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Monster Bashes

A sampling of benefits, shows and parties for the holiday

By Laura Latzko

Bearie deLishus

Witches Ball

Villains is the theme of the fourth annual Witches Ball, held by the Grand Canyon Sisters of Perpetual Inlgence Oct. 21 at the Rock.

Sister Bearie de Lishus, also known as John Robitaille, said many of the performers will be dressed as popular Disney villains such as Ursula from The Little Mermaid or the Wicked Queen from Snow White. Attendees are also encouraged to dress up as fairy tale characters.

Drag queen Lady Christian will host the charity drag show. The sisters will be selling raffle tickets and pudding shots and will award a prize to the person with the best costume.

The event is a benefit for an annual toy drive for Logan's Playground, an organization that provides support services to children living with or affected by HIV/AIDS. Robitaille said the organization provides toys to children ranging in age from 1 to 16.

8 p.m.-midnight Oct. 21
The Rock
4129 N. Seventh St., Phoenix
Admission: $5 or a new toy
602-248-8550; azsisters.org

Exposed Gallery Halloween Party

Exposed Studio & Gallery Masquerade Ball

An Uncle Fester impersonator will host the seventh annual Masquerade Ball Oct. 28 at Exposed Studio & Gallery.

DJ Dead will play traditional Halloween songs, such as Bobby "Boris" Pickett's "Monster Mash" and Sheb Wooley's "Purple People Eater."

For the first time, the party will include a pumpkin carving contest, starting at 6 p.m., with prizes for the first, second and third place pumpkins.

Gallery proprietor Gregg Edelman said he may heckle partygoers who don't dress up for the party's costume contest.

6-11 p.m. Oct. 28
Exposed Studio & Gallery
4225 N. Seventh Ave., Phoenix
Admission: $5
602-248-8030; www.exposedgallery.com

BS West Halloween Party

BS West Video Music Awards Halloween Show

For the 19th year in a row, BS West in Scottsdale will host its block party Halloween event.

The theme will be the BS West Video Music Awards, a red carpet event that mimics MTV's Video Music Awards. Expect to see recreations of performances from artists from the 1960s to the present day.

BS West owner Mike Fornelli said the Oct. 29 show will include drag performances by established performers and by people who don't regularly do drag, including BS West staff members.

Joan Rivers and Perez Hilton impersonators will greet guests on the red carpet, and comedian and singer Wendy Ho and local drag queen Neveah McKenzie will host.

The event will be staged outside, and BS West will have five bars set up. The costume contest will have a $500 prize for the individual winner or the group with the best costume.

9 p.m. Oct. 29
BS West
7125 E. Fifth Ave., Scottsdale
Tickets: $20 general admission;
VIP tables $200-$300
480-945-9028; www.bswest.com

Desert Dragon masks

Monster's Ball

The 13th annual Monster's Ball at the Alwun House will feature Provocatease, a vaudeville-style burlesque show with live music and comedy. Other highlights will include a drum and mask ceremony from Desert Dragon Dance Theatre, and a dance performance by Ignite Collaborative Arts Project.

DJ-MX and Girard De Muro will spin music. Masks from mask maker and performance artist Zarco Guerrero are featured in the art show, and Guerrero will perform during the Desert Dragon Dance Theatre performance.

The gallery will display paintings from the Monster's Menagerie collection, an art collection that director Kim Moody said features untraditional Halloween artwork from Arizona artists. Expect to see artwork depicting gargoyles, spirits and vampires.

8-11 p.m. Oct. 29
Alwun House
1204 E. Roosevelt St., Phoenix
Tickets: $12 in advance, $14 at the door
602-253-7887; alwunhouse.org

Wendy Ho

Wendy Ho says her act challenges stereotypes about women

By Laura Latzko

Singer, rapper and comedian Wendy Ho will aim to lighten the darker mood of Halloween with her brand of comedy when she appears in Phoenix in the days before the holiday.

Ho will perform and co-host Oct. 28 BS West's Elements Show and Oct. 29 at the club's Video Music Awards Halloween Show. She'll also appear Oct. 30 at Apollo's Lounge.

Ho defines herself as a cross between Bette Midler, Margaret Cho and Lil' Kim. She's known for songs such as "Bitch, I Stole Yo Purse," "Poop Noodle," "Cocaine" and "Oprah Winfrey."

Ho said that although they are funny, most of her songs come from personal insights about the world. "They are an extension of myself," she said. "It is rooted in truth. The best comedy comes from sadness and anger."

Through her persona, Ho said she attempts to challenge stereotypes about women. "It's to get people to talk and to think and to celebrate," Ho said. "It's not just to offend for the sake of offending ... I think art is about expression and making a statement."

Also known as Wendy Jo Smith, Ho said that in real life she is introspective and feminine. The act "allows me to live out this other side of my personality that I don't get to live out all the time," she said.

Ho said she has worked to prove to others that you don't have to fit a certain image to be successful. She said that she continues to struggle with identity issues, but her goal is to define herself by her own terms.

"We all have this shame or guilt about who we are," Smith said. "If I can inspire freedom, I have done my job."

Since the beginning of her career, Ho said her music has resonated with gay audiences, probably because of her sense of humor.

"I'm a gay man on the inside. My sensibilities are the same as theirs," she joked. "They just love a strong, loud and passionate woman."    -E