Thursday, August 25, 2011

Ball Legend Paris Dupree has Died


If you are a fan of "Paris Is Burning" then I have some sad news. Paris Dupree has died.

Here's the scoop:
In New York’s drag ball world, Paris Dupree was considered a legend among legends. As the founding mother of the House of Dupree, she was an inimitable force, an iconic figure who mobilized young, urban gays to express themselves in ways that mainstreamAmerica could not quite understand. That is until the release of Jennie Livingston 1990 documentary Paris Is Burning, which was named after one of Dupree’s grand balls. Details of Dupree’s death remain unconfirmed, but friends and fans began Tweeting “R.I.P. Paris Dupree” on August 15. She was living in New York City at the time of her passing.

“The ballroom runway ‘Grand Prize Competition’ in heaven got a bit thicker this week with the passing of Mother Paris Dupree,” says famed performer Karl Xtravaganza. “Her death signals the end of an era.” Dupree made her mark as one of the “big five” House mothers in New York’s ballroom scene. She founded the House of Dupree in the 1970’s alongside her fellow mothers Angie Xtravaganza, Dorian Corey, Avis Pendavis and Pepper LaBeijia. Originally established in Harlem, the drag balls were over-the-top and exuberant—a Wonderland of escapism where you can be anything you want, and anything goes. Dupree’s annual Paris Is Burning ball inspired Jennie Livingston’s documentary, which included footage from ballroom events and intimate interviews with drag mothers and their “children.” Dupree appears in one scene where she rips the wig off her head and yells “Butch, Queen!” to the judges. It’s a true lesson in fierceness that only a ballroom icon could teach.
This is a sad day for the community.

Hat Tip to Rod 2.0

Cyndi Lauper Opens a LGBT Youth Homeless Shelter in Harlem


Musical diva and icon Cyndi Lauper will open True Colors Residence, a shelter for LGBT youth in Harlem.
The True Colors Residence, named after her 1986 hit "True Colors," will be located on West 154th St. near Frederick Douglass Blvd. in Harlem. The residence, the first permanent housing facility of its kind in the city, was conceived by the singer, her manager and the West End Intergenerational Residence, a non-profit focused on providing housing for homeless families and the elderly.

Lauper, a longtime supporter for LGBT rights, was moved to pursue this project because up to 40 percent of homeless youth in the city identify as LGBT. "These young people often face discrimination and at times physical assault in some of the very places they have to go for help," she wrote in a letter seeking donations for the residence. "This is shocking and inexcusable!"
The opening day is September the 1st. Go Cyndi!

source

What will Happen in the True Blood finale?


Mega writer Alan Ball dropped some info on what to expect in the end of this season.
Hankie up, True Blood fans. Not everyone survives the Halloween clash between vampires and witches in the fourth-season finale. "There is a body count by the end," says creator Alan Ball. "It's more than one death—people we know and love—and it's pretty shocking."
And we may see an familiar face by the end too... P.S. It's not Russell  

Lost Trailer: Locke and Key TV Series



Locke & Key is a wonderful graphic novel that was made into a series. But Fox pu**ied out and let the pilot hang high and dry.

But in some mysterious fashion, it leaked and I have it for you to see

CBN News: Glee Is Desensitizing Our Kids To Homosexuality