Jade
Esteban Estrada
sounds tired on
the telephone
Wednesday
afternoon.
Exhaustion, he
admits, has been
plaguing him.
The beast has
followed him
through months
and months on
the road as one
of America's
most prolific
gay performers.
The road-weary
Estrada has no
problem with
being so tired
-- he's doing
what he loves.
"I had my 135th
performance just
a couple of
weeks ago," said
Estrada, "and
when I did, I
was just
thinking there's
nothing in the
world I'd rather
be
doing."
Right now the
Latino pop star,
gay rights
activist, and
award-winning
playwright and
actor is in the
middle of four
nights of shows
in St. Louis
performing his
one-man theater
pieces, "ICONS:
The Lesbian and
Gay History of
the World, Vol.
1" and "ICONS:
The Lesbian and
Gay History of
the World, Vol.
2."
The St. Louis
run ends on
Sunday. On
Monday and
Tuesday, Estrada
brings the shows
to Cape
Girardeau with
performances at
Independence
Place at 8 p.m.
Both shows tell
world history
through the
perspective of
famous
homosexuals,
such as Ellen
Degeneres,
Michaelangelo,
Oscar Wilde,
Gertrude Stein,
Greek
poet Sappho,
Susan B.
Anthony, 9/11
hero Mark
Bingham, Billie
Jean King and
Alexander the
Great.
Like acting,
history is a
subject that
compels Estrada.
"If I had a
perfect life, I
would be a
history teacher
during the
daytime and
doing theater at
night."
Through the
performance,
Estrada switches
between
characters,
requiring a
great acting
range. "ICONS"
is not a drag
show
performance, but
an educational
and entertaining
look at the
homosexual's
role in history.
The performances
will be a return
to Cape
Girardeau for
Estrada, who
brought "ICONS
Vol. 1" to the
city in November
2003. The
reception, he
said, was
great, which is
one reason he
decided to come
back.
Denise Eaker,
a.k.a. the Delta
Dyke, is the
person
responsible for
bringing Estrada
back to Cape
Girardeau. Eaker
runs the gay,
lesbian,
bisexual and
transgender
community center
called Visions
of Pride, a
place set on
"three acres of
pride" on Garden
Lane.
"Know that you
are loved and
never alone," is
the message
Eaker tries to
put out to the
local gay
community.
Visions of Pride
disseminates
that message
through a crisis
line, community
activities and
charitable
giving. Right
now, Visions is
working to get
together
disaster relief
for victims of
Hurricane
Katrina.
Eaker said the
gay community in
Cape Girardeau
needs to assert
itself and get
over an identity
crisis that has
caused local
gays to hide in
the closet.
"I'm asking the
gay community to
go out on a
limb," Eaker
said of the
show. "If you're
queer you need
to get off the
sidelines and
stop hiding.
It's time
to stand up and
let our voices
be heard.
"'ICONS' shows
us where we've
been, where
we're going and
where we could
go. I'm not
asking people to
march up and
down Broadway.
I'm asking to
understand their
culture, I'm
asking them to
understand what
their hopes and
fears are."
While 'ICONS'
addresses the
history,
"Somebody Else's
Life" explores
the hopes and
fears. Written
and performed by
St. Louis gay
theater guru
Jerry
Rabushka,
"Somebody Else's
Life" consists
of three
snapshots of gay
life -- from the
controversy over
gay marriage to
the isolation
experienced by
gay teens.
Rabushka plays
six characters
in the
half-comedy,
half-drama,
including a
conservative
religious
husband and wife
living next door
to a married gay
couple
and a gay teen
ousted by
friends at a
party after his
first homosexual
kiss.
The experiences
portrayed in
"Somebody Else's
Life" really hit
home with the
gay community,
said Rabushka,
especially the
last act about
the teen.
"Just about
every gay person
knows when
you're a
16-year-old in
high school,
your life is
hell," said
Rabushka. "They
can relate to
that."
While larger
metro areas have
chances for
homosexuals to
see gay theater,
those chances
are rare in
smaller towns
like Cape
Girardeau, said
Rabushka.
"Everybody's gay
in L.A., they
say, and you're
not a big deal
there," Rabushka
says with a
chuckle. "You
come down to
Cape Girardeau
and it's not
something you
see every day."
The message of
both productions
is geared not
only toward
gays. Rabushka,
Estrada and
Eaker want the
straight
community to
check the shows
out, too.
The race,
religion and
sexual
orientation of
the characters
isn't the main
point, said
Estrada.
"These are key
figures who all
shaped who we
are today,"
Estrada said.
"This is a story
of the history
of the world."
Estrada sees a
lot of injustice
in history --
from slavery to
the Holocaust to
the oppression
of women to
religious
warfare to the
gay rights
controversies of
today (by the
way, he doesn't
condone gay
marriage, just
civil unions).
Even though time
has passed and
technology has
grown, the
conflict has
just taken new
forms.
Estrada wants
the world to
know progress
has been made,
but unless the
lessons of
history are
heeded, the
progress may be
lost.
As he tells the
audience at the
end of his show,
"History has a
funny way of
repeating
itself."
Rabushka hopes
his play can
help the
straight world
understand that
homosexuals are
humans, just
like heteros,
with the same
hopes, dreams
and
insecurities,
shared by all
members of the
human race.
©2005 Southeast
Missourian