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BRIGHTON PRIDE is proud to help make Sussex #NoPlaceForHate

Organisers of this year’s Pride festival join forces with Police & Crime Commissioner (PCC), Katy Bourne, to help make Sussex #NoPlaceForHate.

Missey
Missey

In the run-up to this year’s event themed ‘Freedom to Live’, pubs and bars in St James’s Street, which are part of the Pride Village Party, will be using specially designed beermats to help publicise the Self Evident hate crime reporting app. The beermats all have a QR code on the back that, when scanned, quickly downloads the app onto the customers’ smartphones.

Paul Kemp
Paul Kemp

Commenting on Pride’s support for the campaign, Director Paul Kemp, said: “Pride is delighted to be involved in this important campaign which, given recent events like Orlando, could not have come at a better time.

“As with the theme of this year’s festival, everyone has the right to enjoy the same freedoms irrespective of their race, faith, sexuality, gender or disability. However, many of those from marginalised communities do not have the same confidence in the police and this is why we support the self evident app which allows victims of hate crime in Sussex to access help and support without involving the authorities. “

Katy Bourne
Katy Bourne

Mrs Bourne said: “I am delighted to have the support of the Pride organisers as well as the pubs and bars in St James’s Street in order to help make Sussex #NoPlaceForHate.

“We are launching the campaign on Wednesday (27 July) which is ten days before Pride. Over the course of the ten days we will be uploading a series of short videos and images featuring our hate crime mascot, Missy The Dog, to Facebook and Twitter. These fun videos and images will also be used to launch my PCC Instagram page @sussexpcc.

“Like many, I have no time for bigotry and believe that no one should be singled out and victimised because of their race, faith, sexuality, gender or disability. Although there are some light-hearted elements to the campaign with the use of images and videos of Missy to encourage the download of the app it does however send out a very serious message: that hate crime will not be tolerated in Sussex.

“I am looking forward to this year’s Pride event and hope that lots of people visit our stall in Preston Park where we will be promoting the Self Evident app with a variety of fun merchandise, including a selfie frame, temporary tattoos and flags. You’ll find us next to Sussex Police so please come and say hello.”

The Self Evident crime reporting app is a piece of smart technology developed by the social enterprise, Just Evidence. With financial backing from the PCC, the app now offers enhanced functions for tackling hate and enables victims to seek help directly from specialist support services as well as the police. The app’s ability to record, store and validate video, audio and photo evidence makes it particularly useful for anyone who witnesses or experiences hate and other crimes.

Guy Dehn, Director of Just Evidence, said: “We are committed to giving people practical tools to turn the tables on crime and injustice. With Katy Bourne giving a lead nationally and support from local events like Pride, we are confident the app can help make Sussex #NoPlaceForHate.”

Ten-foot tall puppet to lead Totnes Pride Parade

The procession at Totnes Pride on Saturday, September 3, will be lead by a ten-foot tall puppet.

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Social enterprise Proud2Be teamed up with ROC Creative to create the Puppet.

ROC Creative is a dedicated Art project which supports adults with learning disabilities express themselves through a variety of media . They have specialist practitioners running groups in art and design, drama, dance, photography and film, music and samba.

ROC Creative Learning Guide Support Worker, Debbie Perry, said: “We see Proud2Be as having a similar ethos to ours – to celebrate diversity, promote equality and be proud of all our contributions to the wider community.

“Samba ROC have had the opportunity to lead the Proud2Be procession in Totnes for the last two years and have been overwhelmed by the warmth of feeling and enthusiasm of everyone who took part.  We wanted to be part of the event again but were keen to add something new. The idea to create a giant puppet came about after Mat and local puppet maker Paul came to look at our project and make plans for the next procession.

“We are very excited to be adding a new dynamic to our samba performance and for our art group members to be able to collaborate with Paul and his team of artists.”

Mat and Jon Price
Mat and Jon Price

Proud2Be co-founder Mat, said: “We are very proud to be working alongside ROC Creative. Debbie and the whole team at ROC Creative have been extremely supportive of Proud2Be and generous with their time and expertise. We very much look forward to marching alongside them (and our new puppet friend) during this year’s procession.”

Proud2Be will be laying on a whole host of events in Totnes, which will bring the lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, intersex &/or asexual+ (LGBTQIA+) community together with their friends, families and supporters, to celebrate diversity in the town.

Activist Jacq Applebee will be returning as one of this year’s special guests alongside activists Helen Belcher, Holly Greenberry and Dawn Vago.

The day kicks off at 11am outside The Dartmouth Inn, where there will be opening speeches from Jacq, Helen and Totnes Mayor Eleanor Cohen, who together with award-winning Samba ROC Band and the puppet, will then lead a procession up Fore Street and High Street to Totnes Civic Hall at 11.30am.

Community bus service Bob the Bus, will be running a park and ride service from 10am at KEVICC and will also be transporting those with mobility issues up the procession at 11.15am.

From midday at the Civic Hall, visitors can enjoy, workshops and talks, a variety of community stands, Dot’s Cafe, a craft area, a family area, face painting and much more.

There will be a panel discussion at 1.30pm, where national and local activists will discuss how to challenge the divisions that exist within the LGBTQIA+ community.

The fun continues into the evening at Totnes Pride After Party from 7.00pm at Totnes Civic Hall, which will feature live music from popular Disco Funk band Golddust, P?nk and DJ sets from Madame Souza & Rhi Rhi Rhythm.

Due to a successful Big Lottery grant, for the first time, entry to the daytime events are free.

Tickets to the After Party are £10.00 (18 and over only) and are available to purchase online (plus £1 booking fee), from Proud2Be events in August and at Totnes Pride day event.

Proud2Be Co-founder Jon added: “We are so excited about this year’s Pride; we have been working hard to ensure that Totnes Pride is a community event we can all be proud of. We are thrilled with the support we have received from the local community. For us Totnes Pride is a chance for the whole community to come together and celebrate diversity in our town and to also raise awareness about the issues still faced by the LGBTQIA+ community, in the UK and around the world.”

To mark the event Totnes Town Council will once again, raise the rainbow flag over Totnes Civic Hall as a sign of solidarity and support for the LGBTQIA+ community. The flag raising ceremony will take place on Monday, August 29, 2015 at 6.30pm and will be followed by Totnes’ first LGBTQIA+ History Walk led by local Writer, Historian and Publisher Bob Mann.

If you would like to get involved, volunteer and help. then email Julie and Dot at volunteer@proud2be.co.uk.

Proud2Be are asking local businesses and residents to show their support by flying rainbow flags during the week of Pride. These are available to buy for £5 from Proud2Be.

To find out more about the events, or to buy a rainbow flag, click here:

Or email: info@proud2be.co.uk.

THEATRE REVIEW: High as Sugar, King’s Head

High as Sugar is a new one person musical about a loud and proud trans woman living life on the wild side in the art-pop, counter-culture of New York City between 1969 and 1970.

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Written and performed by Tanner Efinger, Sugar, the central character, is inspired by the true life 70s trans icon and Warhol superstar Holly Woodlawn.

The stiflingly humid night of the show’s London premiere was reminiscent of a typically airless Manhattan summer evening, heightening the experience in the small space. On a set strewn with the discarded clothes and debris of a chaotic bedsit apartment, we find Sugar already in the room. She is apparently drunk, swigging from a bottle of vodka and staggering around trying to find something ‘gorgeous’ to wear for the evening.

The sense of chaos is heightened by Efinger’s use of improvisation, with Sugar flirting and crashing into the audience and asking for help in choosing her outfit. But gradually she settles down enough to begin to tell her story, taking us back to her childhood and to the little boy who saw his first ballet and from that day on wanted to be the Sugar Plumb fairy rather than the Nutcracker Prince.

Sugar recalls her crazy life once she finally makes it to New York City. It’s a brutally honest and unapologetic tale of drugs, sex, booze and failed relationships, as Sugar lives hand to mouth despite being spotted by Andy Warhol and being invited into his bizarre world.

Though much of the play is outrageous and frantic, it’s not without its quieter, tender moments, as when the writing, direction, lighting and styling come together beautifully as Sugar recalls the funeral of her best friend, Penny, who died of an overdose. Penny was born a boy before finding her true self, but in death is heartbreakingly stripped of her persona by her conservative, catholic family, who present her as a young man at her own wake. It’s a beautifully touching part of the show.

The show’s music – three original songs – also provide the space for a more structured and reflective tone. There’s a nice love song to New York City, as well as Sugar’s own theme, reprised throughout the first half, which musically references her obsession with the Sugar Plum Fairy as well as her homely Jewish upbringing in Florida.

Despite all the chaos, Efinger’s powerful central performance connects with the audience and helps bring the show together, and in a twist at the end which blurs the line between performer and character, Efinger speaks directly and powerfully to the audience with a passion, personality and defiance as strong and as moving as the character he has created.

You can catch High as Sugar in Oxford on August 5 at the Old Fire Station.

For more information, click here: 

THEATRE REVIEW: High as Sugar, King’s Head, London, July 20

BOOK REVIEW: Purple Prose: Bisexuality in Britain: Kate Harrad

Purple-Prose-website-bannerPurple Prose: Bisexuality in Britain

Kate Harrad

Purple Prose: Bisexuality in Britain is a great and far ranging anthology looking at all the myriad aspects of the day to day and night to night life of a bisexual person in the United Kingdom.  It’s also the first of its kind: a book written for and by bisexual people in the UK There’s a wide range of experience represented here, through interview, essays, poems and stories but it’s also wonderfully intimate, relevant and honest.

Often an anthology particularly one with such laudable aims as this one can drift and try and get too much in, but the clear focus on the personal, the immediate and the experiences of Bi folk in Britain keeps the narrative focus tight.

29362988Editor Kate Harrad has picked some seriously entertaining and interesting stories from different cultural and ethnic perspectives along with challenging insight into non monogamy, gender queerness and disabled experiences.

Harrad has managed to keep the personal at the fore which makes the readers journey a pleasure, the book itself a relevant commentary on contemporary British Bisexual experience and a must read for Bi people and their allies from across the LGBTQ world.

An important and entertaining book.

Out now, paperback.

£21:50

For more info or to buy the book see the publishers website here:

Polari First Book Prize 2016 shortlist revealed

The shortlist for the Polari First Book Prize was announced last night (Thursday July 28, 2016) at the Polari Literary Salon in London’s Southbank Centre by founder and chair of judges Paul Burston.

WEB.600.1Now in its sixth year, the Prize is awarded annually to a writer whose first book explores the LGBT experience, whether in poetry, prose, fiction or non-fiction.

The six shortlisted titles are:

♦ Blood RelativesStevan Alcock (Fourth Estate)

♦ Sugar and Snails: Anne Goodwin (Inspired Quill)

♦ Trans: Juliet Jacques (Verso)

♦ Different for Girls: Jacquie Lawrence (Zitebooks)

♦ Physical: Andrew McMillan (Jonathan Cape)

♦ The Good Son: Paul McVeigh (Salt)

This year’s shortlist draws a spotlight on the increasing breadth and diversity of works focusing on the LGBT experience and demonstrates the remarkable candour and breadth of talent of the LGBT literary community.

Fiction features strongly – from Anne Goodwin’s poignant midlife coming-of-age (Sugar and Snails) and Jacquie Lawrence’s exploration of love through the entangled lives of six women (Different for Girls) to Paul McVeigh’s funny and frightening story of a young boy navigating the troubles of 1980s Northern Ireland (The Good Son) and Stevan Alcock’s unforgettable tale of teenage life set to the backdrop of the Yorkshire Ripper murders (Blood Relatives). The shortlist is rounded-off by Juliet Jacques poignant memoir of the transgender experience (Trans) and a raw yet moving collection of poems written in celebration of the masculine form (Physical) by Andrew McMillan.

Paul Burston
Paul Burston

Chair of judges Paul Burston said: “From an exceptionally strong long list, we are delighted to present a shortlist of books which successfully highlight the range of experiences and talent in the LGBT literary community. Our strongest ever. Since we began this year’s judging process the world has turned on its head. At a time when it has never been more important to draw our similarities over our differences, each book chosen gives us all insights into other worlds; a sense of what it’s like to walk in another’s shoes. Choosing a winner will be incredibly challenging.”

The 2016 prize is being judged by a panel consisting of chair Paul Burston, author, journalist and host of Polari literary salon; Rachel Holmes, author and former Head of Literature & Spoken Word at the Southbank; Suzi Feay, literary critic; VG Lee, author and comedian and Alex Hopkins, writer and editor.

The announcement also marks the pre-launch of Polari on Tour, a UK-wide series of events taking London’s award-winning Polari Literary Salon to major cities from September to November.

The overall winner will be revealed at the London Literature Festival on Friday 7 October, 2016 at the Southbank Centre.

Polari Literary Salon began in 2007 in the upstairs room of a bar in Soho. Events are now held monthly at the Southbank Centre and regularly sell out. In 2013, Polari was named LGBT Cultural Event of the Year in the Co-op Respect Loved By You Awards.

The Polari First Book Prize was launched in 2011. Last year’s winner was Glasgow based author Kirsty Logan for The Rental Heart and other Fairy Tales.

The winner will be announced at the London Literature Festival on Friday, October 7, 2016 at the Southbank Centre.

Polari First Book Prize partners include WH Smiths Travel and Square Peg Media.


Polari on Tour – Key Dates:

JULY 28 – PRE-TOUR LAUNCH AT SOUTHBANK CENTRE, LONDON

SEPTEMBER 8 – CHAPTER, CARDIFF

SEPTEMBER 22 – BISHOPS STORTFORD LIBRARY

SEPTEMBER 28 – PRINTWORKS, HASTINGS

OCTOBER 14 – MARLBOROUGH THEATRE, BRIGHTON

OCTOBER 21 – NOTTINGHAM WRITERS’ STUDIO

NOVEMBER 4 – ASSEMBLY ROXY, EDINBURGH

NOVEMBER 11 – IDEAS STORE, TOWER HAMLETS

NOVEMBER 15 – HOVE LIBRARY

NOVEMBER 18 – GRAND THEATRE, BLACKPOOL

NOVEMBER 19 – MAC BIRMINGHAM

NOVEMBER 21 – FRUIT SPACE, HULL

NOVEMBER 23 – NEWCASTLE CITY LIBRARY

NOVEMBER 25 – END OF TOUR AT SOUTHBANK CENTRE, LONDON

For full information about the tour, click here:

 

 

 

PREVIEW: Brighton Museum & Art Gallery Pride event

Fashion Cities Africa tour and film screening: Stories of Our Lives

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Start your Pride Weekend celebrations with a late night private view of Brighton Museum’s Fashion Cities Africa exhibition. This late night event includes a pay bar where you can relax with a drink, before sitting down to a private screening of a film characterising the queer experience in Kenya.

Told through a series of five vignettes, the film explores the true stories of people identifying as gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender or Intersex.

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Event: Fashion Cities Africa tour and film screening: Stories of Our Lives

Where: Brighton Museum, Royal Pavilion Gardens, Brighton BN1 1EE

When: Friday, August 5

Time: 7.45pm-10pm

Cost: £10

Please book through the Royal Pavilion & Museums booking office: 03000 290900

BOOK REVIEW: Hide: Matthew Griffin

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Matthew Griffin

Wendell and Frank meet at the end of World War II, when Frank returns home to their North Carolina town.  They fall in love, they turn their backs on the world to follow their hearts and live together, obsessively protecting themselves from a world which refuses to understand, respect or even acknowledge their love.. At 83,  Wednal finds Frank laying outside among their tomatoes and their whole carefully protected almost perfect world is challenged. 

Oh, this book moved me, I utterly loved every page of it. One of the best gay love stories I’ve ever read, and that’s saying something.

This is an astonishing book; it’s the love affair/marriage of two men over almost their whole lives told with compassion, passion, commitment, and wonderful touches of humour and pathos that mirror the true stories of many people who have spent so long together. The grace and tender wonder of this book is that it’s a male couple featured in their journey through life together, secretive, claustrophobic but also liberating in its honest portrait of two men choosing each other’s lives to live in.   Griffin writes with panache, characters and situations utterly believable and the soft Carolina countryside wafts its way into the narrative. I could close my eyes and feel the perfumed air, the cloying heat, the squeak of the porch door, he’s such an evocative writer.

I loved this book, it made me laugh and brought a tear to my eye and it’s rare a book does both, the narrative is huge and emotionally brutal, little details bringing the reality crashing in, but always human and real and the men’s relationship offered up with a tender honesty that reflects so many lives we know were lived in secret.

Dhc2FWIcSee more about this author here: . Simply superb, please read it, just to encourage Griffin to write more like it.

Out now £16.99

For more info or to buy the book , see the publishers website here. 

IPCC update LGBT groups on Barking deaths investigation

Members of LGBT community groups in east London have met with investigators examining the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) response following the deaths of four young men.

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The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) is investigating the response of the MPS to the deaths.

The bodies of Anthony Walgate, 23, Gabriel Kovari, 22, Daniel Whitworth, 21, and Jack Taylor, 25, were all found in the Barking area on separate dates between June 2014 and September 2015.

IPCC Commissioner Cindy Butts, who is overseeing the organisation’s investigation into the MPS response to the four deaths, has held a meeting with a small number of invited community representatives in Barking to listen to concerns.

The Commissioner explained the scope of the investigation and outlined what work has already been carried out, such as reviewing documentation and statements.

During the meeting the Commissioner also asked for anybody who may have information which may assist the IPCC investigation to come forward.

Cindy Butts
Cindy Butts

Cindy Butts said: “The tragic deaths of these four young men have concerned the community, both in east London and in the wider LGBT community.

“I was pleased to offer the opportunity to meet with community groups to explain our role in examining the police response to these deaths and listen to concerns.

“We are limited in what information we can discuss so as not to prejudice the ongoing criminal proceedings linked to this case but, I would like to reassure people that our investigators are continuing their important work.

“We are keeping all of the families involved up to date with our investigation and our thoughts remain with everyone affected by the tragic deaths of Anthony, Gabriel, Daniel and Jack.”

The IPCC are aware statements and information were provided to police at the time of the original investigations into the four deaths. However, IPCC would like to hear from anybody who passed information to police specifically between June 19, 2014 and October 15 2015, prior to the investigation currently being carried out by the MPS’s Homicide and Serious Crime Command.

As part of the police investigation, Stephen Port, 41, of Barking, has been charged with four counts of murder in relation to the deaths as well as a number of other offences. The criminal proceedings in relation to these charges are ongoing.

Anyone with information should telephone 0800 151 0021 or email: 

Parking permit amnesty starts on August 1

Brighton and Hove City Council are inviting residents in possession of parking permits for zones they no longer live in to hand them in.

WEB.600The council is running a permit ‘amnesty’ throughout August. People with permits who are not entitled to them can hand them in for cancellation with no questions asked. Residents can either post the permit back to the council or hand it in to parking services staff in the customer service centre at Hove Town Hall where there is also a special permit drop box.

Parking permits state that if a resident moves out of the parking zone for which they have a permit, they must surrender it.

It is fraud to use any kind of parking permit that you are not entitled to. A sample audit in the city showed that around 2% of permits in circulation are possibly fraudulent, which is a potential cost to the council of around £190,000.

Councillor Gill Mitchell with Brighton & Hove City Council’s new mechanical street cleaners outside the Town Hall in Brighton. August 6, 2015. © James Boardman 07967642437
Councillor Gill Mitchell

Cllr Gill Mitchell, chair of the city’s environment, transport and sustainability committee, said: “Brighton & Hove has had considerable success in dealing with Blue Badge fraud and we are keen to see that other types of parking permits are not being misused. We have 27,000 resident permits on issue so making sure that they are going to the right people will ensure residents can park more easily near to their homes and will free up waiting lists.”

 Anyone found using permits fraudulently following the amnesty could face prosecution. The council is continuing to cross-check records and from September will introduce automatic online checks as well as new forms warning people who the council will take action against people using parking permits fraudulently.

M.E. research and treatment

The Sussex ME Society to host a medical meeting on Thursday October 6 at the Brighthelm Centre in Brighton.

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The charity who cares for those affected by Myalgic encephalopathy (ME) or Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) will be hosting a medical meeting on Thursday October 6 at the Brighthelm Centre in central Brighton.

Presentations will be given by consultant neurologist Prof Leslie Findley and Clinician Scientist Dr Neil Harrison from Sussex University along with Dr Alan Stewart and staff members of the NHS Sussex ME/CFS Service.

To reserve a place email: or telephone Colin on 01273 674828.

For more information, click here:

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