SGN October 14, 2022

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ISSUE 41

C E L E B R AT I N G

VOLUME 50

48 YEARS

F R I D AY

IN

OC T OBER 14 , 2 0 2 2

SE

S E AT T L E ’ S L G B T Q I A + N E W S & E N T E R TA I N M E N T W E E K LY S I N C E 19 74

PRINT E PAG E 1 7

PROP 8 TRIAL TAPES TO GO PUBLIC by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer The US Supreme Court will not hear a case in which opponents of marriage equality in California hoped to keep their 2010 court arguments secret. The case has its origins in the battle around California’s notorious Proposition 8, a 2008 ballot measure in which California voters rejected marriage equality.

Plaintiffs in Hollingsworth v. Perry, the California Proposition 8 case, celebrate on the steps of the Supreme Court on June 26, 2013. (from l) Jeffrey Zarrillo and his partner Paul Katami, attorney David Boies, and Sandra Stier and her partner Kris Perry – Photo by J. Scott Applewhite / AP

A new chapter: Magus Books to open store in Wallingford Photo by Lindsey Anderson

by Georgia Skerritt SGN Intern This Saturday, October 15, a new location of Magus Books is joining Seattle’s literary and secondhand scenes. Established in 1978, Magus is the largest used bookstore in the city and has long been a staple of the University District. Now it is making the next step and expanding to the Wallingford neighborhood, offering a new reading oasis for the community. In an interview with the SGN, owner Hanna McElroy described the decision to add

see TAPES page 20

Seattle Queer Film Festival preview:

Chatting What the Funk?! with burlesque dynamo Mx. Pucks A’Plenty and director Adriana Guiman Mx. Pucks A’Plenty – Photo by Heather Schofner

a new location as one that developed quickly. “It was synchronicity,” she explained. McElroy, who has owned the original Magus location on the Ave with her husband Chris Wiemer for the last 20 years, told the SGN that the process of expansion has only been going on for the last two months. The new Magus location, called the Annex, will be in the basement of a property previously occupied by Open Books, which was one of the few poetryonly bookstores in the US.

see MAGUS page 4

by Sara Michelle Fetters SGN Staff Writer The 27th annual Seattle Queer Film Festival (SQFF) kicked off last night with the world premiere screening of director Adriana Guiman’s raucous documentary What the Funk?!. Filmed in 2019, it follows local burlesque personality Mx. Pucks A’Plenty as they plan and stage a three-day festival made up entirely of performers of color all doing their acts to classic 1970s funk music. This year’s 59 festival programs comprise 150 documentaries, features, and shorts from

27 countries. Highlights include the US debut of director Jason Karman’s Canadian sensation Golden Delicious, Scout Durwood’s crazed millennial comedy Youtopia, and Amanda Kramer’s Please Baby Please, the Outfest Grand Jury prize winner for Outstanding North American Narrative Feature. Most of the films are also available as part of SQFF’s digital package, including What the Funk?! Head over to Three Dollar Bill Cinema’s website, https://threedollarbillcinema.org/sqff,

see SQFF page 6


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