The Castro Theater
The city declared this remarkable Spanish Colonial structure
a landmark in 1977, calling it San Francisco’s
finest example of a 1920s movie palace. Inside the 1,600-seat
theater sports an awesome plaster ceiling resembling
a giant cloth canopy. The loyal, enthusiastic audience
revels in the theater’s opulence and the thrill
of seeing favorite classics as they were originally presented.
If you’re lucky, you’ll be at a performance
where the theater’s multi-pipe organ rises from
the orchestra pit and the organist regales moviegoers
before the show. Special events are also staged here,
such as concerts of the Gay Men’s Chorus, and numerous
film festivals, including the International Gay and Lesbian
Film Festival. 429 Castro St. (between 18th and 17th
Streets).
Telephone 415-621-6120
Glide Memorial United Methodist Church
Civil rights leader and pastor Cecil Williams changed history
by supporting homophile movement, and the church serves
as a meeting place for gay men, lesbians and transgender
people. Sunday services offer great Gospels Music for everyone.
330 Ellis.. Sunday celebration 9am and 11am.
Telephone 415-674-6000
Harvey Milk Plaza
A small brick plaza in front of the Castro and Market Muni
station was dedicated in 1985 to the slain civil rights
leader and former member of the San Francisco Board of
Supervisors. At the railway’s entrance is a plaque
giving a thumbnail history of Milk’s career in the
city--from 1973 when he opened a camera store at 575 Castro
(now occupied by a shop called Skin Zone) up to his assassination
at City Hall in November 1978. The memorial concludes movingly
with a quote from Milk: “I am all of us.” Markets
and Castro Streets.
James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center
Located in a wood-paneled circular room in the seven-story
San Francisco Public Library (known to locals as “New
Main”), this center is a landmark in homosexual history
as the first facility of its kind in the world to be housed
in a public institution. Named for its single largest benefactor,
a member of the Hormel meatpacking dynasty (and controversial
ambassadorial nominee in 1997), the center is dedicated
to research on gay and lesbian culture. Highlights of the
collection include material from filmmakers Rob Epstein
and Peter Adair, journalist Randy Shilts, pioneering lesbian
publishers Barbara Grier and Donna McBride of Naiad Press
and, of course, the personal papers and memorabilia of
San Francisco supervisor Harvey Milk. A dramatic 22-foot
trompe-I’oeil ceiling mural by Charley Brown and
Mark Evans, Into the Light, depicts gays and lesbians and
the names of famous homos throughout history.
M, F-Sa; Tu-Th 9am-8pm; Su noon-5pm. 100 Larkin St. (at Grove
St), Third floor. 415-557-4400.
Museum of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender
History: A Project of the GLBT History Society
The mission of the GLBT Historical Society is to collect,
preserve, exhibit, and otherwise make available to the public
historical, cultural, and artistic materials related to gay,
lesbian, bisexual, transgender communities, identities, and
practices, as well as of other sexual minorities. Their goal
is to build the world's first full-scale, professional quality
museum devoted to GLBT history and culture. 657 Mission St.,
Suite 300.
For more information telephone 415-777-5455 or visit www.glbthistory.org
Current Exhibition: The legacy of San Francisco Supervisor
Harvey Milk, the first openly gay person to hold high public
office in a major American city, is profiled in Saint Harvey:
The Life and Afterlife of a Modern Gay Martyr. Old photos,
posters and personal belongings including the blood-stained
suit he wore the day of his assassination are part of this
provocative exhibit.
National AIDS Memorial Grove
Located at the intersection of Bowling Green Drive and Middle
Drive East, the National AIDS Memorial Grove in Golden
Gate Park is the country’s only federally sanctioned
memorial commemorating the struggle against AIDS. For all
who come here it is a place to remember, to acknowledge
grief and to begin the process of healing. Volunteers conduct
tours of the grove every Thursday from 9:30am to 12:30pm.
Meet at Main Portal, intersection of Bowling Green and
Middle Dr.East.
For more information, telephone 415-750-8340 or 888-29-GROVE
or visit www.aidsmemorial.org
The New Conservatory Theatre Center
This theater school and performing arts complex offers professional
classes and productions. In addition to classrooms and
rehearsal spaces, the center has three theaters and an
art gallery featuring paintings, sculptures, and photographs
that changes quarterly. It’s also home to the “Pride
Season,” a subscriber-based gay and lesbian performance
program that has included the world premiere of the all-gay
version of Jack Heifner’s "Vanities," a revival of
John Herbert’s 1967 classic "Fortune and Men’s
Eyes," and Helen Eisenbach’s "Lesbianism Made Easy."
Exhibits: Tu-Sa noon-7pm. 25 Van Ness Ave. (between Oak and
Fell Streets). 415-861-8972.
The Pink Triangle Park
A new civil rights memorial in the heart of the Castro is
the first of its kind in the U.S. The Pink Triangle Park
memorial is dedicated to the remembrance of the millions
of gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgenders who were
victims of the Holocaust. Corner of Market and Castro,
behind the City Athletic Club.
For more information, telephone 415-823-0795 or visit www.PinkTrianglePark.net
Polk Street Gulch
From the end of World War II, when San Francisco’s
gay community first started to emerge in strong numbers,
until the early ‘70s when the action moved into the
Castro, Polk Gulch was the city’s most significantly
gay district. Today, it has some of the city’s more
ethnic gay bars and clubs and fine cafes to sit and watch
the passerbys. This area is also known to attract an array
of “Drag Queens” and transsexuals that frequent
the local clubs and discos.
San Francisco LGBT Community Center - Charles M. Holmes Campus
The San Francisco LGBT Community Center is home to a dynamic range of organizations
and activities that support the needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual,
and transgender (LGBT) individuals of every race, gender,
age, sexuality, and socio-economic status. The center promotes
activities that further define and advance the political,
social and cultural agenda of the LGBT community. It is located
at 1800 Market Street, M-F noon- 10pm, Sa 9am-10pm. Closed
Sunday.
For more information, telephone 415-865-5555 or visit www.sfcenter.org
San Francisco Gay Mens Chorus
The San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus made its official debut
on December 20, 1978, though it first appeared informally
singing a memorial hymn on the steps of the San Francisco
City Hall in late November 1978, the evening Mayor George
Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk were assassinated. Chorus
time is wrapped naturally around the concert season, from
September through the following August.
For more information, telephone 415-865-3650 or visit http://www.sfgmc.org.
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)
In January 1995, in celebration of its 60th year, the museum
relocated its collection from the Veteran’s Building
in the Civic Center to new, larger quarters across from
Yerba Buena Gardens. Its handsome brick box home was designed
by the internationally acclaimed Swiss architect Mario
Botta and features a 125-foot cylindrical skylight that
channels light down to the first-floor atrium court. More
than 17,000 works are housed on the museum’s four
floors; such queer and bisexual artists as Georgia O’Keeffe,
Larry Rivers, Frida Kahlo, Jasper Johns, Robert Mapplethorpe,
Andy Warhol, and Duane Michaels are represented in the
permanent collection, along with the likes of Picasso,
Matisse, Kandinsky, Calder, and Noguchi. And don’t
miss Jeff Koons’s exquisitely campy statue Michael
Jackson and Bubbles.
Admission; free first Tu of the month; half-price Th evening.
M-Tu, F-Su 11AM-6PM; Th 11AM-9PM; closed W. Tours daily.
151 Third St. (at Minna Street). 415-357-4000.
San Francisco Performing Arts Library & Museum
(PALM)
With a gallery and collection focusing on the Bay Area, this
nonprofit institution naturally has works by a bushel of
theater queens, including Leonard Bernstein, Jerry Herman,
Cole Porter, and Lorenz Hart. Make an appointment to view
videos or listen to recordings.
Free. W 1pm-7pm; Th-F: Sa noon-4pm. 399 Grove St. (at Gough
Street). 415-255-4800
San Francisco Women’s Center - Women’s
Building
The strength and history of women united is depicted in a
beautiful mural covering part of the building. The center,
a particularly important resource for women of color and
lesbians, is the site for regular meetings, readings, workshops,
and events. M-F. 3543 18th St. (between Valencia and Guerrero
Streets).
Telephone 415-431-1180
SoMa
The artsy SoMa District resembles New York City’s SoHo
district in more ways than one. Here, light industry has
been replaced by designer studios and nonprofit galleries.
This area is also the major enclave of factory-outlet stores.
SoMa, literally the area south of Market Street, is home
to some of the city’s mega-clubs, leather and bear
bars. Several big discos pulse with activity seven nights
a week. Also, leather and special interest stores abound
which make for fabulous specialty shopping.
Theater Rhinoceros
The oldest gay and lesbian theater company in America (founded
by Alan Estes in 1977) is known for its innovative stagings
of performance art, comedy, musicals, and drama. The main
theater, which has premiered works by Charles Ludlum, Jane
Chambers, and the Five Lesbian Brothers, seats about 150
people and puts on a five-work season September through
June; there’s a smaller studio theater in the basement.
The name comes from the “lavender rhino” (gentle
and peaceful until provoked), a symbol of the early gay
rights movement in Boston.
Box office: Tu-Su. 2926 16th St. (between South Van Ness
Avenue and Mission Street). 415-861-5079.
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts
The gay and lesbian communities are well represented at this
55,000-square-foot contemporary arts center, part of the
beautiful Yerba Buena Gardens complex. To date, the exciting
array of exhibitions, screenings, and performances has
featured a variety of artists, from Pomo Afro Homos to
the Stephen Petronio dance company and the San Francisco
Gay Men’s Chorus. 701 Mission St. (at Third Street).
Program information 415-978-2787.