menu

Gay MP for Hove & Portslade to march at Pride

Peter Kyle, the new Labour MP for Hove & Portslade will be marching with the Labour Group on the Pride Community Parade, Carnival of Diversity on Saturday, August 1.

Peter Kyle MP
Peter Kyle MP

Mr Kyle, said: “As Hove’s first openly gay MP I’m proud to be able to represent the LGBT communities and show how far we have come and what we can achieve. I’m over-the-moon to be in a position to be able to be a loud and effective voice for all sections of the community and I will endeavor to continue to push forward boundaries and show the next generation that nothing is impossible. Enjoy Pride weekend – I hope it’s the best one yet.”

Nationally Labour is committed to strengthening the law on homophobic, biphobic and transphobic hate crime, tackling bullying in schools and working towards the decriminalisation of homosexuality worldwide.

Cllr Warren Morgan
Cllr Warren Morgan

Councillor Warren Morgan, Leader of Brighton and Hove City Council, added: “Under my leadership the city council will celebrate the LGBT contribution to the city year round, and work on ensuring all are safe, respected and included. Have a great Pride weekend and thanks to all those who make the weekend such a success.”

Brighton, Hove and District Labour Party say Brighton Pride is a special event in their annual calendar and an opportunity each year to remind people of Labour’s record on fighting for equality and discrimination.

Nancy Platts
Nancy Platts

Nancy Platts, Chair of Brighton, Hove and District Labour Party, said: “I’m proud to join the Pride parade and my thoughts are with the LGBT communities in other parts of the world, where they are unable to enjoy the freedom to openly express their love and still have to win the fight for equal rights.”

The Brighton Pride Community Parade will set off at 11am on Saturday, August 1, from the Peace Statue on Hove Lawns and travel east along Kings Road, north up West Street, east along North Street and north along London Road to Preston Park.

London LGBTQI cross-arts festival announces 2015 dates

Organisers of London’s Gaywise FESTival, also known as GFEST, have announced that this year’s event, entitled (Complacent Present) …Fragile Future? will run from November 9-20.

GFEST

GFEST is London’s Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex (LGBTQI) cross-arts annual event.

The 2015 festival will consist of a visual arts exhibition, film screenings, performances, plus talks and debates focusing on the works of young and established artists and practitioners. The festival is organised by arts charity Wise Thoughts.

This year’s visual arts exhibition, Asian Future, will explore Asian identity.

The film programme will run under the heading Cinema Futura, while the performance events will be themed Tonal Future.

GFEST’s 2015 programme advisors include Anna McNay, Gulliver Ralston, Michael Petry, Simon Tarrant, Subodh Rathod and Lois Keidan and the artistic director is Niranjan Kamatkar.

Catherine West, MP for Hornsey & Wood Green where Wise Thoughts is based, said: “I am delighted to offer my support to this year’s GFEST, celebrating some of the brightest and best talent in the LGBTQI community here and abroad.  I am looking forward to coming along to one of the events in my constituency and send my best wishes to everyone taking part this year and to Wise Thoughts for organising such a fantastic diverse programme.”

GFEST is now in its eighth year, despite major cuts to art funding in the capital and nationally.

Speaking of the importance of endorsement from key decision makers, GFEST artistic director Niranjan Kamatkar said: “We are very pleased to receive the support of our local MP and we continue to profile LGBT art works due to the support of eminent people, artists and audiences. Irrespective of significant funding challenges, we are confident that we can deliver the full festival programme this year.”

For more information about GFEST, click here: 

Martlets London Road shop brims with Pride

Looking for those few finishing touches to complete your outfit for Pride?

Martlets at Pride

Perhaps the Martlets London Road shop can help. From feather boas, wigs and hats to fancy dress, masquerade masks and butterfly wings, they have an amazing selection to choose from.

Martlets Head of Retail, Eve Collins, said: “We are really proud to be supporting Pride, especially on its 25th anniversary. The parade will be going right past the shop this year, and we can’t wait to see the procession and all the colourful floats as they go by.

“We have a wonderful variety of stunning, colourful and glitzy party outfits and accessories, which we think could be just perfect for Pride.”

Martlets at PrideThe Martlets has ten shops around Brighton & Hove, Lewes, Peacehaven, Rottingdean and Woodingdean which create valuable income source for the hospice.

All profits raised through Martlets Trading Co. helps the Martlets Hospice provide end of life care to adults who are affected by terminal and life limiting illness, as well as caring for their families and loved ones.

The Hospice receives less than a third of their funding from the government and must raise £11,000 a day to help people who are dying to do so with dignity and in as calm and peaceful a way as possible.

Eve added: “Our shops sell everything from Vintage clothes and jewellery, quality used furniture and electricals, white goods, new mobility aids as well as clothing, home ware, books and toys. We also sell books online through Amazon and EBay, we have over 80,000 titles listed so we think there’s something for most people!”

The Martlets Hospice in Hove provides end of life care services to adults with terminal illness including cancer.  Hospice facilities consist of an 18 bed InPatient Unit, a Hospice at Home Service, and Day Services for patients and their carers.

The Martlets believes that everyone is entitled to die well. Its main aim is to maximise patients’ quality of life and to support patient choice, dignity and independence.

A registered charity, all services are provided free of charge. The Martlets receives less than a third of its funding from the government and so must raise £11,000 a day to care for patients and their families.

For more information about the Martlets, click here: 

 

Centre for older people celebrates 35th anniversary

Somerset Day Centre, home to the OLDER & Out project for older LGBT people celebrated its 35th anniversary last week with a party attended by almost 200 people.

Somerset House

The event, attended by the mayor of Brighton and Hove, Cllr Linda Hyde, trustees, service users and their friends and families, took place at their premises in St James’s Street, Brighton.

Director Jules Dienes, said: “We encourage independence and help people to access other services and make sure they are getting the right benefits and help people generally with their confidence and mobility.”

OLDER & Out the LGBT social group meets at the Somerset Day Centre on the second Friday of each month from 1-3pm.

WEB.600.2

For more information about OLDER & Out, click here:

For more information about the Somerset Day Centre, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 699000

 

Council’s smart answer to bus ticket problem

Bus passengers with electronic ‘smart’ tickets will be able to use them on more than one bus company in Brighton & Hove from next week.

Brighton and Hove City Cllr Gill Mitchell launches the expansion of the Bus Key Cards in Brighton and Hove with L-R Neil Morgan (The Big Lemon) Nick Hill (Brighton &  Hove Buses) and Joe Beckley ( Compass Travel). From August 3rd the electronic smart tickets will be accepted onThe Big Lemon and Compass Travel buses as well as Brighton & Hove buses.
Cllr Gill Mitchell (second from left) launches the expansion of the Bus Key Cards in Brighton and Hove

At present, smartcard tickets, known as The Key, used on Brighton & Hove Bus Company services, could not be accepted by other firms, meaning anyone who needed to make a journey involving more than one company had to buy tickets from different sources.

From August 3, the new multi operator ticketing scheme will be available on vehicles run by The Big Lemon and on all Compass Buses operating on the Brighton & Hove network.

To buy tickets online, click here: or at Brighton & Hove Buses’ North Street shop.

M-Tickets bought and displayed on mobile phones via an app will also be accepted across the three companies.

For more information, click here: 

Transport bosses say it will make cross-city bus travel easier and cheaper.

The move was made possible by a £71,000 grant the council won from the Department for Transport, plus resources from Brighton & Hove Buses and their parent company Go Ahead, and the project has funded computing changes to integrate the services, plus installation of card-readers on buses run by Compass Travel and the Big Lemon.

The companies provide supported bus services, subsidised by the council, which would otherwise not be commercially viable.   The three-year pilot scheme will cover Compass Travel services 37, 37B, 47 56, 57, 16 and 66, plus service 52 operated by The Big Lemon.

As well as winning the grant and facilitating the project, the city council is also contributing  £27,000 towards set-up costs, with bus companies meeting the running costs.

Smartcards can be topped up online or at Brighton & Hove Buses’ North Street shop, providing tickets ranging from single journeys to one-year seasons.

If successful the council’s multi-operator scheme could be extended to all operators of bus services in the city.

 Cllr Gill Mitchell, Chair of the council’s environment, transport and sustainability committee, said:  “This makes cross-city bus travel much more practical.  It could increase travel on routes which have to be subsidised and make them increasingly viable.

“This has been a very positive exercise, with the council assisting co-operation between our different bus companies for the benefit of the travelling public.”

 

Supported services mainly run to outlying areas east of the city as far as Saltdean and to Hangleton, Knoll and Portslade in the west.  They cover routes or times that are socially important but not commercially viable.

Hepatitis C in the UK continues to rise

Latest figures published by Public Health England (PHE) show hospital admissions from hepatitis C-related end-stage liver disease and liver cancer continue to rise.

WEB.600

Although there has been a small drop in deaths in 2013 compared to 2012, overall trends in hospital admissions and deaths have been upwards for more than a decade.

PHE estimates that 160,000 people in England are living with hepatitis C, many of whom are unaware of their infections. However, more individuals are being tested and diagnosed; particular improvements have been seen in primary care where surveillance indicates that testing has risen by 21% in England in the last five years.

People who inject drugs remain at greatest risk of infection. In 2014, 83% of people who inject drugs and participated in surveys report having had a hepatitis C test, an increase from 67% in 2004.

The report highlights the importance of maintaining provision of needle and syringe programmes and to avoid substitution therapies in drug services as part of the wider efforts to prevent the spread of hepatitis C infection.

Dr Helen Harris, hepatitis C expert at PHE, who led the publication of the report, said: “With more patients being tested and improved treatments, there is at last real hope that we will begin to see an impact on the number of deaths from hepatitis C-related end-stage liver disease and liver cancer.

 “Antiviral treatments are available in the UK that can successfully clear hepatitis C virus in the majority of patients, and new drugs coming online offer improved rates of viral clearance, fewer side effects, and are easier to administer.

“Hepatitis C is a problem in England, but it’s a problem with a solution.”

The recent policy announcement making new treatments available to patients with hepatitis C-related cirrhosis, will help to reduce the future burden of hepatitis C disease, and a scale-up of new treatments in those with less severe disease could achieve a reduction in the numbers of people who would otherwise go on to develop serious liver disease.

 

Dr Charles Gore
Dr Charles Gore

Charles Gore, Chief Executive of  The Hepatitis C Trust, added: “We are living in a potentially transformative time for hepatitis C. New treatments offer us the chance to save and transform the lives of thousands of people in this country. No longer can we tolerate the ever-rising number of people dying from hepatitis C related cirrhosis and liver cancer. We can instead create a future where hepatitis C is eliminated as a serious public health concern.”

 

PREVIEW: Dragelicious!

Artist Mike Thorn presents his latest exhibition Dragelicious at the Honeysett Gallery on Madeira Drive at the end of July.

WEB.600

Mike is a Brighton based artist and illustrator. He usually specialises in drawing and painting heavier, masculine men, including bears, skinheads, leather men, and men in uniform.

He said: “I am inspired to show images of gay men that challenge the stereotypical ideal of the toned, smooth, youthful physique. I portray relaxed, masculine men, often with a heavy, hirsute build, with an element of underlying sexuality, sometimes coupled with a hint of humour. Bears, leather men, skinheads and men in uniform all provide sources of inspiration. My work ranges from painting in oils and acrylic, drawing in coloured pencil, through to illustrating stories for various publications.

In this new exhibition he moves away from his usual themes and immortalises famous Drag Queens including Phil Starr, Miss Jason and Regina Fong.

Mike has staged exhibition in: New York, San Francisco, Paris, Berlin, Sydney, Amsterdam, Bergen, Cologne, London, Manchester and Birmingham.


Event: Dragelicious:

Where: Honeysett Gallery, Arch 280, Madeira Drive, Brighton

When: Friday, July 31-Sunday, August 9

For more information about Honeysett gallery, click here:

For more information about Mike Thorn, click here:

 

We All Bleed Red

Poet and artist Vince Laws has created We All Bleed Red for the church of St Peter & St Paul, in Oulton, Norfolk.

Vince Laws
Artist’s impression of ‘We All Bleed Red’ by Vince Laws.

“It’s a beautiful, simple church, just up the road from where I live,” said Vince. “Sometimes I go inside and practise poetry. Sometimes I sit on the wall outside and watch spectacular sunsets unfold.”

The church tower is in need of significant repair, the heating is inadequate and wooden platforms need replacing. A new floor of pamment tiles in the nave will create a level space, and allow a variety of community uses, such as art shows, concerts, and yoga.

“I want to show the tower bleeding, in need of first aid, and wounded,” explained Vince. “And at the same time, as the church takes on the new mantle of being a community space, I want ‘We All Bleed Red’ to be an invitation to everyone to use the space, regardless of religion, ethnicity, sexuality, etc.”

Stephen Jefford, who is co-ordinating the restoration project with the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) for St Peter & St Paul, Oulton, said: “We’re really thrilled that Vince has come up with such a dramatic idea. I’ve know for a while that he, like many in the village, cherishes the church as an open building. His idea of making the Tower a part of his exhibition is really thoughtful. We’re also really grateful for the support we’ve had from the Church and Diocese, as well as our regular parishioners, to embrace making the church building both a place of worship as well as a community resource.”

Vince will be exhibiting an array of text art and poetry inside the church from till Sunday, August 30, everybody welcome.

The church is open daily, and entry is free.

Access: Parking is on grass 20 metres from the church door, the main path is gravel, and there is a ramp into the church. Other paths around the church are grassy and uneven. There is no toilet.

Donations towards the Oulton Tower & Community Project are welcome.

Email: for details of how to donate.

The restoration project to date has been supported by a first round Grants for Places of Worship award from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF), to develop the proposals further as well as an award from the Norfolk Historic Churches Trust; the church is awaiting confirmation of further funding from the HLF towards the costs of carrying out the works and would be grateful for any financial help toward this project.

For more information about Vince Laws, click here:

2015 Edinburgh Fringe to include over 50 LGBT themed shows

Organisers of the Edinburgh Festival Fringe have announced that this year’s programme will include more than 50 shows covering LGBT themes, including a number of new works.

Edinburgh Festvial Fringe

Highlights include: Trans Scripts, a show based on real interviews exploring gender identity through the struggles and triumphs of six transgender women.

In The Gospel According to Jesus, Queen of Heaven, written and performed by trans playwright, performer and poet Jo Clifford, bread is shared, wine drunk and familiar stories are reimagined by a transgender Jesus.

The Traverse Theatre will present the world premiere of Swallow, a new play by Stef Smith which takes a long, hard look at the extremes of modern life with questions of identity, heartbreak and hope.

From the Czech Republic, Boys Who Like to Play With Dolls is a contemporary dance show set in a world in which masculinity and femininity are unrelated to male and female forms, questioning conventions and clichés of gender.

I Am Not Myself These Days is a new one man show by Fuel, adapted from a bestselling memoir, which recounts a time when Josh, the central character, worked as a drag queen, battled alcoholism and loved a crack-addicted rent boy.

By the Bi fuses modern dance, physicalised movement and spoken word to explore harmful and hurtful stereotypes of bisexuality such as confusion, greediness and promiscuity.

The International Stud is an award-winning play which follows drag queen Arthur on his search for love in the backrooms of the 1980s gay scene.

These Troubled Times is a comedic and irreverent exploration of homophobia, religion and the meaning of family.

How to Keep an Alien is based on a true story. Sonya meets Australian Kate and they fall in love just weeks before Kate’s visa is up and she must leave Ireland. Together they have to find a way to prove to the Department of Immigration that they have the right to live together.

Sex, Hugs and Gender Roles: A Panel Show About Sexuality is a free, unique stand-up panel show exploring relationships with sex, sexuality and culture.

Aussie cabaret sensation Amelia Ryan will perform her multi award-winning cabaret show A Storm in a D Cup, written about her gay father, transgender step-mother and failed career as an exotic dancer.

Margaret Thatcher Queen of Soho returns after a sell-out at the 2014 Fringe and sees Maggie in a drag comedy cabaret extravaganza about gay rights, the 80s and disco.

The Night Shift with Gloria Hole sees the loud, crude and primarily drunk Gloria Hole question what on earth an ageing drag queen does when it’s time to hang up her heels.

The 2015 Edinburgh Festival Fringe will run from, August 7-31.

For further information on all the above shows, click here:

Martlets appeal for volunteers to help support isolated patients

The Martlets Hospice appeals for volunteers to join their new Community Home Visiting Service, launching soon to help support isolated patients.

Judith Williams and Stuart Carter
Judith Williams and Stuart Carter

Together two groups of volunteers will form a new service called the Community Home Visiting Service. Community volunteers will provide vital care to patients who are housebound, and struggling alone. Discharge buddies will support patients who are leaving the hospice inpatient unit, by helping them adjust to life at home on their own, and making sure that they feel safe.

Judith Williams, Discharge Coordinator at Martlets Hospice said: “When people leave the hospice they are often scared and feeling vulnerable, they’re leaving the InPatient Unit where they’ve had 24 hour care. This scheme will help to bridge the gap between the hospice and home. Our discharge buddies will help patients feel secure, they’ll see them through the door safely, unpack the suitcase and make sure there’s food in the fridge.  Not only that, they’ll be around to help out for two to three weeks. Both these volunteer roles are really practical, offering hands on support – we’d love to hear from anyone who thinks this sounds like them!”

The Martlets has been successfully running a small-scale home visiting service since 2011 so the staff at the hospice know from experience what their patients need.

Volunteers visit once a week for a few hours, and will help with practical jobs like learning how to use a mobile phone, or sorting paperwork. Perhaps more importantly they also provide patients with time to talk about themselves; it’s a chance to forget about their illness for once.

If you’d like to find out more about becoming a part of the Community Home Visiting Service, contact Judith Williams or Stuart Carter on 01273 273400.

For more information about the Martlets, click here:

 

X