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Rainbow Fund awards record grants to LGBT/HIV groups

The great and the good attended the Rainbow Fund Awards ceremony at the Brighton Metropole Hilton last night.

Rainbow Fund Award

Rainbow Fund patron, comedienne Zoe Lyons and Lola Lasagne hosted the ceremony, which saw grants totalling over £50,000 awarded to twelve local LGBT/HIV organisations providing effective front-line services to the LGBT community in Brighton and Hove, followed by the new Pride business awards acknowledging support from local businesses for Pride.

Guest presenters during the evening included Cllr Denise Cobb, Deputy Mayor of Brighton and Hove; Katy Bourne, the Police and Crime Commissioner; Cllr Bill Randall; Peter Kyle, the prospective Labour candidate for Hove and Portslade; Nicole Gibson, Pride Ambassador; David Raven, Miss Jason and Tammy Twinkle; Jamie Hakim, the owner of Brighton Lanes Apartments; Hizzie Fletcher, the organiser of Freedom to Live Pride Art Exhibition and a member of the Rainbow Fund grants committee; and Danny Dwyer from Bear Patrol and the Brighton Bear Weekenders.

Chris GULL

Rainbow Fund chair Chris Gull explained the Fund’s new community interest company (CIC) structure and thanked former chair Paul Elgood for delivering the highest-ever total for a grants round during the previous twelve months. Paul remains the CIC director and a member of the grants panel.

Rainbow Funds

Grants were made possible thanks to fundraising by Brighton Pride, the Brighton Bears Weekender and nearly twenty fundraising events and activities in aid of the Rainbow Fund this summer organised by venues such as Legends, the Queen’s Arms, the Marine Tavern, Dr Brighton’s, Subline and groups and individuals including the MCC, the Eurovision Party, Jamie Hakim and George Montague, the Oldest Gay in the Village.

Peer Action

Peer Action received £5,000 for activities and treatments for people with HIV.

Blueprint 22

Blueprint 22 received £5,000 for development of online social networking for young people.

Allsorts Youth Project

Allsorts Youth Project received £5,000 for a Trans youth worker for the Trans*formers youth group.

Sussex Beacon

Sussex Beacon received £5,000 for an alcohol-related health project for people with HIV.

Older & Out

Older & Out received £4,360 for activities for older LGBT people.

GEMS

GEMS received £5,000 for activities for older gay men.

MindOut

MindOut received £5,000 for a weekly peer support group.

LGBT Switchboard

LGBT Switchboard received £2,500 for domestic violence training for Switchboard counsellors.

FTMB

FTMB received £4,313 for core running costs for 2 years.

Out in Brighton

Out in Brighton received £2,500 towards LGBT radio training and equipment costs.

LGBT Community Safety Forum

LGBT Community Safety Forum received £5,000 towards hate crime advocacy and support including continued British Sign Language training for volunteers.

Lunch Positive

Lunch Positive received £5,000 towards food costs, venue, volunteers and a new Sunday lunch pilot.

 

 

REVIEW: Kate Bush

Like The Sun Coming Out: my evening with Kate Bush, by Craig Hanlon-Smith.

Kate Bush

Such was the volcanic response from the audience at the Hammersmith Apollo on Saturday night, at the end of the first week of Kate Bush’s residency there, that her (assumed) comments of gratitude in between songs during the opening 30 minutes were inaudible above the applause, cheers and whistles of a tiny fraction of a fan base that stretched from ages 18 to 80. Standing as one of around 3000 fortunate ticket holders, it would not be an exaggeration to suggest that what we were experiencing on that late August evening in West London was akin to a collective spiritual if not religious experience.

The first 40 minutes of ‘Before The Dawn’ is a straightforward gig, but one that is wrapped in the artistic wizardry and mystique of an illustrious career within reach of its 40th anniversary. It takes me at least that time to appreciate that yes, it is really her, and yes she really is leading, as she described, “one shit-hot band” through a storming set list of hits and equally tremendous album tracks from 1985’s Hounds of Love, through The Red Shoes to her triumphant return to the fold Ariel, itself now almost ten years old. What a collection to choose from; how proud she must feel both to own and to have created such a wealth of material. There was many a grown man over forty amongst our number who during Running Up That Hill and King Of The Mountain openly wept.

The band – which includes two sets of drummers and percussionists, two sets of keyboards, four guitarists and five singers – ensures that her own theatrical production styles and both vocal and instrumental layering are brought to life with prowess and perfection. Had that been our lot, we’d have all returned to our lives thrilled, touched and exhilarated to have witnessed La Bush’s triumphant return to live performance; but the venue then shuddered into darkness amidst thunder, lightning and exploding cannons which drenched the audience in thousands of seemingly handwritten notes quoting Tennyson, announcing the theatrical interpretation of the 1985 concept suite The Ninth Wave.

What followed was a performance that befitted the international reputation of the Royal National Theatre or RSC, with sets of shipwrecks, a frozen ‘Under Ice’ living room which mirrored its mundane equivalent, and a host of characters ranging from a near-drowned crew to fantastical fish people. At the centre of every moment, physical, musical, vocal, was the auteur of it all, Kate Bush. As she was carried off into the deep leaving her cast and crew clutching a buoy battered by the onstage silk ocean, carried by fish people through the audience, I have never experienced such breathless silence from 3000 people collectively stunned into silence by the artistic mastery of all we had witnessed. The Ninth Wave performed in its entirety concluded with Bush returning to the stage with her troupe for The Morning Fog, acoustic, warm and inclusive, to conclude Act One. “You know what?” she sang with arms outstretched “I love you better, now” and we believed her completely.

Act Two brought more spectacle, her work with RSC director Adrian both detailed and awe inspiring. A Sky of Honey from Ariel is brought to life through the tale of a young artist, played by Kate’s son Albert McIntosh and a wooden boy puppet. Again the entire company and more portray blackbirds, artists and spirits, all the while maintaining a quality of performance you would expect from The Royal Opera House. Every moment, gesture, turn and note was carefully considered, choreographed and directed, and yet with such spontaneity and heart. What we are experiencing here is where art meets magic. If this is before the dawn, I am not sure I shall be able to cope once the sun comes out.

Our evening concludes with its curator, creator, director and author simply at the piano, delicately sharing Among Angels from her most recent release 50 Words For Snow, and the company return to the stage to lead 3000 disciples in a rousing Cloudbusting. We couldn’t have asked for more. She looked thrilled, as were we.

Did I mention that every song received its own standing ovation? that strangers hung on to one another for emotional support throughout? and that concluding the evening as she sang “I can see angels, standing around you”, so could we, Kate. And so could we.

 

 

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