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In brief 09/04/2024

For the win!

Football season is off to an electric start at the University of Virginia. Despite a two-hour severe-weather delay, the Cavaliers maintained momentum in their August 31 season opener, and  beat the University of Richmond 34-13.

Before kick-off, UVA held a moment of silence to honor Lavel Davis, D’Sean Perry, and Devin Chandler, who were killed in a November 13, 2022, shooting on Grounds. Former UVA running back Mike Hollins was also injured in the shooting, and returned for his final season with the Cavaliers last fall. Members of the Perry and Hollins families stood on the field for the coin toss.

The Hoos were strong out the gate, quickly shutting down the Spiders’ initial drive and immediately scoring a touchdown on their first possession. Starting quarterback Anthony Colandrea had an impressive showing alongside Trell Harris, Jack Griese, and Malachi Fields.

After the weather delay, the Cavaliers returned to the field and closed out the game with gusto, avoiding a repeat of last year’s post-monsoon loss to James Madison University.

The win was a welcome departure for the Hoos, who finished the 2023 season 3-9, tied for second worst in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

In addition to celebrating the team’s victory, fans at Scott Stadium also cheered the return of the “Adventures of Cavman” before kick-off. The beloved pre-game show is back in two-dimensional, stylized animation.

“I really appreciate the students and the fans that came back [after the weather delay],” said UVA Head Coach Tony Elliott in a post-game media conference. “Two hours and 18 minutes in a pretty bad storm, and a lot of folks decided to come back. … We wanna fill the entire stadium.”

The UVA football team’s next test comes September 7 on the road against Wake Forest, with kickoff scheduled for 7pm.

More guidelines

Photo by Sanjay Suchak.

The University of Virginia has suspended admissions and historical tours by the University Guide Service amid accusations of overly critical and “woke” content. The suspension of UGS was announced August 28, and is expected to extend through the fall semester.

While UVA has not connected the halt of UGS tours with the condemnations by conservative alumni organizations like The Jefferson Council, statements to various media outlets and UGS itself indicate tour content was an element in the decision. The organization is currently working with the administration to create a semester training plan that would allow UGS to resume tours in spring of 2025.

“The justification for these suspensions is based on the Administration’s view that UGS is failing to fulfill its delegated functions, particularly in terms of reliability and tour quality,” said UGS in a statement posted on social media. “We are continuing our work with administrators … so long as this relationship does not harm our ability to share an honest and complete account of UVA and its history.”

According to a statement to The New York Times, fall semester tours will be run by paid student interns hired by UVA. 

Pride time

After a summer of celebrations in other cities, it’s finally time for the Charlottesville Pride Festival. This year’s festivities at Ting Pavilion will run from noon to 7:30pm on Saturday, September 7, with highlights including live music, food, and drag performances. The event is open to all ages, though drag shows may include adult content. For more details and a timeline of events, check out @charlottesvillepride on Instagram.

Medaling at Paris Paralympics

Across the pond, two Hoos had a stellar showing at the 2024 Paralympics. Fourth-year rower Sky Dahl, who will continue competing for the Cavaliers this fall, won a silver medal for Team USA in the PR3 mixed four with coxswain on September 1. UVA Law alum Matt Simpson played on the U.S. goalball team, which was knocked out by defending champions Japan in the quarterfinals.

Race days

Local athletes were off to the races over the weekend: The Charlottesville Women’s Four Miler and Cal Tri triathlon were held August 31 and September 1, respectively. More than 1,200 competitors completed the 42nd annual Women’s Four Miler—the event raised over $52,000 for the UVA Breast Care Center this year. Charlottesville’s Cleo Boyd, 31, took first place for the third straight year, with a time of 22:07.35. In the triathlon, almost 200 participants competed, and 51-year-old Bill Deaton won with a time of 1:07:41.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Cville Pride Festival

During an all-day party that includes live music, moon bounces, belly dancers, and several drag shows, the Seventh Annual Cville Pride Festival, hosted by Remy St. Clair and friends, pulls out all the stops for a marathon high-energy celebration. Count on plenty of food trucks, beer and wine offerings, and a rainbow of vendors.

Saturday, September 15. Free, 11am. Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 

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Arts

ARTS Picks: Cville Pride Festival

All events, part of the Cville Pride Festival, take place at the Sprint Pavilion, 700 E. Main St. cvillepride.org

Singer-Songwriter Showcase
1-2pm

It takes a certain amount of moxie for a musician to get on stage, armed with only an acoustic guitar and a voice—no tricks, no smoke, no mirrors—and perform his or her own songs before a crowd of strangers. It’s an act powerful and empowering in its vulnerability, and Ben Freedman, Debra Guy and Wendy Repass are all up for it.

Dance Party
4-5pm

Breakdancing, which originated in the South Bronx in the 1970s, has long been considered one of the pillars of hip-hop culture. From the chain wave to popping, locking and baby freezing, a talented break dancer—a b-boy or a b-girl, if you will—can make your head spin faster than he can kick a windmill. The University of Virginia’s breakdance troupe, The Hooligans, will bust a move, or 20, while DJ Philophonic chooses the tunes…don’t hesitate to join in with a robot or an uprock if the inspiration strikes.

Hip-Hop and R&B Hour
5-6pm

Sons of Ichibei, one of the most politically charged, socially conscious hip-hop groups in town, opens this hour featuring singers Nay Nichelle and Not3z alongside the thought-provoking lyrics of Jaewar & Vibe Riot, the clever flow of EquallyOpposite and the soulful hip-hop of Lo$tnFound. Plus, several local rappers will perform their single “No More,” a tribute to the events of August 11 and 12.

Drag Shows
11am-7pm

Talk about dragging it out. With three multi-performer shows (at 11am, 2pm and 6pm) and numbers between music sets, more than 20 drag performers—Dreama Belle, Fifi Fellacio, Kora Zone, Bunny Nicole, Bert Darling, Cherry Poppins, Symone N. O’Bishop and others—will take to the Cville Pride stage throughout the day.

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Arts

ARTS Pick: Miss Gay Charlottesville Pride Pageant

Don your best duds and get in the spirit as Miss Dreama Belle and Bunny Nicole host the Miss Gay Charlottesville Pride Pageant as part of C’ville Pride Week. An all-ages crowd will witness the standout styles, cutting-edge cutouts and classic looks as female impersonators and transgender male-to-female contestants compete in several categories: creative pride wear presentation, formal gown wear, onstage Q&A and talent.

Sunday, September 10. $15-20, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. 245-4980.

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Living

LIVING Picks: Week of September 6-12

Family

LGBTQ Youth Pride picnic
Saturday, September 9

The third annual LGBTQ Youth Pride Picnic, part of the Cville Pride Festival, offers food, resources and games for teens. Families of youth and LGBTQ parents are welcome. Free, 3-7pm. Washington Park, 1001 Preston Ave. cvillepride.org/ 2017- cville-pride-festival

Nonprofit

All Who Wander
Thursday, September 7

Early Music Access Project artists present a program featuring everything from 18th-century Scottish tunes to Bob Dylan songs, to chronicle the struggles of people on difficult journeys. Proceeds benefit the International Rescue Committee. $25, 7pm. The Haven, 112 Market St. earlymusiccville.org

Food & Drink

The Cooking Gene talk
Saturday, September 9

Culinary and cultural historian Michael Twitty discusses food history and genetics (he has traced his family’s genealogy from Africa and Europe to America), as part of the 11th annual Heritage Harvest Festival. Festival admission: free-$28, 10:30am. Monticello, 931 Thomas Jefferson Pwky. heritage harvest festival.com

Health & Wellness

Brewery 2 Brewery ride
Saturday, September 9

This second annual 75-mile bike ride goes from Devils Backbone Brewery’s Outpost Tap Room in Lexington to its Basecamp Brewpub & Meadows in Roseland. Riders 21-plus can enjoy DB beer at the after-party. $70, 8:30am. Devils Backbone Outpost Tap Room, 50 Northwind Ln., Lexington. db brewingcompany.com

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News

‘Confederate fabulous:’ Gay and black issues collide at Lee Park

As Charlottesville continues to grapple with its Civil War history and the statue of General Robert E. Lee on his trusty steed, for a while at the Cville Pride Festival September 17 in Lee Park, Traveler sported a multicolored boa in a bit of ironic subversion.

Until someone called the police.

“Confederate fabulous is not an option—they de-campified it,” says UVA professor Jalane Schmidt. “I saw Pride as prioritizing queer respectability politics over being an ally with everyone offended by white supremacy.”

Pride did not decorate the statue, but board member Matthew Brown climbed up and removed the boa, and festival organizer Lisa Green says she takes full responsibility for the decision.

“Even though we live in Charlottesville under a bubble, every year someone complains,” says Green. “If someone is going to complain, it’s not going to be because we’re not following the rules. It’s going to be because it’s an LGBT event.”

Green says the decision to remove the boa was difficult and there was a long discussion before it came down. “I made the call because the complainant kept calling,” she says, and she did not want the festival accused of “defacing public property.”

Schmidt notes that at other events, such as the Tom Tom Founders Festival, Traveler was decorated with legwarmers, and no one complained about that.

Tom Tom organizer Paul Beyer says that was done by a “guerrilla” knitting group, and not sanctioned by the festival.

“When groups use that park and they don’t say anything about the name, I see that as acquiescence to white supremacy,” says Schmidt. She cites “intersectionality politics,” and says, “I don’t stop being black when I talk about being gay.”

Schmidt teaches monuments and memory in UVA’s religion department, and she’s been vocal at City Council and Blue Ribbon Commission on Race, Memorials and Public Spaces meetings.

She refers to Lee Park as “change-the-name park,” and says statues such as Lee and General Stonewall Jackson at Court Square should be removed and relocated, much as Hungary did with sculptures from its Soviet past that have been placed in Monument Park as part of the country’s history that isn’t lauded, but should be remembered “as a cautionary tale. I don’t want to airbrush history like the Kremlin used to do,” when those out of favor with the Communist Party were removed from photos.

At the time of the Civil War, 52 percent of Albemarle and Charlottesville’s population was enslaved, says Schmidt. “If anything, there should be monuments to the enslaved majority and to the Union troops who came to set them free. Over half were slaves. That’s what I think we should remember.”

Many have spoken in favor of keeping the statues and reframing them with plaques to provide more context. “That’s not enough,” says Schmidt. Nor does she subscribe to the idea of building more monuments to honor African-American leaders without removing the Confederate ones. “That’s not acceptable because these central places have already been taken by white folks,” she says. “Any monument to black people will already be peripheral.”

And for those who argue the statues were a gift, she reminds us of grandma’s ugly sweater, disposed of with hilarity at white elephant parties, or wedding rings after divorce. “They were a gift, but they represent an earlier self with which we no longer identify,” she says. “We’ve moved on, and it’s simply not appropriate any longer to wear this gift.”

For Pride organizers, there were no easy answers. Its president, Amy Sarah Marshall, was a speaker at the March rally in support of removing the Lee statue.

“We have had major discussions” on the issue of holding the Pride Festival in Lee Park, says Green. “A lot of people believe being in the middle of town, that’s also making a statement.”

And she says the decision to remove the boa did not reflect her personal views. “It was for the greater good of a nonprofit and we work very hard to be good citizens and community members.”

Both Green and Brown praise the police officers who worked the festival. “The officers were showing solidarity with the festival,” says Brown, who has family members in law enforcement.

He offered to take the boa down because he didn’t like the optics of “an African-American officer on a ladder photographed taking it down.” Personally, he hopes the “statue finds a new home,” he says. “Taking [the boa] down in no way represents approval of the statue and what it represents.”

Schmidt is unlikely to be convinced. She compares groups that use the park like Cville Pride and Tom Tom to “the nice white people during segregation who continued to patronize segregated establishments and didn’t say anything publicly if they objected to it. Your private regrets, expressed sotto voce, do not make you an ally or promote change. It’s time to stand up and be counted, because silence equals consent.”

Clarification September 29: The 54 percent enslaved population at the time of the Civil War includes both Charlottesville and Albemarle County. And Schmidt does favor statues of African American luminaries in place of the Confederate monuments.

Correction September 30: According to the 1860 census, 54 percent of the Charlottesville-Albemarle population was black, 52 percent was enslaved.

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