The Glines
Founded in 1976 by John Glines, Barry Laine and Jerry Tobin, The Glines is an American not-for-profit organization based in New York City, New York, devoted to creating and presenting gay art to develop positive self-images and dispel negative stereotyping.
Awards
Productions
Other notable successes produced by The Glines include:
- Jane Chambers’s[4] Last Summer at Bluefish Cove,[5] My Blue Heaven[6] and The Quintessential Image[7]
- Doric Wilson’s A Perfect Relationship and Forever After[8]
- Victor Bumbalo’s Niagara Falls
- Richard Hall’s Love Match
- Sydney Morris’s If This Isn’t Love! and The Wind Beneath My Wings[9]
- Arch Brown’s Newsboy[10] and Sex Symbols[11]
- Joseph Pintauro’s Wild Blue[12]
- Anthony Bruno’s Soul Survivor
- Robert Patrick’s T-Shirts and Untold Decades[13]
- Tom Wilson Weinberg’s musical Get Used to It![14]
- An Evening With Quentin Crisp[15]
- a number of plays by John Glines, including On Tina Tuna Walk, Men Of Manhattan, Body And Soul and Murder In Disguise
- plus the First and Second Gay American Arts Festivals in 1980 and 1981.[16][17]
A benefit in 1982 was given by The Glines was at The Town Hall, a performance space in New York City, consisting of three one-act plays: The Quintessential Image by Jane Chambers (with Peg Murray in the title role), Forget Him by Harvey Fierstein (with Harvey Fierstein, Estelle Getty and Court Miller), and A Loss of Memory by Arthur Laurents (with Richard DeFabees, who played Arnold in matinée performances of Torch Song Trilogy).[18]
The Glines broke into television in 1986 with its acclaimed production of Hero of My Own Life, a documentary on the life of a person living with AIDS.[19]
Artists
Among the many artists who have appeared (or whose work has appeared) with The Glines are:
References
- ^ Mel Gussow, "Theater: Fierstein's Torch Song", The New York Times, November 1, 1981.
- ^ Frank Rich, "Stage: 'As Is,' About AIDS, Opens", The New York Times, March 11, 1985.
- ^ Stephen Holden, "Theater Review: Dusting Off the Spirit of Ziegfeld", The New York Times, July 5, 1993.
- ^ The Eight Faces of Jane
- ^ The Purple Circuit, Old Plays are Gold
- ^ Beth A. Kattelman, Chambers, Jane (1937-1983) glbtq, a web-based "encyclopedia of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender & queer culture"
- ^ Stephen Holden, "Review/Theater; Comedy of Self-Acceptance And a Portrait of Its Writer", The New York Times, August 17, 1989.
- ^ On Forever After [1] Doric Wilson website
- ^ If This Isn’t Love! Doollee.com
- ^ Arch Brown biography [2] Arch Brown website
- ^ Sex Symbols Doollee.com
- ^ Stephen Holden, "Stage: Short Plays on Gay Themes", The New York Times, September 20, 1987.
- ^ Robert Patrick Doollee.com
- ^ Gary L. Day Weinberg’s "Get Used to It!" PGN March 27—April 2, 1992,
- ^ Anita Gates, "Crisp, So Stylishly 89, Gets To the Point, Well, Crisply", The New York Times, June 26, 1998.
- ^ Happy Gay Day "Today in History (May 19) 1980" The Malcontent website
- ^ Gay and Lesbian Theatre Festival
- ^ Long Island Journal, The New York Times, October 10, 1982.
- ^ John Corry, Hero of My Own Life, Story of AIDS Patient", The New York Times, June 23, 1986.
External links
- the Glines website
- Fascination Michael’s Thing, 1975
- Dancing for Our Lives Jennifer Dunning, The New York Times, January 12, 1986.
- Good Sense and Dancing on Ice James A. Lobata, oobr, Summer 1988.
- Thor’s Day Edward Crosby Wells (author) website
- Meet Marvin D.J.R. Bruckner, The New York Times, April 29, 1993
- TOSOS and The Glines, glbtq, a web-based "encyclopedia of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender & queer culture"
- Info and pics on Gulp! One actor’s experience, Queer Music Heritage website