Dr. Blackwell's BLOG

Friday, February 21, 2014

Out Gay Faculty Less Comfortable Than Closeted Peers

Filed under: GLBT Social Issues and Civil Rights — Dr. Christopher Blackwell @ 03:46

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A study published in this month’s issue of the Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering highlights the effects of being out in the workplace on university Faculty. The study, authored by Patridge, Barthelemy, and Rankin (2014) showed that just 11% of gay and lesbian Faculty members are open and honest about their sexuality in the workplace and that those who are experience higher levels of stress compared to colleagues who remain closeted. The findings suggest a strong need for nondiscrimination policies in university-settings and creation of more welcoming work environments that embrace diversity among Faculty. The abstract for the study appears below:

There is limited information available regarding factors that contribute to the academic advancement of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and queer (LGBQ) communities. In this project, we employ data from the 2010 State of Higher Education for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender People, and our aim was to assess the experiences of LGBQ faculty from science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines. Survey responses from 279 LGBQ faculty members across multiple departments were analyzed through chi-square and binary logistic regression. Our findings from this national study identify several factors influencing the academic climate and subsequent career consequences of LGBQ faculty, and department-level analyses suggest these climate factors may be particularly relevant to the STEM fields. We propose that the comfort of LGBQ faculty members is a valuable measure for advancing the retention of LGBQ STEM faculty members, and we show that both exclusionary behavior and being “out” are factors that negatively impact this measure. We provide potential best practices to improve the academic climate for STEM faculty members, thereby advancing both their persistence and their influence on mentoring prospective LGBQ STEM students.

The Night Was Alive: TITANIC at Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center

Filed under: Performing Arts — Dr. Christopher Blackwell @ 03:35

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On Monday February 17th, a once in a lifetime experience occurred on the stage of Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center. The original Broadway cast of the Tony Award-winning Best Musical TITANIC reunited for a concert performance of the show, complete with a 120-piece orchestra and 200-member choral ensemble. The experience was truly memorable and is something I will cherish and never forget. It was a great way to close a chapter on the show and open a new one as it plans to return in a newly conceived version on Broadway in the Fall. Below is Playbill’s Steven Suskin’s beautifully articulated review of the event and a video of the cast in rehearsal last week.

Michael Cerveris, Brian d’Arcy James and More Offer aTitanic Night at Lincoln Center

By Steven Suskin
18 Feb 2014

Titanic steamed into Avery Fisher Hall last night and received a more-than-rousing reception from a house packed with thousands of diehard fans of the 1997 musical by Maury Yeston and Peter Stone. Not only were the musical numbers ecstatically (and deservedly) received; many of the members of the original cast who were on hand to recreate their roles were greeted with strong entrance applause. To borrow a phrase from Walter Lord’s 1955 bestseller about the ill-fated maiden voyage, it was “a night to remember.”

Titanic was the massive musical that overcame a rocky in-town preview period to become the Best Musical of the 1996-97 season, winning Tony Awards for Yeston, Stone, designer Stewart Laing, and Jonathan Tunick(inaugurating the new category of Best Orchestrations). The show ran two years, which was not quite enough to bear the outsized costs — including a shipload of scenery and a cast of 42 — but sufficient to establish it as one of the most significant musicals of its time.Stripped of scenery and costumes, but supported by a full orchestra conducted by original music director Kevin Stites — and including seven members of the 26 piece opening night pit band — Yeston’s score sounded glorious. Augmenting the effect was an added chorus; while the original show was sung wholly by the principals, last night’s event added more than 200 singers from seven high school choirs coming from as far as Nebraska and Colorado. Craig Arnold of Manhattan Concert Productions, which offered last year’s concert version of Ragtime, produced. Don Stephenson, who in 1997 played the second class Englishman eloping with a member of the nobility (and who was subsequently a replacement star of The Producers), directed the concert. 

More than half of the original cast was assembled, with 22 actors recreating their roles. Some of the cast members have gone on to Broadway stardom, like Michael Cerveris and Brian d’Arcy James. (Among the most celebrated of the originals was the then-little known Victoria Clark, who all but stole the show as Alice Beane, the second class passenger who storms the First Class deck. Clark was announced for the concert but withdrew last week.) Others have been little seen in the interval, but last night the years seemed to melt away. The voices were true, if not always as strong as originally, with the various solos — Yeston’s score is filled with important solos for many of the characters — ringing authentic.

The most significant of these solos were those written for the three crew members. D’Arcy James’ “Barrett’s Song” and “The Proposal,” Martin Moran’s “The Night Was Alive,” and David Elder‘s “No Moon” were all as chillingly pristine as they were on opening night in 1997. Cerveris, John Cunningham and David Garrison reprised their roles as architect, captain and owner, climaxing in their vicious trio “The Blame” and the architect’s wild “Vision” as he pores over the blueprints while the ship goes down.Theresa McCarthy and Jennifer Piech were joined by Erin Hill as the three Kates, scoring with the charming-turned-majestic anthem “Lady’s Maid.” Michele Ragusa, who played a small role in the original, moved up to Clark’s role of Alice Beane and did especially well. David Costabile andJohn Bolton helped steer the proceedings from the bridge, while Ted Sperling was back onboard — with his violin — as ship bandleader Hartley. As the evening approached its inevitable climax, Alma Cuervo and Ron Raines as the Strauses of Macy’s offered the tender showstopper “Still.” Serving as a central cog — and a humanizing touch as the ship starts to sink — was Allan Corduner as Etches, the First Class Steward.

The bravura fifteen-minute opening sequence (“The Launching”) drew an almost astonished ovation from the crowd. The show was intact with one addition, an operetta-like duet called “I Give You My Hand.” This was cut during previews, leaving the characters played by Stephenson (the concert’s director) and Judith Blazer without a major singing moment. Performed here by Ryan Silverman and Jill Paice, one understands how it doesn’t enhance the show.

The performance ended with a firestorm of curtain calls, capped by Yeston graciously bowing to the audience and acknowledging the late librettist Stone, whose picture appeared on a screen above the stage. This was a one-shot Titanic, but fans of the musical can look forward to Thom Southerland’s intimate production from London’s Southwark Playhouse, which is scheduled for Toronto in July and Broadway in the fall. The concert suggests that Yeston’s Titanic remains as powerful and glorious as originally.

Theater Review: Bridges of Madison County The Musical, ROCKY: The Musical, Machinal, and All The Way

Filed under: Performing Arts — Dr. Christopher Blackwell @ 03:19

I had the opportunity to venture off to New York City last weekend and got to see some amazing new Broadway shows, including 2 musicals (both of which were in previews) and 2 plays (one of which was in previews). Check out my reviews below:

Bridges-of-Madison-County-Broadway-Musical-Tickets-176-120413 Bridges of Madison County. To preface this, I must divulge that I never saw the movie incarnation of this story and have never read the book. However, I did see and LOVE Parade, which hails from the same composer as this fantastic show. Bridges tell the story of Francesca (Kelli O’Hara) a middle-aged Italian immigrant housewife who’s mundane existence is turned upside down when a rugged and handsome stranger named Robert (Steven Pasquale) comes to town to photograph historic bridges that punctuate the local landscape. While many stories of love affairs fall into the realm of cliche and silliness, Bridges is somewhat immune to that because of the unique aspects of its story. For example, the main character’s immigration experience is integrated into the plot and is used to provide an etiologic framework to explain the rationale for her behavior. The book is written by Marsha Norman of The Color Purple (which incidentally, I did not like). The pace is perfect and the character development superb. And O’Hara’s performance as Francesca is one of the finest I’ve ever seen on stage. Her voice is purely angelic; and she portrays the character with an amazing realism. Pasquale is also great as her opposite; and the side characters are also very well portrayed. Hunter Foster provides a solid performance as Francesca’s husband Bud; but the amazingly talented Cass Morgan (the original Mama from MEMPHIS) is relegated to the sidelines with only one solo number, which to me is sad because Morgan gushes with talent. The beautiful and soaring score from Jason Robert Brown is both moving and engaging, pulling the audience in and truly conveying the emotions of the complex characters. The only downside of the show is the sets, which are manually manipulated by cast members throughout the production. They are a little too simplistic; and the need for the actors to shift them from one end of the stage to the other comes off as a little cheap. Regardless, by the end of the show, I found myself incredibly moved and connected to each character of the story. And in a time when many musicals come off as trite and superficial, Bridges of Madison County is surprisingly fresh and excitingly phenomenal!

rockyWC2 ROCKY: The Musical. I have never been a major fan of the story of Rocky. There’s nothing wrong with it per se; but the underlying message of the underdog being triumphant and the shy and quirky girl falling for the big dumb jock is certainly a little overdone. What attracted me to the Broadway show was simple–the composers of the music! Ragtime is one of my all-time favorite Broadway shows. And with the same composers (Stephen Flaherty and Lynn Aherns) on board, there was no way I was missing Rocky. And guess what? I’m glad I didn’t! This show is A LOT of fun! No, you won’t leave the theater with a new knowledge of an amazing piece of history or even something of significance; but you WILL leave with a smile! And the performances of the leads (Andy Karl as the Italian Stallion and Margo Seibert as his love interest Adrian) are strong. Both have great voices and give convincing interpretations of their respective characters. The music of the show is pop-rock in style and is catchy and fun. The sets (when they’re working–there were two long technical holds during the performance I sat through) are breath-taking and incredibly technologically complex. And the final fight scene, complete with a regulation-sized boxing ring that extends several rows into the orchestra (the rows are cleared and audience members transferred to seating areas on the stage), had the audience cheering. Although the overhead projection of the event and large flat television screens which float down to the stage throughout the show to illustrate media coverage of the fight threaten the show’s time setting, which is supposed to be in the late 1970’s. And there are some issues with pacing in the show currently; it is a little too long. Rocky’s training scenes are a little repetitive and monotonous; and the setup of the matchup, cooked-up by Apollo Creed’s promoter, is way underdeveloped and seems plopped together and rushed in haste. These issues are easy fixes, however, and I expect these kinks will be smoothed before opening night. Rocky really is a TON of fun! Don’t go see this show expecting an intellectual exercise. Relax, eat a little popcorn, and sit-back and enjoy the guilty pleasure Rocky provides.

1.167575 Machinal. Roundabout’s production of Machinal, which is loosely based on the true story of the life of husband-killer and executed American criminal Ruth Snyder, is a haunting work of theater. Rebecca Hall’s portrayal of Young Woman (names are never revealed in the show) is flawless. And the show’s rotating set is literally mind-boggling and incredibly effective at augmenting the story itself and further demonstrates the mechanistic nature of the main character’s unraveling life. Young Woman obviously suffers from mental illness. When she begins to have loose associations (the actual clinical term for the condition in which a psychotic individual links words together that are often situationally unrelated), the set darkens and only Hall’s face is spotlighted during the event. As a nurse practitioner, I immediately diagnosed the character’s condition and appreciated this highly effective manner of allowing the audience to literally enter the character’s psychology. Machinal isn’t a fun show. It isn’t a show that lightens one’s mood. But it does demonstrate a powerful story of a disturbed person during a time in American history when women were treated much differently than they are today. It is a haunting and amazingly crafted work and should not be missed.

bc90f2b9d985c8a6d6ae2ab18c833036 All The Way. I decided last minute to see this show. And I am really glad I did. Bryan Cranston’s performance as Lyndon Johnson surely puts him as the frontrunner for the Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play. The story follows Johnson’s unofficial term as President immediately following the assassination of President Kennedy up to his election night victory. An amazing cast brings the story to life. There’s just too many good actors for me to even begin to mention here. And they all provide stand-out performances. The book tells the story of a tumultuous time in American history when the civil rights movement was in full-gear and Johnson was working feverishly to pass a civil rights bill that would pave the way for racial equality throughout the nation. The set (a round congressional appearing arena with the Oval Office at center) is simple yet appropriate. The show could be trimmed down a little; it seems to drag a little bit at the end. But, the amazing performances provided by this amazingly talented ensemble cast makes every minute an absolute joy.

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Article Examining Vaccination Guidelines in Gay/Bi Men Published

Filed under: Health and Social Policy,Nursing Science — Dr. Christopher Blackwell @ 03:11

 

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Great news! My original article “Vaccination Guidelines for Gay and Bisexual Men” has been published in this month’s issue of The Nurse Practitioner: The American Journal of Primary Healthcare. The article explores current vaccination recommendations for gay and bisexual men and provides strategies to reduce barriers to vaccination in this population. Access the article by clicking on the link below:

Blackwell, C.W. (2014). Vaccination guidelines in gay and bisexual men. The Nurse Practitioner; The American Journal of Primary Healthcare 39 (2), 34-39. DOI: 10.1097/01.NPR0000441910.01654.2b.

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