Archive for May, 2009

Day of Decision 2009

by Troy Williams

It was no surprise that the California Supreme Court upheld Prop 8.  And what better excuse to hold a rally at the Capital and a march to the Temple?  I was invited by Michael Mueller from Utahans for Marriage Equality to speak at the end of the rally.  I don’t really remember what I said — but mostly I just wanted to convey the sentiment that queers are not victims — Prop 8 is not a defeat — and that we should no longer allow right wing organizations like the LDS Church to intimidate us.  I also wanted to remind folks that our world is in crisis — climate change threatens all life on earth — our economic crisis is leaving many Americans in poverty — and our health-care crisis is allowing Americans to die because they are denied treatment by corrupt for-profit insurance companies.

These are serious challenges facing our world — none of which will be resolved if gay marriage is made legal.  So we’ve got to get out and make positive change happen in the world.  I believe LGBT equality is a major component of the social shift that is needed in our society — but gay  marriage is only one component of a larger social justice struggle.  Keeping that in proper context is essential as we  move forward.

Richard Kim of The Nation wrote an excellent overview of the Prop 8 decision — and wisely suggests that we give pause before dumping millions of more dollars into a campaign to repeal the amendment.  “Not one of those 18,000 married couples got any new rights or benefits
that California’s DP did not already provide; they only acquired the
term marriage itself. Of course, as a state, California cannot grant
any of the federally provided rights and benefits of marriage, but as a
matter of state law, the two categories are substantively equal.”
That said, I believe we queers have got to keep pushing, keep shouting and keep our dissent at the heart of public debate.  We can nolonger allow right wing bullies to dicate out lives. We need to stand up and be bolder than ever. And yes, LGBT Americans should enjoy EVERY freedom provided to other citizens of this country.  We should settle for nothing less.

So the invitation to every person who reads this blog — when you wake up in the morning, please ask yourself, “what can I do today to make the world a more just, more peaceful and more sustainable place to live?”  Then get dressed, get out the door and make an impact!

I’ll see you in the streets.

(all photos by David Newkirk)

THANK YOU SALT LAKE CITY!

By Troy Williams

On behalf of myself, Charles Lynn Frost and Pygmalion Theatre Company, we want to thank all of you for making The Passion of Sister Dottie S. Dixon a smash success.  We enjoyed a wild run with sold out shows, added performances and fantastic media coverage.  We were overwhelmed by the amazing response.

It’s exciting to see a project emerge from nascent concept into a fully manifested reality.  Three years ago I approached Charles and asked him to create a character for my radio series on KRCL.  I knew Charles was a phenomenal actor and I was anxious for the opportunity to collaborate with a performer of his caliber.  I sat down at his kitchen table as he pulled out a series of notes.  “Her name will be Sister Dottie S. Dixon and she will host a show called, What Not, What Have You and Such as That”.  We were off and running.

It took awhile for me to grasp Dottie’s syntax and “heavy regional dialect”.  Charles had to teach me “Spaneesh.” Not your typical south of the US border Spanish, but “Spaneesh” from Spanish Fork.  It was tricky but Charles was patient.  And after awhile I caught on “ril good!”

Charles and I approached the character from two different perspectives.  He was channeling his mother, who raised him in Spanish Fork – as well as her many friends who comprised the sisters from his ward.   I was always channeling those courageous women in Mormon history who were excommunicated for challenging authority – Sonja Johnson (who supported the Equal Rights Amendment), Fawn Broadie (who wrote No Man Knows My History) and Lavina Fielding Anderson (who documented cases of ecclesiastical abuse).

_DSC5984 Charles grounded Dottie’s basic humanity and gave her a soul, while I constantly threw her into outrageously uncompromising situations.   After two years of Dottie on the radio, we decided to take her to the stage.  One of the elements that Charles and I deeply agreed upon was the need for the gay community to shift our narrative.  It is time we collectively change our story.

Think about it.  When you survey gay cinema, theatre and literature, it is almost always associated with violence and death.  AIDS, gay-bashing, suicide and parental rejection comprise what has become a gay victim meta-narrative.  The world hates gay people and look how we suffer! This is the story that we tell over and over.  And I’m really done with it.

When Charles and I sat down to write The Passion we were very clear that we were going to celebrate how awesome it is to be gay.  We were determined to invert the classic narrative of parents rejecting their queer kid.  What if Dottie, as a Mormon mother, championed her gay son, even at the risk of her own membership?  That was the driving force.  From the very beginning I was determined that Dottie was a latter-day Joan of Arc.  She was a visionary who would come into conflict with her Church leaders.  Her actions would culminate in her trial and ultimately she would be “burned at the stake center.”  Yet no matter the trials we put her through, Dottie would always remain true to her Mormon core.

_DSC6044 When you create a work of art, you never really know which parts will be well received and which might fall flat.  There were many surprises along the way.  Perhaps due to a glowing review in The Deseret News, The Passion drew in a large number of active Mormons.  Every night I would look out across the audience to see seats plum-full of “Dotties” – brave Mormon moms unafraid to laugh at our cultural idiosyncrasies.  And perhaps due in part to Dottie’s following on KRCL, there were many nights when our straight audience far outnumbered the queers.

One BYU professor in attendance told us that, like Dottie, he was asked by his employers not to talk about his gay child.  Another LDS mother took me by the hand and with tears in her eyes told me how she was a Dottie and she had invited her 18 year old son to see the show in the hopes that he would finally come out to her.  I heard back later that night, he did.

There are many Mormons, who in the shadow of Proposition 8, are standing up for their gay family members.  They are loving and embracing them just as they are. Things are changing for the better.

_DSC6071 For far too long, the Mormon leadership (and the Born Again Christians and the Republican Party, et al) have tried to control the gay narrative. They have marginalized our lives, disparaged our love and actively worked to eliminate our rights.  That day is over.  Our identity will no longer be defined by others.  We will no longer internalize their fear and enmity.  We are crafting our own stories and rewriting a new ending.

And it feels damn good, doesn’t it?

As Dottie says, “Heavenly Father sent a gay baby into our lives as a blessing.”  We want every queer person in the world to believe that.  We want every parent of a gay child to know what a beautiful gift they have been given.  We are not sinners, we are not defective, and we are most definitely not burdened by an affliction.  “The Mormons have great lessons to learn from their gay children” says the Giant Box Elder Bug wearing the Jacqueline Smith sweater set from KMarts, “Why do you think they have so many!?”  Indeed.

The world is changing.  The story is shifting.  You are part of that.  All of us.  Every time you come out, every time you raise your voice and defend the “marginalized and miniaturized people of the earth”, every moment that personal authenticity informs your next choice.  This is the work that Dottie invites us to engage, “to heal a world that is ailing from too much suffering.”

May that be the passion that consumes our lives. I’m grateful for Sister D for sharing with us new possibilities and new stories. Inthenameofjesuschrist – AMEN!

The City Weekly LOVES The Passion!

'Copters & Casseroles

Sister Dottie S. Dixon provides more real emotional heft than Miss Saigon.

By Scott Renshaw

The Passion of Sister Dottie S. Dixon
Sister Dottie S. Dixon (Charles Lynn Frost) originated in three-minute segments on local radio, so I was fearing that The Passion of Sister Dottie S. Dixon would be the theatrical equivalent of those ghastly Saturday Night Live sketches padded out to feature-length movies. I never expected Sister Dottie to become so … real.

The
character as conceived is already intriguing and complicated: a
faithful Mormon wife and mother from Spanish Fork who is also an
activist on behalf of her openly gay son Donnie. The play—by Sister
Dottie’s co-creators Frost and Troy Williams—serves as kind of an
“origin” story, flashing back to pivotal events including Donnie’s
coming-out, a consciousness-expanding trip to the Burning Man festival
and confrontations with church authorities over her civil disobedience.

READ THE WHOLE REVIEW HERE!

Dottie on KUER’s Radio West

Dottie and I hit the big times yesterday!  We had a lovely hour with Doug Fabrizio talking about gay art, activism and The Passion of Sister Dottie S. Dixon.  Thanks to Doug and Elaine Clark for making everything happen.  I had to laugh a bit because I found myself using my reverent NPR radio voice, which is in contrast to my big RadioActive voice. The trick to all of this is finding the right voice for the right audience.  Doug has a gift for getting at the heart of an issue.  And I hope the conversation was helpful for people who are trying to find their own voice amidst the ongoing battle for queer liberation.

Have a listen by clicking HERE!

The Deseret News LOVES the Passion!

'Sister Dixon' heartwarming, poignant

Published: Friday, May 8, 2009 3:49 p.m. MDT

"THE PASSION OF SISTER DOTTIE S. DIXON," Pygmalion Theatre Company, Rose
Wagner Center, through May 17 (801-355-2787); running time: 2 hours 10
minutes (one intermission)

In a country embroiled in a political debate over same-sex marriage,
Proposition 8, Miss California and Marie Osmond, it might be easy to forget
the people at the heart of this polarizing issue.

Enter Sister Dottie S. Dixon (Charles Lynn Frost).

The Pygmalion Theatre Company show — "The Passion of Sister Dottie
S. Dixon" — has been so popular the company added three performances
to the close-to-sold-out run.

Sister Dixon is not here to preach, and she's certainly not here to
judge. She is here to share the story of her personal journey and spread a
message of love and inclusion — "bridging the gap between gays and
Mormons, one creative casserole at a time."

Dixon was created when KRCL's Troy Williams asked Frost to create funny
characters for his radio show.

Frost, who is best known for originating the role of Alex McCormick in
Plan-B Theatre Company's "Facing East," chose a character based on his
mother — a good Mormon woman living in Spanish Fork, Utah.

With Dottie's best friend, Sister Dartsey FoxMoreland (Kent Frogley) at
the piano, and a series of stairs as the set (Brad Henrie, design), Sister
Dixon entertains for close to 90 minutes.

Beginning with her family "treeneology," she then teaches a lesson on
how to speak Spanish — of the Fork variety — "Ferude,"
"Frignernt" and "ta, da, sa" in place of "to, do and so." The crowd, made
up of many of Dixon's fan base, laughed appreciatively at all the
local-isms, especially at a clip of Dixon on Doug Fabrizio's show.

The pacing moves along pretty well, but it does slow down a bit when
Dixon finds herself at the annual Burning Man Festival in Nevada, where she
ends up hallucinating (aided nicely by Pilar I's lighting) about a giant
boxelder bug telling her about her new mission.

What works best and is most endearing about this play is that it is
personal. Even though the evening is filled with comedy — and lots of
it (thought never mean-spirited) — what is most appealing about "The
Passion" is watching this very likeable, warm and loving woman's very real
struggle.

And Frost's delivery couldn't be better.

Sensitivity rating: Veiled references to drug
use; smoking; mild swearing; and sex discussion on Dottie's wedding
night.

E-mail: ehansen@desnews.com

NPR Story Corps: Troy Williams and Matthew Landis

On May 1st, the mobile NPR Story Corps was in Salt Lake City.  I  received a call from Karen McCreary from the ACLU of Utah asking me if I’d like to bring a friend and have a sit down chat.   I called up my buddy  Mathew Landis to discuss growing up queer in Utah, activism, current events and whatever else came to mind.  The result is a back and forth conversation about both of our lives.

While Matthew was out and proud tearing up the streets of Salt Lake City in Queer Nation Utah, I was closeted and shamed, volunteering for Gayle Ruzicka’s Eagle Forum!  Our stories are dynamically different — but we are both today queer potentialists who have big hopes and desires for our community.  We see the myriad possibilities that an unapolagetic queer worldview can offer the planet.

This is our story.  Part of it anyway.  As much as we could fit each of our 39 years into 39 minutes.

STREAM THE CONVERSATION HERE

Dottie on the Huffington Post!

Mike Bonifer

Mike Bonifer

Posted May 5, 2009
| 02:52 PM
(EST)

Sister Dottie vs. The Mormon Church

From
May 1-17, Dottie Dixon, a game-changer of the highest order, takes the
stage nightly at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center in Salt Lake
City in her one-woman show, The Passion of Sister Dottie S. Dixon, which chronicles her experiences as the activist Mormon mother of a gay son.

Sister Dottie, who lives with her husband of 38 years, Don, on what
she describes as "a lovely little cul de sac" in Spanish Fork, Utah,
about ten miles south of "the BYU," approaches the Mormon church's
anti-gay positions from the unassailable mountaintop of a mother who
loves her child. And she comes at it from the inside, as a
tenth-generation Mormon whose great-great grandfather, Heber Orson
Maxwell O'Donovan, migrated to Utah, across the plains as a Mormon
pioneer in 1847 with none other than Brigham Young himself, the second
prophet, seer, and revelator of the Mormon Church.

Her show, a comedy with what she describes as "moments of
poignancy," addresses the controversy of Sister Dottie's stubborn
refusal to accept the Mormon church's anti-gay positions. "I can't
choose between my church and my child," she said last week when I spoke
to her on the phone between rehearsals for her show. "My church wants
me to choose. I don't do that."

READ THE REMAINING ARTICLE HERE

Gay Times: I AM A GAY TERRORIST

by Troy Williams

The April issue of the UK based Gay Times wrote a fun article about my work.  It’s mostly awesome and very flattering.  The author/editors did take some liberties with our interview however.  For the record, “totemic” is not part of my regular vocabulary, and I never said anything about sticking bombs up the ass of gay America! Though on second thought, it does provide an amusing mental image.  Wow, no matter how hard I try,  I just can’t get away from the militant persona Gayle Ruzicka has created for me!  I also wish they would have given a photo credit to David Newkirk for his awesome shot.  Otherwise, Sally wrote a lovely piece and I’m glad the message of Queer Utah is getting out around the world.


Troy Williams

contact Troy at troywillbe [at] gmail.com