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Local LGBT charity receives national recognition

MindOut the LGBT mental heath organisation is shortlisted for BBC award.

MindOut

MindOut, Brighton’s LGB&T mental health charity has been shortlisted for BBC Radio 4’s All in the Mind 25th Anniversary Awards. One of over seven hundred projects to be nominated, MindOut is one of three on the shortlist for the prize. MindOut is a mental health service run by and for lesbians, gay men, bisexual and transgender people based in Brighton and Hove. It provides a range of services including advice and information, advocacy, a peer support group programme, well being activities and events and a food and allotment project.

The winner will be announced at a glittering ceremony at the Wellcome Collection in London on June 19.

Helen Jones, Director MindOut
Helen Jones, Director MindOut

Helen Jones, Director of MindOut, said: “I am delighted and proud. To have our work recognised in this way is very humbling. Our staff and volunteers work tirelessly to provide services to LGB&T people in Brighton and across Sussex and I am thrilled that all their hard work has been recognised in this way. I hope this nomination will focus attention on the mental health needs of all LGB&T people.”

'All in the Mind' presenter, Claudia Hammond
‘All in the Mind’ presenter, Claudia Hammond

All in the Mind presenter, Claudia Hammond, added: “To mark our 25th anniversary we wanted to create an opportunity where people who’ve had mental health problems can thank any of these people or groups by nominating them for an award. We want to hear those stories of how people recovered or found a way of coping with their mental health problems. Perhaps there are lessons there. We want to recognise those who really go the extra mile to help others.”

All in the Mind is marking its 25th anniversary. The programme is the longest running programme on mental health and psychology in the world and covers mental health, psychology and neuroscience issues.

MindOut will feature on the programme on Tuesday, May 6 at 9pm.

For more information about MindOut, CLICK HERE:

 

 

Brighton Pride enables Rainbow funding for LGBT mental health project MindOut

Thanks to last year’s funding from Brighton Pride, the Rainbow Fund has been able to continue its support to MindOut, the LGBT mental health project working in the city.

Rainbow FundFollowing a Rainbow Fund grant provided to the group last year, Helen Jones, Director of MindOut has reported that: “The funding enabled us toWEB.200 provide peer support groups for LGBT people who are experiencing mental health problems a place to go which is supportive, safe, confidential and affirming.  Many of the people who attend are socially isolated, some do not go anywhere else all week.  This year 87 people came to our group work service.

“For some time MindOut has been aware of the mental health needs of older LGB&T people, some of whom are isolated, less likely to access commercial LGBT venues, less likely to be part of community initiatives.  The Rainbow Fund grant enabled us to run an event aimed at bringing together older LGBT people. This event was excellent, very dynamic, well attended and has continued to run monthly.

“Funding for ‘Out of the Blue’, our suicide prevention group, has been essential to keep this very popular group running weekly. This year we have provided 243 places for LGBT people who experience suicidal distress.”

Helen concluded: “The Rainbow Fund has made a huge difference to us this year.  We really value such a community focussed, flexible grant which has supported us to offer essential services as well as developing new community work.”

Paul Elgood
Paul Elgood

Paul Elgood, Chairman of the Rainbow Fund said: “We have been proud to support MindOut since it was established as an independent organisation. Their work tackling suicide prevention, social isolation and mental health is critical for our community. Thanks to the money donated by Brighton Pride we can see the difference our funding has made to the community. The positive outcomes of their work are astonishing and help show that every pound donated through the Pride ticket scheme is making a huge difference to our community.”

Overlooked: Lizzy Mace: Fringe Review

Overlooked_pressrelease

Overlooked

Written and performed by Lizzy Mace

Pink Fringe @ Marlborough Theatre, Prince’s Street, Brighton

Monday, May 6

Have you ever felt undervalued? Ignored? Overlooked?

Every now and again you come across a performer whose endearing modesty is as charming as her talent.  Lizzy Mace’s sharp unremitting take is on the kind of folk who slide on by, desperately trying to be unnoticed without the usual kind of glam & bang to grab attention. Maces characters are a collection of these types, she grabs them and puts them in a spotlight allowing them a moment of our time to rant, grow, glow or just squirm, and then holds a mirror up to our reactions. She’s sharp and mean but you could watch her and not know that till it’s too late. In a festival full of cant, puff and self-promotion this subtle, delicate yet robust cute collection of contradiction enchanted me last night at the Marlborough as part of the Pink Fringe.

Overlooked is part of the Marlborough Prink Fringe, for more info on the excellent  Pink Fringe see the website here:

Mace does characters well and managed with the slightest of props to transform convincingly. Displaying a wonderful range of amusing accents and some tragically observed characters, whose awkwardness is never in question although their dignity, delusion and pride often are. This isn’t laughing at the sad or small, it’s laughing at our own self-importance, swift judgmental attitudes and common neediness. While sharing a mutual moment of shy, wide eyed hope at some kind of connection with each other, this is a charming show.

Mace does some cool deconstruction of humour too, written into one of her funnier piece with the ‘Fourth Pig’ from the Big Bad Wolf tale, and some cringingly honest pleas of the ‘Girl in the Coat check queue’. She does angry and mad very well and her vengefully psychotic sock puppet TV presenter was wonderful. She’s got good range and an engaging stage presence, although we only ever get to glimpse the real Lizzy on moments of meta reflection.

Macey

Mace’s warm and engaging characters manage to carry this show across some of the more tumbleweed moments but then I suspect that Mace has built these in as slightly awkward moments of silence to allow the real delight of the quiet, overlooked moments to shine, and even if she hadn’t I’m willing to cut her a bit of slack as she made me laugh out loud many times with her superb surreal and slightly sad observations on a whole host of real and fictionally real characters.

Charming, understated and funny, Mace sneaks up on us unawares and moves us from pity to hilarity in one swift ruthlessly observed remark. Don’t underestimate this overlooked show. You go Lizzy! But just go quietly and without too much fuss, as you do, but push it a little further into the dark side too Poppet.

For more information on Lizzy or to check out her next dates, CLICK HERE:

For more information on the Pink Fringe and shows due up at the Marlborough Theatre, CLICK HERE:

 

L Project release second anti bullying single

New single immediately tops the Amazon Folk, Rock and Movers and Shakers lists.

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After the shock of seeing LGBT hunts in Russia and gay people being burnt alive in Uganda the L Project brings a big dose of LGBT love to the table with the release of their second LGBT fund-raising single We’re All Human .

This follows on from the huge success of their first single released last year called It does get better.

L ProjectDescribed as We Are The World but for LGBT, the song, and it’s accompanying YouTube video (which has seen nearly 10,000 views in 48 hours), is raising money for three LGBT charities:

  • Kaleidoscope Trust – and international LGBT charity
  • The Russian LGBT Network
  • Mermaids – a UK youth transgender charity
The song immediately topped the Amazon Folk, Rock and Movers and Shakers lists, has been shared and tweeted by Clare Balding, Marc Almond, Billy Myers, Biff Naked, actress Angela Griffin and author Stella Duffy to name a few and is bubbling up through the various Amazon and iTunes charts. That’s brilliant going for a group of nineteen unsigned LGBT artists, whose main ambition is to get it into the mainstream to help raise as much money as possible.Georgey Payne, the songwriter and producer of We’re All Human, said: “Since the first song we’ve built up a massive network of support through social media. This time we hope that the mainstream media will pick up our story, so that even more people will download the song, and be part of changing the lives of LGBT people who need support. Some of that help will be financial, but we also have lots of stories about people all over the world being helped just by hearing the words and knowing there are people like us who care.”L ProjectThe song is available from all good download sites: We’re All Human – The L Project 

To view the official music video for We’re All Human LGBT Charity Song: CLICK HERE:

For iTunes, CLICK HERE:

For Amazon, CLICK HERE: 

 

 

Euro madness all week

Brighton Gay Radio counts down to Eurovision Song Contest in Copenhagen.

Brighton Gay Radio

The campest radio station in Brighton and Hove will be broadcasting the gayest Eurovision classics all week as the nation gets ready to tune into the annual Euro songfest being broadcast from Copenhagen on Saturday, May 10.

Emmelie de Forest from Denmark won the 2013 edition of Europe’s Favourite TV Show in Malmo, Sweden with her song Only Teardrops!

Mark ‘Marcia’ Jenkins resident DJ at the Legendary Glitterball Nights at the Bulldog in St James Street will bring you:

Tuesday May 6:   Glitterball Eurovision from the 80s

Wednesday May 7: The top 50 Divas of Eurovision

Thursday May 8: The official UK at Eurovision fan club all time UK entry countdown

Friday May 9: The top 50 Eurovision winners countdown

Saturday May 10: Weekend..Eurovision Clubland Party…non stop Eurovision dance mixes old and new.

To tune in, CLICK HERE:

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