IMAGE: Orbit Room – Gay Chicago May 21, 1987
Theatrical delights this week include "Last Summer at Bluefish Cove" by Jane Chambers at Footsteps Theater Company, 1234 N. Sherman; William Shakespeare's "Macbeth" at the Court Theatre, University of Chicago, 5535 S. Ellis; and "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom" at the Edgewater Theatre Center, 1020 W. Bryn Mawr.
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Articles from "Don't Miss: Events in the News" in Windy City Times:
"Alternative AIDS Therapies Presented
Mary Kay Ryan, co-founder of the AIDS Alternative Health Project, will discuss Eastern medicine, bodywork, massage, nutrition, and other alternative and holistic therapies for persons with HIV infection and AIDS. Jointly sponsored by Howard Brown Memorial Clinic, Horizons Community Services, and AAHP, the presentation will be held Thursday, March 17, at 7:30 p.m. at a location to be announced."
"Mishima's 'Love and Death' to be shown
The Experimental Film Coalition will show Yukio Mishima's "Rite of Love and Death' on Friday, March 18 at 8 p.m. at the Randolph Street Gallery, 756 N. Milwaukee Ave. Mishima cast himself in the lead role for a drama contrasting traditional Japanese ritual restraint against the emotional excesses of the poet/warrior's life. Almost biographical, the film graphically depicts the hebestod of a disgraced soldier and his wife in a grisly foreshadowing of the artist's own suicide three years later. Admission $4."
"'Evita' to Benefit AIDS Efforts
Proceeds from the Tuesday, March 22, performance of 'Evita' at the Marriott Lincolnshire will be donated to Actors Equity and the League of Chicago Theaters as part of the 'Season of Concern' series of benefits intended to raise $1 million for AIDS research, preventative education and the care of PWA's. Tickets are $25."
1994
Obituary in Gay Chicago reads:
"Richard Allen 'Rico' Chin, 41, died on Saturday, March 5, of a fast-growing Metastatic Cancer.
"Mr. Chin was born on September 11, 1952, in Kentucky, but Chicago has been his home for many years. He also has lived in Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Puerto Rico, Evansville, and New York.
"As a youth, he was a gay activist since the time he was 12.
"In the early 1970s, he worked for the Barbara Beckman Center as a volunteer on a hotline. The Barbara Beckman Center later evolved into the Horizons Center. He was on the board of directors for the Rogers Park Gay Community Center, and later was a staff member for the Rogers Park-Edgewater Gay Alliance.
"In 1987 and 1988, he worked in the Spanish community as a street worker who helped with AIDS education. He was an AIDS buddy who helped more than a dozen dying men with household chores so that they could continue living at home.
"In 1971 Mr. Chin and his former lover John Cantrall, were arrested for kissing at the Greyhound Bus Terminal. Their simple act of affection became big news for that time and was the inspiration for the annual gay kiss-in, which took place at the Daley Center from 1971 to 1979 during Pride Week.
"He was politically concerned and was a staunch Democrat. He was very active in the first campaign to elect Harold Washington for Mayor.
"One of his hobbies was collecting newspaper clippings, many of which have been donated to the Chicago Historical Society and the Art Institute. He was a self-taught intellect who could hold a conversation with anyone and would. He loved Chicago architecture, language, writing, and the fine arts.
"Mr. Chin was a very special person who was a true individual. Best known for his warm-heartedness, he genuinely cared about all types of people and had many friends.
"He will be missed and remembered by many, especially his grandmother, two sisters, and his partner/lover Rafael Valdez.
"A memorial service will be held at a later date that is yet to be arranged."
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