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REVIEW: Lulu -The Tiger Lilies: Dome

tigerlillies-luluLulu: A Murder Ballad
The Tiger Lilies
Written by Martyn Jacques
Performed by The Tiger Lillies and Laura Caldow
Directed and Designed by Mark Holthusen
Mon 30 Nov, 8pm

The Tiger Lilies’ genre-defying brand of other-worldly vocals and unnerving performance style have carved them a unique niche in the cabaret and music theatre scene. After a sell-out run of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, the cult creators of the award-winning Shockheaded Peter now stage another adaptation of a macabre classic.

Ah, the Tiger Lilies, my favourite crepuscular music makers and all round darkly dark cabaret trio, who’s music, songs and personas are as twisted as a Prime Ministers arguments for war and just as deluded, bloody and deadly. Presenting their new show Lulu at the Brighton Dome to a full house of enthusiastic Brightonians;  it’s been a while since I’ve seen so much badly dyed hair.

TIGER-LILLIES-2Constructed from the main character in Wedekind’s ‘Lulu’ plays lead singer and writer-composer Martyn Jacques narrates ( or reads from AutoQ depending on where you’re sitting) this miserable wretched tale of Lulu interspaced with eighteen ballads each one different and highlighting Jacques intensely strange and compulsive voice, one moment crooning sweetness the next Dame Edna on poppers, they are nothing if not watchable, and the wonderfully strange use of playing the saw and the Theremin to add an edge of odd to the ballads was evocative. The story however is problematic and with an all male presentation apart from mute dancer Laura Caldow who dances the descent into misery and despair that is Lulu’s life. It’s called Lulu, but she doesn’t get a voice, its all about the men, pimps, Johns, abusers , step fathers, sugar daddies, druggies, pushers, perverts and eventually ( in a touch too much of the clichéd ending) murdering brutish men who ruin her. The men control our view of Lulu and it’s uncomfortable viewing. We are forced to become voyeurs, peeping and being entertained by misogyny as porno entertainment.

See further info on this production here

Director Mark Holthusen has created a visual spectacle through projected sets interlace with a Victorian music hall clockwork style that constantly changed, all projected and sophisticated with a multi layered approach that enhanced the show with these large scale virtual sets that create an immersive and richly atmospheric environment. They were great.

 

 

Overall I had mixed feelings about the whole thing. Bleak truths examining the male gaze and relentless exploitation in pursuit of a fantasy of unrealistic female marionette, creepily referred to as ‘my doll’ throughout. Lulu is never allowed to mature into a more wily whole woman. The narrative urges us onward relentlessly into deeper and more unpleasant abusiveness. One interesting part was where one of Jacquese’s ballad eluded to Lulu being unable to sustain a relationship with one man as she craved male attention, this promised to illuminate Lulu’s life but it was a cul de sac of insight.

Erin Prizzey from the women’s refuge movement would describe Lulu as ‘prone to violence’, brought up with damaging negative attention she is drawn to it rather than live without.

lulgscene1Either way it left a nasty taste and even though I’m a Tiger Lilies fan I wouldn’t go and see it again. I hoped for redemption, if not for Lulu then for her soul as it lifted itself up out of her hell, but the Lilies are too cruel and honest for that and we were left with the brutal broken truth as we waddled out into the chilly seaside air.

Shudder!

See more of the earsthetic festival and other events on at the Dome at the Dome website here:

 

 

Tickets for Brighton Pride 2016 go on sale

The Pride festival is the Rainbow Funds biggest annual fundraiser raising over  £200,000 for local LGBT/HIV groups over the last three years.

Brighton Pride

For Pride 2016, Early Bird tickets have been frozen at £12.50 and will be available to local residents from Thursday, December 3 from Legends, Prowler and Sussex Beacon shop.

Extra £10 community tickets will also be made available this year to community groups and parade entries.

Free tickets are also available for people who help our community by volunteering just two hours of their time or by applying to the Rainbow Fund’s hardship ticket scheme.

If people choose to purchase tickets nearer the event, they will be more expensive, but Pride aims to deliver an accessible community event that is value for money, as well as meeting its fundraising obligations and creating a sustainable future.

For book tickets online, click here:

Kemptown MP calls for increased investment in HIV for the most marginalised

Simon Kirby, MP for Brighton Kemptown & Peacehaven, joined UK activists at a STOPAIDS Parliamentary event to mark World AIDS Day on December 1.

Simon Kirby MP

He joined them in their call for increased investment in HIV and to support HIV testing and treatment for the most marginalised.

UK investment has helped to transform the global HIV response and Mr Kirby voiced his support for renewed UK leadership in the push to end the global AIDS epidemic by 2030.

Mr Kirby spoke with activists about the progress made so far in the AIDS response and the financial and political commitment needed to make ending AIDS as a public health threat by 2030 a reality.

UNAIDS estimates that in order to end AIDS by 2030, global funding must increase from $19bn to $32bn annually- but funds must increase over the next five years or we will lose this unique window of opportunity to end AIDS.

Mr Kirby said: “For the first time the end of AIDS is achievable. We have the tools to end the epidemic, but to meet the ambitious global targets the UK government signed on to in September, we can leave no one behind. The UK government must increase its support to ensure access to HIV testing and immediate treatment for all including the most marginalised groups in the UK and globally.”

The UK government welcomed the new Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) in September 2015 during the UN General Assembly in New York. SDG 3 pledged to ensure healthy lives for all, and end the AIDS epidemic by 2030.

Mike Podmore of STOPAIDS, said: “It is inspiring to see parliamentarians like Simon Kirby showing his support for continued UK leadership in the global HIV response. We call on the UK government to increase investment in HIV now in order to avoid paying a higher price later when HIV infections will have increased. Key affected populations including sex workers, injecting drug users and LGBTI must be at the heart of the response.”

Monday December 1 marked the 27th anniversary of World AIDS Day, a day when activists and people living with HIV from around the world come together in the fight against HIV, show their support for people living with HIV and to commemorate people who have died.

STOPAIDS is the network of 80 UK agencies working since 1986 to secure an effective global response to HIV and AIDS.

For more information about STOPAIDS, click here: 

 

REVIEW: World Aids Day Concert

This annual event is an extraordinary coming together of the City’s LGBT music scene, mainly choral, as an act of remembrance and awareness and also as a fund raiser for the charity Lunch Positive – and as such it would be wrong to in any way criticise any of the performances.

World AIDS Day ConcertThe atmosphere in the church was certainly one of warmth and love and each performing group had given their all to engender that. There were though some outstanding moments throughout the evening.

Resound are a quality choir of male voices that achieve the very highest standards and produce a sound that is simply stunning, precise in every sense and rounded. So too do the all female Rebelles under the same musical director Stefan Holmstrom. And joining forces they gave us a very beautiful Swedish Christmas carol.

Qukulele added a cheeky charm and campness to the evening – matched by the Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus’ irreverent reworking of Mylie Cyrus’ Wrecking Ball! Yes, hearing is believing.

Finally the Rainbow Chorus, a community choir with a no audition policy, directed by Aneesa Chaudhry (newly appointed Musical Director of the European Queer Choir) raised the roof with an outstanding medley from Les Miserables and a run-away train rendition of The Rhythm Of Life – a fitting anthem.

All in all with performances from Actually Gay Men’s Chorus and The Brighton Belles an exceptional evening entertainingly held together by comedian Julie Jepson.

St Mary’s Church
December 1
5 stars

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