“Sanctuary: A History of Queer Club Spaces in Newark” is a collaboration between Rutgers University-Newark’s Queer Newark Oral History Project and the Newark-based visual and performing arts company Yendor Productions. Most events are free and all are open to the public.
Sanctuary events will begin on October 11 at 7pm with an art exhibit on the theme of club space as sanctuary at 765 Broad St., Newark, 7th floor. The following week, on Thursday, Oct. 16 at 7pm Rutgers University-Newark will host “Out in Newark! Queer Club Spaces as Sanctuary,” a panel discussion featuring some of Newark’s leading nightlife promoters and performers. The event will be held in the Paul Robeson Campus Center, located at 350 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Participants include former patrons and employees of the iconic Club Zanzibar, a member of the House of Jourdan, two of Newark’s lesbian nightlife entertainment companies – B.L.I.S.S. Entertainment and Ms. Theresa Productions – as well as other legendary and contemporary
Newark area LGBT and allied trend setters.
OnFriday, Oct. 17, Sanctuary presents spoken-word performers, including both new and established poets, who will perform at the Broad Street exhibit space at 7pm. On Sunday, Oct. 19, Sanctuary will host a tea party – a special film screening, panel discussion, and day party – in conjunction with the GET DOWN Campaign’s “No More Stigma” film series, from 3-9pm at the Broad Street exhibit space.
Sanctuary will culminate with “Fire and Ice: The FireBall Returns,” featuring lip-synching, dance, and live performance. The FireBall will be held at the Robert Treat Hotel on Saturday, Oct. 25, from 5:30pm to 3am and will be a benefit for Newark’s newly-opened LGBT Community Center. Admission is $30. For ticket information, visit http://newarklgbtqcenter.org or contact James Credle at 973-919-9926.
“Sanctuary exemplifies the Queer Newark Oral History Project’s ongoing efforts to enable public,
intergenerational discussions of LGBT life in Newark,” said Prof. Beryl Satter of the Federated Department of History at Rutgers University-Newark. “Our city’s clubs, bars, parties, discos, and ballroom houses have long been sites of LGBT solidarity and sustenance. Sanctuary honors this history by using the story of queer club spaces to uncover and celebrate the remarkable resilience, caring and creativity of queer Newark residents.”
Rodney Gilbert, Founder and CEO of Yendor Productions said, “The Sanctuary events of October 2014 will be the beginning of an outreach to LGBT people and their supporters in every ward in Newark. We are an integral part of this city’s cultural fabric and we always have been. Sanctuary gives proof of that fact. We need to show the truth of our past in order to have an inclusive and enriching future for all people in Newark.”
For more information visit http://newarklgbtqcenter.org