Categories
News News Feature

TERRI SCHIAVO DIES

Doctors have announced the death of Terri Schiavo in Pinellas Park, Florida. Schiavo, 41 and in a persistent vegetative state for the last 15 years, died at the hospice where she lay for years while her husband and her parents battled over the issue of disconnecting her feeding tube.

The case became a political issue in recent weeks as the Republican-dominated Congress, supported by the Bush administration, rushed emergency legislation that superceded Florida state courts and mandated an appeal of the Schiavo case to the federal judiciary.

The federal appeals courts declined, however, to overrule the state courts’support of husband Michael Schiavo’s decision to allow his wife the natural death which he said she would have wished.

The first reaction to Terri Schiavo’s death by a Tennessee lawmaker came from Sen. Bill Frist, a physician who had supported the federal reviews based on his interpretation of a videotape of Terri Schiavo.

Said Frist on Thursday: “Today I join with all those mourning Terri Schiavo’s passing. I am deeply saddened by her loss. I pray for her mother and father, her family, and all those involved in this regrettable loss of life. May God bless her memory.”

Categories
News News Feature

COMMENTARY: SHERMAN WILLMOTT’S SPRING CLEANING

After two Pulitzer nominations, an offer from President Bush to write White House concert reviews, and an editor accusing me of being a gadfly (Will someone please tell me if that’s a compliment?), here’s a follow-up on my award-winning stories from the last six months:

1) Radio Round-up (October):

Air America joined the talk radio fray in Memphis on 680 AM. While something has been needed to quell the far right bias of the Memphis talk radio airwaves, when is enough negativity enough already? I say two negatives do not make a positive. Ban ‘em both–I’ll trade Rush and Franken for just radio static any day!

Smooth Jazz 98.9 is now Power 99, a hip-hop lite top 40 station–a bit late to the hip-hop world and without any edge at all, for sure.

Longtime Rock 103 bozos Drake & Zeke are no longer on Rock 103

. In an ironic twist of gargantuan proportions, Zeke is now bashing Rock 103 and Clear Channel on his web site “for sucking the life out of what was once one of the best rock stations in America”(!) and soon to be on yet another classic rock radio station, 98.1 (Memphis is now blessed with twice as much bad classic rock–three times if you count the Arkansas station that bleeds onto 102.3). 98.1 has a major format change coming this Friday while this week they have been playing vintage Def Leppard album sides. Oh, boy, I can’t wait.

WYPL 89.3, the Library Channel will soon begin featuring beaucoups of Memphis music in a move to bring music back to the forefront of this newly charged 100,000 watts of power station.

Satellite Radio: Five weeks after my piece on the coming of satellite radio, Mel Karmazin shocked the entertainment industry by becoming Sirius Radio’s CEO, legitimizing the new industry–at least for many in the investing community. The addition of Karmazin (as well as Howard Stern) allowed for a very successful re-capitalization of Sirius that sent Sirius on a massive spending binge to acquire the most popular radio programming available. Between Sirius and XM, new deals have since been signed with NASCAR, NCAA, PGA, Eminem & 50 Cent (Shade 45 Hip Hop channel) as well as many other entertainers and sports leagues. Both companies are furiously competing against each other and leaving traditional commercial radio to grab at the local crumbs left behind. In Memphis, Sirius has created a 24/7 all-Elvis station at Graceland, and XM has been broadcasting from high-profile special events like the Blaxploitation movie poster exhibit opening at the Stax Museum.

Savvy On the Fly readers would have gained 6% by buying XM stock in October or 41% by investing in Sirius. Sirius rose from $3.75 the day my column ran in October to $7.95 in December–more than doubling in less than two months! (Clear Channel, the biggest loser to satellite radio, is surprisingly up 8% since October).

2) Memphis’ senior photographer Ernest Withers‘ (January) new book Negro League Baseball is out, and he will be signing copies at Davis-Kidd Thursday, March 31 at 6:00 p.m.

3) Graceland (December) is still standing and is now sharing shelf space with American Idol stars. Robert Sillerman has added the American Idol show to his growing intellectual property company Sports Entertainment Enterprises (CKXE). After purchasing the rights to the King and Idol, Sillerman’s company stock has gone from 8 cent to $24.07 in three months. We pronounced this deal a major coup for Jack Soden, and Lisa Marie should be very happy with her licensing deal so far. Many shrewd Elvis fans can now make money (and have!) by investing in the King while idolizing him as well!

4) David Gest (December) continues to try to feed the hungry, although with only modest success. While Gest’s restaurant list was reduced to just the one Gus’ downtown location, on Easter he again offered free food to those willing to brave the elements. Unfortunately a rush of people into the restaurant (food fight?) caused the management to call the police and prematurely shut down the giveaway. Fans of Gest’s fabulous music productions will be sad to hear he does not seem interested in hosting another gala in Memphis. The man who originally brought Gest to town, John King, continues to add Memphis radio programs to his www.Tigeradio.com web site.

5) Viva L’American Death Ray (February) will play again April 7 at the Hi Tone. Monsieur Jeffrey Evans has briefly returned from Europe but is doubling back for the Barbican Festival in London Sunday April 3rd.

6) Memphis in May (December) did not book any crappy ‘70s rock re-treads (excepting the r&b of War and K.C. and the Sunshine Band) and focused on Memphis and roots music for their best line-up in years–albeit one with no “must sees.”

7) The Memphis Music Commission (November)never did do that web site they promised back in October. They did create less transparency in their new non-profit though. Oh, well, you can’t have it all.

I look forward to much more Memphis music muckraking in the next six months. Pay attention and make some money too. An On the Fly bonus?É

Want to respond? Send us an email here.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

CITY BEAT

CLOSE THE PYRAMID

It’s spring time, and the Memphis Grizzlies are entering the really tough part of the schedule.

Not just those games against other playoff contenders and all-stars such as LeBron James and Allen Iverson. Off the court, the lineup of formidable competitors includes Shelby County commissioners John ‘J-Will’ Willingham and Walter ‘Big Dog’ Bailey, the upcoming Beale Street Musicfest in April and May, promoter Beaver Productions, and the ever dangerous duo of Motley Crue and DeSoto County Civic Center.

The issue is not basketball but the non-compete contract clause that gives the Grizzlies and their operating arm, Hoops Inc., first dibs on the dwindling number of bands and artists that want to perform in Memphis in a big arena. While Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court were preoccupied last week with Terry Schiavo’s feeding tube, Willingham and others were casting the non-compete clause as a right-to-life issue for The Pyramid and Mid-South Coliseum. As Pyramid General Manager Alan Freeman told commissioners, if his employer, SMG, gets a call from a promoter wanting to play The Pyramid, he must by contract immediately refer them to the Grizzlies, and he can only book a show with their blessing.

“That’s not happening,” said Freeman, who estimated that six to eight events have bypassed Memphis due to the non-compete clause since FedEx Forum opened last September.

Questioned by Bailey, the commission’s watch dog over the Grizzlies and FedEx Forum, Freeman gave a grim report. The Pyramid lost $200,000 to $300,000 in potential revenue. Two bands, Rascal Flats and aging rockers Motley Crue, booked the 9,000-seat DeSoto County Civic Center instead. FedEx Forum has only two concerts booked for the next 90 days, and both previously played The Pyramid so they are not new business.

As facilities managers and promoters, SMG and Beaver Productions are understandably concerned. Willingham and the four commissioners voted to keep the heat on the Grizzlies and “lawyer extraordinaire” Stan Meadows, as Willingham called him in an open letter that was alternately sassy, silly, and sensible. But there is no need for a pity party for The Pyramid or the concert drought. Concerts and shows that need an arena as big as The Pyramid or FedEx Forum are only a small part of the Memphis entertainment scene. Tunica casinos, the Grizzlies, the Memphis Redbirds, AutoZone Park and the Memphis Botanic Gardens Live at the Garden concert series weren’t around when The Pyramid opened. There are more venues in the Memphis area than there are bands, teams, singers, and entertainers to fill them (see chart). Within walking distance of each other downtown, there are two arenas, one outdoor amphitheater, one music museum, one ballpark, and two auditoriums with a total of 60,000 seats. Plus Beale Street. On nights when three or four venues are booked, Memphis seems like a genuine big city. On slow nights, visitors must wonder what in the world we were thinking.

The focus on the non-compete clause misses the point. FedEx Forum wasn’t built to bring more concerts and truck shows to Memphis any more than Tunica casinos were built to revive the careers of geriatric singers or increase the consumption of shrimp cocktails. Those are extras. FedEx Forum is about professional basketball and a big-league image. Memphis made its choice and should make the best of it. There was always going to be some collateral damage. But $300,000 in revenue, which is offset by the expenses of keeping The Pyramid open, doesn’t make much of a dent in the $30 million of debt on the building. The Grizzlies are responsible for operating deficits at FedEx Forum. They –and the city and county — need a competing arena at the other end of downtown like Sen. John Ford needs another ex-wife.

If there are six or eight fewer concerts in Memphis because of the Grizzlies, there are also 50 more NBA games per year. The Grizzlies give Memphis an answer to Tunica’s casinos and Nashville’s Tennessee Titans. Motley Crue playing The Pyramid couldn’t do that. The Grizzlies help keep FedEx and AutoZone happy. The headquarters of Fortune 500 companies are worth some perks. Would anyone trade them for HealthFirst and Worldcom, the corporate fallen angels of Birmingham, Alabama and Jackson, Mississippi?

vClosing The Pyramid won’t turn off the music in Memphis. Musicfest, according to Freeman, dries up the concert business for at least a month before and after the three-day event. Beale Street, the Cannon Center for the Performing Arts, Memphis Botanic Gardens, suburban concert halls, and scores of bars and clubs listed in this newspaper offer live music. The Mud Island Amphitheater, which is not bound by the non-compete clause, will soon announce a revived summer series of at least ten concerts. Benny Lendermon, head of the Riverfront Development Corporation, said Mud Island’s 2005 bill “will far exceed the number of concerts it has had in the past.” The Orpheum, which has presented the likes of Norah Jones, Jerry Seinfeld, and Tom Petty, plans to offer more music concerts in 2005, according to Pat Halloran.

The Pyramid is simply an expensive skyline ornament. It was doomed as a basketball arena when the University of Memphis Tigers moved away. Its usefulness as an adjunct to the Memphis Cook Convention Center is limited to a handful of conventions such as the Church of God in Christ that require a large assembly hall. Pierre Landaiche, the general manager of the convention center, said “people will walk a mile indoors” if buildings are connected by interior walkways and people-movers but are reluctant to go outside to a separate building.

No one has come forward with a viable alternate use for The Pyramid that would shift the debt to a private developer without additional public investment. A casino, which is Willingham’s choice, would require enabling legislation from Nashville and face opposition (and competition, if it ever came to pass) from the Tennessee Lottery and Tunica casinos.

“There is a difference between a dreamer and a visionary,” says Beale Street developer John Elkington, who has seen his share of both in the last 25 years. “A visionary has the wherewithal to make it happen. With The Pyramid, we have a bunch of dreamers here.”

Halloran, president of the Memphis Development Foundation which runs The Orpheum, isn’t ready to quit on The Pyramid.

“They need to let them book shows,” he said. “I understand the Grizzlies’ position, but I think the city made a bad deal. It hurts the economy not to have multiple events.”

Howard Stovall of Resource Entertainment Group, which represents some 50 bands and other clients, isn’t so sure.

Given the competition from Tunica and the inherently “tricky” Memphis market, the non-compete clause in exchange for the Grizzlies picking up operating deficits at FedEx Forum is “a decent deal” for Memphis, he said.

“Four or five years ago people were talking about the fact that concerts weren’t coming to Memphis,” he said. “Memphis is finicky. The sweet spot in this market is the 5,000 to 7,000-ticket concert. Things that seem to be layups turn out to be a lot more difficult. The only way to succeed is to be cautious.”

Want to respond? Send us an email here.

Categories
Sports Sports Feature

FROM MY SEAT

MY FINEST FOUR

This weekend I will watch my 25th Final Four, a silver anniversary, you might say, of shining moments. In 1981, I was a sixth-grader living in southern California when my dad and I watched a sophomore point guard named Isiah Thomas lead his Indiana Hoosiers over a North Carolina team one year B.M. (Before Michael). Herewith, my own final four: the finest teams to cut down the nets over the last quarter century.

4) 1989-90 UNLV Runnin’ Rebels — The excellence of the teams on this list has a lot to do with the team they beat for the championship. These Rebels destroyed a still-developing Duke squad that would win the next two national titles (and upset the undefeated Rebels in the ‘91 semifinals). Larry Johnson and Stacey Augmon were All-Americas at UNLV, and Greg Anthony and Anderson Hunt may have been the best backcourt tandem since North Carolina State’s Sidney Lowe and Dereck Whittenburg in 1983. With coach Jerry Tarkanian chewing his towel on the bench, UNLV beat Kenny Anderson and Georgia Tech in the semis, then crushed Christian Laettner’s Blue Devils, 103-73. Hunt made 12 of 16 field goal attempts for 29 points while Johnson added 22. And Anthony put the clamps on Duke’s freshman playmaker Bobby Hurley (no field goals, three assists). This was the pinnacle of UNLV’s “outlaw” program, a band of aptly named hell raisers who took the rest of the college basketball world by force of aggression, and made no apologies for it. Final record: 35-5.

3) 1983-84 Georgetown Hoyas — The 1984 championship game was a heavyweight tilt unlike many seen before or since, and a matchup of two Final Four regulars from the early Eighties. Georgetown was making its second of three appearances in the finals with Patrick Ewing at center. Houston was making its third straight trip to the Final Four with Hakeem Olajuwon playing the pivot. Ewing’s supporting cast included the sweet-shooting Reggie Williams and the rim-rattling Michael Graham. Olajuwon was backed by Michael Young (18 points in the final) and Alvin Franklin (21). Ewing earned his clash with Olajuwon by outplaying Kentucky’s twin towers (Sam Bowie and Mel Turpin) in the semis, while Houston beat a Virginia team that desperately missed Ralph Sampson (a rookie with the Houston Rockets), 49-47 in overtime. While Hakeem the Dream (15 points, 9 rebounds) may have edged Ewing (10, 9) in their matchup, the Hoyas were unbeatable in Seattle. Williams scored 19, Graham 14, and David Wingate added 16 in the 84-75 win. This would be coach John Thompson’s only national championship, but enough to spawn a nation-wide frenzy that had Hoya gear in shopping malls from Seattle to Miami. Final record: 34-3.

2) 1991-92 Duke Blue Devils — This was the sixth of coach Mike Krzyzewski’s 10 Final Four teams, his second consecutive national champ, and to this day, the best team he’s ever suited up. Senior star Laettner was making his fourth straight appearance in the Final Four (and his third straight title game). When Laettner made his epic, buzzer-beating shot to beat Kentucky in the regional finals, this squad’s coronation in Minneapolis was mere formality. The Devils squeezed by Indiana (remember Damon Bailey?) in the semis, 81-78, setting up a championship showdown with Michigan’s Fab Five, the greatest quintet of freshmen ever seen at the Final Four (we all know Chris Webber, Jalen Rose, and Juwan Howard, but who remembers Ray Jackson and Jimmy King?). The game was no contest. Sophomore Grant Hill scored 18, Thomas Hill 16, and Laettner wrapped up his college career with 19 as Duke won, 71-51. Michigan turned the ball over 20 times and was led by Webber’s 14 points. Over his four years at Duke, Laettner had a record of 21-2 in the NCAA tournament. Final record: 34-2.

1) 1981-82 North Carolina Tar Heels — You just can’t help but add some historical perspective to the greatness of coach Dean Smith’s first national champions. Three of their starters (James Worthy, Sam Perkins, and freshman Michael Jordan) went on to play a total of 44 seasons in the NBA and won nine NBA championships. Having lost in the finals the year before to Thomas’s Hoosiers, the Heels knocked off Houston (with Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler) in the semis before edging Georgetown, 63-62, in a thrilling title tilt. Hoya freshman Ewing was guilty of a series of goaltending calls in the early minutes of the game, all the while establishing a presence North Carolina would have to play around with their superior perimeter players. With 28 points, Worthy assured his status as the NBA’s number-one draft pick three months later. Jordan scored 16 (and pulled down nine rebounds), the last two, of course, coming on what proved to be the game-winning jumper with less than a minute to play. North Carolina was challenged by Ewing’s 23 points and 11 boards, while Sleepy Floyd added 18 for the Hoyas. Sadly, the game tends to be remembered as much for Georgetown’s Fred Brown throwing the ball to Worthy in the final seconds — out of the corner of his eye, Brown thought Worthy was a teammate — as for the first national breakthrough for the man who would become Air Jordan. Final record: 32-2.

Want to respond? Send us an email here.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

POLITICS

BRYANT REDUX

If he’s elected to the U.S. Senate in 2006, when he’ll be making his second try, former 7th District congressman Ed Bryant will do what he can to get named to that body’s Judiciary Committee. Why? “I want to make sure I can help President Bush. We’ve got to be careful to get the right kind of judges in there,” is how Bryant put it to members of the Southeast Shelby County Republican Club last week.

The issue is crucial, Bryant told the audience at Fox Ridge Pizza last Tuesday night, and will remain so even if, and maybe especially if, Majority Leader Bill Frist can successfully follow through on his current threat to change Senate rules so as to prevent a Democratic filibuster on judicial appointees.

That’s the so-called “nuclear option,” which, Bryant suggested, could be equally dangerous to both parties. There is the 2008 presidential election to think about, for example, and with it the specter of a certain Democratic senator from New York name of Hillary. “If there’s a second president Clinton,” Bryant warned, “then we want to make sure that we look very closely at her judges to make sure they believe in the Constitution. Don’t be thinking that we’re going to be solving this very quickly if we go nuclear.”

To distinguish himself from three other declared opponents for the Republican nomination, Bryant boasts his legal background, which includes service as a military J.A.G. officer, as a West Point instructor, and as U.S. Attorney for West Tennessee, including Memphis, during the late ‘80s and early ‘90s. Though he didn’t mention it last week, he was also a House “manager” for the first President Clinton’s impeachment in late 1998 and earned a certain fame — or notoriety — as the designated GOP interrogator for that proceeding of one Monica Lewinsky.

First elected to the House in 1992, Bryant represented Tennessee’s 7th District, which stretches from the suburbs of Memphis to those of Nashville. He hazarded his first run for the Senate in 2002, when the then Republican incumbent, Fred Thompson, made a surprise announcement of withdrawal from politics. (Thompson, a veteran of several movies, went back to acting and can be seen weekly in installments of TV’s Law and Order.)

It remains unproven, but there are many who believe that Thompson timed his announcement so that former Governor Lamar Alexander could get an early start on the race to succeed him. Bryant was reportedly one of those who thought so (his supporters certainly did), but he declared for the Senate anyway, despite further widespread reports that the Bush administration itself was promoting Alexander.

Bryant lost a hard-fought primary in 2002 but then loyally soldiered up in support of Alexander, the eventual winner over Democrat Bob Clement. He went back to his former residence in Jackson [and settled down to a law practice]. When Frist, who is expected to be a 2008 presidential candidate, confirmed that he would vacate the state’s other Senate seat and not run again in 2006, Bryant had another opportunity and was the first candidate of either party to hit the ground running.

“I apologize for spending so much time in East Tennessee,” he said to the East Shelby County club last week. “But,” he noted wryly, “that’s where the votes were down last time.”

Bryant thinks the statewide name recognition he gained in 2002 puts him on equal terms with the other announced GOP candidates — former 4th District congressman and 2002 gubernatorial candidate Van Hilleary, now of Murfreesboro; Chattanooga mayor Bob Corker; and state Representative Beth Harwell of Nashville, the former chairperson of the Tennessee Republican Party.

“We’re not running against Lamar Alexander this year,” Bryant told the Southeast Shelby audience last week. “We’re running against mortal people, not a political superstar.”

In an interview after his public remarks, Bryant indulged himself in some speculation that runs counter to conventional wisdom. “What happens if Governor [Phil] Bredesen doesn’t run again?” he asked, noting that the governor, who has potential long-term problems with social “wedge” issues and TennCare, has been touted as presidential prospect in the national media.. “I think he might serve one term, declare victory, and try to get up in that league.”

That would open the doors for a governor’s race for his 7th District successor, Marsha Blackburn, as well as the aforesaid Hilleary, Corker, and Harwell. “I’m prepared to endorse them all, anybody that wants to run,” he said with a grin, “to get them out of the [Senate] race.”

Want to respond? Send us an email here.

Categories
Politics Politics Beat Blog

BOWERS, MCNEIL WIN DISTRICT 33 PRIMARIES


Democratic winner Kathryn Bowers (behind desk) relaxes in her Elvis Presley Blvd. headquarters with well-wishers after her state Senate primary win — (l to r)State Rep. Lois DeBerry (House Speaker Pro Tem); Del Gill; and state Senator Steve Cohen

Democrat Kathryn Bowers and Republican Mary Ann Chaney McNeil were easy winners Thursday in their party primaries for an open District 33 state Senate seat and won the right to oppose each other in the special general election on May 10th

The GOP’s McNeil

The District 33 seat was vacated earlier this year by longtime incumbent Roscoe Dixon, who now serves as an aide to Shelby County mayor A C Wharton, and is held on an interim basis by former Teamster leader Sidney Chism, like Dixon a Democrat.

In a relatively light turnout, Bowers won with 50 percent of the vote against Michael Hooks and James M. Harvey. Political unknown Harvey, a mortgage broker and former truck-driver, campaigned steadily and surprised most observers by finishing ahead of Hooks, the Shelby County Commission chairman who had counted on high name recognition and late-breaking endorsements to give him a chance against state Representative Bowers. Harvey had some 27 percent of the primary vote against HooksÕ 23 percent.

McNeil, a retired educator, polished off three Republican opponents with relative ease, polling 63 percent of the vote against 24 percent for Jason Hernandez, 6l6 percent for Barry Sterling, and 6.5 percent for Mary Lynn Flood.

BowersÕ victory can be attributed to a number of factors, including industrious campaigning, the support of a small but dedicated corps of supporters, and a promise, which events may have overtaken, to resist Governor Phil BredesenÕs plan for pruning the stateÕs TennCare rolls. Hooks rolled the dice with last-minute literature that featured endorsements from numerous city and county office-holders, including Memphis mayor Willie Herenton and Shelby County mayor A C Wharton. He had campaigned in support of alternate revenue measures initiated by Wharton and endorsed by the county commission Ð including a controversial real estate transfer tax, one that Bowers made a point of opposing.

If elected on May 10th, Bowers could establish two precedents Ð becoming the first African American female to serve in the Senate from Shelby County and becoming the first person to be both the House and Senate sponsor of a bill to pass the General Assembly. That bill, a complex financing measure to benefit The Med, has already passed the House and would be signed ÒBowers, BowersÓ if it passed the Senate under her sponsorship.

ÓThat can happen if the legislature stays in session past May 10th, and I think it will,Ó said Bowers. ÒOh, weÕll make sure it stays in session that long!Ó jested state Senator Steve Cohen, a prospective colleague.

Should she prevail instead, McNeil, who received a statewide Outstanding Principal Award in 2003 , has no shot at such dual sponsorship, but she, too, would become the first African American female to serve in the state Senate from Shelby County.

Two independent candidates, Ian Randolph and Mary Taylor Shelby, will oppose Bowers and McNeil on the May 10th special general election ballot.

Final Vote Results From All 51 Precincts

DEMOCRATS

Bowers: 2,129 or 50 percent
Harvey: 1,184 or 27 percent
Hooks: 994 or 23 percent

REPUBLICANS

Flood: 79 or 6.5 percent
Hernandez: 294 or 24 percent
McNeil: 757 or 63 percent
Sterling: 81 or 6.6 percent

Categories
News The Fly-By

Touched by an Angel

Saul Bozoff doesn’t know what he’s getting into at first, and neither will readers of The Angel of Forgetfulness (Viking), native Memphian Steve Stern’s first work of fiction in six years and his most complex, ambitious book to date.

The novel opens in 1969. Saul, from Memphis, is a lonely freshman at New York University, and his only relative in the city is his aged “Aunt” Keni. Keni is a shut-in living on the dilapidated Lower East Side, and she’s been entrusted with an unfinished manuscript written by her onetime lover, Nathan. But Keni dies. Saul has the manuscript. And in no time the year is 1910. Nathan is a lowly proofreader for the Jewish Daily Forward, and he’s smitten with a youthful Keni. Nathan’s also a storyteller, and the story he tells to seduce an unwilling Keni concerns an earthbound angel named Mocky and his half-mortal son named Nachman. They also live on the Lower East Side, but it’s the turn of the century and they’re in the company of a band of Yiddish-speaking cutthroats and thieves. A chapter later, though, and we’re in Memphis — Midtown, to be exact. It’s 1970. Saul has dropped out of college, and after a short stay in a mental institution, he falls in with a bunch of unwashed dopeheads. Billy Boots is head of the house — on Idlewild, to be exact — until that house goes up in smoke and Billy directs the hippie household to the Arkansas Ozarks, where they start a farm and where … where …

Forget it. Even a thumbnail description of the twisting, time-traveling, high-comedy narratives that make up The Angel of Forgetfulness won’t fit this space. So let Steve Stern do the talking, as he did in a recent phone interview from his office at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, New York, where he teaches creative writing.

The Flyer: I’m interrupting you at work.

Steve Stern: Yes you are. I thank you. Keep talking.

Speaking of work, you once taught at the University of Memphis.

That was a few years ago. There was a creative-writing chair in the English department. I asked for a settee. They offered me a footstool. So we compromised.

This latest novel has in it the most, if not the first, autobiographical material you’ve written. Care to comment?

Years ago, I wrote a story about an angel named Mocky and his son. But it never touched the ground. I mean, it took place in such a fabulist dimension. I stuck the story in a drawer, where it will remain in perpetuity. Then Mocky sort of gave “birth” to Nathan, who writes about Mocky and his son in The Angel of Forgetfulness. But it seemed to me that the story needed an additional “frame”: me.

I’m not an autobiographical writer. God forbid. But I did feel a perverse impulse to stick myself in the book and try to define my own relationship to the world of this novel. I started writing a little close to home. In fact, there are friends of mine in Memphis who are implicated.

I heard as much from a woman I work with.

Don’t give her the book! Just give her my regards. And my apologies as well.

You took liberties with the scenes set in Midtown and that commune in Arkansas?

Gross liberties! My borrowing from experiences that happened over 30 years ago … It’s all filtered through a pretty distorted lens. The characters are hybrids and largely invented.

Even your character Saul, who seems to be an awful lot like you?

Oh … I don’t know. I don’t think I’m as bad as Saul. I think I’ve got a little more integrity than him. He’s a pathetic fuck. I don’t like him very much. But he learns a bit, grows a bit.

Your prose style is seamless. Have you ever felt like you were, excuse the term, “channeling” these characters?

That’s true! The angel dictated most of it! That’s my problem. I was just the receptacle.

But seriously, I’m a slow writer. For the last five years or so, the writing was pretty choppy. I was doing more traveling than I’m used to, more teaching. So the writing itself was in fits and starts. But one story sort of begat another. They fell oddly into place. There wasn’t a lot of tinkering. It was a natural process.

Jewish immigrants and Yiddish-American literature have had a profound effect on you and your work. What drew you to that literature in the first place?

I’ve been reading this stuff for years, because that immigrant chapter is my favorite chapter in American history. I love the notion of people from a thousand-year exile translating the diaspora experience to America — to a few square blocks on the Lower East Side of Manhattan — and bringing with them all the baggage of tradition, most of which was defined by oppression, persecution, and poverty. The Lower East Side was in many ways yet another ghetto, another kind of poverty and confinement. But it was also a place where creative energies were released in explosive ways. The air was palpable with those energies.

Did your parents or your teachers encourage you as a writer?

No, not at all. Not to malign my mother and father, but growing up, there were no books, no music, no art in the house. My father was a grocer. We had a few Reader’s Digest condensed books, but that was it. And East High in the ’60s … It was not a place that reinforced literary pursuits. I wanted to be an athlete! A pretty forlorn fantasy.

After college I had these wander-years. My friends and I, you know, took too many drugs, found ourselves on a dirt farm in the Arkansas Ozarks. Then I knocked around Europe some, mostly England, and ended up … Where did I end up? I didn’t end up anywhere! I came back to Memphis in my 30s. Got married. We split up in ’86. That’s when I left Memphis pretty much for good.

I went to Wisconsin to teach and then to Saratoga Springs, which has been home going on 19 years. I arrived as a visiting lecturer at Skidmore, and when that ended, I just hung around. After a couple of years, they were embarrassed to see me on the streets all the time.

Have you been at all influenced by Southern literature?

Early on, I had writer friends in Memphis who were working out of that tradition, which I wanted to lay claim to as well but always felt somewhat estranged from. And as much as I admire Faulkner and Welty and O’Connor — you know, “the gang” — it wasn’t my literature finally. I grew up, on the one hand, feeling that Memphis was home, and, on the other hand, reserving the right to feel like an outsider.

But that Lower East Side diaspora mentality … I still have a kind of “poacher’s” attitude toward Jewish tradition and culture and all this material I’m passionate about but at the same time always apologizing for exploiting. Because it’s not something I experienced first-hand. I’ve come to it through the back door, mostly through texts.

Who else is working out of this tradition today?

It’s funny. When I started writing about the Pinch, that old Jewish neighborhood in Memphis — spinning stories out of folkloric motifs and using elements borrowed from Jewish tales, the Talmud, kabbalah, and midrash — I did feel like I was alone. But there’s a generation that’s younger than me and feels comfortable with these materials, writers like Nathan Englander and Jonathan Safran Foer.

I take it you don’t much care to hear your work described as “magic realism.”

It gets slotted that way sometimes, but I’ve never been comfortable with the label. To that extent, the Old Testament is magic realism! My work is the natural marriage of ordinary experience and fable. It’s a tradition that Yiddish literature has been mining or did mine for decades … a literature born out of an oral tradition.

The “accessories” — the concrete details of that literature — are all very real, very much drawn from the grit, the ordinary life of the Pale and the shtetl but always with an affinity for the universal, which is that folkloric dimension, that fabulist dimension.

Are there major plans to publicize The Angel of Forgetfulness?

I know that there are NO major plans. My editor is doing his best to make an “event” out of the book, but it’s a catch-22: If you’re a writer with a track record like mine, publishers don’t spend a penny unless you already have the kind of attention that warrants an expense on their part. But I did talk Viking into paying for my flight to Memphis in late April for a booksigning at Burke’s. So far, that’s it.

I’ve always been better at discouraging people from reading my books than promoting them.

Do you hear from the readers you do have?

Oh, just my friends, who generally say nice things. But I don’t trust them. It would be nice to hear from readers, but, you know, my books have been sort of few and far between, and they tend to be greeted, each one, as the first. Nobody seems to remember I’ve had books before.

That explains why you don’t have a higher profile in your own hometown?

I don’t know. Maybe it’s because I’m a despicable, black-hearted individual. I had my moment of local celebrity back in the ’80s. You leave town, and people forget.

Maybe I can help them not to forget.

Do your worst.

Categories
Art Art Feature

Mind Trips

Anamnesis,” Kathleen Holder’s current show at David Lusk Gallery, is one of the most emotionally powerful exhibitions in Memphis this year. Like luminists’ landscapes and particularly Mark Rothko’s late paintings, Holder’s nuanced and intensely saturated pastels burn with a mystical intensity.

“Anamnesis” means remembering, and her works reflect a calling up of deeply buried memories — an image or idea that is in the brain but just beyond reach and then spontaneously pops up.

Phrases that sound like poetry — “I am the house where the moon lives” — occurred to the artist as her fingers spread particles of bluish and golden-white pastels across fields of carmines, violets, scarlets, and cadmium reds in Anamnesis X.

Faint shards of light inside barely visible receptacles could be dying embers in ancient caves (Anamnesis IV) or slivers of gold in alchemists’ cauldrons (Anamnesis XI) or chemical reactions in our bellies (Anamnesis IV) or Holder’s memories of purple-pink steam rising from a smoldering house fire (Anamnesis XII).

Her almost imperceptible, softly glowing apexes invoke images of Gothic arches (Anamnesis X); the tips of a pope’s or wizard’s hat radiating their masters’ special powers (Anamnesis IV); or boat bows emerging from moonlit mists (one of Holder’s metaphors for accessing alternate states of consciousness).

Flecks of golden-white pastel backed by midnight blues (Anamnesis III) or dark umbers (Anamnesis XII) bring to mind pinpoints of light playing out Bell’s theorem about the interconnectedness of particles across vast expanses of space. Like visionary poets and philosophers, Holder intuits that all things arise from common ground. Her art attunes our sensibilities to the point where “unified whole” and “ground of being” are no longer philosophical jargon or tenets of faith but deeply felt experiences. This artist draws us into “the house where the moon lives,” where a chorus of memories, dreams, and sensations pool and reconfigure into the most mysterious of all cauldrons — the human psyche.

Kathleen Holder at David Lusk Gallery through April 2nd

Meikle Gardner’s current exhibit fills two walls of Perry Nicole’s beautiful new gallery space in Chickasaw Oaks. The oils on canvas he describes as a “visual presentation of the interconnected workings of thought processes.” But these works are not dry, intellectual musings. Here is thinking in all its inventive, obsessive, self-reflective glory. The paintings were created within the last six months, and the works’ sharply defined motifs, interlocking grids, intricate weaves, and highly expressive colors tell us about the challenges of preparing for a major show.

Spirit Ditch is dizzyingly intricate. The composition’s multilayered weave unravels, and an oozing, gummy substance drips from the threads. Beyond that is pitch-blackness. At the bottom of this structure, a salmon-colored shape with multiple appendages looks like some sort of spiderlike, fleshy creature caught in its own web. Claustrophobic and disorienting, Spirit Ditch‘s subtitle could be: “Trying to micromanage the void (or God or creative mind) is not a good idea.”

Gardner’s ability to build gesture, color, and composition to intense pitches produces true delight in Maiden Voyage. In this work, the unraveling threads, like those in Spirit Ditch, become a sieve that delicately holds the composition together. Forest greens and orange ochres are highlighted by electric-yellow lines looping, snaking, trailing off, and beginning again. The work is playful and experimental and is punctuated by yellow asterisks to suggest the epiphanies that arise from free-flow thought.

Gray grids superimpose Shiva Saw, a shape-shifting abstraction of spring greens. About the fifth layer down there is what looks to be a pale-green radar screen with finely incised crosshatching. This is an organic form, a life force, and here is its central switchboard. What a richly realized abstraction of Shiva, the Hindu god of creation and destruction. “Shiva saw” (and every creator knows) that each new idea requires working through some old patterns and presumptions.

The artist steps back for a broader view in Tsunami Lights, a haunting combination of title, color, and design. The pale-blue background is calm now. Strewn across its surface are gold and rust-brown gridirons that have been twisted by some monumental force. Superimposed starlight creates the impression that we are viewing the site of devastation from a great height.

In Chinese New Year, Gardner goes all the way down — past grids, past intricate weaves, past finely etched switchboards, to delicate green and blue washes and untouched white paper. His signature grids become unfurling ebony and red ribbons that curl around expressive dots and jottings of Eastern calligraphy in gestures so loose and un-self-conscious they read like finger-painting.

Gardner’s major new show has successfully opened, his slate is clearing, and Chinese New Year, one of his most satisfying new works, feels like celebration and letting go.

Meikle Gardner at Perry Nicole Fine Art through March 30th

Categories
News The Fly-By

Painful Proposal

The three ambulances that pulled into the Hope and Healing Center on Union Avenue Wednesday morning weren’t carrying victims of strokes or heart attacks. Instead, they carried patients whose suffering will only get worse if their health coverage is cut by Governor Phil Bredesen’s proposal to scale back TennCare.

The TennCare Saves Lives Coalition held nine rallies in nine days in major Tennessee cities to show how the proposed cuts could affect thousands of people.

About 100 people attended the Memphis “Drive to Save Lives” protest. They chanted, “Hey, hey, Bredesen, let us keep our medicine.”

Bredesen’s plan proposes scaling back coverage for 719,000 Tennesseans. Of that number, 323,000 people would be completely cut off.

“There are a very substantial number of people in Tennessee who will die if they’re cut from the program,” said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA.

Pollack said if Bredesen’s proposal is passed, it would be the largest state cutback in health care in the history of the country. Although Bredesen has acknowledged that the cuts will hurt, he says it’s the best way to balance the state budget. n

Categories
Cover Feature News

Gay in Memphis

On a recent Friday night at the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center (MGLCC), about 20 people are crowded into a small sitting room listening to local singer-songwriter S.J. Tucker. The atmosphere is relaxed. Rainbow-colored candles adorn the mantel just below a painting of two nude women. Some people lounge on couches; others sit at small tables. The aroma of fresh-brewed coffee hangs in the air, as people — gay and straight — walk in and out of the kitchen to refill their mugs.

But outside this small building in Cooper-Young, a battle is raging. Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered (GLBT) Americans are facing some scary stuff. The issues of gay marriage and gay adoption are at the forefront of national and regional politics. During the presidential election, the nation was so divided on such “moral issues” as gay marriage that many voters based their decision on that issue alone. Throughout the campaign, President Bush pushed for an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that would ban gay marriage.

Last Thursday, the Tennessee House of Representatives voted 88 to seven to approve placing a measure on the 2006 ballot that could result in a statewide ban on gay marriage. The Senate approved the same measure 29 to three last month. If approved by voters, the resolution would also prevent the state from recognizing gay marriages or civil unions performed in other states.

Gay adoption was also the center of a statewide debate until last Wednesday, when a House committee finally defeated a bill that would have banned gay couples from adopting children. But the 11 to nine vote to defeat the bill came after it was reworded to give preference to heterosexual, married couples. Currently, only one person from a gay couple can legally adopt. The other person has no legal rights to the child.

“We’ve been fat, dumb, and happy for a while — sitting back, thinking everything was going to be okay,” says Tommy Simmons, who spearheads Initiative: Fairness, a political action group at MGLCC. “I think this has really galvanized the gay and lesbian community. We feel more threatened now than we have since the onslaught of the AIDS epidemic.”

Shelby County is home to 1,821 same-sex households, the most reported in the state, according to 2000 census data. That number doesn’t include gays who live alone or with someone not their partner.

Back in 2003, economist Richard Florida’s book, The Rise of the Creative Class, revealed that cities with the highest populations of “bohemians, immigrants, and gays and lesbians” were also the cities with the highest-paying high-tech jobs. Florida looked at 49 urban areas with populations of at least a million people. Memphis ranked 41st as welcoming to gays and lesbians. Not surprisingly, using Florida’s findings, Memphis ranked 48th as a technology center.

So what’s it like to be gay in Memphis, the buckle of the Bible Belt? Do locals agree with Florida’s theories? Are gays in the Bluff City hiding in the safety of their closets or are they out and proud, basking in the glow of a sweet Southern rainbow?

That all depends on who you talk to and in what part of the city they live.

Midtown Is Gay Memphis

“Midtown is pretty accepting, but outside the 240 loop, I don’t go,” says Don Anderson-Fisher. “I wouldn’t go out there with their mega-churches. I wouldn’t want to expose my child to that kind of hatred.” Anderson-Fisher has an adopted son.

His friend J.B., who asked that we not use his full name, is sitting on a couch with his partner, Matthew Presley. They are also the proud parents of an adopted son. Their toddler is off playing with Anderson-Fisher’s son in the colorful playroom at the Presley home. J.B. speculates on the perceived closed-mindedness in the eastern areas of the city.

“You get one man out in East Jesus and he says people should believe one way, so he convinces his congregation to follow his beliefs,” he says.

J.B. doesn’t name names, but he’s referring to any number of religious leaders at large conservative congregations in Memphis. Certainly, the statement could apply to the Rev. Adrian Rogers, the recently retired pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church in Cordova. Bellevue hosted a “Battle for Marriage” rally last July, where 10,000 people viewed a simulcast of James Dobson, founder of the conservative Focus on Families group, declaring gay marriage to be an attack on “religious liberty.”

Or he could be referring to the Rev. Alton Williams, apostle of World Overcomers Church in Hickory Hill. Williams’ church purchased a large ad in The Commercial Appeal in October 2003, referencing the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to repeal sodomy laws. The ad read: “Court Says Sodomy (Homosexuality) Is OK, But What Does God Say?”

Anderson-Fisher’s statement could also apply to the Church of God in Christ (COGIC) leader Bishop G.E. Patterson who, in a November 2003 article in The Commercial Appeal, was quoted as saying in reference to the Episcopal Church’s decision to ordain a gay bishop: “The Episcopal Church not only embraced and set an openly gay man at the top, they shamed and disgraced the body of Christ. It’s not right. Nobody has the right to be gay.”

Given the actions and statements of some religious leaders, it’s easy to see why gays might feel uncomfortable outside Midtown. Most of the city’s gay clubs and bars are located in Midtown, along with the city’s only gay gift shop, Inz and Outz, and the only gay-themed video rental store, Family Flavors.

And many churches in Midtown are more receptive of homosexuality. Several churches in the area welcome gays and lesbians without the “love the sinner, hate the sin” approach of more conservative churches. First Congregational Church in Cooper-Young hosted a “Freedom to Marry” celebration on Valentine’s Day weekend, supporting civil marriage for gay couples. Evergreen Presbyterian, located across from Rhodes College, hosted a four-week study program in January on the ordination of gays and lesbians in the Presbyterian church.

According to Presley, even the First Baptist Church on East Parkway was accepting of his nontraditional family.

“We haven’t caught a bit of flack in that place,” says Presley. “As a matter of fact, last year, a teacher put a card together that said, ‘To Papa and Daddy.’ That was just the sweetest thing.”

And there are other gay-friendly churches, such as Holy Trinity on Highland.

“We don’t do civil marriages at all. I won’t sign a license because not all our members are treated fairly and have the same access under the civil code,” says Holy Trinity pastor Tim Meadows. “So we do religious Christian ceremonies for gay people and straight people. One day, when everyone’s treated fairly, that may change.”

But discrimination can still be a problem anywhere in the city, even Midtown. Len Piechowski, president of MGLCC, says the center has been hit with anti-gay graffiti on more than one occasion. Local filmmaker Morgan Jon Fox, whose high school coming-out film, Blue Citrus Hearts, has received national acclaim, says he still gets hassled occasionally.

“I can walk into the corner store at Southern and Cooper and get called a ‘faggot’ by 14-year-olds. The store owner never says anything,” says Fox.

The Visibility Catch-22

Many people the Flyer interviewed said the low profile of gay residents keeps Memphis from being a more gay-friendly city. According to some gay activists, there are too many closeted couples with nice homes and lucrative jobs who fear that outing themselves will disrupt their lifestyle.

“It’s a catch-22, because research shows that the more people you know who are GLBT, the more accepting you’ll be. But when you don’t have protection, it’s a lot to ask of people to be out,” says Sharon Horne, a professor who teaches methods for counseling GLBT clients at the University of Memphis.

“The only gay people that some straight people think are out there are the ones who fit the stereotype and are flamboyant,” says MGLCC vice president Heidi Williams. “If more people would out themselves, it would become an issue that more people would have to deal with. I think some people think there are fewer gay people here than there are.”

Her friend Noel Troxell, former secretary for MGLCC, brings up another point: In Tennessee there’s no legal protection for gays when it comes to job security.

“Right now, you can be fired for being gay, so I don’t know how smart that would be for everybody [to come out] in a city like Memphis,” says Troxell. “If my boss wanted to, he could fire me today.”

That’s the concern of one city school teacher, whose name has been changed to protect her identity. “Kathy Smith” teaches for Memphis City Schools and says she fears she’d “be fired in a New York minute” if she outed herself at work. MCS has a nondiscrimination policy, but it doesn’t name sexual orientation in its protections. Smith is a mother of two, both artificially inseminated, and she makes it clear that she’s not ashamed of being gay.

“At my son’s school, everybody knows us as the family that we are. The kids don’t think anything of it. When my kid said he had two moms, half the class piped up and said they did too. But they meant because of divorce,” she says. A local coalition of gay activists hopes to convince the city of Memphis to offer some job security for homosexuals. The group has drawn up a proposed nondiscrimination clause for the city that would offer equal access in employment, housing, and public accommodations and is going through the necessary legal routes to get it passed.

Dottie Jones, of the city’s office of intergovernmental relations, says the ordinance would “safeguard the right and opportunity of all persons to be free from discrimination, including discrimination based on age, race, color, creed, religion, national origin, ancestry, disability, marital status, gender, sexual orientation, and/or physical characteristics.”

The Politics of Homosexuality

According to Piechowski, Mayor Willie Herenton has been supportive of the local gay community. He attended the MGLCC’s ribbon-cutting for its Cooper-Young facility in 2003, and he attended a symposium on gay hate crimes several years back. After the event, Piechowski began talking with the mayor about the need for a nondiscrimination ordinance. He says Herenton expressed support.

“The mayor believes in civil rights for all people, and he believes discrimination in any form is wrong,” says mayoral spokesperson Gale Jones Carson. “When he was approached [about the ordinance], he supported Len on it.”

Piechowski also told the mayor that other major cities had a liaison to the gay community in city government. Herenton created the position and appointed Piechowski to it.

“The last time we talked, I wanted to brief him that we were doing some gay-rights demonstrations on the corner of McLean and Union,” says Piechowski. “He was very supportive, and he assured me that if I needed some type of protection at that location, I should not hesitate to contact him.”

But not all local politicians are as supportive of the gay community. County mayor A C Wharton hasn’t been blatantly unsupportive, but in a New York Times article about Memphis’ creative class, he was quoted by writer John Leland as saying it wasn’t government’s job to welcome gays and lesbians.

Kevin Gallagher, spokesman for Wharton, said that what the mayor meant was that he hadn’t heard a call for county support for gays and lesbians and didn’t believe it was the position of the county to set up programs for them at this time.

On a national level, Representative Harold Ford Jr. hasn’t been a beacon of gay support either. While he originally opposed Bush’s push for an amendment banning gay marriage, he later flip-flopped and voted for it. As a result, local gay political activist Jim Maynard organized a grassroots write-in campaign to challenge Ford in the November election. Maynard’s signs featured a rainbow flag and were mainly placed in gay businesses, bars, and clubs. He only garnered 166 votes.

“My purpose was not to win,” says Maynard. “When Harold Ford Jr. caved in on the federal marriage amendment, I thought it was important to provide an option. I didn’t want to vote for him after that.”

Maynard says he’s thinking about running for the position again in 2006, only this time with a better organized campaign.

There are currently no openly gay or lesbian politicians in Memphis, although state senator Steve Cohen (D-Memphis) is probably the strongest ally gays have in state government. Cohen and state senator John Ford (D-Memphis) were two of three senators to vote against the resolution to ban gay marriage in Tennessee. Cohen even attempted to amend the resolution to allow for civil unions and employee benefits for couples who had entered into such contracts. His amendment was voted down 25 to six.

It Starts in the Schools

Discriminatory attitudes are often formed early, as children adopt their parents’ beliefs. Those attitudes are then carried into the schools. Memphis City Schools and Shelby County Schools do not include sexual orientation in their nondiscrimination policies. Several gay and lesbian students told the Flyer that their teachers don’t do enough to stop harassment.

Trevor Rush was pulled out of Craigmont Junior High School at age 13 by his legal guardian grandparents after he was beaten by a group of boys because he was gay. A tendon in his leg snapped during the assault. The perpetrators received a three-day suspension, but Rush, now 18, says the beating was an extreme example of the harassment he faced daily.

“People would take stuff from me in the lunchroom and in the hall, and they’d throw it in my face. The teachers literally ignored it,” says Rush. “One told me it was my own damn fault.”

Rush and a few friends tried to put together a school-wide gay/straight alliance, but he says administrators wouldn’t allow it. Vince McCaskill in MCS public affairs says there are no school-sponsored gay/straight alliances in city schools, although he says there may be some student-led groups.

At a recent Memphis Area Gay and Lesbian Youth (MAGY) meeting, an 18-year-old teen who requested anonymity identifies himself as bisexual. He says he occasionally dresses in drag when not in school, and talked about problems he’s seen with administrators at Bartlett High School. He says a couple of his lesbian friends were holding hands outside the school one day when the assistant principal ordered them to her office. School policy prohibits public displays of affection regardless of sexual orientation, but Cox says the administrator told the girls their act was “disgusting.”

Some schools have better reputations. When an 18-year-old lesbian came out at White Station High, she says some kids were “iffy about it,” but she only encountered one student who has said anything hurtful. In fact, the White Station drama department is putting on The Laramie Project, a play that chronicles the 1998 murder of gay Wyoming college student Matthew Shepard. It runs from April 6th to 8th, and the school is donating all the funds from the April 8th performance to MAGY.

MAGY, a social support group for GLBT adolescents, meets every Friday at a Midtown location its adult moderators have asked the Flyer not to reveal. They’ve also asked us not to reveal the names of the youths we interviewed. The moderators say that although the kids may be out, they’re still living with their parents, and they do not want to create any problems for their families. MAGY meetings, which include occasional guest speakers and discussion groups, attract around 30 participants a week.

Support From Within

Outside of Midtown, Memphis may not have much to offer gays and lesbians, but the local gay community has formed an infrastructure that offers support, information, and recreation.

The MGLCC has technically been in existence for 16 years, but up until 2003, it had no permanent building. A few Madison Avenue storefronts were utilized over the years, but the group never really took off until its board of directors secured the converted house on Cooper. The center hosts a number of groups, including the Stonewall Democrats, Mid-South Gay and Lesbian Republicans (formerly the Log Cabin Republicans), Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous, and Alcoholics Anonymous.

The center also houses Lavender University — gay-themed public-education classes — for several months a year. During “Sunday Afternoon at the Gaiety,” the center features gay and lesbian-themed films, and Friday nights are coffeehouse nights, with occasional free live music.

Memphis is home to two free gay-themed periodicals –-The Triangle Journal, a monthly GLBT newspaper, and Family and Friends, a monthly magazine. In recent years, both have expanded distribution to include more mainstream locations.

The Triangle Journal includes both regional and national gay news, as well as a what-to-do, where-to-go guide of gay-friendly venues and events in Memphis. It has a circulation of 4,000 copies per month.

Family and Friends, with a circulation of 5,000 copies a month, also boasts regional and national news and coverage of local events. A popular section in the back of the magazine functions as the R.S.V.P. of the local gay community, with several pages of photos of people at bars, clubs, and events. Publishers Anita Moyt and Patty Pair say they pride themselves on offering grittier, harder news than their competitor.

“Some people in the community have some issues with us because we’re not a propaganda magazine,” says Pair. “If somebody in the community screws up, we’ll run a story. As journalists, we have a duty to report.”

Eight bars are listed in Midtown in Family and Friends‘ “Rainbow Directory,” a guide to gay resources. One, the Paragon Lounge, is at an East Memphis location on Walnut Grove; another, Allusions, boasts a North Memphis address. Backstreet, the city’s largest gay nightclub, draws hundreds of 20-to-30-somethings each weekend.

Several people interviewed say the bar scene is the most progressive aspect of gay Memphis. Moyt says many straight people hang out at Backstreet because “the music’s better than in straight clubs.” It’s not uncommon to see about half as many straight couples as gay couples there. But many in the gay community wish that attitude of acceptance wasn’t limited to a trendy bar scene.

“The gay community here is almost in a ghetto of gay bars and gay churches. I’m more interested in politics and civil rights,” says Maynard, who says Memphis lacks gay activism. “It just seems like most people in the community are more interested in socializing in the bars and clubs.”

In the future, the MGLCC hopes to offer much more to the GLBT community. The volunteer board of directors, which currently boasts eight members, drafted a 20-year mission statement, called “MGLCC 2023.” It envisions a number of facilities along Cooper offering specialized support, such as a counseling center, elder-care for gay senior citizens, legal and medical services, and a youth home.

“Youth services would provide counseling and housing services for children who have been put out of their homes by homophobic parents,” says Piechowski. “Every once in a while, a kid will come to our door who has had to turn to the streets and turn tricks just to survive. There’s no service in the Mid-South that can handle displaced or rejected gay youth.”

Meanwhile, the gay community will likely continue to grow and become more visible. Many say they’ve already seen more cohesion in the community since the recent gay marriage and gay adoption issues have gained the spotlight.

“Memphis has come a long way in the six years I’ve been open,” says Ray Casteel, owner of Inz and Outz. “I have a lot of straight people that come in and buy cards and gifts.” Horne says things can only improve as more people come out. She likens the gay rights fight to the civil rights battles of the past.

“There are plenty of countries that have had legalized gay marriage for years,” says Horne. “I think 50 years from now, we’ll look back on this time in shock.”