken's arty photos of male nudes line the rose walls. Miles, the cat, wanders into the bedroom, clearly bored. There's a knock on the door: It's Ken's mom, Oneica. (She asks that her last name not be used). Oneica sits in the living room, waiting as Carlos and Ken primp.

Carlos paints his face with spirit gum, a liquid adhesive, and then, ever so carefully, dabs hair shavings on his upper lip and chin. (He saves the clippings from his haircuts just for this.) His hands shake just a bit. Of course they're nervous. Stage fright strikes even the most seasoned pros.

They've been at it a while: Ken for six years; Carlos for eight. Day jobs are a necessity. (Ken works as a graphic artist; Carlos is a college student who works for a nonprofit agency.) There's no money in this. (Well, save for the dollar bills their fans throw at them.)

They do it for the passion. For the parody. And for the politics.

Says Ken, 28: "I'm mocking misogyny, patriarchy, capitalism and homophobia. . . . You have to make fun of it to educate. I'm an entertainer. The last thing I want to do is to alienate my audience."

"I'm an entertainer," says Carlos, 26, a first-generation Filipina Canadian whose real name is Clarissa Lageratera. "But I'm also a political activist.

"What we're doing is owning up to our masculinity. It doesn't mean male. Masculinity is more about what's between your ears, your brains, than what's between your legs."

But first, they've got to deal with what's between their armpits.

"That'll be the first criticism," says Carlos. "You've got boobs!"

Bosomy kings bind with Saran Wrap, then wind on layers of duct tape over the plastic. But you bind at your own risk: Cautionary tales abound of overzealous kings who've passed out from too-tight bindings and been carted away by paramedics.

Packing the all-important "package" is a considerably less arduous process. Ken prefers to stuff a sex toy down her trousers, while Carlos opts for a lifelike silicone reproduction. The really creative mix water, glue and borax soap to form a substance called "Gak."

Of course, a sock works, too.

Those desiring a crib sheet need only consult the debut issue of "Kingdom," the international drag king magazine recently launched by Carlos and Ken. On Page 8, the neophyte king will find an article penned by Carlos: "The How-Tos of Kinging: Facial Hair, Binding, Packing & The Swagger."

Six years ago, Ken saw a poster for a drag king contest. She'd always been on the feminine side, but on an impulse, she joined up -- and won.

Back in Winnipeg, Carlos was a girlie girl: Long curly hair, makeup, the whole bit. Even worked part-time as a go-go dancer at a local nightclub. She started hanging out with drag queens: She loved their energy, their shows. Eventually, they invited her to perform with them. Carlos started butching it up a bit, pulled her hair back, scribbled on a mustache, started working with a dance coach.

A drag queen friend persuaded her to go all the way.

Now she's got a dynasty. Literally. She's the ruling patriarch of the Las Vegas Dynasty, an international gathering of 52 drag kings who've all adopted the last name "Las Vegas." Carlos handpicks them. Talent is not a prerequisite. Kindness and a commitment to community service are. Ken is an honorary member.

Together, the two of them have created their own parallel universe, where gender is fluid, where a girl can be a boy if that's what she wants. Even their parents are slowly finding a way to accept their world. It wasn't always so. Carlos remembers her mom's shock when she accidentally found Carlos in full drag regalia. Now she helps out with his costumes. Carlos's dad even lends his clothes. Her parents even brag to their friends that their daughter has appeared on Maury Povich, though they don't necessarily say for what. (She's now a consultant for the show.)

Still, from time to time, Carlos's mom will pull her aside and say, "You know you're a girl, right?"

Ken's mom, Oneica, freely admits that she doesn't understand the whole gay thing. But she loves her daughter. Her son died in a jet-skiing accident a few years ago; Kendra is all she has. And that is enough for her.

"Her motives are belonging," Oneica says of her daughter. "Her family is around the world. Her brother died. Being a female, she's vulnerable. She doesn't like that feeling. I don't blame her. This society is rough on women. This [gives her] a sense of belonging, a sense of power. I respect that."

"She tells me that most of these kids are gay, abandoned by their parents. I don't think that's a reason to abandon your child. This way, we stay together."

Acceptance wasn't always so easy to come by.

In the '40s and '50s, the Jewel Box Revue, featuring the gender-bending Storme DeLarverie, regularly packed in crowds at the Apollo Theater. Like today's drag kings, DeLarverie cut her hair short, donned men's duds and took to the stage.

There was no dressing in drag offstage. Not if you wanted to stay out of jail.

"It's much easier now," says DeLarverie. "They can walk around the street in drag if they so choose. That's great. That's good."

Still, call her a drag king, and she bristles.

"I am a male impersonator," says DeLarverie, who, at age 81, works as a bouncer at a lesbian bar in Manhattan. "What I did was a forerunner for them to do this."

What she did was to sing big-band style, a handsome woman with a smoothly deep voice, crooning amid a chorus line of beautiful men dressed like women. It was all about illusion. Show biz. There was no lip-syncing, either. (As she sees it, anyone can do that.)

Even so, DeLarverie looks at today's drag kings with a certain amount of tenderness.

"I know a lot of the girls, and I'm all for them," she says. "This is their day, these young people. This is their day. Not mine."

© 2002 The Washington Post Company

Printed without permission from the Washington Post website. Read the story along with additional history on this story at the Washington Post website.

[back to top]

 
 
Archived News Stories
 
 

Red BulletMontgomery Seeks Tax Deal For Gay Couples
Red BulletLoan Plan For Unwed Couples Dropped
Red BulletRival plans emerge for gay TV channel
Red Bullet
Grrrls II Men Drag Queens Are Out. Drag Kings Rule, and Club Chaos Is Their Local Dominion.

 

 
 
   
For best rest results in viewing this site, Internet Explorer 4.0 or above with a resolution of 800x600 or higher and font size set to medium (or 100%) is recommended. It will not appear the way it was designed to in Netscape or Opera.
 
   
[Entertainment] [Fun Stuff] [Help Arena] [Hot Topics] [In The News] [Local Sports] [Metro Area Events]
[Relationships] [Resources] [What's New] [Who We Are]
www.dcdykes.com was created in June of 2001 and was last updated on August 7, 2002 .
Questions, comments, trouble navigating this site? Just drop an e-mail to the webmistresses@dcdykes.com.
We can't always reply to every e-mail right away, but we will read it.
©2001 - 2002 - All Rights Reserved