BREAKING: HRC Announces Major Expansion In Fight for Transgender Equality and Justice ​

BREAKING: HRC Announces Major Expansion In Fight for Transgender Equality and Justice ​

Today, HRC announced it is significantly expanding its work dedicated to justice for the transgender community. The organization will advance new initiatives that address the urgent needs of the transgender community, with specific attention to community members deeply impacted by racism, sexism and transphobia. This major effort will include a focus on economic empowerment; capacity-building programs; targeted task forces in communities hardest hit hard by the epidemic of anti-trans violence; and expanded public education campaigns.

“We are in the midst of a national crisis. People are dying, and the response must be swift, strong and rooted in solutions the transgender community is rightfully demanding,” said HRC President Alphonso David. “In meetings with activists all over the country, time and again I have heard about systemic failures that are pushing many transgender people out of a job, on to the streets and into desperate and dangerous situations for survival. Through this new initiative, we aim to help change these realities. Change will not come overnight and it will not come from any single organization or person. But the Human Rights Campaign will be a part of the work to help build the capacity of leaders already on the frontlines of this fight.” 

Over the last 10 years, HRC has dramatically deepened its transgender justice work. From passing critical gender identity non-discriminaton protections and combating anti-transgender bills to sounding the alarm on the epidemic of violence targeting transgender people — especially Black and Latinx women, the organization’s advocacy and programs have been increasing in scope and impact. Still, significant work remains to ensure that every transgender person is protected from discrimination and safe from violence.

The challenges facing the transgender community demand action and change at all levels. This national crisis is made shockingly clear by the fact that at least 18 transgender people have been victims of fatal violence this year, 17 of whom have been Black transgender women. According to the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey, 21% of Latinx transgender people and 20% of Black transgender people are unemployed, compared to 15% of transgender people overall and 5% of the overall U.S. population. 43% of Latinx transgender people and 38% of Black transgender people were living in poverty, compared to 29% of transgender people overall and 14% of the U.S. population. And 40% of transgender people overall have attempted suicide in their lifetime, compared to 4.6% overall — nearly nine times the attempted suicide rate in the U.S.

The Human Rights Campaign’s expanded work will seek to address many of the persistent and insidious barriers to employment, housing and safety faced by transgender people, especially transgender women of color. The expansion includes four main pillars:

  • Economic empowerment is a central part of true lived equality. HRC’s annual Corporate Equality Index has helped reshape the workforce for transgender people — but far too many still can’t access pathways to employment.
    • HRC will leverage our strengths and partnerships to deliver new economic opportunities.
    • HRC will engage in a partnership with Trans Can Work to join with community-based organizations and corporate America to address the employment gap through trainings and career fairs in up to five major U.S. cities over the next year. A Los Angeles-based nonprofit founded in 2016 by restaurateur Michaela Mendolsohn, Trans Can Work is committed to empowering gender diverse communities through career navigation, workforce development, and job placement. 
  • The march toward justice for transgender people must be led by transgender people, which is why HRC is expanding our training and professional development programs for transgender advocates, activists and community leaders of color.
    • This year, HRC launched ELEVATE, which focuses on professional and leadership development for trans people of color in public health fields. Ten fellows will participate in the first class of this program, which provides intensive in-person training and a series of interactive webinars throughout the year. 
    • HRC is also announcing the creation of ACTIVATE, a fellowship program that launches in 2020 and will focus on enhancing the core skills needed to access and succeed in leadership roles in the nonprofit sector. The first fellows will be chosen from jurisdictions that have experienced high documented anti-trans violence.                                 
  • This is an urgent crisis of public safety and government officials must respond as such.
    • HRC will be working on the ground with community leaders to pilot task forces to address violence in five to seven communities hit particularly hard by this epidemic.
    • Legislation must be a part of this solution too. The fact that the Violence Against Women Act hasn’t been reauthorized is inexcusable. LGBTQ panic defenses should be outlawed in every state in this country. HRC will, of course, continue to push for comprehensive state and federal legal protections like the Equality Act to ensure transgender people have legal recourse when facing discrimination where they work, where they live and when seeking crucial social services. And several of other bills making their way legislatures, including bills decriminalizing sex work in New York and Washington, D.C., will be required to shift the reality for transgender people in the United States. 
  • The public needs to be educated in a much more robust way than it is today, rooted in the real stories of trans people of color. 
    • HRC will be ramping up efforts to create more conversation about this epidemic of violence through national media and our own platforms. 
    • HRC will also leverage our programs to more expansively engage parents and faith communities of color in this public education effort.

Today’s announcement comes ahead of Saturday’s historic National Trans Visibility March in Washington, D.C. HRC President Alphonso David will be speaking alongside other advocates, activists and community members. 

To learn more about HRC’s work on transgender justice, visit HRC.org/transgender.

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Writer Erik Patterson and actors Stephen Guarino & Michael Rishwan on giving an audience a ‘Handjob’

Writer Erik Patterson and actors Stephen Guarino & Michael Rishwan on giving an audience a ‘Handjob’

Michael Rishwan and Stephen Culp

Artistic power can hide in unlikely places.

Thus is the case with Handjob, a new play which had its world premiere at the Atwater Village Theatre in Los Angeles. Written by Erik Patterson, and as directed by Chris Fields for the Echo Theater Company, Handjob opens with a titillating situation.  A frustrated writer named Keith (played by Stephen Culp of Gray’s Anatomy) has hired a hot younger man named Eddie (Michael Rishwan, a student of New York’s The New School) to clean his house. The scene plays until two new characters emerge, Kevin (Stephen Guarino of EastSiders) and Bradley (Ryan Nealy of the film Singularities) and act out almost the exact same setup on the exact same set…with no explanation.

What’s really going on here? We’ll not say, other than to mention that Handjob does indeed deal with a handjob (which is presented live on stage), and the blurred lines where reality can intrude on fantasy, and vice versa. Running 90 minutes with no intermission, what begins as a silly, sexy romp evolves into a morally ambiguous, provocative and graphic meditation on gender, race, sexuality and violation.

Handjob opened September 7 and runs through October 28 at the Atwater Village Theatre in Los Angeles. Queerty snagged some time with playwright Patterson and actors Rishwan and Guarino to chat about the power of the piece, subverting an audience’s expectations, and what happens when fights break out in the audience.

Congratulations to you all. This is a far more challenging piece than I expected. It doesn’t have clear or easy answers about who’s right or wrong. So Erik, where did you conceive this?

Erik Patterson: I’ve been working on this play about two years. The Echo read a draft of it a year ago, and we probably did about six readings of it before we had a cast and went into rehearsal. So I’ve been doing a lot of refining and revising over the course of the past year. Before that, I think I started writing about two years ago. It went through various incarnations. The original impulse was I had hired a shirtless cleaner, and was having dinner with a friend of mine. Nothing untoward happened, it was just a man to clean my apartment with his shirt off, which was lovely.

[Laughter]

I was telling the story to my friend, and she said “There’s a play there.” So I wrote. There’s a lot in the play, a lot of current, hot-button issues. All of the things people were talking about like #MeToo—all of that was going on while I was writing. So a lot of that bled into the play and it became this ball of ideas.

I don’t get to talk to many actors who create a role in theatre. How did the part come to each of you?

Stephen Guarino: We had met socially through an actor named Matt McGrath, whom I idolize.

[He turns to Erik]

Maybe you thought I was interesting, but that was the only time we really hung out. Then he sent me a script while I was in New York. I was just reading it frantically, and had to read it a second time. Then I got so excited I called him and said “I’m going to play this. Nobody will do it better than me.” To be fair, some other people had read it, but I was just so excited for the flip that happens [a major plot twist]. To play both sides of that: I feel like that is a fair assessment of how I feel in my own life.

And what about for you, Michael?

Michael Rishwan: I did audition. It came to me through a friend who’s in Gloria, from last season. I’m in film school right now. So I went in to work my chops and my training, and I ended up getting it. It’s been really beautiful. I’m so appreciative to be part of this process and working with these people in the play.

And it’s not easy material.

MR: The writing itself, the mental dexterity you have to have—he’s written such a play that, as an actor, I get so excited to eat his words. But there are so many different ways you can deliver his language You have to be so focused. There’s a speed about it. You have to be intentional with the language. It’s almost like I’m playing on a playground in a way.

SG: It’s a mouthful.

Tamarra Graham, Stephen Guarino, Gloria Ines and Ryan Nealy

That monologue you’re given, yes. But more than that, the nervousness of the character. I’m curious as to your process: how do you get at that every night?

SG: It’s difficult for me because physically. I’m a lounger. So I literally just caffeinate myself for that first scene. I do ecstatic breathing, and I start doing all the ticks so that I’m in a frenzy by the time I enter the scene. I’m also thinking about everyone that’s seeing it, all the people I know, and I get myself to a full nervous state. I say all their names over and over in my head. I feel like a deer in the headlights when I start. I just think you’re going to fail, you’re going to fail…

That’s a hell of a method.

SG: It’s great. The more nervous the funnier the situation. Usually you have to be relaxed and grounded to start a play. This is the opposite.

Do you watch the show every night Erik?

EP: We’re in our third weekend. I haven’t seen every show, but it’s my baby. I like to watch it a lot to see how it grows and changes. So I won’t be watching it quite as much as we go on. But I feel very lucky that the entire cast is brilliant. To see them all bring this play to life is really fun. Every audience too—it’s interesting to hear how the audience will respond from night to night. There are many arguments made in the play, and on some nights I feel like some people are more with one argument and other nights they’re with another. Audiences can be very vocal.

MR: It’s different every single night.

Really?

EP: There was one night where this person in the audience kept sighing very loudly.

[Laughter]

He was very upset about certain things. I was like oh wow, they’re feeling things. So that’s fun to see: the work provoking.

How does it evolve from night to night?

SG: We all keep finding something new in the script every night. Honestly, it’s so verbose that I will hear something new I really need to digest. It’s like I really hear it for the first time. Maybe that actor really leaned into that argument. Like tonight, I really heard a lot of Tamara’s stuff, and I really leaned into it, so then it was easier for me to get excited about what she was saying. I’m not an enthusiastic person–

[Laughter]

I have to fabricate, to a certain degree.

Ryan Nealy and Stephen Guarino

I want to talk about the sex scenes. Obviously, doing sex or nudity on camera is very different from doing it on stage, particularly in an intimate venue. There are all kinds of different laws about what you can show. Michael, you’re not in any dildo scenes.

MR: No!

So Stephen, when you have to do a scene where you actually have to touch a fellow actor’s penis—or a facsimile of it—how do you get to a comfort level where you’re able to do that and do it with people watching?

SG: I probably don’t hold those things too precious in the first place. In fact, I find it sort of titillating. But I will literally just think of things that turn me on in my own experience to try and recreate the shortness of breath, or the blushing, or the embarrassment of a sexual situation. I concentrate on sexual situations that were uneven.

How do you get comfortable with your fellow actors?

SG: I don’t really think about it, which is interesting. I just think they’re doing their thing, I’m doing mine. At no point would I think I have crossed over into their space.

EP: I do feel like, maybe, some of the things that happen in the play, we have a very safe space.

SG: On the spectrum of people who thought intimacy coaching was necessary, I fall on the end of you gotta be f*cking kidding me.

EP: But, at the same time, just from an insider-outsider—I don’t act the scene. I just analyze it. I feel like you two are respectful of one another’s spaces. They worked together. You would touch his knee.

SG: Yeah.

EP: I felt like there was a period of time where they were learning how to touch each other but it’s not crossing lines. You would hold a hand or touch a knee.

SG: I wonder if I would have I would have been less deliberate about that if I knew the other actor was gay. Knowing the other actor and knowing him to be heterosexual, I was very clear. I’d say “I’m going to touch your knee now to block this.” That was until we got the prosthetics.

Tamarra Graham, Stephen Guarino, and Ryan Nealy

That’s smart.

SG: But I wonder if I knew he was gay, I would have been like, I’m just going to touch this…

[Laughter]

But that’s also so meta with the content of the play itself. I was left wondering about the rehearsal period, if any of it was added in.

EP: It was all scripted.

MR: I think Mr. Patterson has written a really beautiful play about the power of connection and the power of disconnection and how necessary it is for people right now. No matter what you look like, no matter how you identify, it’s connection vs. disconnection.

Sure, which can stir up an audience.

EP: There was a moment where we had a talkback after the show. Someone in the audience said something, and Stephen was talking, and there was a little bit of back and forth. Suddenly I felt like the play was happening again.

Wow.

SG: It was a woman. I said something sort of in my bombastic way. And she said “I don’t know if that’s you or the character talking.” And I said “M’am, I’m not a sociopath.”

[Laughter]

EP: That’s a good line!

SG: It was just me. I wasn’t offended, but I was aghast that someone would think I wouldn’t know the difference.

What’s so funny about that is that is what the play is about: the nebulousness of boundaries particularly in a situation where you indulge a fantasy, be it the shirtless guy cleaning house or working on a set. I read a story from an actress recently who described an instance on a set where she played a scene with another actor. She was supposed to have a shocked reaction, so her fellow actor took a water bottle and sprayed water up her skirt into her snatch. So she screamed and reacted, and it might even be the take in the film.

Related: MJ Rodriguez kicks down a new door with her new role in ‘Little Shop of Horrors’

I mention this because she felt really violated. At the same time, you hear about other actors who will come out naked to shock a fellow actor. Or guys actually hit each other. Or actors really French kiss. So my question is when you’re in a creative space like this, how do you still respect one another’s boundaries?

EP: You talk. There has to be a lot of dialogue. We knew going into this rehearsal process that we were making a play called Handjob with an actual handjob in it. So we didn’t ignore the fact that there’s a handjob in it.

SG: It’s so hilarious. We get audiences because of that. They think it’s going to be a sex show.

EP: Absolutely. I think that the handjob is the Trojan horse to get those people into the theatre, but there’s a whole lot more going on in the play than that. The handjob is a big shiny object. I once saw this gay play—a “sexy” gay play—before I wrote this. It made me so mad because the play wasn’t about anything. I think it thought it was, but it really wasn’t.

Tamarra Graham, Stephen Guarino, Ryan Nealy, Gloria Inez

But tickets sold?

EP: Out the wazoo. But I went to this play, and people were running to go see it, because it was so sexy. Which is great, but I wanted something to go deeper.

SG: I will also say this: I have never been in a situation where I felt anything uncomfortable on that level. I’ve had race issues come up, where certain conversations I had to be taught a different language, and I was embarrassed. But that all happened within a conversation. I have kissed, I have had sex with women—nobody has ever come up to me as a gay man and said “Ok, now you’re going to touch her. Now you’re going to kiss her.” Nobody has ever asked me.

That’s interesting. I talked to Rupert Everett last year, and he has had directors tell him how to touch a woman. And he would say “You know I’m bi, right?”

[Laughter]

SG: I just think nobody has ever been concerned about me as a gay man touching a woman.

Are you ever concerned for your own safety?

SG: I’m trying to think of any time. I remember once I was in character and a person said “Don’t touch me. I’ll get AIDS.” But that person was trying to be funny, and they’re an idiot. I was caught off guard, but not offended. I just thought what a poor choice of words. That’s the only time I can really think of.

That’s probably a good thing for you. The most provocative line in the whole text is in the final scene where one character says “I don’t want to teach you.” What interesting about that is that so much of the plot and meta-plot are about teachable moments and misunderstandings. The laziness isn’t just someone not wanting to listen, it’s someone not wanting to explain their feelings. That just fuels frustration. So, how do we get around that?

EP: One of the things I really want to leave audiences with is that there’s a lot of talking in this play, and not a lot of listening. At the end of the day, we all need to listen more especially to people who represent groups we are not part of. Straight people need to listen to gay people more. White people need to listen to people of color more. There’s a lot of not listening happening.

So what happens the next day?

EP: That’s another play. I don’t have an answer for that.

Stephen Culp and Michael Rishwan

Michael, what do you think? Your character closes out the play with his exit.

MR: I don’t even know the answer to that question. It’s the notion of connection vs. disconnection. I don’t know if Eddie is going to write stuff, or have second thoughts. I leave that open to the audience.

In the same way as Mamet’s Oleanna, the audience ends up projecting their own experiences onto the characters and ultimately has to ask: What am I seeing here? It’s about perception.

EP: I don’t know what they all go through the next day, but I hope that the next day the audience is still thinking and talking about all these things.

All photos by Darrett Sanders.

Handjob, presented by the Echo Theatre Company, runs until to Oct. 28 at the Atwater Village Theatre in Los Angeles.

 

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Beto O’Rourke: Trump Should Resign — WATCH

Beto O’Rourke: Trump Should Resign — WATCH

Beto O’Rourke called on Trump to resign in an interview with CNN’s Erin Burnett.

Said O’Rourke to Burnett: “President Nixon did the right thing and resigned before it moved to a trial in the Senate. I’m calling upon those who are close to President Trump right now, the same ones who tried to hide the transcript or the notes from this phone call, who right now are complicit in what the president is doing, to advise him to do the right thing and to resign from this office. If we’re talking about bringing together a very divided country, unifying once again around the great challenges that we have, then the most divisive president that we’ve ever had, one who is breaking laws with complete impunity right now, tearing this country apart, must step down. That’s the right thing to do. But should he fail to do that, the House must vote to impeach, and that trial must be held in the Senate. And I believe in this country, I believe in this country and I believe that we will do the right thing at the end of the day.”

Democratic presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke calls on White House officials to advise President Trump to resign: “Do the right thing” t.co/m3zcB49QBr pic.twitter.com/vgPo8pwolI

— OutFrontCNN (@OutFrontCNN) September 27, 2019

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Beto O’Rourke: Trump Should Resign — WATCH