Seattle Gay News
Issue 3, Volume 47, January 18, 2019
Arts & Entertainment
Seattle Opera’s Il Trovatore
An excellent cast, followed by a great one
So Long, Dearie! CAROL CHANNING 1921 - 2019
Seattle Opera's Il Trovatore – Photo by Philip Newton
by Rod Parke SGN A&E Writer SEATTLE OPERA IL TROVATORE BY GUISEPPE VERDI LIBRETTO BY SALVATORE CAMMARANO MARION OLIVER MCCAW HALL January 12 & 13 Continuing through 1/26
The new production of Verdi’s Il Trovatore at Seattle Opera packs such a thrilling punch that even my 80-year-old body pumped teenaged adrenalin again and again at Saturday’s opening night performance. Then, much to my glee, Sunday’s matinee cast with new singers in four of the leading roles carried us to even greater heights with superior singing all around.
see IL TROVATORE page 4
2019 Academy Awards Nominations Predictions
Roma and A Star Is Born likely to lead the nomination count come Tuesday morning
Lady Gaga in A Star Is Born – Photo courtesy of Warner Bros.
by Sara Michelle Fetters SGN A&E Writer The 91st Academy Award nominations will be announced on Tuesday morning, and other than the likely presence of Brad-
ley Cooper’s hit remake of A Star Is Born and Alfonso Cuarón’s B&W critical darling Roma appearing in a number of categories including Best Picture and Best Director, the
see OSCARS page 6
Carol Channing – Photo by Frazer Harrison / Getty
by MK Scott & B. Harlan Boll Special to the SGN This past week we lost an Broadway icon and Gay ally, Carol Channing, who died this past Tuesday, at home in Rancho Mirage, CA of natural causes at age 97. Upon reading her tribute that was sent to me from her publicist, B. Harlan Boll, I had
not known that Ms. Channing was, in fact, born in Seattle on January 31, 1921, and later moved to San Francisco and attended one of the best schools in that area, Lowell High School. (When I was in high school, my school’s choir from Beaverton, OR, which I was a part of, performed at Lowell High School every two years.)
see CAROL CHANNING page 6
Hauntingly somber Cold War an unforgettable story of music and romance
Joanna Kulig and Tomasz Kot in Cold War – Photo courtesy of Amazon Studios
by Sara Michelle Fetters SGN A&E Writer COLD WAR Now playing
Wiktor (Tomasz Kot) and Irena (Agata Kulesza) are traveling the Polish countryside chronicling the folklore and music of the peasant class before it potentially dis-
see COLD WAR page 8