A Celebration of GLBT Theatre in Ten Minute One Acts TWO EVENINGS OF READINGS ONLY! September 14th and September
21st 7:00pm curtain (Both evenings of readings will include
a talk back) MADCOW THEATRE, ORLANDO
Baby Summer by
Michael Ramirez – New York , NY Directed by Margaret
Nolan Featuring: Tiffany Weagly and Heather Wilkie
The Boileroom by Bill Cosgriff – New York ,
NY Directed by Seth Kubersky Featuring: Michael Marinaccio and Kevin Kriegel
Songs
My Brother Sang by Myra Slotnick – Provincetown , MA Directed by Laura Lippman Featuring: Jessica Miano
Kruel, Ryan Dowd Urch, Corey Volence and Laura Lippman
Daniel(le)
– A Monologue Play by Asher Wyndham – Tempe , AZ Directed by Lester Malizia Featuring: Nicholas Wuerhmann*
Godfrey – A Short Play by Ian
August – Highland Park , NJ Directed by John DiDonna Featuring: Jessica Pawli and John DiDonna
This Functional Family by Tait Moline – Orlando , FL Directed by Chad Lewis Featuring: Kyla Swanberg,
Tim DeBaun, Steven Johnson, Janine Klein and Chris McIntyre
Kids 'R Us by Josh Levine – New York , NY Directed by Rob Ward Featuring: Jimmy Moore, Blake Logan*,
Gina DiRoma and Tiffany Weagly
Director of New Works
– John DiDonna Stage Manager – Jennifer Bonner
With special thanks to The Dramatist Guild,
Mad Cow Theatre, and the amazing playwrights from around our world who sent in submissions. Your words need to be heard.
* Actors appear courtesy of
the Actors' equity Stage Reading Guidelines

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| Mad Cow Theatre, 105 S. Magnolia Ave., Orlando, FL |
CLICK the Scarecrow for directions to Mad Cow Theatre

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| Not all perforners and directors are GLBT... We love DIVERSITY! |
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Order your tickets online through our production partner:

Some more of OUR history,,,
The lambda
 One symbol which continues to remain popular is the lower case Greek letter lambda. The symbol was originally chosen
by the Gay Activists Alliance of New York in 1970. The GAA was a group which broke away from the larger Gay Liberation Front
at the end of 1969, only six months after it's foundation in response to the Stonewall Riots. While the GLF wanted to
work side by side with the black and women's liberation movements to gain unity and acceptance, the GAA wanted to focus
their efforts more concisely on only Gay and Lesbian issues.
Because of its official adoption by the GAA, which sponsored public events for the gay community, the lambda soon
became a quick way for the members of the gay community to identify each other. The reasoning was that the lambda would easily
be mistaken for a college fraternity symbol and ignored by the majority of the population. Eventually though, the GAA headquarters
was torched by an arsonist, destroying not only the building but all of the organization's records, and the movement never
recovered from the loss. The symbol, however, lived on.
Now what the symbol means or meant when it was introduced are a prime topic for speculation and a morass of public
rumoring. Some of the more popular rumors are: - Simply,
the Greek letter "L" stands for "liberation."
- The Greek Spartans believed that the lambda represented unity.
- The Romans took it as meaning "the light of knowledge shining into the darkness of ignorance."
- The charged energy of the gay movement. This stems from the lambda's use in
chemistry and physics to denote energy in equations.
- The
synergy which results when gays and lesbians work together towards a common goal (a gestalt theory which also stems from the
physics-energy theory)
- The notion that straights and
gays, or gays and lesbians, or any pairing of these three, are on different wavelengths when it comes to sex, sexuality, or
even brain patterns. This again comes from the lambda's presence in chemistry and physics, where it is sometimes used
to represent the wavelength of certain types of energy.
- An
iconic rendering of the scales of justice and the constant force that keeps opposing sides from overcoming each other. The
hook at the bottom of the right leg would then signify the action and initiative needed to reach and maintain balance.
- The lambda is also though by some to have appeared on the
shields of Spartan and/or Theben warriors. The Thebes version is more popular because, as legend has it, the city- state organized
the Theban Band from groups of idealized lovers, which made them extremely fierce and dedicated warriors. Eventually however,
the army was completely decimated by Kind Philip II, but was later honored by his son Alexander the Great.
There is no actual evidence though that the lambda was ever associated with this
group. However, there was Hollywood movie in the 1962s called The 300 Spartans starring Diane Baker, Richard Egan, and Ralph Richardson that showed Spartan
warriors who appeared to have lambdas on their shields.
Whatever the lambda meant or means today, it's everywhere. Even though at one time it acquired a strictly male
connotation, it is used by both gays and lesbians today. Back in December of 1974, the lambda was officially declared the
international symbol for gay and lesbian rights by the International Gay Rights Congress in Edinburgh, Scotland.
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