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Queens Of Pop at Revenge tonight!

Queens Of Pop
Queens Of Pop

Brothers, Ged and James Weir from Manchester are QOP. To their near million new fans they are much better known as the outrageously funny Queens of Pop.  They formed by accident in October 2012 after Ged’s previous band Saltylips split and he asked James to help him out on some music.

The brothers’ comedic timing and uncanny ability to deliver the perfect parody has seen them build a huge online audience over the last 8 months culminating in them receiving almost half a million youtube views for their excruciatingly funny take on Atomic Kitten’s Whole Again which ironically has seen the real Kerry Katona become one of their biggest fans.

The Kitten’s parody sits alongside their wicked takes on Girls Aloud, Steps, Kylie, Taylor Swift and Coronation Street’s Deirdre Barlow and Sally Webster has seen Queens of Pop become nothing short of an online sensation.

Now starting their first live dates, their opening show in Manchester saw more than a thousand people cram into the venue with another 300 locked outside.

Queens of Pop write cutting pop satire and poke their long fingernails deep into pop culture’s ribs and while they may doff their considerable caps to shows like Bo Selecta, Stella Street and The League of Gentlemen, the added twist of their modern day pop songs and ultra glamorous caricatures gives them a deliciously original edge.

The Queens Of Pop, will be appearing at Club Revenge on Friday, June 21, on stage at midnight.

Alex Baker of Club Revenge, said:

“We’re delighted to be the first venue in the South to secure a performance from the Queens Of Pop! Moreover, this is a booking that is in response to overwhelming customer demand. We’ve been inundated with requests to book QOP, and the reaction to their Youtube videos has been staggering”.

To get advance tickets for the show, CLICK HERE: 

To find out more about Queens Of Pop, CLICK HERE:

Simon Kirby MP in Gay Marriage debate tonight

Simon Kirby, MP
Simon Kirby, MP

Changing Attitude Sussex will stage a debate on gay marriage tonight, Friday, June 21 at 8pm at St Mary’s Church (on the corner of St James’ Street and Rock Gardens, Kemptown, Brighton) in the heart of Brighton’s gay village.

The principal speakers will be Simon Kirby, MP for Kemptown, and Brighton councillor Christina Summers.

Simon has been an outspoken longstanding committed supporter of equal marriage.

Earlier this year he said:

“I support equality because I believe the institution of marriage strengthens families and society, and I think that the benefits of a legally defined marriage should not be excluded to anyone because of their sexuality. I will be doing my utmost to support the cause of equal marriage in Parliament in the weeks and months ahead.”

 

Cllr Christina Summers
Cllr Christina Summers

Christina Summers is now an independent Brighton councillor after she was controversially expelled from the Green Party because of her opposition to same-sex marriage, based on her Christian convictions.

During a council debate on the issue she declared:

“When you touch marriage, you’re hitting at the very heart of God, and I have an enormous problem with that.”

The supporting speaker for gay marriage will be the Rev David Page, and Dr Sharon James of the Coalition for Marriage will also speak against. There will be an opportunity for audience members to ask questions and raise issues with the speakers.

Dr Keith Sharpe, Chair of Changing Attitude Sussex, said:

“In view of the Bill currently going through Parliament this is a very timely public debate which is of particular relevance in Brighton given its large gay population. The principal speakers take diametrically opposite views and this should be an exciting event.”

Everybody is welcome and entry is free.

Event: Gay Marriage debate

Where: St Mary’s Church on the corner of St James’ Street and Rock Gardens, Kemptown, Brighton

When: Friday, June 21

Time: 8pm

Entry: Free

 

Donmar Warehouse: ‘The Night Alive’

The Night Alive

In The Night Alive, Conor McPherson’s new play, Tommy (Ciaran Hinds), a middle-aged ‘moocher’ (as he calls himself) living in a squalid Dublin bedsit, has gone out to get some chips, but comes back instead with a bloodied and bruised girl.

Aimee (Caoilfhionn Dunne) has been beaten up by her ex and has landed in Tommy’s lap, and she should thank her lucky stars that he’s not such a bad lad. Yes, he’s a ducker and a diver (‘freelance’); yes, he’s in the midst of a struggle with his ex-missus over the kids; and yes, he’s not exactly ‘a catch’ – but he’s a man who, by his own admission has “never hit a woman in me life, although there’s many a time I had reason to.” And in Aimee’s world, that’s about as good as it feels it’s going to get.

So she stays, cadges a bed, gives him a bit of ‘relief’ for the rent (he’d do it himself, he says, if it wasn’t for this damned Repetitive Strain Injury), and meets his mate Doc (Michael McElhatton) a one-sentence-behind-everyone-else kind of guy, resplendent in dirty brown jumper and trackie bottoms, who is forever climbing in the window of Tommy’s bedsit, usually clutching something he’s nicked.

Soutra Gilmour’s set is a detailed depiction of how a Tommy would live; all bin bags, faded posters of sunsets, and used tea bags clogging up the sink. It’s mostly bathed in a dirty yellow light as if from a dusty 100w bulb, and the bit we see of the loo behind the door is enough to make you retch.

The two men dance around Aimee with words, feeling their way tentatively, offering friendship of a sort. Tommy’s Uncle Maurice (McPherson regular Jim Norton) who owns the building makes sporadic but memorable appearances. He’s often drunk and struggling with the fact that only eight people turned up to the anniversary mass for his wife.

As Tommy and Aimee swap gifts, albeit shoplifted ones, we see a hesitant relationship blooming. Until the ex turns up. Brian Gleeson, son of Brendan, plays Kenneth, a psychopath who uses streams of words to baffle and confuse. This is particularly effective on poor, slow Doc who can’t understand the danger facing him until it’s too late. The first shock of the play is brutal and hits you like a hammer.

McPherson’s prose is lyrical and meandering, a pleasure to to the ears, especially when he riffs on a throw-away subject. Tommy tries to palm Doc off with payment in the form of cigars. When Doc points out that they’re out of date, Tommy responds with the pragmatic “Well, that only makes them easier to light.” And it’s funny too, with their absurdist conversations about nothing in particular. Dopey Doc’s writing a book called The Call of Nature, and his idea of presents for Tommy are a CD called The Rocking Sounds of the Vuvuzela and a book called, ironically as it turns out, How to Survive Life-Threatening Situations.

There are also glorious moments of losers being happy as when Tommy, Doc and Aimee break into spontaneous gyrations to Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On, but continued happiness is unlikely in these hopeless lives.

The two moments of violence let the piece down. It just doesn’t need them: it would be a better and more satisfying play without, ho hum, all the drama. The voices are enough and it feels almost as if McPherson has lost faith in his characters with the need to bring such extremes into their lives.They’re more than interesting enough without it.

And what’s with the ear-splitting music punctuating scenes? McPherson, who here directs his own play, should turn it down as it shatters the mood. Or am I just getting old?

The acting is uniformly superb although the stage particularly lights up when Norton as drunken and angry Uncle Maurice reels on. Dunne’s Aimee is suitably vulnerable and bruised, although she’s quite the enigma too, while McElhatton gives Doc an amiability that makes you want to mother him (if it wasn’t for that awful brown jumper). There are inconsistencies written into his character – he’s supposed to be slow, but has quite a clever speech near the end – which he handles well and almost irons out.

Hinds’ face tells a story in itself. Naturally doleful, made even longer by a handlebar moustache, it tells a tale of a loser who has hope thrust upon him unexpectedly. Deep down, his eyes say, I know this isn’t going to work because it never does, but that doesn’t mean I won’t give it a go. And that’s quite a lot for eyes alone to say…..

At 105 minutes, The Night Alive is long enough for you to sink into Tommy’s sinking world. And it’s a world that’s satisfying and complete.

 What: The Night Alive

Where: Donmar Warehouse, Earlham Street, London

When: Until July 27

Tickets: £7.50-£35

More information: CLICK HERE:  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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