Category Archives: Boston

Boy Meets Vogue Boy

He is known now as the “Vogue Boy“, but back in the summer of 1991 Robert Jeffrey was just a kid on a family vacation. Decked out in an ensemble fitting for Hampton Beach, New Hampshire – shorts, a T-shirt, and sneakers with socks – the young Robert looked like any other boy on vacation with his family, but when offered the chance to lip-sync his favorite song, he became someone else. The little gay boy in each of us came out at that moment, as he channeled Madonna’s ‘Vogue’ in front of a blue-screen at the Hampton Beach Casino.

“VOGUE BOY”: ME AT NINE, PERFORMING TO MADONNA IN SUMMER ’91! from Robert Jeffrey / Angelo de Vries on Vimeo.

Two decades later, Mr. Jeffrey posted the video online in commemoration of the twentieth anniversary of ‘Truth or Dare‘ and the response was overwhelming. When watching it for the first time, my eyes welled up with tears. It resonated so strongly with me – and countless other gay men – that it was like looking at a piece of my own past had it gone the way it should have – had I been so brave and not cared what anyone else thought. Here was something I had done in my bedroom, secretly, on my own, yet he was doing it not only in front of people, but on video, forever committing this moment to history. And not just doing it, but doing it with such joyful abandon and glee that it was impossible not to be swept up into the magnificence and beauty of it. This was a boy on the cusp of finding shame, but not quite there yet. For most of us, the happiest moments of childhood come right before we learn embarrassment, before society teaches us such shame. Here was that moment, captured exuberantly on film for all time, then put away for twenty years.

Reading further into how he came to be performing a Madonna song so publicly, I also envied how supportive and loving his parents had to have been (I would subsequently discover that his Mom bought Madonna’s ‘Sex’ book and gave it to him for his birthday when he was old enough to have it – now THAT is one cool mother). I suppose a few of my tears fell for the longing of that, and the happiness I felt for someone to have been so lucky and so embraced, so early in his life.

After watching the video again recently, and delving into the writings on his website, I was struck by how parallel our lives had been at key moments. The stories were pieced together by various pop-culture mile-post moments, and many were eerily similar to what I had been going through around the year 1996, when we were both in the Boston area. Our time there matched up in uncanny ways confirmed by our tendency to link events in our lives with the career trajectory of Madonna. Back then we were both infatuated with gentlemen who did not return our affections, at the same time that we were picking up the ‘Evita’ soundtrack (painstakingly, and painfully, recalled in the Madonna Timelines for ‘You Must Love Me‘ and ‘Don’t Cry for Me Argentina‘) – and in Mr. Jeffrey’s pieces on the night he saw ‘Evita’ at the Cheri Theater (where I took my Mom to see it as well, the very night I officially came out to her) and his never-to-be-love-affair with another boy.

At those seminal moments in our lives, what a difference it would have made to have known that someone else was going through something similar, at the same exact time. Would we have been friends had we met then? Who can tell? It’s one of those wistful sighs of the universe that we simply must trust was meant to have been, and if we weren’t supposed to have known each other until now, there must be a reason for it.

What made those angst-ridden years so difficult was not just being lonely in terms of love, but also somewhat lost without any close gay friends. For a lot of gay guys who feel shunned by the world, especially those courageous enough to be completely who they are, the only people they feel close to are other gay men. Such is the way in which lifelong friendships are established, with the trust and understanding that only someone in similar circumstances could fathom. I never had that. To this day, aside from my husband, my closest friends are straight. For that reason, and in so many other ways, I do wish we had met back then, to have been friends in the lonely years in which we searched for love, in which we grew up, in which we became the men we are today. But we can’t go back. We can only remember, and move forward.

A few years, and several love affairs later, we both saw our idol for the first time in Boston, when she was on her Drowned World Tour. It was 2001, and we must have been screaming for her at the same time – another moment where our lives geographically and emotionally connected in ways of which we were completely unaware. Can some of the loneliness of the past be replaced by a friend who should have, or at the very least could have been there all along? Of course not, but while we may not be able to erase the loneliness that once was, we might be able to heal and come to terms with it in ways that previously proved impossible.

I’m not sure what to make of all these nearly-shared experiences, the moments and timetables that so strangely dove-tailed but in which we never quite met. This is my little tribute to the boy who showed off when I showed shyness, who dared when I was diminished, and who danced when I dreamed. Hopefully, it’s also an introduction to a new friend who feels like he was there all along.

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Holiday Stroll

This year I’ve given into the feel-good joy that most people experience at Christmastime. Usually I try to Grinch out until the last possible moment, but that becomes its own onerous effort after a while, and sometimes it’s easier to give in and go with the flow. As such, I set aside last weekend for our Boston Holiday stroll, when Kira and I take a long walk through the city, stopping at various places for food and drink, doing a little holiday shopping, and taking part in the festive merriment that marks the season.

There is no set schedule, no tight time table, and not even a rough idea of where we’ll go or end up. I’m not usually comfortable with that (being a Virgo through and through), but with Kira, and at this time of the year, it’s all right. In fact, it’s welcome.

There are enough schedules to keep, enough structured events and specially-coordinated outfits to wear in the coming weeks. This was a time to keep it all casual and fun, and like so many of our best times it went completely unplanned.

By the time dusk descended, the snow had stopped. Christmas decorations were all around, and store windows glowed in the gathering darkness, their lights spilling out onto the sidewalks.

At the end of a cold day, and the start of a long night, an old-fashioned by the fire is one of the coziest notions. It warms the heart and the hearth, and cures whatever coldness lingers within.

The glow of the holidays is upon us.

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Winter Wonderland

It must have started snowing at the break of dawn, for by the time we awoke there was already a pristine white dusting on the cars and streets. Looking out of the window, I could see that this was the perfect snowfall – slow, calm, windless, and peaceful – more picturesque than powerful. Ideal for a holiday walk through the city of Boston. Bundled up in scarves and hats, Kira and I stepped outside. I had a loose idea of where we were headed, and the first stop was a quick stroll through the Boston Public Garden.

Most of the time I’ve spent in the Public Garden has been during the sunnier months, and on the sunnier days. It is decidedly less magical in the pouring rain and blowing wind. On this morning, however, conditions were holiday-postcard-worthy. A little snowfall lends a lot of enchantment, and on this barely-snowy day it was a treat to see the Garden in its pre-winter light.

There’s something about snowfall and willow trees that speaks to the heart of beauty. With or without leaves.

The gnarled trunks of elderly trees give off an other-worldly glow, their architecture highlighted by the bright layer of snow. The pond, not yet drained or frozen over, still provides a home to various waterfowl. We are never quite alone in the Garden.

At the edge of the pond, where the three states of water meet and co-mingle, a reflection of the city I so love.

This is the sort of snowfall that I like best, and even Kira, in her sockless flats, admits it makes a beautiful scene. We huddle close and traipse along the winding path that will lead us to Charles Street, to a Tibetan store that I know carries the warmest pairs of woolen gloves and mittens (because it must get frigid in Tibet).

As we exit the iron gates of the Garden and cross the street to Beacon Hill, it feels like we’ve gone back to two turns of the century ago. I just wish I’d thought to bring my bustle.

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A Rose in the Snow

It’s fitting that this week begins with another Christmas rose – even if it’ s a different one from last week’s. This particular specimen was not in the Back Bay of Boston, but somewhere in Beacon Hill, on the snowy Saturday that my brother and I just spent in town. We picked up my friend Kira on Friday night and did some holiday shopping at the Wrentham Outlets, before celebrating our annual holiday weekend back in Boston with a couple of old-fashioneds at City Bar. The night was brutally cold, with a biting wind, but the condo was warm, candles were lit, and a bit of whiskey can warm the wickedest heart.

When we woke on Saturday morning, the snow was already falling down…

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The Shimmering Dusk of Boston

It was around this time of the year when we closed on the condo in Boston, many years ago (1995), and something about the late afternoon light of November still brings me back to the first few nights I spent there. Furnished with nothing but a cot and a radio alarm clock to keep me company, it was a stark start. There weren’t any chairs, so I had to eat standing up at the kitchen counter (if I ate at home at all). The overhead lighting only covered the living room, kitchen and bathroom – the bedroom was dark at night. It sounds too minimalist to have ever been much of a comfort, yet it remains one of my favorite memories.

I’ve said this before, and it holds true: it is the silence and quiet I miss most. There is a different quiet now. All of the furniture and window treatments and accessories add their own noise – and comfort – to the place. Back in the beginning, there was nothing to distract. Not even a bed on which to sleep. And for all the ado made of my supposed affinity for luxury, it was perfectly fine. In fact, it was exactly what I needed. When I think back on the most calm and settled moments of my life, that period easily ranks among them. Even with school and the insanity of an almost-full-time retail job (in the busiest shopping time of the year), I would walk into the emptiness of that condo and feel perfectly content – and hopeful.

It remains a haven, a retreat, a safe place – and after years of furnishing, it now holds treasures of reassurance, corners and hidden shelves of special memories, of people and parties so faded that only a brief snippet of laughter can be recalled, or the way a bouquet of flowers shone in the morning light. When the dusk falls, I’ll make my way into the bedroom, leaving the lights off for a moment, as they were so long ago, and watch as the sun goes down. It is my favorite place of contemplation.

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The Black Squirrel

While in Boston this past weekend, I brought my brother to the Public Garden and showed him the spot where Andy and I got married. The Garden has different charms in the Fall – the colorfully changed leaves of the trees, the sun slanting deeper in the sky, and this special guest – the black squirrel. I had not seen any black squirrels in the Garden before now. They had been prolific in Washington, DC, where Andy and I watched them with the rapt interest of the novelty they were to us.

Hopefully this guy (or gal) will be here when Andy makes it back into town.

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Non-Nude Odds & Not-Nearly-Naked Ends

This Sunday concludes one of the busier weeks of my year, from a few days in New York seeing Madonna and Suzie, and checking out The Out hotel, to an evening at ‘Wicked‘, followed by the Beaujolais Nouveau Wine Festival, and capped by a weekend in Boston, seeing friends and family, old and new. As I sit here in the living room, it feels in many ways like the day after a party – satiated and exhaustedly happy, if slightly regretful that it’s over as fast as it started. The good part is that the holidays – and many more meetings with friends and family – is just beginning. There is enough wickedness in the world to warrant an open-embracing of all things warm and comfortable. No matter how pretty the messenger bag or how sweetly-scented the Tom Ford Private Blend cocktail, the only thing I ever wanted for Christmas was more time with those I love. (Okay, aside from the items on the Christmas list that I’ll post soon enough.)

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A Bed to Rest My Head

We need a new bed in Boston. The one we’ve had, purchased way back in early 1995, has run its course, performed admirably, and is on its last squeaky legs. It’s also just a Full size, which makes it slightly cramped for when Andy and I visit together. (One of the drawbacks to sleeping in a King size bed at home is that you can’t go back to a Full. Ever.) While we certainly don’t need a King size for the condo (nor would the size of the room accommodate it), the linen set we have, and the headboard I crafted myself, are fit for a Queen. Or two.

I’m going to set some savings aside and see if Mom and Dad will go in for half. Bed sets have gone up substantially since 1995, and I simply cannot do it alone. Along with a new television (not at all a priority, but it will be nice to get rid of the two-ton bulbous-backed set that we probably couldn’t even give away at this point), the condo should be set for another ten years. As a home-away-from-home, that is a comforting thought.

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To Falmouth Via Boston

This weekend I’m heading back out of town, en route to Falmouth, MA to see my friend Kim in a local production of ‘Sunset Blvd.’ (always tricky to do one of my favorite musicals right!) Along the way, I’m spending the night in Boston and hanging out with Kira. Low-key and relaxing, and hopefully somewhat recuperative after a cold I can’t seem to shake.

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Worse for Sunday Wear

The Sunday morning after a fun weekend in Boston is often a rough time. Especially when it’s pouring rain.
If I hadn’t had to get back to upstate NY, I would have climbed back into bed with a book.
Instead I showered, got dressed, and hit the road – happy about none of it.
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Life & Death in the Public Garden

Last weekend I made a quick trip to Boston for my friend JoAnn’s Fall Party (more on that later…) As per usual, I found myself back in the Boston Public Garden where the following murder scene had only recently taken place. A squirrel, face down in the grass, had died – or, more likely, been killed. Nearby, other squirrels chattered and ran about excitedly, agitated and bothered for reasons obvious and less so.
A few moments later, I saw why. At the edge of the pond, a badelynge of ducks squawked and broke ranks with a disruptive splash, and from the midst of them a hawk swooped through, almost gripping a squirrel in its talons before alighting on a nearby branch. Here, then, was the Fall Hawk – I’d been waiting since the start of summer to see some sort of closure from its predecessors in upstate New York. It sat menacingly above me, preening itself and keeping its keen eyes focused on all the activity below.
I looked around for the squirrel that got away, and at the others that now sent out warning clucks of danger, not that there would be anything I could do if the hawk were to spot one of these rascally creatures and zoom in on it. I’d always thought of the Boston Public Garden as one of the safer spots for a city animal to live. It seems it’s just as precarious as any other.
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Waiting for My First Job

Sitting by the elevator on the upper floor of the Limited/Express/Structure building in Fanueil Hall in the Fall of 1995, I listened to ‘Waiting in Vain’ by Annie Lennox. To this day, I cannot listen to it without thinking rather fondly of that time in my life, when I got my first official job on my own. For that moment, on the leather chair by the elevator, Ms. Lennox was wailing about waiting, as I sat waiting for my final interview of the day.

I’d spent the entire morning, and the first part of the afternoon, traipsing through Quincy Market and the tourist traps, so desperately did I love Boston and want something to do with it. I came to the epicenter of tourist life, because despite its cheesy trappings, there was something old-school and comforting about the area where my Mom had first taken me and my brother so many years ago. I stopped in at every bull market and store front, inquiring whether anyone was hiring, scoping out places where I thought I might fit in (there were none), and filling out applications on all sides of the cobblestone walks. It felt hopeless. No one was interested, no one was hiring, and no one was impressed with my backpack. (There, you see, I wasn’t always what I am today.)

As I neared the very end of my path, which was right where I started, the stand-alone multi-floored building that housed the Limited and Express and Bath and Body works, and what was then Structure, stood blankly but forbiddingly to my left. I looked up at it, shrugged, and gave it my last bit of effort.

For some strange reason, the idea of working in a clothing store had never crossed my mind. I was looking for a quieter gift shop of some sort, where I could lazily lounge around selling bits of Boston to hapless tourists. Yet suddenly the universe sent me up to one of the top floors, where the elevator opened to a cove of men’s sweaters, displayed pristinely on a black table before me. I stepped out into the rather empty store, where music played and display lights sparkled. Lifted up from the ground, I felt safely removed from the city – in the same way I’ve always felt when looking out from the window of any high-rise in Boston. A sudden, small sanctuary ~ a respite from the unfruitful day. I asked one of the workers if they might be hiring. He told me to wait while he got a manager.

This is when I sat down and listened to Annie Lennox. I shifted in my seat as she sang about waiting in vain for love. Around the corner, a woman came walking toward me. I felt tired and bedraggled, at the end of my tether, and ridiculous with a college kid’s back-pack strapped to my shoulder, but she shook my hand, introduced herself as Barrie, and took me into the back office. We sat down and she had me fill out an application, then asked me some questions. Was this an interview then? I had no idea. It was my first lesson that very few things in life would ever be explicitly spelled out, particularly when it came to jobs. There was a code language involved, more ‘How-would-you-feel-about’ or ‘Might-you-be-interested’ than ‘Do-you-want-the-job-because-we-want-to-hire-you?’ So much obtuse carefulness made my head spin, but I was too tired to care, and I figured nothing would come of this anyway, so I just recited the most honest answers I could, my mind already on the commute back to the dorm.

“Why do you want to work here?” she asked as one of the final questions.

I paused, mentally running through the stock answers of building a better fashion world, helping others in their quest for sartorial improvement, or my simple dream of working in Boston – the one I’d had since I was a child. But none of them seemed to impress, so I blurted out the most basic truth that came to mind:

“Because I like to shop, and I’m good at it.”

I laughed as I heard myself say it out loud. She stopped me.

“No, that’s great,” she reassured me. “The best workers we have are the ones who love to shop, who know the merchandise, and who know how to talk to people about clothes.” I stopped laughing. For perhaps the first time in my life, the notion that I might actually be great at something truly astounded me. I’d been good at a great many things, but great at none of them. Here, for the first time, without any help from parents or friends, in a store and a city where nobody yet knew me, someone – a stranger no less – saw something of value in what I might do. I will always remember and be thankful to Barrie for that – she gave me my first chance to see something that no one else had seen, even myself.

In a month, I would become their number one performer, opening up more credit cards than anyone else, racking in the highest ADS (average sale amount), and getting the most shifts of anyone other than management (about 35 hours a week – which I didn’t realize at the time was practically a full-time job) – all the while going to Brandeis full-time. My days, and most of the nights, were full – with commuting, working, and school – and I look back at that schedule then and wondered how I did it. At the time, I didn’t even notice. I loved it, I was good at it, and, for the first time, I felt like I belonged.

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Light Caught in a Doorknob

My favorite place to be in the early afternoon is our bedroom in Boston, when the sun is slanting through the blinds and filling the room with light. Granted, I am not there as often as I’d like, and perhaps that is the reason for its pull. This weekend, my heart will heed that call.

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Is This Even Legal?

(I was holding off on writing about this when it looked like Ticketmaster and the TD Garden might make right for what they did, but it appears they aren’t going to do that, so here’s the story of our piss-poor ticket experience.)
When I ordered the tickets from Ticketmaster for the Madonna show at Boston’s TD Garden, the only ones left were with a side view. I’d had side views before – so long as no obstruction was noted, they were always fine. In fact, they were usually good for getting behind-the-scenes views you don’t normally get, which for an uber-fan like me is always cool. Even though they looked like they were somewhat behind the stage, rather than to the side, I still figured we’d get a good enough vantage point. Of course, it can’t hurt to ask, so when we got to the TD Garden, I went to a ticket counter and asked if there was a possibility of an upgrade. I was told no, but that our seats should be fine, as even the side views were pretty good. Emboldened by this encouragement, I relaxed a little, until we found our seats and realized we could not see any of the main stage. I mean – none of it. An enormous bank of lights was set right in front of our section. This wasn’t just a side view – this was a blatantly obstructed view – and none of it was noted on the tickets at the time of sale, or at any point thereafter, or I never would have purchased them. ($380 for two tickets happens to be a lot for me, even if it is Madonna.)
I tracked down an usher and said that our view was completely blocked, asking if there was anywhere else we could be seated, and she dismissed me saying that there were no other options as the show was sold out. She did not mention the option of talking to a manager or checking if there were any other spots in the building to afford a better view. At this point there were a number of disgruntled patrons, as our entire section could clearly not see anything. I hoped against hope that maybe, just maybe, this bank of lights would rise once the show began, and all would be well with the world – after all, how could they sell tickets that had such a blocked view with no mention or notation of it? At the very least, it was misleading, if not completely misrepresentative of what we were paying for.
Of course, those lights did not move. And those big side screens for the people in the way back? They were directly above our heads, so we didn’t even get to watch them. I was lucky enough to have an idea of what was going on (based on far too many YouTube sneak peeks), but Andy hadn’t a clue what was going on, and the show was effectively ruined for him (and would have been for me too if I didn’t have the luxury of seeing her again in New York later). My question is how could Ticketmaster and the TD Garden sell seats like this without any indication of the obstructed view? I thought that such things had to be clearly spelled out, otherwise a refund would be granted. At any rate, I’ll be looking into whether similar incidents have happened at the TD Garden and with Ticketmaster – I know I’m just one small insignificant voice in their ticket monopoly, but if we keep up enough of a battle, we may see some changes. And hopefully no one will have to miss a Madonna show ever again.
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