December 18, 2014 Edition of the Bay Area Reporter

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Top national stories of 2014

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ARTS

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Nutcracker opens

Tango time

The

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Vol. 44 • No. 51 • December 18-24, 2014

LGBTQs join allies in police protests Rick Gerharter

Andrea Aiello, left, executive director of the Castro/Upper Market Community Benefit District, joins members of the Homeless Outreach Team, Rann Parker, Hugh Gregory, Maraea Master, Joy Brown and seated, Kat Lee and Rosa Coy Chang.

SF, Castro focus on homeless issues by Seth Hemmelgarn

T

hursday, December 18 is a day set aside to remember people who have died in San Francisco without a home. Recent rains that have hit the Bay Area make an already hard existence even tougher for many people who live on the city’s sidewalks and in the city’s parks and other outdoor spaces. What may be shocking in other cities can seem routine here: Sidewalks dotted with people covered in blankets, boxes, or just the clothes on their back to shelter them from the rain and cold. Last June, the biennial San Francisco Homeless Point-In-Time Count and Survey was released and, for the first time, included statistics on LGBT people. The report found that out of a total of 7,350 homeless people, more than one in four (29 percent) identified as lesbian, gay, bisexual or “other” for a total of 2,132. According to recent figures from Bevan Dufty, a gay man who serves as director of Housing Opportunity, Partnerships and Engagement for Mayor Ed Lee, the city has 1,150 homeless shelter beds. Many have said they don’t want to stay in shelters anyway, for reasons including they don’t want to get robbed, or they don’t like the rules. Nationally, the memorial day for homeless people will be recognized Sunday, December 21. In San Francisco, events are planned for Thursday. Colleen Rivecca is the advocacy coordinator for St. Anthony’s Foundation, a local nonprofit that provides meals and other services in San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborhood. She’s organizing the nonprofit’s participation in the homeless memorial. See page 22 >>

by Seth Hemmelgarn

F

rom the queer Oakland woman who helped start the widely used Black Lives Matter slogan to the gay police chief who stood with Rich-

mond protesters to the effigies of lynching victims that were hung at UC Berkeley, LGBTQ people have claimed a place in the protests that have recently swept local cities and the rest of the country. See page 16 >>

A protester holds up his hands during a demonstration in San Francisco’s Union Square last Saturday.

Drag club races to open by New Year’s Eve Steven Underhill

by Matthew S. Bajko

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he sounds of power tools and hammering reverberate inside the confines of the former Club Caliente in San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood. Piled against a wall are discarded building materials stripped from the nightclub’s interior, which has been closed since March 2010. Following days of rain last week, water pools on the ground due to leaks in the roof that needed to be patched up. In the middle of what once was the dance floor are piles of construction materials. Half a dozen workers are busy building out a new stage, bar areas, and unisex bathrooms. “Things are happening so quickly. Everyday I get here and a new wall has gone up,” said Jason Beebout, part of the quartet that is turning the 6,000 square foot space into a new home for drag shows, gay dance parties, and cabaret acts. “The last week has been insane.” Beebout, a straight bartender and lead singer of punk group Samiam, is the designated project manager among the four friends racing to open the venue in time for New Year’s Eve in order to host its first event. Tuesday night, December 16, the city’s entertainment commission voted to grant the club’s owners the permits they need to operate as a nightlife venue with live performances. Dubbed SF Oasis, it will become the permanent home for weekly Saturday night drag shows hosted by famed local drag queen Hek-

Rick Gerharter

The entrance room and front bar are taking shape during remodeling for the new SF Oasis club and cabaret.

lina, one of the co-owners of the club. Formerly known as Trannyshack, the racy and risqué drag shows have been rechristened Mother and will debut January 17. After coming under fire from activists who considered the show’s inaugural name to be transphobic, Heklina announced in the spring she would change it. During a tour of the new club space Friday, December 12, Heklina told the Bay Area Reporter she settled on Mother

because of its double entendre meaning. “It not only refers to becoming a drag mother, it is the mother ship of drag in San Francisco,” said Heklina, whose given name is Stefan Grygelko. “It also provides for lots of great imagery for posters and photo shoots.” The opening of SF Oasis will end a yearslong effort by Heklina to own and operate her own

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See page 9 >>


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