Where to go after spending the day on Sunday, May 5, exploring the National Zoo for the annual DC Center fundraiser? Down the hill and through the urban wilderness to Trade, of course, where your reward is a drag performance by 17th Street High Heel Race Winner Madame Chevitz at 5 p.m. Other attractions at the 14th Street hotspot include a face-painting booth to channel your “inner gay animal,” free food tasting by Galley Kitchen, and a specialty “Zeebra” cocktail. The afterparty officially ends at 8 p.m., but the bar will be open until the early hours as a refuge for all the nocturnal critters in town. Trade is at 1410 14th St. NW. Call 202-986-1094 or visit www.tradebardc.com.
COUNTRY DANCING WITH DC RAWHIDES
The DC Rawhides showcase their boot-scootin’ brand of social dancing every other Saturday — now on both floors of the Ziegfeld’s/Secrets in Southwest. Starting at 7 p.m. on Saturday, May 4, the group presents an hour-long session of lessons in intermediate/advanced two-step dancing taught by Lee and Michael on one floor, with the other open for a solid hour of “your favorite line dances back-to-back.” No worries if you don’t know how to line dance or don’t yet have a favorite: the Rawhides “love beginners and always teach basic two-step.” The evening continues with open dancing to former Remington’s DJ Chris P. until 10:50 p.m. — roughly an hour before Ella Fitzgerald and her Ladies of Illusion take to their regular perch. By then, you’ll also find fully exposed “freestyle” dancers and their admirers shaking it to house music by DJ tim-e upstairs, if you’d like to see and do it all. Ziegfeld’s/Secrets is at 1824 Half St. SW. Cover is $5 until 9 p.m.; $10 after. Call 202-863-0670 or visit www.dcrawhides.com or www.ziegfelds.com.
This Sunday, May 5, the original Dupont location of the chain of restaurants run by Jamie Leeds kicks off a new season of its monthly summertime party for lesbians and all others “under the rainbow.” New this year to the 21+ event are partnerships with local and national LGBTQ organizations, with SMYAL first out the gate. Each month will also feature a different color Ladies Tea bracelet in honor of the selected charities, allowing for the truly devoted to #CollectTheRainbow. From 3 to 5 p.m., Ladies Tea has the run of the place, with exclusive drink and food specials at the downstairs bar, finer libations in the upstairs space rechristened Hank’s Cocktail Bar, plus the venue’s new garden patio. The party moves to the Ladies Lounge after 5 p.m. to make way for dinner. Hank’s Oyster Bar is located at 1624 Q St. NW. Call 202-462-4265. Visit www.hanksoysterbar.com.
MONTHLY ZODIAC DRAG CONTEST AT FREDDIE’S
Ophelia Bottoms hosts an amateur drag competition at Freddie’s in Crystal City on the first Sunday of every month, including this Sunday, May 5. Contestants vie for the most audience applause, with the winner earning the proper zodiac title — in this case, Miss Taurus — plus a $50 prize and a spot in the annual competition to crown the yearly Miss Zodiac. Showtime starts at 8 p.m. Freddie’s Beach Bar is at 555 South 23rd St., Arlington. Cover is $5. Call 703-685-0555 or visit www.freddiesbeachbar.com.
A transgender man in South Carolina claims he was accosted in a bar by staff, called anti-trans slurs, and arrested by police for using the women's restroom -- the very restroom that conservatives would typically argue he should use due to being assigned female at birth.
Luca Strobel, who posts on TikTok as @FulltimeCowboy, recently posted a pair of videos in which he recounted going to the Sand Dollar Social Club in Folly Beach on Friday, May 16, as a designated driver for a friend, Caroline Frady, who was at the bar.
Cue the wedding bells for Freddie Lutz and Johnny Cervantes!
The owner of Freddie’s Beach Bar in Arlington and his partner of 28 years will be getting married in view of hundreds of thousands of WorldPride revelers during the WorldPride Parade on Saturday, June 7.
“I’m literally inviting the entire world,” laughs Lutz. “I’ve thought about doing a wedding float for Freddie’s for years now, but we have never pulled it off.”
Lutz had always dreamed of a fancy, public wedding on a parade float, but he and Cervantes declined to get married immediately after same-sex marriage was legalized in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
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