A QUEERNUCOPIA OF MUSIC, PERFORMANCE AND CELEBRATION HEAT UP THE WINTER SEASON AT THE CHAN NATIONAL QUEER ARTS CENTER

LEA DELARIA, CHEYENNE JACKSON, NIKOLA PRINTZ, DAVÓNE TINES, CHEF MELISSA KING and more

Q-LAB: AN ARTIST-CURATED SERIES INTRODUCED

SEASON ALSO INCLUDES THE RETURN OF THE MEMORY KEEPERS INITIATIVE AND THE EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM “RHYTHM”

Tickets On Sale TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26


(SAN FRANCISCO, CA, November 22, 2024) - The Chan National Queer Arts Center (170 Valencia Street, San Francisco) announces a sizzling line-up of talent for their 2025 Winter season that brings a queernucopia of Internationally-renowned artists showcasing their talent and celebrating their queerness. The season includes Broadway and television stars Lea DeLaria and Cheyenne Jackson with their highly acclaimed cabaret shows as well as the introduction of a new series, Q-LAB that features artists Davóne Tines and Nikola Printz in multi-disciplinary works featuring classical and pop music, dance and queer-focused artistry. “Top Chef: All-Stars” winner Melissa King will be curating a queer Lunar New Year celebration with traditional snacks, burlesque performance, and lion dancers. The Memory Keepers Initiative, a popular oral-history project that captures the voices of living history, will return with two programs, featuring noted author and tribal leader Greg Sarris and Fine Arts Museum Curator Furio Rinaldi, the co-curator of the smash hit “Tamara De Lempicka” exhibition at the De Young Museum. The Queer Arts Center, home to the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, will feature singing members of the world’s first openly gay chorus in Come Together: A Beatles Cabaret and Anything Goes: A Broadway Sing-Along. In addition, SFGMC’s nationally-renowned education program RHYTHM will stage a special event featuring Bay Area youth ensembles at The Queer Arts Center for the very first time. Tickets are available now to members of SFGMC’s Conductor’s Society. Tickets go on sale to the general public on Tuesday, November 26th via sfgmc.org.

Beginning its second season of programming, The Queer Arts Center is quickly becoming one of the most artistically-diverse and popular venues for the presentation of queer arts across the globe. This winter season has something for everyone - from opera to pop, comedy, culinary and visual arts that speak to the whole of the LGBTQ+ community and its allies. Spring and Summer events at The Queer Arts Center will be announced in the near future. The Queer Arts Center season is curated by Richard Lonsdorf and Jacob Stensberg. Funding for The season is made possible by the generosity of Janet Cluff, Steve Gallagher/Coldwell Banker and Nick Harper.

Lea DeLaria, the winner of a SAG, Obie and Theatre World Award and who earned the distinction of being the first openly gay comic on television in America, returns home to San Francisco where her career began in 1982 for two performances of her new show Out Rage on Saturday, January 18. Cheyenne Jackson, the Tony Award-nominated and Drama Desk and Grammy Award-winning actor/singer, brings his one-man show Signs of Life, a deeply personal and uproariously funny exploration of the universe’s subtle cues, to The Queer Arts Center for two performances on Valentine’s Day (February 14). 

New this season is the introduction of Q-LAB, an interdisciplinary space for artistic innovation, where music transcends traditional boundaries and connects across styles, genres, and identities. Each performance is crafted as a thesis—a compelling artistic statement from the stage that draws audiences into new perspectives. Through immersive staging and innovative design, Q-LAB invites audiences not only to witness but to feel deeply and viscerally experience the stories, emotions, and ideas shared in the space. To inaugurate this series, pioneering bass-baritone Davóne Tines presents Queering the Mass on Friday, January 31 and Saturday, February 1. The New Yorker says “In a matter of minutes, we had traversed multiple centuries and worlds.”  Nikola Printz, an Adler Fellow for San Francisco Opera whose singing has been called “vibrant and tonally resplendent” by The San Francisco Chronicle, headlines the season’s second Q-LAB March Madness on Friday, March 21 and Saturday, March 22. Q-LAB is made possible through the generous support of Terrence D. Chan and Edward Sell.

To celebrate Lunar New Year, The Queer Arts Center welcomes “Top Chef: All-Stars” winner and TV personality Melissa King as she puts her signature spin on an event that will showcase, celebrate and empower the queer Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community. 

The Memory Keepers Initiative, The Queer Arts Center’s queer oral history project, which is also broadcast and streamed in an edited form on NPR-affiliate KALW, memorializes those whose earlier efforts built the modern LGBTQ movement. Inaugurating its second season is “Tamara De Lempicka: Queen of Art Deco” on Thursday, January 23. Led by Curator of Drawings and Prints at the San Francisco’s Fine Arts Museum Furio Rinaldi, who also served as the co-curator of the Lempicka exhibit, this special event is Rinaldi’s exclusive Bay Area lecture about the bisexual artist, currently on display at the De Young Museum. On Thursday, February 20, The Memory Keeper’s Initiative will host Greg Sarris, Chairman of the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria and author of The Forgetters, in conversation with Jane Ciabattari. Sarris will read excerpts from his work and discuss his journey navigating multiple identities and cultural spheres, exploring how remembering shared histories can help repair the world.

Come Together: A Beatles Cabaret will feature members from the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus in an intimate cabaret performance under the direction of SFGMC’s Music Supervisor and Principal Accompanist Danny Sullivan for two performances on Saturday, March 1. Last year’s cabaret sold out immediately and due to popular demand, a second performance has been scheduled this season.

Anyone who likes to sing is invited to Anything Goes: A Broadway Sing-Along on Friday, March 14. This family-friendly event, led by SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, gives everyone a chance to channel their inner Broadway diva, alongside members of SFGMC. The evening includes a special sneak preview by the Chorus of upcoming numbers from Broadway, Our Way, playing at the Curran Theater on March 29.

Expanding their popular educational program RHYTHM (Reaching Youth Through Music) to The Queer Arts Center, members of several different youth choruses will attend a special one-day event led by Associate Director of Music, Education and Outreach Mitch Galli. At a typical RHYTHM, members of the Chorus work directly with school administrators, educators and students to build understanding around issues facing today’s youth. RHYTHM helps guide students to make positive choices around acceptance, builds empathy and encourages students to become leaders and advocates for equal rights. This special event is private and not included on The Queer Arts Center’s public calendar. Participating groups will be announced at a later date.

“With The Chan National Queer Arts Center, we are focused entirely on queer arts and artists. By opening our doors to a diverse range of ideas and performance mediums, we’ll create community, creativity and collaboration,” stated Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg. “This landmark space is a place for creativity and activism and we could not be more thrilled about this upcoming season. When we began planning, it was clear that for it to succeed, it must reflect our entire community and offer established and emerging artists an opportunity to explore their craft and their passion. It is one reason we are investing in our new Q-LAB series, and we know that Bay Area audiences will find the programs stimulating and memorable.”

“I cannot wait to share this season with Bay Area audiences," stated Richard Lonsdorf, The Queer Arts Center's newly appointed Director of Programming. "Having worked with many of these artists in other spaces over the years, I can share that it is a thrill for all of us to be creating work at a place like The Chan National Queer Arts Center that offers space for queer artists to be their unfiltered selves and to laugh, reflect, provoke and celebrate together with our own community. These events represent only a small fraction of what queer artists in this country have to offer, and I look forward to sharing more as we continue to bring this game-changing venue to life."

“There is an African proverb that says ‘If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together’,” stated SFGMC CEO Christopher Verdugo. “This season, we are set to go further than ever before. In the face of rising challenges, we turn to the things that unite and uplift us: music, art and community. Together, with our gifted singers, valued community and school partners, generous donors, dedicated staff and enthusiastic audiences, we are creating a space for healing, a place where voices from across the LGBTQ+ community and our allies come together to celebrate our shared humanity. With unity as our guiding force, we will continue to lead by creating extraordinary music and transformative experiences that build community, inspire activism and foster compassion.”

FULL SCHEDULE:

The Chan National Queer Arts Center

170 Valencia Street, San Francisco

Tickets at sfgmc.org

  • SATURDAY, JANUARY 18 - Lea DeLaria: Out Rage at 6:00 PM and 8:30 PM

  • THURSDAY, JANUARY 23 at 7:30 PM- Memory Keepers Initiative - Tamara De Lempicka: Queen of Art Deco, featuring Furio Rinaldi

  • FRIDAY, JANUARY 31 at 7:30 PM - Q-LAB: Davóne Tines, Queering The Mass

  • SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 at 7:30 PM - Q-LAB: Davóne Tines , Queering The Mass

  • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6 AT 7:00 PM - Chef Melissa King’s LUNAR NEW YEAR CELEBRATION

  • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14 at 6 PM and 8:30 PM - Cheyenne Jackson Signs of Life

  • THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20 at 7:30 PM - Memory Keepers Initiative - Greg Sarris, “The Forgetters: An Evolving Story”

  • SATURDAY, MARCH 1 at 3:00 PM and 8:00 PM - Come Together: A Beatles Cabaret

  • FRIDAY, MARCH 14 at 7:30 PM- ANYTHING GOES A Broadway Community Sing-Along

  • FRIDAY, MARCH 21 AT 7:30 PM - Q-LAB: Nikola Printz, March Madness

  • SATURDAY, MARCH 22 at 7:30 PM - Q-LAB: Nikola Printz, March Madness

ABOUT THE ARTISTS

LEA DeLARIA: OUT RAGE

With a multi-faceted career as a comedian, actor and jazz musician that began in San Francisco’s Mission District in 1982, Lea DeLaria holds the distinction of being the first openly gay comic on television in America, and earned a place in our hearts from her three-time SAG Award Winning role as Carrie “Big Boo” Black in the hit Netflix series Orange is the New Black. Now, the acclaimed jazz vocalist, Emmy Winner, and author of the infamous U-Haul joke takes aim at WTF is happening in the world today, bringing her Sicilian rage, sharp tongue, and musical prowess to the Chan National Queer Arts Center. In other words, it will be an unforgettable evening of song and dance.

FURIO RINALDI: “TAMARA DE LEMPICKA: QUEEN OF ART DECO”

A Memory Keepers Initiative Special Event

On the occasion of the first major museum retrospective of Lempicka in the United States at The DeYoung Museum, Curator Furio Rinaldi offers an in-depth, multimedia presentation about the artist’s distinctive style and gender-defying life journey, as well her iconic cultural influence among drag queens, pop stars, and celebrity collectors. With works that exuded cool elegance and transgressive sensuality, Tamara de Lempicka (1894–1980) helped define Art Deco. Her paintings captured the glamor and vitality of postwar Paris and the cosmopolitan sheen of Hollywood celebrity. Although she moved among the most influential circles in 1920s Paris, 1940s Hollywood and beyond, her identity as a queer woman has not been widely discussed. 

Q-LAB - DAVÓNE TINES: QUEERING THE MASS

Pioneering bass-baritone and creator Davóne Tines queers the Catholic mass by transforming it into a non-denominational structure for dealing with human problems. About the program, The New Yorker says “In a matter of minutes, we had traversed multiple centuries and worlds, yet all the music was filtered through the taut resonance of one voice: a timbre at once grand and fraught, potent and vulnerable.” Join Davóne along with his band THE TRUTH (John Bitoy, piano and Khari Lucas, sound artist and electric bass) as they weave classical, gospel, baroque, jazz, and opera into a journey of personal reckoning.

CHEF MELISSA KING’S LUNAR NEW YEAR CELEBRATION

Queer the new year with celebrity chef and TV personality Melissa King, the Top Chef: All-Stars winner and fan favorite, as she puts her signature spin on the Lunar New Year in an event that will showcase, celebrate and empower the queer Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community. Chef King’s gigantic grazing board anchors the celebration, full of traditional snacks you won’t want to miss. Guests will be treated to burlesque, lion dancers and other performances throughout the night, with lucky red envelopes, a DJ and more surprises. Don’t miss your chance to get lucky at the most fabulous celebration in town! Tickets to this event will be available at a later date to be announced.

CHEYENNE JACKSON: SIGNS OF LIFE

Emmy- and Grammy-nominated luminary Cheyenne Jackson brings his infectious charm and powerhouse vocals to The Queer Arts Center with Signs of Life, a musical meditation on art, love, fatherhood, and the cosmic twists that have shaped his remarkable path. In Signs of Life, Cheyenne invites audiences on a deeply personal and uproariously funny exploration of the universe’s subtle cues. From toe-tapping melodies to saucy showbiz anecdotes, prepare for an unforgettable night filled with whimsy, laughter, and the sheer joy of a perfectly imperfect night of shared experience.

GREG SARRIS: “THE FORGETTERS: AN EVOLVING STORY”

A Memory Keepers Initiative Special Event

Author Greg Sarris, who serves as Chairman of the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria, dives into his latest novel The Forgetters—a tender, astonishing, and richly beautiful story cycle about remembering our shared histories and repairing the world. In conversation with fellow author and cultural critic Jane Ciabattari, Sarris will share excerpts from his novel, told in the classic style of Southern Pomo and Coast Miwok creation stories. Greg Sarris has navigated many identities and cultural spheres, as a gay man, born of a German Jewish mother, a southern Pomo/Coast Miwok/Filipino father, as a tribal leader, a professor, a screenwriter, co-producer, always as a storyteller, with books of nonfiction and fiction. Sarris will recount his journey through academia, literature and film to the highest levels of leadership in his tribe and his community, as well as serving on the UC Board of Regents and as board chair of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian.

COME TOGETHER: A BEATLES CABARET

Whether you’ve traveled the Long and Winding Road or just scored a Ticket to Ride, SFGMC’s Come Together is the destination for you and melds perfectly with SFGMC’s year-long theme of “Together!”. Singers from the Chorus deliver distinctive versions of greatest hits from The Beatles catalog, performing solos, duets, and small group numbers in a cabaret setting that includes fabulous drinks from our bar. You’ll be sure to turn your Hard Day’s Night into a memorable Yesterday! The Beatles are the seminal rock band that bridges generations and whose message of love, peace and understanding are the playlist of our collective consciousness. Under the direction of SFGMC Principal Accompanist Danny Sullivan.

ANYTHING GOES: A BROADWAY SING-ALONG

If you’ve ever wanted to sing with the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus—this is your chance! This family-friendly sing-along brings the epic theatrical energy of the Broadway stage to the Chan National Queer Arts Center as Artistic Director Jake Stensberg leads YOU in some of your favorite musical numbers in a musical preview of the Chorus’s upcoming spring concert Broadway, Our Way playing March 29 at the Curran Theater. Members of the SFGMC will offer a special preview of that concert as well as sing alongside you and extend the community, wellness and joy of singing. No singing skill required. This is an event for all ages!

Q-LAB - NIKOLA PRINTZ MARCH MADNESS

Artistically fluid opera star Nikola Printz, the singing acrobatic sensation who has delighted local audiences at SF Symphony's Holiday Gaiety, the SF Opera's Carmen Encounter and other stages, brings together a fabulous cast of characters for a grand, campy evening of madness in every sense of the word. Joined by pianist Bob Mollicone and other queer artists, Printz will lure audiences to the brink of sanity—from the famous meltdowns of Lucia di Lammermoor, the lovers' quarrels of Kurt Weill and punk rock rage of Nina Hagen. With music drawn from across the spectrum of pop, opera, broadway and more, this evening is sure to offer the cathartic scream we've all been searching for.

SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS 

Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope. Under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo and Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim. 

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ABOUT THE CHAN NATIONAL QUEER ARTS CENTER

The Pansy L. Chan and Terrence D. Chan National Queer Arts Center is the nation’s first LGBTQ center for community, creativity and collaboration. This landmark space, that also serves as the home of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, is the first of its kind in the country — an artistic sanctuary for queer artists to call home, a space for audiences to share their lived experiences, and a beacon of inspiration and empowerment for queer individuals nationwide who are confronting oppression. A place for art and activism. 

For more information, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/sfgmc.bsky.social 

X: www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scottwaltonsf@gmail.com

Individual artist press materials available on request

SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS ANNOUNCES “THE LOVE TOUR” OF IOWA AND NEBRASKA

SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS ANNOUNCES “THE LOVE TOUR” OF IOWA AND NEBRASKA

SFGMC WILL ALSO HEADLINE THE 2024 GALA CHORUS FESTIVAL IN MINNEAPOLIS

(SAN FRANCISCO, CA - May 21, 2024)—The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus (SFGMC), the world’s premier queer chorus is proud to announce “THE LOVE TOUR” that will bring their powerful voices and message of unity to the heartland. From July 7-9, 2024, the 300-member Chorus, under the direction of Jacob Stensberg, will travel to Iowa and Nebraska, joining forces with local LGBTQ choruses and advocacy groups at each stop to elevate the Chorus’ mission of transforming and connecting people through song.

Following the momentous tour, SFGMC will headline the finale concert at the 2024 GALA Chorus Festival in Minneapolis. The GALA Chorus Festival is the quadrennial festival of LGBTQ+ Choruses from around the world. More than 15,000 singers and 200 Choruses will be represented.

In each city of the LOVE TOUR, The Chorus will be joined by a local chorus and also shine light on local LGBTQ+ nonprofits who are investing in advocacy, education and the celebration of our shared queer culture and people. In Iowa City, the Chorus will partner with the Quire of Eastern Iowa as well as the family of Puck Carlson, the teen who is the lead plaintiff in the fight against bills that target LGBTQ+ rights in that state. In Omaha, they’ll join with the River City Mixed Chorus and with OutNebraska, an organization that invests in advocacy, education and culture; and in Des Moines, they’ll work with Iowa Safe Schools to help create a fun VIP Experience for kids and give them a great time at the concert, where they will share the stage with the Des Moines Gay Men’s Chorus.

At a time of rising anti-LGBTQ+ legislations and hate crimes across the country, the Chorus is dedicated to countering intolerance by sharing their artistry and radiating a message of love, hope and acceptance. The Chorus has chosen Iowa and Nebraska due to a wave of anti-LGBTQ legislation before those respective state’s legislatures. Iowa currently has 34 active bills on its docket and Nebraska 10, according to the ACLU Legislative Tracker. It hopes to counter a rise in anti-LGBTQ crime that has been legitimized nationwide since the 2016 election. According to the ACLU, attacks based on gender identity are up 32.9% and those based on sexual orientation are up 13.8%. SFGMC believes that music has the power to transform and connect people, opening a door to conversation and healing.

SFGMC has a storied history of using their voices to respond to adversity, create dialogue and inspire change. They last toured in 2017, which took the Chorus to Southern states like Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, South Carolina and North Carolina. That powerful journey was captured in the Tribeca Festival Award-winning documentary “Gay Chorus, Deep South”.

The Chorus first toured in 1981, visiting Dallas, Detroit, New York,  Washington, D.C. and Seattle. That tour became the catalyst for other cities to create their own LGBTQ Choruses, launching the International circuit of Choruses that exist today - many of whom will perform at the GALA Festival this summer in Minneapolis, where SFGMC will headline the closing night of the Festival.

SFGMC has also toured extensively in the Bay Area, headlining concerts at Zellerbach Hall (Berkeley), The Green Music Center (Sonoma County) and Davies Symphony Hall (San Francisco). In June of this year, the Chorus will be presented at Davies as part of the San Francisco Symphony’s concert season.

“We are lucky in San Francisco. An LGBTQ+ person can find a safe haven, free from the discrimination and hatred many, in other communities, experience every day,” stated SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg.  “But we know that, even in our own Chorus, there are many who need to be healed from the discrimination and hate they experienced in their life. And instead of running from that, we want to embrace it and show up in communities that may not have as favorable of a view around LGBTQ+ rights. Our last tour not only helped shift hearts and minds but also helped to magnify and amplify work already underway in towns across America. With our upcoming THE LOVE TOUR, we’ll be bringing a big wave of love, a rainbow ripple of song to communities that are yearning for music, unity and love.”

“It would be easy to stay home in our SF bubble and avoid the hurt, avoid the hate but how does that change the world and move hearts and minds,” asked SFGMC Executive Director Christopher Verdugo. “But that is not who we are. We want to open up hearts, to have a conversation and make room to find agreement, and ultimately, love. We hold our own preconceptions of what it is like to live with an open heart in the Midwest, unaware of the vibrancy and resilience that already exists. We have as much to learn from them as they do from us.  As long as the world continues to discriminate against the LGBT community, we will sing until our very last breath”

SFGMC, now in its 46th season, had an auspicious start. Only four weeks following their formation, San Francisco was rocked by the assassinations of 

Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, the first openly gay elected official in the country. The Chorus, along with tens of thousands of others, gathered on the steps of City Hall for a candlelight vigil and sang “Singing For Our Lives”, a song that was crafted in the tumultuous aftermath of that tragedy. Then, as now, SFGMC used the power of music to salve the 

troubled crowd, while delivering a message of love, unity and community. Since that time, the Chorus has grown to nearly 300 members. In 2023, SFGMC reached a new milestone when they opened an Art Deco building in San Francisco to serve as an arts destination for queer artists from across the world. The Chan National Queer Arts Center, located at 170 Valencia Street, serves as the Chorus’ headquarters and also includes programming directed towards the community at large.


Schedule of performances

July 7: University of Iowa, Iowa City with the Quire of Eastern Iowa

July 8: Countryside Community Church with River City Mixed Chorus (Omaha)

July 9: Des Moines with the Des Moines Gay Men’s Chorus

July 12: The ensembles of SFGMC (The Lollipop Guild and HomoPhonics) at the GALA Festival

July 14 - SFGMC headlines the closing concert at GALA


About SFGMC
Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope.

Under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo and Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim. Recent touring schedules, recordings, and outreach programs have broadened its impact and reputation in the community while maintaining its signature blend of humor, personality and ground-breaking performances. In 2019, SFGMC acquired a historic facility that has become its permanent home for rehearsals and offices. The building also serves as The Chan National Queer Arts Center, the first-ever community space for LGBTQ artists and arts organizations.

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For more information on SFGMC, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

X (formally ‘Twitter’): www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC Archive contact: archive@sfgmc.org

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scottwaltonsf@gmail.com


THE SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS PRESENTS OUR FAVORITE THINGS

AN INTIMATE EVENING FEATURING SFGMC
ENSEMBLES THE LOLLIPOP GUILD AND
HOMOPHONICS

FRIDAY, JUNE 7 - 7:30 pm

The Chan National Queer Arts Center

(San Francisco, CA – April XX, 2024) – The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus (SFGMC) is thrilled to announce OUR FAVORITE THINGS, an intimate evening of music presented by their renowned ensembles The Lollipop Guild and HomoPhonics. This special event, taking place on Friday, June 7 at 7:30 pm at The Chan National Queer Arts Center, located at 170 Valencia Street, promises an evening of vocal fireworks and electrifying performances set in a cabaret-style seating at the newly-renovated home of the Chorus. Tickets are available for purchase at sfgmc.org.

OUR FAVORITE THINGS will play a second performance on Sunday, June 9 at 2 PM at Freight and Salvage as part of their presenting series. The Chorus has a long history with the Berkeley venue, performing their holiday show at the venue in more than 10 years of sold-out performances.

The evening will be filled with popular songs from Wicked, Pitch Perfect, Hocus Pocus, and Rent, as well as an hilarious tribute to the master movie musician John Williams, which recently became a viral hit online, with more than 1 million views, on TikTok and Instagram. Audiences can expect to sing along to classics from Elton John, Stevie Wonder and Adele. And of course, expect some Drag Queens (In the Sky). The event is sure to leave everyone smiling, hearts happy and enough earworms to satisfy a month’s worth of entertainment.

“We couldn't be more excited to feature the incredible talent and voices of the Chorus' two ensembles”, stated HomoPhonics director Mitch Galli. “When the HomoPhonics sing, it is pretty amazing to hear the sound that we can make using just our voices. The complex harmonies and rhythms create a wall of sound that we've come to be well known for and that leave audiences shouting for more."

“The Lollipop Guild was the first small ensemble in the LGBTQ choral movement, out and proud in 1979. I couldn’t be more honored to continue their legacy”, said Paul Saccone, music director. “We can’t wait to perform for you, bringing the signature wit, zest and camp that TLG is known for and that audiences love.”

“No one who has attended a performance by the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus has walked away without commenting on the singular artistry of our two ensembles: The Lollipop Guild and HomoPhonics”, stated SFGMC’s Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg. “These singers are committed to musical excellence and not only do they serve as the backbone of our larger Chorus, they also give their time to each of these ensembles. Our audiences can’t get enough of these talented singers and we wanted to give them an evening to themselves, a full evening of vocal pyrotechnics and ingenious choreography.”

About The Lollipop Guild: The Lollipop Guild was founded as a barbershop quartet in 1979 and is recognized as the world’s first openly gay vocal ensemble. Since then, The Lollipop Guild has grown to an ensemble that features light-hearted and upbeat styles of singing, with rich harmonies and dazzling choreography. The Lollipop Guild is led by Paul Saccone and accompanied by SFGMC’s resident pianist Danny Sullivan.

About HomoPhonics: SFGMC’s newest vocal ensemble, HomoPhonics, began in 2015 as a result of the recent contemporary pop a cappella craze. Focusing on musical cohesion with only their voices, the group, under the direction of Mitch Galli, uses arrangements that feature tight, dynamic harmonies and vibrant, upbeat rhythms with their signature tight choreography.

About SFGMC
Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope.

Under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo and Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim.

Recent touring schedules, recordings, and outreach programs have broadened its impact and reputation in the community while maintaining its signature blend of humor, personality and ground-breaking performances. In 2019, SFGMC acquired a historic facility that has become its permanent home for rehearsals and offices. The building also serves as The Chan National Queer Arts Center, the first-ever community space for LGBTQ artists and arts organizations.

About The Chan National Queer Arts Center

The Pansy L. Chan and Terrence D. Chan National Queer Arts Center is the nation’s first LGBTQ center for community, creativity and collaboration. This landmark space, that also serves as the home of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, is the first of its kind in the country — an artistic sanctuary for queer artists to call home, a space for audiences to share their lived experiences, and a beacon of inspiration and empowerment for queer individuals nationwide who are confronting oppression. A place for art and activism.

###

For more information on SFGMC, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

X (formally ‘Twitter’): www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC Archive contact: archive@sfgmc.org

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scottwaltonsf@gmail.com


The SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS WITH THE SAN FRANCISCO SYMPHONY “ALL WE NEED IS LOVE”

JUNE 18 AT DAVIES SYMPHONY HALL

Tickets are on sale now at sfsymphony.org

(SAN FRANCISCO, CA, May 13, 2024)—On June 18, at 7:30 PM, The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus (SFGMC) presents their exciting contribution to Pride Month: “All We Need is Love.” This uplifting two-act concert with the San Francisco Symphony is a testament to love’s unending capacity to inspire and unite. Led by Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, the concert will feature bass-baritone soloist Enrico Lagasca. Members of San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Company (BATCO) will also appear, with the 280-member Chorus, in “I, Too, Sing America”, from BATCO’s award-winning production of the same name.

SFGMC’s appearance, as part of the San Francisco Symphony’s Summer Concert Series marks their third annual collaboration, following two sold-out engagements with the San Francisco Symphony since 2022.

Tickets are currently on sale at sfsymphony.org.

This one-night only concert will showcase the full musical range of SFGMC by performing classical standards like Ralph Vaughan Williams’s “Five Mystical Songs”, featuring Mr. Lagasca, San Francisco composer David Conte’s “Elegy for the Matthew”, a newly arranged setting for Michael Tilson Thomas’s “I Like to Learn”, a new commission for chorus and orchestra by Dominick DiOrio and contemporary selections including Cyndi Lauper’s “True Colors” and Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Cut to the Feeling.”

“When conceiving this concert, I knew we would be performing again with the spectacular San Francisco Symphony, but for both acts for the first time,” revealed Jacob Stensberg, SFGMC’s Artistic Director. “Having them harmonize with the Chorus in June, the heart of Pride Month, I aimed to select music embodying the essence of what the Chorus stands for: music, activism, pride and community."

SFGMC CEO Chris Verdugo added, “‘Love’ epitomizes everything we are about this Pride month and always. While Jake has curated an astonishing evening of traditional love songs, once again he raises the bar by expanding our repertoire to delve into the multifaceted nature of love, recognizing its unparalleled potency."

About SFGMC

Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope.

Under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo and Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim. Recent touring schedules, recordings, and outreach programs have broadened its impact and reputation in the community while maintaining its signature blend of humor, personality and ground-breaking performances. In 2019, SFGMC acquired a historic facility that has become its permanent home for rehearsals and offices. The building also serves as The Chan National Queer Arts Center, the first-ever community space for LGBTQ artists and arts organizations.

About Jacob Stensberg

Jacob Stensberg is the conductor and artistic director of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus and the recently-opened Chan National Queer Arts Center. As conductor, Stensberg has led the Chorus in sold-out performances with the San Francisco Symphony and in world-class venues like The Green Music Center (Sonoma) and Zellerbach Hall (as part of the Cal Performances series), Grace Cathedral and more. The Chorus’s recent purchase and renovation of their building, The Chan National Queer Arts Center, has allowed the Chorus to expand their programming and Stensberg has produced and conducted numerous cabarets, community sing-alongs and a four-part spoken word series since the building was inaugurated in December 2023. Following their engagement with the San Francisco Symphony, Stensberg will lead SFGMC in a 2024 tour of the Midwest, with stops in Omaha, Cedar Rapids and Des Moines, followed by the keynote performance at the GALA Choral Festival in Minneapolis this summer.

Prior to his appointment with SFGMC, he was the assistant director for Purdue Musical Organizations at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana. While at Purdue, Mr. Stensberg worked with more than 300 students in eight different ensembles, performing in annual traditions like the Purdue Christmas Show, as well as writing and performing custom music for special events like NASA’s 50th anniversary of the moon landing in 2019.

In addition to his work at Purdue, Mr. Stensberg enjoyed working with Butler University choirs and orchestras, Indianapolis Symphonic Choir, Circle City Chamber Choir, Booth Tarkington Civic Theater, Zach&Zack Productions, BOBDIREX, Eclectic Pond Theatre Company, and Civic Theater of Lafayette.

Mr. Stensberg received his formal and formative training from Kristina Boerger at Carroll University in Waukesha, Wisconsin, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in music education. He earned his master’s degree in conducting from Butler University where he studied with Eric Stark.

About Enrico LaGasca

Filipino-American bass-baritone Enrico Lagasca has traveled long musical distances in the short time since he began his career – comprising 16 oratorios, 17 new-music works, seven opera roles plus 13 song cycles and collections. Heard on four Grammy Award-nominated recordings, Enrico is both a solo and ensemble singer in settings as diverse as New York’s mission-specific TENET Vocal Artists and major orchestras under conductors such as Riccardo Muti, Zubin Mehta, Pablo Heras-Casado, Nicholas McGegan, Jane Glover, John Butt, John Nelson, Matthew Halls and Carl St. Clair. Soloist highlights of his current season include Haydn's Lord Nelson Mass

with Voices of Ascension in New York, Handel's Messiah at Ann Arbor's University Musical Society and at Carnegie Hall with Musica Sacra, Bach's Christmas Oratorio at Washington Bach Consort, and Mendelssohn's Walpurgisnacht with the St. Louis Symphony and Craig Johnson's Considering Matthew Shepard - the latter reflecting Enrico’s particular interest in works that address the LGBTQ+ community. He is a member of the Kaleidoscope Vocal Ensemble, which is dedicated to diversity and social justice.

HeisagraduateofNewYork'sMannesCollegeofMusicandlivesinNew York City with his domestic partner of several years.

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For more information on SFGMC, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

X (formally ‘Twitter’): www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC Archive contact: archive@sfgmc.org

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scottwaltonsf@gmail.com


SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS PRESENTS MEMORY KEEPERS INITIATIVE: “THE HISTORY OF THE SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS”

The History of the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus

AN ORAL HISTORY SERIES ABOUT THE WORLD’S PREMIER QUEER CHORUS, THEIR ACTIVISM AND THEIR ENDURING MESSAGE OF LOVE AND COMMUNITY


THURSDAY, MAY 16 AT 7 PM AT THE CHAN NATIONAL QUEER ARTS CENTER

FEATURING JACOB STENSBERG, ROBERT RUFO, JAY DAVIDSON,
THOMAS KENNARD AND SURPRISE GUESTS

(SAN FRANCISCO, CA, May 1, 2024)—The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, the world’s premier queer chorus, continues their exploration into local queer history with “The History of SFGMC”, the final program of the Memory Keepers Initiative. Hosted by SFGMC’s Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg and featuring Robert Rufo, Jay Davidson, Thomas Kennard and surprise guests, the final Memory Keepers Initiative of the season will be presented at SFGMC’s home, The Chan National Queer Arts Center (170 Valencia Street) on Thursday, May 16 at 7 PM. In an effort to make this event accessible to all, the Memory Keepers Initiative is a “Pay What You Can” event. Tickets are available at sfgmc.org.


The Memory Keepers Initiative is an oral history project that uplifts and preserves the stories of our community’s visionary LGBTQ+ elders in order to foster intergenerational connection among LGBTQ+ communities and allies, as well as inspire a bigger, brighter future by learning and understanding of our collective history.


The evening will be moderated by SFGMC’s Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg and will include Robert Rufo, one of the original Chorus members who continues to sing with the group, Jay Davidson, another original member who also served as the Business Manager in the early days, and Thomas Kennard, a long-standing member who joined shortly after his transition more than 25 years ago. The Chorus, whose roster of active singers is nearly 300 people has a storied history, dating back to their first performance, only a month after their formation, at the candlelight march following the assassinations of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. The Chorus was the first in the world to openly proclaim their dignity by using the word “gay” in their title. SFGMC’s commitment to music and activism has never changed and they continue to be a beacon of hope to queer people across the world.

“When I first became aware that SFGMC was seeking a new Artistic Director, I immediately began to devour all their rich history, which convinced me that I wanted to take a part in their present and future”, stated SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg. “We are lucky to have so many of our long-standing members still active with us and their stories will make our history come alive for new generations. This is what Memory Keepers Initiative is about: keeping history alive, to inform the present and build upon the courage and wisdom of those who came before us.”

Presented at The Chan National Queer Arts Center in San Francisco, the Memory Keepers Initiative includes four programs in 2024: 

  • January 11 - The Early Heroes of the Castro

  • February 29 - Centering Black Trans Joy - Hosted by The Transgender District

  • April 18 - San Francisco’s Queer Arts - Hosted by the GLBT Historical Society

  • May 16, 2024 - A History of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus


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About SFGMC
Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope.

Under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo and Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim. Recent touring schedules, recordings, and outreach programs have broadened its impact and reputation in the community while maintaining its signature blend of humor, personality and ground-breaking performances. In 2019, SFGMC acquired a historic facility that has become its permanent home for rehearsals and offices. The building also serves as The Chan National Queer Arts Center, the first-ever community space for LGBTQ artists and arts organizations.

About The Chan National Queer Arts Center

The Pansy L. Chan and Terrence D. Chan National Queer Arts Center is the nation’s first LGBTQ center for community, creativity and collaboration. This landmark space, that also serves as the home of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, is the first of its kind in the country — an artistic sanctuary for queer artists to call home, a space for audiences to share their lived experiences, and a beacon of inspiration and empowerment for queer individuals nationwide who are confronting oppression. A place for art and activism. 

For more information on SFGMC, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

X (formally ‘Twitter’): www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC Archive contact: archive@sfgmc.org

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scottwaltonsf@gmail.com

SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS PRESENTS MEMORY KEEPERS INITIATIVE: “CENTERING BLACK TRANS JOY”

AN ORAL HISTORY SERIES ABOUT THE BAY AREA’S QUEER
HISTORY, HOSTED BY THE TRANSGENDER DISTRICT


THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 29 AT 7 PM AT THE
CHAN NATIONAL QUEER ARTS CENTER

FEATURING SHAYRON GRAYSON, ANDREA HORNE, FRESH LEV
WHITE, BREONNA MCCREE AND CARLO GOMEZ ARTEAGA

(SAN FRANCISCO, CA, February 12, 2024)—The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, the nation’s premier queer chorus, continues their exploration into local queer history with “Centering Black Trans Joy”, the second program of the Memory Keepers Initiative. Hosted by Co-Executive Directors of the Transgender District Breonna McCree and Carlo Gomez Arteaga, and featuring Shayron Grayson, Andrea Horne and Fresh Lev White, “Centering Black Trans Joy” will be presented at SFGMC’s home, The Chan National Queer Arts Center (170 Valencia Street) on Thursday, February 29th at 7 PM. In an effort to make this event accessible to all, the Memory Keepers Initiative is a “Pay What You Can” event. Tickets are available at sfgmc.org


The Memory Keepers Initiative is an oral history project that uplifts and preserves the stories of our community’s visionary LGBTQ+ elders in order to foster intergenerational connection among LGBTQ+ communities and allies, as well as inspire a bigger, brighter future by learning and understanding of our collective history.


The evening will be moderated by Co-Executive Directors of the Transgender District Breonna McCree and Carlo Gomez Arteaga and feature Shayron Grayson, Andrea Horne and Fresh Lev White.The Transgender District is the first legally recognized transgender district in the world. Originally named the Compton’s Transgender Cultural District, after the first documented uprising of transgender and queer people in United States history, The Compton’s Cafeteria Riots of 1966, the district encompasses 6 blocks in the southeastern Tenderloin and adjacent areas.

“San Francisco’s queer history is a rich and complex tapestry that involves so many impactful icons and instances almost lost to history,” stated SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg. “Through our continuing Memory Keepers Initiative, these stories and the trail-blazing people whose stories come alive through their telling serve as reminders that the past can inform the present and that we can learn from the strength, courage, and wisdom of those who came before us.” 

In addition to the 90-minute interactive panel discussion, attendees are encouraged to remain afterwards and record their own stories about queer history in the Bay Area. Volunteers will be on hand to audio or video record anyone with a story to tell and a desire to share it for posterity.

Presented at The Chan National Queer Arts Center in San Francisco, the Memory Keepers Initiative will include four programs in 2024: 

  • January 11 - The Early Heroes of the Castro

  • February 29 - Centering Black Trans Joy

  • April 18 - Hosted by the GLBT Historical Society

  • May 16, 2024 - A History of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, hosted by Jacob Stensberg


###

About SFGMC
Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope.

Under the leadership of Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo and Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim. Recent touring schedules, recordings, and outreach programs have broadened its impact and reputation in the community while maintaining its signature blend of humor, personality and ground-breaking performances. In 2019, SFGMC acquired a historic facility that has become its permanent home for rehearsals and offices. The building also serves as The Chan National Queer Arts Center, the first-ever community space for LGBTQ artists and arts organizations.

About The Chan National Queer Arts Center

The Pansy L. Chan and Terrence D. Chan National Queer Arts Center is the nation’s first LGBTQ center for community, creativity and collaboration. This landmark space, that also serves as the home of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, is the first of its kind in the country — an artistic sanctuary for queer artists to call home, a space for audiences to share their lived experiences, and a beacon of inspiration and empowerment for queer individuals nationwide who are confronting oppression. A place for art and activism. 

For more information on SFGMC, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

X (formally ‘Twitter’): www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC Archive contact: archive@sfgmc.org

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scottwaltonsf@gmail.com

SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS PRESENTS DRAG ME TO THE MOVIES!

Lights, camera, fabulous! One-night only musical extravaganza at Davies Symphony Hall featuring 300 members of

The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus

THURSDAY, MARCH 28 AT 7:30 PM

AT DAVIES SYMPHONY HALL

(SAN FRANCISCO, CA, January 23, 2024)—The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, the world’s premier queer chorus, heads to Hollywood and the silver screen with DRAG ME TO THE MOVIES!, a cinematic extravaganza that’s more dazzling than any Tinsel Town premiere. Featuring the 300-member San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, under the baton of Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg, DRAG ME TO THE MOVIES! will premiere on Thursday, March 28 at 7:30 PM at Davies Symphony Hall (201 Van Ness Avenue, San Francisco). Tickets are currently on sale at sfgmc.org.

 

This isn't just a night of glitz and glamor; it's an ode to the love we find in

every frame and lyric. Roll out the glittering red carpet and step into a world where iconic film scores, pop culture anthems, and the allure of drag harmonize in one unforgettable evening. It's more than movie magic—it's a celebration of love's starring role in the stories we tell. So grab your popcorn, strike a pose, and let SFGMC "drag" you into a celluloid world where every note is an emotion, every performance an affirmation, and every round of applause is a testament to love.

 

The evening will feature world renowned favorites and groundbreaking original interpretations from beloved movies like, Sister Act, Hocus Pocus, The Bodyguard, The First Wives Club, The Greatest Showman, The Da Vinci Code, and of course…Titanic!

 

Every time I walk into a movie theatre, I’m transported the moment the lights first flicker on the silver screen,” stated SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg.  “I’m carried away by the story, the acting and cinematography but as a musician, I’m always aware of the ingenious music that underlies the action on screen and provides the emotion needed to make the scene complete. I know audiences will love SFGMC’s unique perspective on some of this music and will hear these beloved songs in a brand new way.”

 

Featuring 300 singers, the Lollipop Guild and Homophonics ensembles, soloists and a small combo, this concert has something for every movie lover to savor and remember or, as a certain Hollywood star reminds us each time we sit down with some popcorn - “that indescribable feeling we get when the lights begin to dim and we go somewhere we’ve never been before — not just entertained, but somehow reborn, together.”

 

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For more information on SFGMC, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

X (formally ‘Twitter’): www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC Archive contact: archive@sfgmc.org

About SFGMC
Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope.

Under the leadership of Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg and Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim. Recent touring schedules, recordings, and outreach programs have broadened its impact and reputation in the community while maintaining its signature blend of humor, personality and ground-breaking performances. In 2019, SFGMC acquired a historic facility that has become its permanent home for rehearsals and offices. The building also serves as The Chan National Queer Arts Center, the first-ever community space for LGBTQ artists and arts organizations.

 

 

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scott.walton@sfgmc.org

SAN FRANCISCO GAY MEN’S CHORUS PRESENTS THE PERFECT ANTIDOTE TO VALENTINE’S DAY!

LOVE SONGS (AND OTHER MYTHS)

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15TH AT 7:30 PM

AT THE CHAN NATIONAL QUEER ARTS CENTER

(SAN FRANCISCO, CA, January 29, 2023)—The San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, the world’s premier queer chorus, has the perfect antidote to Valentine’s Day when they present LOVE SONGS (AND OTHER MYTHS) on Thursday, February 15 at 7:30 PM. The intimate, one-night only cabaret will feature singers from the Chorus in their inaugural performance at SFGMC’s new home, The Chan National Queer Arts Center (170 Valencia Street). Tickets are available at sfgmc.org.

Regardless of the state of your heart, this intimate evening has been created to fill the audience with the signature love and laughter SFGMC is known for. Expect the unexpected at this special event in which the word ‘love’ is defined by members of the Chorus, who will perform in ensembles, solos and duets. As with anything that SFGMC touches, patrons can expect to experience love with a distinctly queer touch, turning ballads into camp and comic numbers into tragedy as they set their sights on some of the great love songs of our time.

Whether attending alone or with a loved one, Love Songs (and other myths), offers two hours of musical mastery, created and curated by SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg and features SFGMC singers Derek Blechinger, Sam Brondfield, Andrew Caldwell, Mike Devlin, Gilberto Esqueda, Kyle Fowler, Brandon Jenkins, Clint Johnson, Jon Jones, Vinney Lê, Vi Lê-Szarapka, Butch Merideth, Case Nafziger, Justin Nool, Louis Rogers, Ayden Shupe and Oky Sulistio.

“Anyone who has attended one of our concerts has been witness to the extraordinary amount of talent that call our Chorus ‘home’,” stated SFGMC Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg. “I’m continually astounded during our soloist auditions at the large talent pool and diversity of choices on offer. With LOVE SONGS, we’re giving a chance for the public to discover these talents more fully and in a more intimate setting, here in our own home.”

This evening celebrates "love" in all its sweet, camp, ironic, comic, tragic, amorous and mysterious ways through the eyes of some of the best solo singers in the Bay Area. What’s love got to do with it?  Everything.

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For more information on SFGMC, visit www.sfgmc.org

Facebook: www.facebook.com/sfgmc

Instagram: www.instagram.com/sfgmc

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@sfgaymenschorus

YouTube: www.youtube.com/sfgmcvideo

X (formally ‘Twitter’): www.twitter.com/sfgmc

Visit SFGMC TV: www.sfgmc.org/sfgmctv

SFGMC Archive contact: archive@sfgmc.org

About SFGMC

Founded in 1978, SFGMC sparked a nationwide LGBTQ choral movement after its first public performance at a vigil on the steps of City Hall following the assassinations of Supervisor Harvey Milk and Mayor George Moscone. Since then, SFGMC has been embedded in the fabric of San Francisco. It has soothed souls in pain, lifted spirits in triumph, and has remained a steadfast beacon of hope.

Under the leadership of Artistic Director Jacob Stensberg and Chief Executive Officer Chris Verdugo, SFGMC has established a heightened level of performance standards bringing renewed audience and choral industry acclaim. Recent touring schedules, recordings, and outreach programs have broadened its impact and reputation in the community while maintaining its signature blend of humor, personality and ground-breaking performances. In 2019, SFGMC acquired a historic facility that has become its permanent home for rehearsals and offices. The building also serves as The Chan National Queer Arts Center, the first-ever community space for LGBTQ artists and arts organizations.

About The Chan National Queer Arts Center

The Pansy L. Chan and Terrence D. Chan National Queer Arts Center is the nation’s first LGBTQ center for community, creativity and collaboration. This landmark space, that also serves as the home of the San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus, is the first of its kind in the country — an artistic sanctuary for queer artists to call home, a space for audiences to share their lived experiences, and a beacon of inspiration and empowerment for queer individuals nationwide who are confronting oppression. A place for art and activism.

SFGMC MEDIA CONTACT:

Scott Walton 415.350.5195/scott.walton@sfgmc.org