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Old 08-13-2011, 10:29 AM   #1
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Gay Mens Chorus of Washington DC Image by dbking Gay Mens Chorus of Washington DC, Holiday Concert &quot;Baby, It’s Gay Outside&quot; at the Lincoln Theatre ———————————————————————————————- The Gay Men's Chorus of Washington, DC (GMCW) is one of the area's most highly respected arts and community service organizations. Its mission is to "entertain through excellent musical performance, to affirm the place of Gay people in society, and to educate about the Gay experience." It has more than 225 singing members, nearly 100 support volunteers, more than 400 subscribers, nearly 500 donors, and an annual audience of nearly 10,000. The Washington Post has called GMCW "one of the world's best male choruses." (March 2001) GMCW was established in 1981 after the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus' historic national tour and performance at the Kennedy Center Concert Hall. Following that concert, a handful of committed citizens decided it was important that Washington also have a chorus that would use music and entertainment to create a positive and affirming experience for members and audiences, while educating the community about the Gay experience and advocating for equal rights for all people, regardless of ######ual orientation. Now in its 28th season (2008/2009), GMCW is at the forefront of the gay and lesbian choral movement. It sets a standard of excellence in the arts and community service as it achieves artistic excellence while simultaneously touching lives and changing hearts – both on stage and in the community. The Chorus has performed at a variety of venues throughout the Washington area including the Kennedy Center, the National Theatre, the Warner Theatre, Constitution Hall, the Lincoln Theatre, and Lisner Auditorium at the George Washington University. The Chorus also performed at President Clinton's second inaugural in 1996, and in 1998, toured three Scandinavian capitals. While in Scandinavia, GMCW was received by Sweden's Princess Christina to thank chorus members for singing in support of Noah's Ark, a Swedish AIDS services organization. During its 20th anniversary season, GMCW performed at Carnegie Hall and Boston Symphony Hall in joint concerts with the New York City Gay Men's Chorus and the Boston Gay Men's Chorus. In December 2002, GMCW was honored to perform as part of the 25th annual Kennedy Center Honors in tribute to Elizabeth Taylor. This performance was televised nationwide, bringing the Chorus into millions of homes across the nation. GMCW also has a commitment to commissioning new works for men's chorus. Recent examples include Changing Hearts by Alan Shorter for men's chorus and chamber orchestra, and Oseh Shalom by Paul Leavitt for men's chorus and brass quintet – both of which can be heard on our CD, Changing Hearts. GMCW has won a number of awards, including the prestigious Mayor's Arts Award for artistic excellence in 1989, a Distinguished Service Award from the Gay and Lesbian Activists Alliance in 2003, and a Capital Pride Directors Award for Arts in 2005. The Chorus can be heard on a variety of recordings, including: Singing Free, Pride and Joy (nominated for both a WAMMIE and a GLAMMA award – given by the national Gay and Lesbian Music Association), Let It Shine!, And in That Moment, I Dream of a Time (winner of a 2002 WAMMIE Award), You've Got to be Carefully Taught: The Songs of Sondheim and Hammerstein, with two-time Tony-Award nominee Laura Benanti, and Changing Hearts, our Silver Anniversary Album. GMCW performs up to four subscription concerts annually: a holiday concert, a winter concert, a spring concert, and a summer concert. GMCW also appears at a number of community events, including programs for PFLAG, Whitman-Walker Clinic, and The Human Rights Campaign. In addition, GMCW sponsors two small ensembles: Potomac Fever, an a cappella close-harmony group; and Rock Creek Singers, a chamber music ensemble. <a href="http://www.timberlandshoestore.com/men-timberland-6-inch-boots-c-1.html"><strong>timberland 6 inch boots uk</strong></a> These ensembles serve as representatives of GMCW at many community functions. GMCW also produces an annual Cabaret featuring 12-16 of the Chorus' most talented members. Two recent cabarets – Love Songs and Other Fairy Tales, and Let Me Be the Music…The Songs of David Friedman – have been recorded. HIGHLIGHTS OF GMCW’S FIRST 25 YEARS Compiled by Greg D. Kubiak, with contributions by Roger Bergstrom, Jeremy Brumbelow, Bill Cutter, Rick Rosendall, Duward Sumner and printed, authored materials from the GMCW archives. June 28, 1981 After the national tour performance of the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus at the Kennedy Center ten days earlier, Marsha Pearson had distributed flyers announcing a meeting to organize a gay men's chorus. The meeting occurred in the old Gay Community Center at 1469 Church Street in Northwest Washington with 18 men, and the GMCW was born. Jim Richardson became the new organization's Interim Director with the first rehearsals being held at the center, and later at the First Congregational Church in downtown Washington. September 23, 1981 At the invitation of DC Mayor Marion Barry, GMCW's debut performance occurred at a reception at the District Building, to mark the opening of the National Gay Task Force's Washington office (later the NGLTF). Also that month, GMCW established its management umbrella, incorporating the Federal City Performing Arts Association (FCPAA), as a non-profit educational organization whose goal was "to provide first-rate music in performance by and for Washington's gay and lesbian community and the community-at-large." December 12, 1981 With nearly 90 members, the Chorus performed its first holiday concert, jointly with the DC Area Feminist Chorus and Different Drummers, at the First Congregational Church to a standing-room-only audience of close to 1,000. March 17, 1982 GMCW's debut concert – under direction of its first permanent music director, Nick Armstrong – was performed at St. Mark's Episcopal Church on Capitol Hill. Selections were also performed by GMCW's two smaller ensembles — the Sine Nomine Singers, a 16-member chamber group and A Few Good Men, a 20-member song-and-dance troupe. September 9, 1983 The COAST (Come Out And Sing Together) Festival not only marked the first "road trip" for the Chorus outside the Washington-Baltimore area, but also provided the experience of performing in a real concert venue – the Alice Tully Hall at the Lincoln Center. It was also the first national gay choral festival – bringing eleven groups together from around the country – established by the Gay and Lesbian Association (GALA) Choruses. October 8, 1984 When GMCW was to perform at the National Theatre for its "Monday Night at the National" for a mostly straight audience, their introduction brought palpable hostility. However, concluding their concert with the gospel-style "Walk Him Up the Stairs," the Chorus received a standing ovation, and one of their proudest moments. December 13, 1985 GMCW presented an evening performance of its holiday concert, donating the proceeds of ,700 to the Whitman-Walker Clinic in its fight against AIDS. (The GMCW Holiday Concert was inaugurated in 1984.) June 21, 1986 The Chorus celebrated its 5th anniversary by returning to the place of its inspiration – the Concert Hall of the Kennedy Center. DC First Lady Effi Barry read a Mayoral proclamation declaring "Gay Men's Chorus of Washington Day" and introduced the Chorus. July 2, 1988 GMCW sang at the funeral of Leonard Matlovich, a decorated Vietnam veteran who was discharged from the Air Force in 1975 for declaring his homo######uality. Chorus members walked behind his coffin prior to his burial with full military honors in Congressional Cemetery where his tombstone reads: "When I was in the military they gave me a medal for killing two men and a discharge for loving one." October 15, 1989 The Chorus was allowed to participate in the AIDS Healing Service at the Washington National Cathedral under its own name after a significant struggle for recognition. GMCW was asked to participate in the 1988 service, only to have the invitation "rescinded because the Episcopal hierarchy deemed us too ‘political'," according to one member. (While they did participate, it was not under the GMCW name.) Chorus leadership pursued the issue in 1989 and the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church yielded. June 19, 1993 A front page feature story in The Washington Post's Style Section read: This is the Gay Men's Chorus of Washington, in which the men are nicknamed Wanda or Olivia and the budget is 0,000 a year, in which the repertoire ranges from Bach to doo-wop to high-tech contemporary oratorio and at whose concerts you're as likely to see men howling with delight at some beribboned demimondaine with a five o'clock shadow as weeping with silent but violent grief at a stoic neo-gospel elegy … The Chorus has come a long way in 12 years… In 1981 this was the sort of seat-of-the-pants outfit in which the treasurer could, and did, confuse his own personal funds with the Chorus' and well, spend them. Now it's got a 13-member board of directors and a ,000 stock portfolio and 145 dues-paying members. January 19, 1997 The chorus performed an 11-number set at the Smithsonian Institution's American History Museum on the eve of the 53rd Presidential Inaugural – the first time a gay choral group was invited to participate in such a national event. June 28, 1997 On its 16th anniversary of formation, the Chorus was joined by the Indianapolis Men's Chorus at the Lisner Auditorium to perform the DC premiere of "##########Man," to which a review noted, "GMCW always produces a slick, highly professional staging." May 28, 1998 GMCW launched it first overseas tour to Scandinavia, visiting Oslo, Stockholm and Copenhagen. The concert in Oslo was held in the hall at the University of Oslo where Martin Luther King, Jr. received his Nobel Peace Prize. In Stockholm, GMCW was received by Sweden's Princess Christina and thanked for their singing to support a Swedish AIDS service organization. And in Copenhagen, they became the first gay chorus to sing in the Tivoli Gardens concert hall. April 2, <a href="http://www.chinabaike.com/plus/guestbook.php"><strong>Boot Bags | RJ45 Blue Strain Relief Boots (50 Pcs Per Bag)</strong></a> 2001 The Chorus performed at Carnegie Hall as part of their 20th anniversary season joint concerts with the New York City Gay Men's Chorus and the Boston Gay Men's Chorus. June 16, 2001 The 20th Anniversary Gala Concert was held at the Kennedy Center Concert Hall with special guest, the San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus. December 8, 2002 GMCW participated in taping the 25th Annual Kennedy Center Honors – the first nationally televised performance by the Chorus – to be telecast on December 26 on CBS. GMCW was invited to perform in tribute to one of the honorees, Elizabeth Taylor. The audience included the President, Vice President, Cabinet Secretaries, Congressmen and leaders in government, business and the entertainment industry. June 4, 2005 The Pride Concert not only included a reprise "##########Man" – with special guests, the Ft. Lauderdale Gay Men's Chorus – but also presentation of the "Capital Pride Director's Award for Outstanding Leadership and Commitment to the GLBT Community in Washington." June 25, 2006 Culminating its 25th anniversary season, the chorus closed with "Singing Free!" with special guest Barbara Cook at the Kennedy Center. The single performance concert weekend included an alumni reception celebration the night before, and special chorus and guest party after the concert. Question by emil_slm: Are there any WHITE colored Nike Air Force One Premium Ronaldinho size 9.5? The Nike Air Force One Premium Ronaldinho is in blue. I only found one pair of white nikes at ebay, but I was wondering if there are any anywhere else. I found it at: http://cgi.ebay.com/MENS-AIR-FORCE-O...QQcmdZViewItem Best answer: Answer by Justin Tthey’re ########. there are no such things as white Ronaldinho’s Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
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