The Mighty Real Tour



Ex-members of Tribe 8, Lynnee Breedlove and Silas Howard
put on a show tonight at Divan Orange, (4234 St-Laurent) at 8 pm.


Lynnee and Silas were
members of the San Francisco-based Queercore band, considered one of the first,
from 1991 until about 2005. They were out, proud, punk practitioners of tribadism, but Silas has since
transitioned to male and takes testosterone. Lynnee published a book called Godspeed, since turned into a movie of
the same name. Silas continues to make art, after writing and directing By Hook or By Crook, a movie that
debuted to rave reviews at Sundance 2002.

Tonight’s show is part
of a multi-city tour, the Mighty Real Tour: A multimedia evening of dueling solos with:

 

Confessions of a Poser with Lynnee Breedlove: A comic look at bodies,
the mystery of the purple dick, lesbo legacies and how to use them, fatherhood,
and the impossibility of ever being man enough.


Thank you for Being Urgent with Silas
Howard:
A textured tale of a
queer punk spilling into the crappy and exalted glitter of Hollywood’s desire and shame. He searches for
true tales of fierce outsiders and re-imagines the mainstream, ruminating on
American Dream loopholes, burlesque dancers with dementia, and tranny jazzmen.

It will be
entertaining, there will be buckets and there will be knives.

Keep Reading

The cast of All Stars 11

‘RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 11’ is a second chance for the bracket format. Will it work this time around?

Early enthusiasm for the Tournament of All Stars last season was dampened by the back half of the season, raising the question of whether this format is viable in the long term
A flaming torch

‘Survivor’ helped me climb a volcano

Instead of training for a gruelling day-long hike, I listened to podcasts about my favourite TV show. It paid off
Michaela Coel and Anne Hathaway

‘Mother Mary’ nails how devastating a first lesbian breakup can be

In A24’s new pop star drama, Anne Hathaway captures the physicality of a tormented ex-lover aching for answers—and deliverance
The cover of Afternoon Hours of a Hermit; Patrick Cottrell

In ‘Afternoon Hours of a Hermit,’ Patrick Cottrell writes a protagonist who does everything wrong—again

The pseudo-sequel to Cottrell’s acclaimed first novel brilliantly retraces old ground
Advertisement