Parties

One of New York City’s First IRL Gatherings Raised Funds for the Black Trans Community 

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Connie Girl and Jason Wu
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Joining later in the evening was Pose star Dominique Jackson, who was met with applause and flashbulbs as her lithe frame sauntered through the entrance. After situating herself in a corner banquette, she offered us her equally optimistic outlook. “I think we’ll start appreciating each other more and the time we spend together,” she told Vogue. “And apart from dealing with this pandemic is also the reality of what we’ve been talking about and dealing with for many, many years, which is trans lives, especially Black trans lives, not mattering. The barbaric murders that we have faced and the brutality the Black trans community faced was totally ignored. But when people were sitting in their homes, they had no choice but to pay attention to the media and realize we weren’t just making noise. So we have to use this time to look out for each other, and realize a lot of us are going through very similar things.”

With proceeds from the evening going to the Marsha P. Johnson Institute (a charity named after drag queen and activist Marsha P. Johnson supporting Black transgender people) and Destination Tomorrow (a Bronx-based center benefiting the LGBTQ community), guests including Jason Wu, model and Madonna progeny Lourdes “Lola” Leon, and DJs Leigh Lezark and Geordon Nicol of the Misshapes ordered up the Tulum-inspired eatery’s mezcal margaritas and bites. All the while the attended respected the city’s safety regulations—proof that New Yorkers are still capable of having a good time, in the name of a good cause, in our current times.