Tag Archives: history

Check your basements – we want your stuff!

We needed a quiet month after the excitement of the Club Carousel Cabaret.  The amount of press we had was amazing and the sold out performance was more amazing still.  Check out the Calgary Herald review by Stephen Hunt.

The Calgary Gay History Project owes a big thanks to the artistic vision of Third Street Theatre: Paul Welch and Jonathan Brower for the creation of the cabaret.  Their next production opens this month: Late, A Cowboy Song runs from March 11 – 22nd, 2014: you should check it out.  Congratulations also to Paul for getting the Enbridge Emerging Artist Award at the recent Mayor’s Lunch for Arts Champions.

Look for new weekly gay history posts this month on Thursdays.  Now, however, we are calling you to search for old files, photos, meeting minutes, T-shirts, badges, pins, flags, queer publications, or other memorabilia that you could donate to a newly forming gay archives.  We (Kevin Allen and Carolyn Anderson) met with the Glenbow Archives last month, and walking through their vaults, saw that our community’s history is missing.

Here is where it could go:

Future Gay History Archive at the Glenbow here?  Photo: Carolyn Anderson

Future Gay History Archive at the Glenbow here? Photo: Carolyn Anderson

The Calgary Gay History Project is currently gathering archival materials.  If donated to the future archives they will be cared for in perpetuity and made accessible to future researchers.  You might even be eligible for a tax receipt!  Contact Kevin for more information.

[KA]

Cabaret Update and CBC Radio Interview

The Club Carousel Cabaret is sold out!  I went to the dress rehearsal a couple of days ago, and for the lucky people who have tickets, it will be a treat – in fact – I found it very moving.

The Calgary Gay History Project and Third Street Theatre have been getting a lot of media attention in regard to the cabaret.  Perhaps the most heartfelt interview to date was on CBC Calgary’s Homestretch with host Doug Dirks.  It was a 10 minute interview was with Lois Szabo, Club Carousel Founder and Kevin Allen from the Calgary Gay History project, on what life was like for gay people in the 60s. Here is an audio link: Calgary’s First Gay Nightclub, Jan 27, 2014.

Lois will be my special guest on a history panel discussion at the Cabaret, along with Calgary filmmaker, Michelle Wong, and Fairy Tales Executive Director, James Demers.

Issue of Club Carousel Capers from exactly 40 years ago.

Issue of Club Carousel Capers from exactly 40 years ago.

Club Carousel was the foundation of an organized gay community in Calgary and we owe those brave volunteers who founded and operated the club a great amount of respect and gratitude.  The Cabaret tonight is a gesture in this regard – thank you elders!

[KA]

Club Carousel Cabaret! + Filling the Sydney Opera House?

The Club Carousel Cabaret is happening in just under two weeks.  The event at this year’s High Performance Rodeo might sell out – if rumours are correct – so if you are thinking of going, get tickets soon: here.

Thanks everyone who came to the lecture and panel discussion yesterday at the University of Calgary.  Apparently it was the best attended history colloquium ever!  Here are some photos:

Kevin Allen beginning public presentation at U of C

Kevin Allen beginning public presentation at U of C

 

Questions after history presentation at the U of C
Questions after history presentation at the U of C
Panel Discussion: Doing Queer History (r.-l., Dr Rebecca Sullivan, Institute for Gender Research, Kevin Allen, Queer History Project, Karen Buckley, University Archives, Dr. Annette Timm, History Department)

Panel Discussion: Doing Queer History (l-r, Dr Rebecca Sullivan, Institute for Gender Research; Kevin Allen, Queer History Project; Karen Buckley, University Archives; Dr. Annette Timm, U of C History Department)

For those who like website statistics, The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2013 annual report for Calgary Gay History.  Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 8,800 times in 2013. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 3 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.