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Brighton salutes David Raven in his 80th year

Maisie Trollette's 80th Birthday Party

Legendary entertainer David Raven will be celebrating his 80th Birthday in the company of friends he has worked with during his 40 years in show business at a Royal Gala Variety Show hosted by Lola Lasagne at the Theatre Royal on Sunday, August 18 at 7.30pm.

David, better known to his fans as Maisie Trollette will be joined by artists he has shared the stage with during 40 years in show business including Jimmy Trollette, Miss Jason and Dave Lynn.

Local entertainers performing a Broadway Tribute will include: Jennie Castell, JP Christian, Connie Conway, Krissie Du Cann, Poola May, Wezley Sebastian, Davina Sparkle, Spice, Tammy Twinkle. Marc Inscoe and Jason Lee Howlett will perform a ‘Rat Pack’ set.

The Westenders
The Westenders

West End stars including Jae Alexander, Jill Nalder, Peter Stanford, Linda Jarvis, Frances Fry and Jon Osbaldeston will perform together as the Westenders singing a selection of numbers from West End musicals while International female impersonator extraordinaire Ceri Dupree will bring her fabulous characters to the stage of the Theatre Royal for the first time.

John Bruzon who has worked with David over the years, returns as Musical Director for the evening.

Brighton Gay Men's Chorus
Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus
Actually Gay Men's Chorus
Actually Gay Men’s Chorus

The Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus and the Actually Gay Men’s Chorus complete the lineup of this classic community event to celebrate one of ‘Gay Brighton’s’ finest ambassadors.

All profits from the show will be shared between the Sussex Beacon, a care centre for men and women with HIV/AIDS related illnesses and the Rainbow Fund who award grants to LGBT/HIV organisations providing front line services to the LGBT community, through an independent grants process administered by the Sussex Community Foundation.

Event: Maisie Trollette’s 80th Birthday Show

Where: Theatre Royal, New Road, Brighton

When: Sunday: August 18

Time: 7.30pm

Tickets:  £20/£15 plus £1 restoration fee

To book tickets telephone 0844 871 7627 (booking fees apply)

If you book in person at the Theatre Royal there are no booking fees.

To book tickets online, CLICK HERE:

David Raven Birthday Show

 

 

Ecostream protest continues today with Grace Jones tribute

Grace Jones

Following her performance as Cher at last Saturday’s demonstration outside Ecostream on Western Road where she claims she received homophobic abuse from supporters of the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions of Israeli goods) – Miss Chelsea Fox, from Just Divas appeared today as Grace Jones to entertain demonstrators and shoppers at the Sussex Friends of Isreal (SFI) demonstration against the activities of the BDS (Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions of Israeli goods). BDS have been protesting outside the shop since it opened.

Grace Jones

Ecostream, near Waitrose is a refill concept store, the first of its kind in the world, trialled in Brighton and chosen for its green credentials.

Since its launch it has been picketed weekly by an anti-Israeli group called the BDS (‘In 2005, Palestinian civil society issued a call for a campaign of boycotts, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it complies with international law and Palestinian rights).

The store is owned by Israeli owned fizzy drink manufacturer Sodastream.

Concerned that the BDS protests against Ecostream were going unchallenged, a diverse group calling themselves Sussex Friends of Israel formed, comprising members of the Jewish, Christian and LGBT communities.

They come together each week, to counter demonstrate the BDS, with fun, friendly and inclusive initiatives, to show their support to the store and for the State of Isreal.

 

 

 

 

 

‘For Sale’ sign causes a stir!

WEB.300A ‘For Sale’ sign erected in a central conservation area has landed a Brighton estate agents with fines and court costs of nearly £1,000.

Sawyer & Co Sales and Lettings Ltd admitted in court to erecting the board on Howard Place, despite being warned by Brighton & Hove City Council following a similar incident on Buckingham Place.

The company was fined £325 and ordered to pay £610 court costs and £32.50 victim surcharge.

Phelim McCafferty
Phelim McCafferty

Councillor Phélim MacCafferty, Chair of planning, said:

“This prosecution shows that our planning officers are committed to enforcing the ban on estate agent boards within the central conservation areas.

“I would like to thank the majority of estate agents who are complying with the regulations. This prosecution should give them confidence that court action will continue to be taken against those estate agents that fail to comply with the regulations.”

LATEST TV: QTube Episode 5

 

Lastest TV QTube

Latest TV covers Brighton Pride 2013, in the latest episode of QTube.

Starting on the seafront at Madeira Drive they follow the parade all the way to Preston Park where their cameras cover the main stage with top acts like Class A and a message from Peter Tatchell.

You can catch up on events from all around the park from cabaret and line dancing, the Women’s Performance Tent to Calabash the Bears area and Wild Fruit.

Presenters Jonesy and Torsten guide you through a fun packed day.

This is followed by the Symposium where four women discuss ‘How do you perceive media representation of lesbian sexuality.”

To view, CLICK HERE:

Brighton Pride 2013

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Andy Nicholls

Producer/Director

Latest TV

THE PRIDE: Trafalgar Studios, London: Review

Four stars

After the clipped 1950’s tones of the first scene of Alexi Kaye Campbell‘s 2008 Olivier award-winning debut, it’s a bit of a shock when the lights go up again to find Mathew Horne standing there in full Nazi regalia.

But The Pride is a shocking play all round.

the pride top

During it’s two and a half hour duration I kept thinking about the excellent programme notes I’d just read regarding the ‘monstrous martyrdoms’ leading to gay and lesbian equality.

How far we’ve come, I thought, from 1958 when half the play is set, how far, from the ‘gross indecency’ trials that frightened all gay men into silence and a world of fear and recriminations, and a theatre that couldn’t even use the word ‘homosexual’, let alone depict it.

But this is the repressed world that Oliver (a terrific Al Weaver), a writer of children’s books, Philip (Harry Hadden-Paton), an estate agent, and Sylvia (Hayley Atwell), a book illustrator, inhabit.

Philip and Sylvia are in a marriage they both know is a brittle sham (although it’s not without its real affection), when Sylvia introduces the shy, intelligent Oliver to her bluff husband, not realising and realising what’s very likely to occur.

What does occur is not often seen – apart from the explosive conclusion of their relationship – but is discussed in the clipped tones of the time, so reminiscent of Rattigan or Coward. Oliver and Philip have ‘an understanding,’ and when the dreaded ‘H’ word is mentioned, by Sylvia talking about her theatre friend who killed himself (“I think he must have been a……homosexual, Philip”) in an attempt to get her husband to open up, the air freezes in the room.

Running parallel, and skillfully interwoven, is the story of three more lives, the lives of very similar people – Oliver, Philip and Sylvia again – living in a freer age, half a century on.

the pride middle

The same actors play the same parts in the different ages, sometimes leaping from one to the other whilst on stage, creating two narratives that interweave, echo, clash and compliment. This isn’t a simple ‘compare and contrast’ of the eras though: the characters in each age are too well-defined and believable in themselves for that, and the play itself far too layered. The device never feels tricksy and the piece never contrived.

The modern characters are preparing for Pride. Philip has left Oliver over the latter’s addiction to casual sex, leaving best friend Sylvia to pick up the pieces. Oliver hears voices, he says. They call his name, and on Soutra Gilmour’s wonderfully dark, sparkling set, we see Philip (whether it’s his past or present incarnation isn’t made clear) calling out to Oliver, in a spine-tingling moment of connection.

Kay Campbell has a fine ear for both period and modern dialogue and the staccato rhythm of the 50’s scenes are wonderfully complimented by the sprawl and comparative sloppiness of the modern ones. Everything appears so neat, so tidy, so….so, in the former, like a jagged, glittering surface hiding a deep, dark abyss of turmoil, whereas the latter is casual, louche, knowing, but this time hiding a different sort of turmoil: the angst behind the ‘we can have it all now but we’re still not happy’ generation. Is Oliver happier in the present day than the past? Is Philip? Sylvia, the straight character, is ironically the only one who seems in any way liberated.

Al Weaver is the stand out as the two Olivers, his lithe frame managing to make the past Oliver look delicate and intellectual, and the present one kittenish and needy. It’s difficult to take your eyes off him when he’s on stage, while Harry Hadden-Paton makes you still feel for past Philip even after the despicable thing he ends up doing. Hayley Atwell is assured in both her parts, not losing her grip on either for a second.

The one gripe I have is Mathew Horne. Playing three minor but essential parts – a rent boy, an editor of a lads’ mag, and a psychiatrist – he’s just not got the depth to quite pull the acting feat off in such company. When his ‘editor’ suddenly switches gear in a rant about how things have changed in the lads’ mag business, to talk about his uncle who died of AIDS, the shift is too abrupt and he only just squeaks through.

The others carry out these very abrupt changes and transformations with aplomb on the marvellous, sparse set, made up of a huge square mirror with the silver rubbed through at the back to give a ghostly, gilded, period feel. The different ‘ages’ pass by each other on stage, in the gloom, as if ghosts brushing past one another. But which one is real and which the ghost? It’s these super evocative echoes that make this play so special, and that are superbly handled by Jamie Lloyd who also directed its debut at the Royal Court five years ago.

Kaye Campbell‘s writing mixes with ease the banal and the profound, and he injects enough humour to balance out the extremely tense moments that run through the play. It’s a sensitively handled piece as you’d imagine, but there are no kid gloves on show either: it pulls its punches hard and grabs your throat with a tenacious grip when it wants.

the pride end

Go see, if only for the excellent and moving protest against what’s happening in Russia presently, that the cast display at the curtain call. A standing ovation was richly deserved for both the play and the sentiments.

WHAT: The Pride

WHERE: Trafalgar Studios, Whitehall, London

WHEN: Until November 9

TICKETS: £24.50 – £65

MORE INFO: view: http://www.trafalgar-studios.co.uk/The-Pride.html

RUNNING TIME: 2 hours 20 (with interval)

WOULD I GO AGAIN: Yep. Fab acting, fab cast, fab writing, fab directing, fab protest

 

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