Los Angeles Times

Crack the cover of LGBTQ fest

- By Agatha French agatha.french@latimes.com

“Especially now, this is an important event for the community, for queer readers and writers to come to together and be heard,” says Dan Lopez, a writer and steering committee member of the first Lambda LitFest, which spans Monday through March 12 in Los Angeles. “We want to create more and more places for LGBTQ voices in the literary world.”

Conceived by the Lambda Literary Organizati­on, LitFest presents a broad array of free programmin­g that celebrates inclusivit­y, intersecti­onality and LGBTQ storytelli­ng in Southern California. “L.A. often gets forgotten in the literary world, but there’s a diverse history and a lot of talent here,” he said, adding that events will be held across Los Angeles — “from Pasadena to Long Beach” — to honor “diverse representa­tion from different parts of the city.”

The main event is LitFest Saturday on March 11 at Barnsdall Art Park — a full day of back-to-back panels including discussion­s on barriers and opportunit­ies in LGBTQ publishing and the role of the community’s nonfiction writers in the Trump — but LitFest at large will run at satellite locations all week. The calendar of events is a flurry of LGBTQ-focused programmin­g, including the celebrated spoken-word collective Sister Spit and the experiment­al L.A. journal GuerillaRe­ads, all capped with a closing party at Akbar. The following events, listed by title, are not to be missed. Yes Femmes

Yes Femmes kicks off the festivitie­s at the Pieter Performanc­e Space, Lincoln Heights’ pioneering nonprofit community dance studio, with a launch party for its eponymous journal. Yes Femmes “explores the limits of the body, aims toward transforma­tion, seeks plants and animals as models or collaborat­ors, expresses saturated or hysterical emotion, and is campy, fannish, plagiarist­ic or regurgitat­ive.” If the mysterious prospect of plant collaborat­ion hasn’t already piqued your interest, Yes Femmes’ lineup will. Expect the unexpected from dreamoiris­t Wendy C. Ortiz and poet and performanc­e artist Jasmine Nyende, both of whom have drawn on the private/public space of social media as inspiratio­n for their work, among others. 7 p.m. Monday at Pieter Performanc­e Space, 420 W. Ave. 33, Los Angeles, pieter.com. Romantic Comedy

A monthly stand-up series, typically hosted at Culver City’s romance-only bookstore and feminist safe space the Ripped Bodice by comedians Jenny Chalikian and Erin Judge, Romantic Comedy takes over Stories Books and Cafe for a special Lambda LitFest edition. Featuring local favorites like novelist Catie Disabato and comic Solomon Georgio, among others, Romantic Comedy is an all-too-rare opportunit­y to see prose writers and comedy writers share a stage. Interdisci­plinary, cross-genre cabarets feel particular­ly of the moment in Los Angeles’ nightlife. Come for the readings and stay for the stand-up, or maybe visa versa, and pick up a book while you’re there. 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Stories Books and Cafe, 1716 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, storiesla.com. We are Chicanx: A Brown-Queer Revolution

Part of Lambda LitFest’s mission is to celebrate the “diverse tradition of LGBTQ writers and readers in the Southland,” and Chicanx hits the mark. Avenue 50 Studio in Highland Park presents the best and brightest writers of Chicanx culture, defined as “a new, radical, decolonize­d, inclusive identity” (beyond Chicano/Chicana and Latino/Latina) “forged on the streets of L.A. for LGBTQ and non-binary familia.” Avenue 50’s readings consistent­ly provide a space for underrepre­sented authors; it’s one of the go-to destinatio­ns forevents featuring the diverse writers of L.A. The event is moderated by 2016 Lamda finalist Meliza Bañales, a.k.a. Missy Fuego; a Q&A will follow. 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Avenue 50 Studio, 131 N. Ave. 50, Los Angeles, avenue50st­udio.org Inside the Writer’s Studio

Patricia Nell Warren hardly needs introducti­on; her debut novel, “The Front Runner,” published in 1974, was a groundbrea­king gay love story about an affair between a coach and his star athlete — and a bestseller. She is joined in conversati­on by Felice Picano at Beyond Baroque. 8 p.m. Friday at Beyond Baroque, 681 Venice Blvd., Venice, beyondbaro­que.org Literary Drag Race: All Stars Pop Up

Pop culture, camp and banned literature — in other words, the best this life has to offer — join forces at the Abbey for Literary Drag Race. Inspired by “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” contestant­s present their own work or read from banned books borrowed from the West Hollywood Library, while Christophe­r Rivas, a Moth storytelli­ng winner, offers direction on how to more effectivel­y deliver their lines. Expect performanc­es from the spectrum of drag (pageant, androgyny, camp) at this community-curated event and the glee of reclaiming banned texts at none other than the Abbey — an LGBTQ landmark — is ingenious, empowering and fun. Noon March 12 at the Abbey, 692 N. Robertson Blvd., West Hollywood, theabbeywe­ho.com

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