2005 Year in Review Q-NOTES • DECEMBER 31. 2005 2005 sees noteworthy passages 4000 Queen City Dr. Charlotte, NC 28214 704-394-1712 Visit our website at WWW.WOODSHEDLOUNGE.COM TTPCOMTNCx EVENTS Twisted Tuesdays & Sundays! KARAOKE WITH ANTHONY AND SEAN!!! Pool Tournaments EVERY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY December 3I; New Year’s Eve Party with complimentary champagne and no charge for members. The New Fall Line-up Gome see your favorite bartenders all week long!!! Sunday night with Jonathan Tuesday night with Anthony Monday night with Shane Wednesday night with Greg Thursday night with Rick PATTY SPECIALS Mondays: $6 All You Can Drink Bud & Bud Light Longnecks Tuesdays & Wednesdays: All Beers $2.25/All Top Shelf Liquor $3.25 Pool Tournament Every Wednesday 10:30 pm (Bar Time) ($50 Cash Prize) Thursdays: $1.50 Domestic Beers Fridays & Saturdays: Specials Vary. Please Call. Sundays: $2.25 Brand Cqcktails/Free Buffet Served at 6.30 pm Still the Cheapest Place to Drink in Town!!!! HOURS: Monday - Saturday 5*OOp^ to 2:30 Sunday 3'00 to 2:30 am PATIO BAR: Seasonal from page 17 June 28 Activist and Pride founder Brenda Howard Brenda Howacd, 59, died of cancer in Queens, N.Y. A bisexu al activist and sex- positive feminist who was an important fig ure in the modern LGBT rights move ment, Howard was a leader of the Gay Composer David Liberation Front Diamond was , ... openly gay in a ^ay Acti- time when society vists Alliance in was intolerant. the early post- Stonewall era and a founder of the New York Area Bisexual Network. She was also known as the “the Mother of Pride,” for her work in coor dinating the first month anniversary rally and then the “Christopher Street Liberation Day March” to commemo rate the first year anniversary of the Stonewall Rebellion. Howard also originated the idea for a week-long series of events around Pride Day which became the genesis of the annual LGBT Pride celebrations that are now held around the world every June. July 1 Singer Luther Vandross R&B artist Luther Vandross died from complications related to a debilitating stroke he suffered in April 2003. He was 54 years old. Despite his illness, his album “Dance With My Father,” sold nearly a million copies in its first month of release The following year, the album won three Grammy Awards, including song of the year. His eighth and final Grammy came for best R&B performance by a duo — the remake of “The Closer I Get to You,” sung with Beyonce Knowles. Vandross died at JFK Medical Center in Edison, N.J. surrounded by family, friends and a medical support team. Little is known about the performer’s personal life — he remained closeted throughout it and refused to speak about his sexuality publicly. Aug. 7 News Anchor Peter Jennings Nearly four months to the day after he announced in an evening newscast that he had been diagnosed with lung cancer, longtime ABC “World News Tonight” anchor Peter Jennings died. He was 67. Jennings made no secret of his support for the LGBT community. Following the legalizing of same-sex marriage in Massachusetts in 2004, Jennings com pared same-sex marriage licenses to racial desegregation, citing the 50th anniversary of the Brown vs. Board of Education ruling: “1\vo of our main stories tonight are about the struggle for rights and inclusion — one of them in the 20th century, the other right The mother of the modem day civil rights movement: Rosa Parks From 'Midge' to 'Miss Ellie' actress Barbara Bel Geddes was a gay camp kon. now in the 21st,” He announced. Aug. 8 Actress Barbara Bel Geddes Barbara Bel Geddes was something of an icon in the gay community — for her role as “Miss Ellie” on the the TV series “Dallas” and as Midge in the Alfred Hitchcock film “Vertigo.” Eighty-two-years old, Geddes died of lung cancer at her home in Northeast Harbor, Maine. Od.24 Civil Rights activist Rosa Parks Rosa Parks changed the world in December 1955 when she refused to give up her seat on a bus to a white man in Mon^omery, Ala. Her arrest trig gered a 381-day boy cott of the bus system by blacks that was organized by a 26- year-old Baptist min ister, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The boycott led to a court ruling desegregating public transportation in Montgomery, but it wasn’t until the 1964 Civil Rights Act that all public accommoda tions nationwide were desegregated. Nov. 2 Graham Payn Graham Payn, an actor and singer who was Noel Coward’s longtime companion, died in Switzerland at the age of 87. Born in South Africa in 1918, Payn moved to England in 1929. At the age of 14 he first audi tioned for the Noel Coward revue, “Words and Music.” In 1945 Coward wrote a leading role for Payn in the show “Sigh No More.” The produc tion marked the begin ning of their profes sional and personal relationship, which lasted until the play wright’s death in 1973. Nov. 17 Actress Sheree North Sheree North, who aged gracefully from a platinum blond bombshell in the 1950s to older character roles in television productions including “The Mary lyler Moore Show” and “Seinfeld,” died of complications from surgery. She was 72. North initially was groomed as a glamor girl who could substitute for Screen siren the often unreliable Sheree Marilyn Monroe, and did 'I Monroe m Monroe's ’ ^^5 film “How to Be replacement. Very, Very Popular.” Meet you on the other side: Graham Payn, Noel Cowara's longtime com panion died at age 87.