Boston Gay Men’s Chorus to expand accessibility for hearing impaired with $10K grant from Liberty Mutual

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LeWana Clark, ASL interpreter of Boston Gay Men's Chorus concerts since 1989. Gretjen Helene

The Boston Gay Men’s Chorus has been awarded a $10,000 grant from the Liberty Mutual Foundation to expand on the Chorus’s commitment to make its music accessible to the deaf and hard hearing. The grant, tagged specifically for this purpose, comes from the Liberty Mutual Foundation and it doubles the $5,000 Liberty Mutual has given BGMC since 2015.

“Our mission is to create musical experiences that inspire change, build community, and celebrate difference. We can’t do that if an entire population has difficulty accessing our music,” BGMC Executive Director Craig Coogan said in a press release issued this week.

“That’s why we’re especially grateful for our relationship with Liberty Mutual, one of Boston’s philanthropic corporate leaders, and for Liberty Mutual’s generous support of our goal to make our videos, which are viewed more than 1.5 million times a year by people around the world, more accessible to those who are deaf and hard of hearing,” he said.

States the release:

BGMC began providing American Sign Language (ASL) interpreting in 1983, just one year after BGMC was founded. In 1989, BGMC hired LeWana Clark, PhD to interpret each show, which she has done ever since, including those performed during its international tours to Poland in 2005, the Middle East in 2015, and South Africa in 2018.

“It’s a common misperception that people who are deaf or hard of hearing cannot enjoy music,” said Clark. “Music is experienced in different ways by different people and the American Sign Language interpretation greatly enhances the live experience of music for all patrons. Captioning of videos is yet another way to make the culture of music more available to a deaf or hard-of-hearing audience.”

The National Endowment for the Arts has shown that adults with disabilities make up 12 percent of the U.S. adult population, but less than seven percent of all adults who attend art events. One of the reasons for this, says B.J. Wood, a nationally known advocate for communication access services for deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals, is because creative arts organizations do not make simple accommodations available to all patrons.

“I’ve been attending concerts by the Boston Gay Men’s Chorus for nearly 30 years,” said Wood, who is married to Clark. “I can’t tell you how wonderful it is to know that whichever concert I decide to attend will have sign language interpreting. I’m not limited to just one show that is accessible, which is the case for most of the performing arts organizations—though many still don’t even offer that.”

“Making our music accessible to everybody is so important to our mission,” said BGMC Music Director Reuben M. Reynolds III. “I get as many compliments for LeWana’s interpretation as we do for our music. She tells our stories in a way that resonates with all audience members.”

The next opportunity to see BGMC and Clark in action takes place the weekend of May 31–June 2 when BGMC perform “God Save the Queens” at Jordan Hall featuring music from The Beatles, Sir Elton John, Sting, David Bowie, Boy George, Wham, One Direction, Adele, and Queen!

For more on the upcoming concert and all things BGMC go to bgmc.org.

 

 

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