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Sheila McWattie – funeral arrangements

Sheila McWattie, who died suddenly last week, will be laid to rest this afternoon at 4.30 p.m.

Sheila McWattie

SHEILA’S funeral will take place in the South Chapel at Woodvale Crematorium, Lewes Rd, Brighton, BN2 3QB.

Friends attending the funeral are asked to bring a single orange or yellow flower and a short message or poem for Sheila written on paper.

Sheila’s family ask that, instead of sending flowers, you make a donation to MacMillan Nurses, The Brighton Women’s Centre or RISE.

Following the funeral service everyone is invited to gather at Envy Nightclub above Charles St Bar, 8 Marine Parade, Brighton, BN2 1TA where everyone can share and celebrate their friendship with Sheila through music, poetry or simply their stories.


Event: Sheila McWattie Funeral

Where: South Chapel at Woodvale Crematorium, Lewes Rd, Brighton, BN2 3QB

When: Thursday, February 26

Time: 4.30 p.m.

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Labour promise to ban MPs from taking second jobs

Following the cash-for-questions revelations last week concerning two former Home Secretaries, Malcolm Rifkind and Jack Straw, the Labour Party has announced that no sitting Labour MP will be able to take a paid directorship or consultancy from May 7.

Ed Miliband MP
Ed Miliband MP

IF elected to Government on May 7, Labour will move to extend the ban to MPs of all parties.

Ed Miliband MP, leader of the Labour Party, said: “We must rebuild public trust in politics — the integrity of our democracy depends on it. But the Tories are trying to block our reforms. Today at PMQs, I asked David Cameron six times if he’d act to end MPs having second jobs. Six times, he refused to say he would.”

Labour’s parliamentary candidate for Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven, Nancy Platts, has emphasised that her only remuneration will be her parliamentary salary should she be elected on May 7.

Nancy Platts: Labour parliamentary candidate for Brighton Kemptown & Peacehaven
Nancy Platts, Labour parliamentary candidate for Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven

She said: “I’ll be working for my constituents and no one else.”

“My sole professional interest will be the concerns of my constituents and I view any divided financial loyalties as a betrayal of the voting public. I have not accepted, nor will I ever accept, any such inducements.”

“The reputation of politicians sits badly enough already, and will only improve if we remove any suspicion that MPs are working in their own interests as well as those of their constituents.

“In the past day or two, Conservative politicians Lord Heseltine and Sir Malcolm Rifkind have publicly declared that MPs have plenty of time to pursue paid outside employment. I completely reject such an idea. It is outrageous to suggest that there isn’t always plenty for a hard-working constituency MP to do.”

 

 

PREVIEW: Women take centre stage at Brighton Early Music Festival

The programme for Brighton Early Music Festival 2015 will be one of the country’s largest celebrations of WOMEN – as composers, performers, inspirational characters, muses and symbols – including the largest UK celebration of women composers of the past.

Brighton Early Music Centre

FESTIVAL highlights include a new production of the earliest opera by a woman composer – Francesca Caccini’s La Liberazione di Ruggiero dall’Isola d’Alcina (1625), directed by Susannah Waters, with soloists including Anna Devin, Denis Lakey and Nick Pritchard.

Other female composers featured include Elisabeth Jaquet de la Guerre (London Handel Players with soprano Ruby Hughes),Barbara Strozzi, and Chiara Margarita Cozzolani (BREMF Consort of Voices with Clare Wilkinson).

The Orlando Consort will be presenting their new project Voices Appeared, which marries medieval music with the classic 1928 silent film The Passion of Joan of Arc.  More dramatic elements include a retelling of the life of Hildegard of Bingen, and an intriguing programme that indicates Lucrezia Borgia’s cloistered daughter as a prolific composer.

Early music favourites are not neglected, with appearances by the Festival’s patron Emma Kirkby (Heroines of the Golden Age, with lutenist Jakob Lindberg), Joglaresa (Daughters of Abraham, featuring women’s songs from ancient Arabic, Jewish and Christian traditions) and The Carnival Band in a raucous evening on notorious women featured in broad sheet ballads.

This community-based Festival, not only features all three of its own choirs (BREMF Consort of Voices, BREMF Singers, and the BREMF Community Choir), there are also several opportunities to take part. Amateur singers can sign up for a workshop on the music of Cipriano de Rore, or a dynamic workshop led by Belinda Sykes of Joglaresa.

Brighton Early Music Festival also has a strong track record in supporting and mentoring young artists, with its flagship Early Music Live! ensembles scheme running for the eighth year in 2015/16.

Emerging early music ensembles will perform at the Festival on October 31 2015, and many of the smaller roles in the Caccini opera will be taken by auditioned young singers. Vocal ensembles will also have the chance to work with conductor Eamonn Dougan in a public workshop.

For more information and to book tickets, click here:

Or telephone Brighton Dome Ticket Office on 01273 709709

 

 

 

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