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PREVIEW: ‘Therapy’ at the Marlborough Theatre

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LaLa Theatre Co present their debut play Therapy at the Marlborough Theatre.

To heal, or not to heal? Is that a question? 

To err is human! Does that even make sense?

 There are only two things that are certain in life…death and taxes..oh yeah, three things… Therapy! 

When are we considered broken? When do we need to be fixed? 

Therapy plays host to a disparate bunch of characters seeking these very answers. Join them as they embark on a series of bizarre holistic treatments at the Orpady Centre of inner investigations, designed to put them in touch with their truth.
 Led by an unorthodox doctor and two new-age practitioners, the group are taken on a bonkers and revealing journey, as head and heart do battle in a bawdy tale of wit and woe!

Expect fun, camp and cutting humour and some scenes containing scantily
clad men!

 Therapy is an original new play written and directed by Tara Harley.

Show dates are from Thursday 26 – Sat 28 March.

15% of ticket sales will be donated to the Terrence Higgins Trust.

Tickets can be purchased for £10 from The Marlborough or from www.brownpapertickets.com (booking fee applies).

Nominations open for Pride Ambassadors, 2015

Want to be a Pride Ambassador in 2015 and represent your community at the front of the Pride Parade?

Brighton Pride 2015

FOLLOWING the outstanding success of the Pride Ambassadors Program in 2013 and 14, nominations have now opened for electing Pride Ambassadors for 2015 to help celebrate and deliver the Pride theme, Carnival of Diversity.

Last year’s retiring Pride Ambassadors are:

Maria Baker – Ambassador for the Black and Ethnic Minority Community
• Nicole Gibson –  Trans* Ambassador
• Michael (Greenbeard) Nelson – Older People’s Ambassador
• Jenny Bennett – A volunteer at LGBT Switchboard for 30 years

If you want to nominate someone who you think goes the extra mile to help LGBT people in Brighton & Hove or is someone you want to see represent the LGBT community at the front of the Pride Parade, send an email with the name of the person and why you’ve nominated them to info@gscene.com

Whoever receives the highest number of nominations in each of the next four months will be appointed a Pride Ambassador for 2015. The first Pride Ambassador will be announced in May Gscene. The Pride Ambassador’s program is sponsored and administered by Gscene Magazine.

Pride Ambassadors 2015

BFI Flare announces filmmakers in first LGBT ‘Film Mentorship’ programme

BFI Flare: London LGBT Film Festival have announced the successful filmmakers who will take part in the inaugural BFI Flare Mentorship programme in partnership with Creative Skillset.

BFI Flare 2015

THIS pilot programme offers support to five emerging LGBT filmmakers who will be mentored by a senior figure from the film industry as they develop industry knowledge, professional connections, their passion for cinema and an overview of LGBT features entering the marketplace with a tailored 9 month programme of talks and screenings.

The winning film-maker participants and their specially chosen mentors are:

• Aleem Khan, writer/director, whose short film Three Brothers was BAFTA nominated in 2015 and who is currently working on new feature, After Love.

Mentor: Ben Roberts, Director, BFI Lottery Film Fund

• Claire Kurylowski,  whose web-based work, In Real Life, garnered a place in Dazed Digital’s Visionaries series and had its cinema premiere at the Institute of Contemporary Arts as part of London Short Film Festival

Mentor: Ester Martin Bergsmark, award-winning Swedish filmmaker (Something Must Break, She Male Snails)

• Islay Bell-Webb, writer, an NFTS graduate who co-wrote Slap (directed by Nick Rowland), which was also BAFTA nominated earlier this year

Mentor: Russell T. Davies OBE (Doctor Who and recently Cucumber, Banana and Tofu)

• Rachelle Constant, producer, who is currently a development editor at BBC Continuing Drama and recently produced short film Two Dosas which screened at BFI London Film Festival

Mentors: Mike Goodridge, CEO of Protagonist Pictures, former editor Screen International; and BAFTA-nominated producer Gavin Humphries

• Scout Stuart whose debut feature Mud was selected for initial development with Creative England’s iFeatures

Mentor: Hong Khaou, director of BAFTA-nominated Lilting

Tricia Tuttle, BFI Deputy Head of Festivals, said: “Watching BFI Flare (formerly LLGFF) grow in the last decades, we can see just how much LGBT cinema has matured and emerged from the shadows. This is rich, vibrant work representing the diversity of LGBT experience across the globe. But we were also aware there is still a lot of work to be done to support British filmmakers who are LGBT identified and who may want to tell these stories. We were genuinely impressed by the number of quality applications we received, and blown away by the talent and spirit of our five selected filmmakers.  The future of British LGBT cinema looks very bright indeed.”

For more information about BFI, click here: 

British Council makes Flare LGBT films available in more than 50 countries

fiveFilms4freedom is the world’s first digital, global, LGBT film festival.

5films4freedom

THE British Council, the UK’s international organisation for cultural relations and educational opportunities, have announced that five short films from BFI Flare, the UK’s leading Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Film Festival, will be available to audiences around the world for the first time through BFI player, the British Film Institute’s online video service.

BFI Flare: London LGBT Film Festival runs from March 19-29, 2015 at BFI Southbank. On Wednesday, March 25, fiveFilms4freedom will become a 24-hour campaign asking people everywhere to watch a film together over the course of one single day.

fiveFilms4freedom is the world’s first digital, global, LGBT film festival and will be promoted through the British Council’s network in more than fifty countries and regions including across the Americas, China, India, Israel, Kosovo, Poland, Turkey, Ukraine and the Middle East.

This will be a chance for audiences, wherever they are, to enjoy a taster of LGBT cinema; to find out a little bit more about emerging LGBT filmmakers from around the world; and most importantly, to show support for freedom and equality everywhere.

fiveFilms4freedom is produced in partnership with Stonewall, the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans equality charity.

The five films represent a cross section of contemporary LGBT short film. The films are made by lesbians, gay men and transgender filmmakers, and range from sweet short stories about first love to documenting activism. They are polished, rough, funny, sad and inspiring and each has a different voice.

The films are:

• An Afternoon (En Eftermiddag), Director Søren Green’s new short film is a sensitive exploration of nascent sexuality. Mathias and Frederik are two friends who spend an afternoon together; Mathias has decided that this is the time to tell Frederik that he is in love with him.

• Chance, Jake Graf’s self-funded short film premieres at BFI Flare. It focuses on older gay love and overcoming loneliness as a chance encounter between Trevor and a mysterious stranger equally troubled by his own past, forces both men to start to live again.

• Code Academy, Canadian writer and director Nisha Ganatra is best known as Producer/Director of Transparent, the Golden Globe-winning TV series. In Code Academy, Frankie masquerades as a boy in futuristic cyberspace to get the girl of her dreams.

• Morning Is Broken, Director and writer Simon Anderson’s 2014 film is a beautifully shot coming-of-age drama set in the lush English countryside, following a young man’s struggle to come to terms with his sexuality at the end of his older brother’s wedding.

• True Wheel, Director Nora Mandray’s 2015 documentary focuses on Fender Bender, an inspirational bicycle workshop for queer, transgender and women’s communities in Detroit.

Alan Gemmell, Director fiveFilms4freedom, British Council, said:  “fiveFilms4freedom is a ground-breaking LGBT film festival supporting freedom and equality all over the world and showcasing some of our finest short filmmakers.  By bringing together the British Council and films from BFI Flare we are promoting LGBT cinema in countries that make up fifty percent of the world’s population.  On 25 March we are asking the world to watch a movie together and show that love is a basic human right.”

Briony Hanson, Director Film, British Council, added: “The British Council’s job is to connect people around the world and fiveFilms4freedom explores the diversity, freedom of expression and celebration of difference that characterise UK society.  We believe passionately in the power of culture and film to change people’s lives and hope that this programme has a long lasting, far reaching and positive impact.”

Tricia Tuttle, Deputy Director of Festivals at the British Film Institute, said: “Queer filmmakers have delivered some of cinema’s most striking, vital, challenging, provocative and beautiful films, and BFI Flare has been key in bringing these to UK audiences over the last 29 years. We’re thrilled this partnership will open up the festival to audiences around the world, giving millions of people the opportunity to enjoy great new LGBT films.”

James Taylor, Head of Campaigns, Stonewall, concluded saying: “fiveFilms4freedom not only showcases some phenomenal talent, but also brings together the international LGBT community. In 77 countries around the world it is still illegal to be gay, and in five it is punishable by death, so the opportunity to showcase LGBT stories and filmmakers in more than 50 countries worldwide is fantastic.”

 

 

Disabled people call for more job opportunities at Brighton Conference

Disabled residents from across the city called for more job opportunities at a conference organised by Nancy Platts, the Labour candidate for Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven.

WEB.600
Nancy Platts, Simon Wilson, (Simon Wilson is an independent disability trainer, consultant and a website designer) and Kate Green MP

DISABLED people attending said that staff delivering public services must be better trained to understand and respond to their needs appropriately. They also wanted organisations to take a more positive approach to employing disabled people.

Kate Green MP, Shadow Minister for Disabled People was joined by disabled people and representatives from The Fed Centre for Independent Living, Able and Willing, the GMB and Brighton and Hove Buses who discussed the changes needed to services to improve disabled residents’ lives.

Nancy Platts, said: “The conference was a chance for disabled people to hold decision makers to account and speak directly to those who run the services that have such an impact on their everyday lives and I want to thank everyone who came along to share their experiences.

“We know disabled people want to work, but that more needs to be done to give them the opportunity to find employment.  We heard some powerful stories today from disabled people who quite rightly want to be treated with respect and valued in the community and in the workplace.

“The repeal of the hated Bedroom Tax and more accessible transport is just part of the solution – we also need to encourage more businesses to offer jobs to disabled workers and make the reasonable adjustments needed in the workplace.”

Kate Green MP, added: “I enjoyed meeting Kemptown and Peacehaven residents and learning about their concerns as well as their hopes and dreams for the future.

“A Labour government will empower disabled people and enable those who can work to do so. We’ve insisted that our social security system properly protects those for whom work isn’t possible, and enables them to live their lives to the full and with dignity.”

Rosemary Cooper-Macleod from Saltdean, said: “This conference was an amazing opportunity to have our voices heard. Kate and Nancy have really listened to the issues disabled people face and their positive and proactive approach to finding solutions is very welcome.”

The Bushes Spring Clean initiative – change of published date!

It’s that time of the year when THT arrange a Dukes Mound spring clean!

THT Keep It Clean

THEY are looking for volunteers to give them a helping hand on Saturday, April 25 from 1pm-5.30pm to clear up mess left from nocturnal cruising activities.

Litter pickers and spades will be provided as well as refreshments and snacks to keep everyone going during the afternoon.

If you are interested in helping, email:

Or telephone: 01273764208

 

 

Brighton hosts ‘Hand in Hand’ LGBT Choir Festival in June

Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus and the Rainbow Chorus are hosting the Hand in Hand UK and Ireland LGBT Choir Festival this summer over the weekend of June 12-14.

Hand in Hand LGBT Choir Festival: Photo: Pete Stean
Photo: Pete Stean

THE Festival will bring together LGBT choirs from all over the UK and Ireland to sing, socialise and celebrate, whilst helping raise funds for a number of local charities, including the Sussex Beacon and Lunch Positive.

On Saturday June 13, there will be workshops and performances and a number of the choirs will be performing at the Hand In Hand LGBT Choir Festival Concert at 7.30 p.m. in Brighton Dome Concert Hall, with tickets available to the general public.

On Sunday June 14, musical directors, chairs and committee members from the choirs will be offered the opportunity to network, brainstorm, and share issues in a number of short meetings.

Other delegates will take part in seaside ‘flashmobs’ in nearby venues including the seafront itself. By lunchtime, everyone will get together again for a leisurely LGBT picnic in the park before bidding their fond farewells.

WEB.600.2The Co-Chairs for the Hand In Hand Festival, Paul Charlton (Chairman of Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus), and Finola Brophy (Chair of Rainbow Chorus), said: “We are delighted to be organising this unique event, bringing together the best LGBT choirs from all over the UK and Ireland. Don’t miss the ‘Hand in Hand’ Concert at Brighton Dome – your chance to be part of an amazing choral experience never seen before here in Brighton. Singing classical and traditional music through to classic gay anthems, the high standard and diversity of the music and the choirs will astound and impress you. We’re raising money for local charities too, so come and join us for a thrilling evening.”

If you are a member of an LGBT choir in the UK or Ireland, and would like to take part in the Hand In Hand LGBT Choir Festival, click here:


Event: Hand In Hand LGBT Choir Festival Concert

Where: The Brighton Dome, Church Street, Brighton, BN1 1UE

When: Saturday, June 13, 2015

Time: 7.30 p.m.

Tickets: £10/£14/£17 available shortly

To purchase online, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 709709

 

 

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