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LETTER TO EDITOR:

Greens call on Government to apologise t0 victims of historic consensual gay sex convictions.

Cllr Phélim Mac Cafferty
Cllr Phélim Mac Cafferty

Last Friday (October 21) parliamentary legislation that would have wiped clean the criminal records of thousands of gay men was defeated by the Conservative government.

The offences were all from an historic period of time, when being gay was classed as a UK-wide criminal act, and well before the law was changed to be fairer for gay men.

Many of the estimated 50,000 older gay men affected by the proposal live in the Brighton and Hove area, including the Kemptown constituency. In addition to the agreed pardon, this law would have also wiped their “offences,” which all too often made people’s lives unbearable, or worse, destroyed them. It is a matter of shame that this legislation was defeated.

The government throwing out this bill is an insult to the many who over time, will have had unspent convictions on their record, that were passed during an archaic period when gay men were still treated as social pariah. This is a slap in the face for a part of the community who have historically suffered some of the worst oppression from society and who because of their age often experience alienation from the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans) community itself.

Pardons are one thing – but Greens want an official apology for the LGBT community who have had their lives disfigured by reactionary laws over the decades.

I would like to know what justification Mr Kirby, the member of Parliament for Brighton Kemptown, as a senior member of the Conservative government gives for members of his party throwing out this important proposal.

Councillor Phélim Mac Cafferty
Green Party Councillor for Brunswick and Adelaide

 

 

 

Arts Council funds new play by local author

Writer and performer Rose Collis has been awarded research and development funding from Grants for the Arts, supported by Arts Council England, to create a two-act stage play based on her book Colonel Barker’s Monstrous Regiment.

Rose Collis
Rose Collis

The play will be about the extraordinary life of Valerie Arkell-Smith aka ‘Colonel Victor Barker’.

Virago published Colonel Barker’s Monstrous Regiment in 2001 to enormous critical acclaim:

‘Excellent… treads a careful line between sensation and sentiment.’…     Daily Telegraph

‘Rose Collis has delved meticulously…and produced a remarkably gripping and, at times, quite hilarious story.’                                     Val Hennessy, Daily Mail, ‘Critic’s Choice’

The funding coincides with the start of a two-week residency at the Gladstone Library awarded to Rose after she was shortlisted for its prestigious Writer-in-Residence 2016 programme.

web-600The Trials of Colonel Barker will be developed to rehearsed reading stage, in time for the second (Brighton And) Hove Grown Festival of new writing which takes place March 24 to April 2 2017. Rose’s current one-woman play, Wanting the Moon, was performed during the inaugural Hove Grown Festival in 2016.

Prior to the rehearsed readings, Rose will present two tie-in public engagement events: a free ‘Lunchtime Lecture’ at Worthing Library on February 28 and a talk at Jubilee Library, Brighton (date tbc). All events will have Q&A sessions, and copies of Colonel Barker’s Monstrous Regiment will be on sale.

Participating artists for The Trials of Colonel Barker will include Keith Drinkel, Philippa Hammond and Guy Wah.

Rose said, “I am enormously grateful to Arts Council England for supporting another of my projects, and also to the Gladstone Library for the two-week residency which will be spring-boarding this exciting new project. Writing this play will provide an exciting and vital challenge in my development as a stage writer, breaking new ground to create my first two-act play, and my first for a cast of more than two performers.”

New York New York – So good they named it twice

web-300Jaq Bayles takes a big bite out of the Big Apple and digests the hidden gems of the city that never sleeps.

New York probably has more givens than any other city in the western world. So good they named it twice, concrete jungle where dreams are made of, never sleeps (wish we’d remembered that one when we were hanging around til 8am in our hotel room for somewhere to open where we could get a cup of tea), favoured date spot of King Kong.

But what about the stuff the songs and movies don’t tell you? A block is never as short as it looks on the map; a short-stack of pancakes is practically the height of the Empire State Building; you will get chatty with Irish bar staff who will insist on buying you drinks; you will get drunk – although not as drunk as the bride-to-be who is on the bar top pouring a bottle of wine all over herself. Oh, and if you go in February chances are it’ll be colder than The Day After Tomorrow.

However you approach it, the Big Apple offers more juicy bites of adventure than your average Granny Smith does sugar content, but where to begin?

Lobby of Empire State Building
Lobby of Empire State Building

My brief for this piece was to present five things to do in New York that don’t involve the Empire State Building. Practically impossible – I’ve already name-checked it twice and we’re under 200 words in… So let’s go against brief for a moment. You HAVE to do the ESB, and not just for the views, which are almost unparalleled (more of which coming). What you tend not to see in the movies is the interior – a knock-your-socks-off feat of Art Deco design. The main thing you don’t see from the ESB is… the ESB. But there’s one place you can go to remedy that – and other things that might ail you if you believe in the restorative qualities of alcohol.

web-600-4The Top of the Rock is widely billed as having the best 360° views in NY, given that it overlooks the ESB. But it will cost you $27 dollars to get to the observation deck at the summit of the 259m, 70-floor Rockefeller Centre. There are better options… Bar 65 Rockefeller Centre offers the same unobstructed views for the price of a cocktail, which start at $20. That’s the sneaky cheap way to do it, with added booze, but get there early as punters are catching on (it opens at 5pm).

Even when you can do them cheaper, some things you simply have to pay for. But if you’re on a budget, there are plenty of ways to do New York essentials for free.

 

Staten Island Ferry
Staten Island Ferry

Looking for Lady Liberty to shine her light on you but don’t want to fork out the $17 to get you up close and personal (plus the cost of the boat fare to get you there)? The Staten Island ferry is your free pass. The big red boats that run a constant Staten Island to-and-from service take you right past Liberty Island, with views every bit as good as those from the Circle Line tour. And did I mention the free-ness?

Lobby of Chrysler Building
Lobby of Chrysler Building

Need more of an Art Deco fix than Midtown’s ESB or Rockefeller Centre can deliver? Get your walking shoes on and head to nearby Grand Central station, with its fabulous vaulted ceiling, while just over the road the Chrysler Building rises up from its central lobby, Deco down to the floor tiles. Free, free, free.

Chelsea High-Line
Chelsea High-Line

Central Park? Free. But lord knows we’ve all seen enough of that on TV, so give your imagination a break and head to Chelsea where the High Line beckons – a one-and-a-half mile elevated section of a disused railway spur, redesigned and planted as an aerial park. It’ll give you views over Liberty Island too if you jump on near Chelsea Market, the giant urban food centre that’s as much a feast for the eyes as it is for the appetite. You don’t have to pay to look…

Flat Iron building
Flat Iron building

Not too far away there’s another feast for the eyes in the shape of the Flat Iron building. Indeed, it’s its shape that draws the crowds – an odd triangular effort that soars above Madison Square park (one of many New York spaces described as a ‘park’ that wouldn’t stand muster under a UK definition – mostly handkerchief-sized squares of scrubland with a smattering of benches), where you can admire the architecture over a Shake Shack burger at the original site of the chain that evolved from a hot dog-cart.

Which brings us on to ways of sustaining your calorific intake as you navigate those blocks that all look so tantalisingly close to one another on the map. If you’ve got deep pockets and like fine-dining, New York has no shortage of Michelin-starred eateries and popular brunch bars – but book ahead. If you’re dollar-light the choices aren’t lacking either – except in actual nutritional content.

Budget eating is as lacking in greenery as the parks, although we did see an egg-white omelette with broccoli go out of our favourite breakfast diner on one occasion. Indeed, 24-hour diners are cheap enough to be cheerful at any meal, as long as you only want to eat eggs, whether they’re over-easy, scrambled, boiled or whipped up into a pancake.

Most hotels, certainly in Midtown, don’t do breakfast, so diners are a good bet here. And if you happen to be heading back to your hotel, drunk after a night in one of those Irish bars? There’s no end of pizza joints that’ll serve you up a mega slice of your favourite toppings for a small amount of cash. You won’t remember the exact cost and you’ll probably wake up to pizza crusts at the foot of your bed, but at least you’ll have lined your stomach. Albeit after the event.

Guggenhiem
Guggenhiem

TRAVEL FEATURE: Rotterdam – A Revelation

Everyone has heard of and most people have visited Amsterdam at least once and loves its beautiful architecture, canals and wonderful life style.

Rotterdam City Centre
Rotterdam City Centre

I used to live there and while I had visited most of the major centres in the Netherlands, I had never been to Rotterdam

web-600-16Until now I had just assumed that it was just a huge port city, it is after all known as Europort – a very heavily industrialised port, the 10th largest in the world, with petrochemical refineries and storage tanks, bulk iron ore and coal handling facilities as well as container and new motor vehicle terminals.

No thanks I thought, I couldn’t have been more wrong.  Much of Rotterdam was reduced to rubble in the second World War but since then they have been very busy indeed, rebuilding a very modern city.

Centraal Railway Station
Centraal Railway Station

We were totally unprepared for the surprise; this city really has the wow factor.

A new fast train service takes just 25 minutes from Amsterdam to The Netherlands’ second city. In that short time you go from the 17th Century right to the 21st, arriving at one of the most startling railways stations I have ever seen. This stunning building almost defies description, apart from being a modern railway station it features a shiny steel-clad flying buttress reaching right over the plaza.  This building prepares you for the shock of a completely modern 21st Century city.

They call Amsterdam the city of the past and Rotterdam the city of the future. In the past 20 years the city has completely reinvented itself and they have not finished yet.

All the new landmark buildings and innovative construction is quite stunning, high-rise reflective glass and steel is everywhere. We stayed in the Marriott Hotel right in front of the station; this is an extremely modern and very comfortable hotel. Rotterdam isn’t high on many tourist’s agenda, so the price for this excellent four star hotel was just €81.50 a night – a bargain!  You can quadruple that sum for a similar hotel in Amsterdam.

The city centre is mainly pedestrianised, very easy to walk round with very modern trams gliding along. The streets are wide and even when busy Rotterdam never feels crowded.

Markthal – Market Hall
Markthal – Market Hall

Just a short walk from our hotel we discovered one of city’s architectural masterpieces the Markthal – Market Hall, this really does defy description.

web-600-6A feat of fun and functionality, Rotterdam’s stunning Market Hall holds offices and over 200 apartments, with a covered market hall and public space. Its grey stone exterior arches, in the shape of a horseshoe, over the vast interior open space which houses a fabulous food market with many fun restaurants and bars. Coating the entirety of the inside of the archway is an enormous mural featuring an impressive array of fruit, vegetables, insects and flowers.  The PR says that the building demonstrates how beautifully art and architecture can come together, they’re not wrong.

Almost next door to the Market Hall are the unique Cube Houses, an experimental housing system devised in the late 70’s.  Structurally, the cubes sit tilted on a hexagonal pole. Inside, the houses are divided into three levels accessed via a narrow staircase.

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Completing the tilted design, the walls and windows are all angled at 54.7 degrees, providing excellent views of the surrounding area. The only drawback – aside from claustrophobia is that despite a total area of 100 square meters, the angled structure means only a quarter of that space is actually usable. One is open as a museum, very curious and not somewhere where I could live but they are, amazingly, very popular.

It quickly becomes clear why this city is known as the architectural centre of the country and has been called Manhattan on the (River) Meuse.  But of course there is a lot more to this amazing city than its breathtaking architecture. The Luftwaffe didn’t destroy everything and there is still a lot of the old city which has been carefully restored.

Hotel New York
Hotel New York

One of the most famous landmarks is the Hotel New York, based in the former HQ of the Holland America Line which operated a direct service to America by sea. During the 19th and 20th century thousands of Europeans left for the Promised Land: America. It was an attempt to escape poverty and religious repression. It was opened as a hotel in 1992 and has been beautifully restored, well worth the walk to visit.

Delfshaven
Delfshaven

Rotterdam is very much a walking city, though trams are very cheap and efficient.  We hopped on a tram out of the central district just to see where it took us and we ended up in Delfshaven.  This picturesque yacht marina is one of the parts of the old city that survived the 1940 bombardment of Rotterdam. It has had a remarkable history and was apparently the departure point from which the Pilgrim Fathers left to found what was to become the USA.

There’s a  lot to see and enjoy in this surprising city, the gay scene is not large, a couple of bars and of course a sauna, but in any major Dutch city everywhere is potentially gay!

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www.gayrotterdam.com

en.rotterdam.info

 

PREVIEW: La Cage Aux Folles – UK National Tour

John Partridge and Adrian Zmed star in first ever UK tour of La Cage Aux Folles.

 

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Bill Kenwright presents the much-loved musical LA CAGE AUX FOLLES with John Partridge as Albin and Adrian Zmed as Georges, which will open in Oxford on Thursday, January 5, 2017 coming to Brighton on August 5, 2017 at the end of its nationwide tour and coinciding with the opening of Brighton Pride weekend.

John Partridge
John Partridge

John Partridge will play the iconic role of Albin, who moonlights as star drag act Zaza at the infamous La Cage aux Folles nightclub. Partridge’s extensive theatre credits include the West End productions of A Chorus Line at the London Palladium, CatsStarlight Express and Chicago. He is also well-known for playing Christian Clarke in BBC’s EastEnders and as a judge on TV’s Over The Rainbow.

Adrian Zmed
Adrian Zmed

Adrian Zmed will play Georges, partner of Albin and owner of the nightclub. Zmed co-starred with William Shatner as officer Vince Romano in the 70’s hit TV show T.J. Hooker, which ran for 90 episodes over 5 years, and for playing Johnny Nogerelli in the cult classic film Grease 2. This will be his first stage appearance in the UK although he is no stranger to Broadway musicals having previously led the casts of Grease, no fewer than 3 times, Falsettos and Blood Brothers.

Written by Harvey Fierstein and Jerry Herman, and based on the 1973 French play of the same name by Jean Poiret, La Cage Aux Folles follows the story of Georges, the manager of a Saint Tropez nightclub, and his partner, Albin, a drag artiste and the club’s star attraction.

They live an idyllic existence in the south of France but behind the curtains of this sparkling extravaganza, all may be about to change when Georges’ son Jean-Michel announces his engagement to the daughter of a notorious right-wing politician determined to close down the local colourful night-life.

Drama and hilarity ensue when a meeting of the parents forces them to cover up their vibrant lifestyle. Will Albin be able to play the role of his life to ensure that Jean-Michel can marry his love?

La Cage Aux Folles is a multi-award winning musical. The original Broadway production became an instant smash hit when it opened in 1983. It received nine nominations for Tony Awards and won six, including Best Musical, Best Score and Best Book. The success of the musical spawned a London Palladium production and several international runs. The 2004 Broadway revival won the Tony Award for Best Revival, and the 2008 London revival garnered the Laurence Olivier Award for Best Musical Revival.

This brand new production will be produced by Bill Kenwright, directed by Martin Connor, choreographed by Olivier Award Winning Bill Deamer, designed by Gary McCann, sound by Dan Samson (the team responsible for the sumptuous current hit, The Sound of Music), and musical direction by Mark Crossland.

Show-stopping numbers in the score includes The Best of Times, Song on the Sand and the iconic I Am What I Am, which has been recorded by musical legends Gloria Gaynor, Shirley Bassey and Tony Bennett.

The production will tour the UK from January 5 2017, after opening at the New Theatre Oxford.

PREVIEW: Rewind Fast Forward

A cultural archive through Liverpool’s queer nightlife.

Planet Tumbleweed - The light of the female species
Planet Tumbleweed – The light of the female species

An archive of recent Liverpool history made available to thousands across the North West, has inspired new short film commissions by three queer black filmmakers, which will premier in Liverpool as part of the Homotopia festival 2016.

‘Rewind Fast Forward’ is a cultural photographic and video archive from 1975-2005 which looks back at the music, club and fashion sub-cultures in Liverpool, and their intersections with local LGBT and BAME history.

The archive, was created by Sandi Hughes, a feminist filmmaker, DJ and poet who has put together hundreds of hours of film, thousands of photographs, nightclub flyers, posters and magazines which capture the marginalised and outrageous characters of Liverpool she mixed with during the 70s, 80s and 90s.

The archive also captures Sandi’s own experiences of racism, homophobia and sexism, covering personal events such as her childhood abandonment, divorce, custody battle and son’s death.

This year Sandi has been working with the community interest company Re-Dock to secure her archive for the future, thanks to a grant from the Heritage Lottery fund.

Sandi’s film, utilising her archive is called Planet Tumbleweed – The light of the female species, gives voice to women pioneers who have personally inspired the filmmaker, and who are under-represented and overlooked in society.

 She Was a Full Body Speaker
She Was a Full Body Speaker

Evan Ifekoya’s film is titled She Was a Full Body Speaker. The film deals with blackness, queer nightlife and trauma. It builds on Evan’s personal archive, as well as Sandi Hughes’s. Evan’s work investigates the possibility of an erotic and poetic occupation using moving image, performative writing and sound.

Hayley Reid has produced two short films for the project.  The first film is Auld Lang Syne, which is influenced by the #carefreeblackkids and the expression of joy and freedom during times of grief, pain and loss.

The second film is called Mersey on My Mind which is ode to the River Mersey.  Hayley is an advocate for reclaiming archives. She is interested in making film archives more accessible to artist video makers and unearthing new stories through moving image and audio.

Each film varies in length, making for a 45-minute programme which will premiere at the Unity Theatre in Liverpool on November 11 as part of the Homotopia festival with a post screening discussion with the filmmakers.

Rewind Fast Forward will go on to screen at a range of other venues, including Royal College of Art (London) and at the Kuumba Imani Millennium Centre (Liverpool).

Sandi Hughes said: “I’m really excited and made up to have this opportunity to show my film and share these experiences. I first started filming in the eighties, motivated by my experiences of alienation, and I want to tell my life story through the mouths and experiences of the people I have filmed. This is what I’ve done with ‘Planet Tumbleweed’ and the Rewind Fast Forward project.”

The project has been supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund, Film Hub North West Central, the British Film Institute Film Audience Network and the Liverpool Record Office.


Event: Rewind Fast Forward: A cultural archive through Liverpool’s queer nightlife

Where: Unity Theatre, 1 Hope Place, Liverpool, L1 9BG

When: Launches November 11

 

 

She Loves You! The lives and works of Lez Ingham.

lez the artistCraig Hanlon-Smith spends an evening in the company of local artist Lez Ingham to find out what inspires her to paint the stars.

The ring on my phone took me by surprise as I browsed for a gift in a painfully quiet wine-shop in Seven Dials. Stepping into the street to take the call I struggled to hear the voice on the other end, local artist Lez Ingham, calling to arrange our interview a few days later. After sharing some barely audible appreciations of Southern Rail the date was set: “Come to mine darling” she sang, “I’ll open a bottle of something fabulous. And dinner – shall I cook you dinner?” Three days later, loaded with interest and a dollop of apprehension, I climb the stairs to Lez’s Hove pad and to one of the warmest and most excitable welcomes I have ever received.

She stands, hands on hips blinking from behind large brimmed (and extremely stylish) spectacles, penetrating with a stare that may be assessing my hair, my posture, my general appearance, who knows, before breaking into a beam “Yes! you’re marvellous. I hadn’t known what to expect but you’re verrrrry interesting”.

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Installing me on the sofa thrusting a red wine into my hand, and then disappearing into the kitchen to chink a few pots and stir at the bubbling saucepan, she enthusiastically yells “ask me anything!” before she is back seconds later talking ten to the dozen all about an upbringing which began in Zambia where she was born, and then took in much of the United States; “I had the most wonderful childhood” she shares. “My parents were truly wonderful people, I loved them so very much, I really did”. Lez’s family and relationship with her parents is a subject she returns to during our evening together time and again. This level of personal detail and shared intimacy is fascinatingly immediate and I find myself thinking of all the people I know who might find it strange and not at all British, but of course of all those who would immediately love Lez as I begin to think I do.

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After studying in London, Lez moved to South Africa and to a successful career in advertising and graphic design; “I was looking for a gay club called ‘The Studio’ in Cape Town but landed this career in advertising”; that I cannot make head nor tale of the chronology doesn’t appear to concern Lez as she leaps around her life story of lesbian squat parties in Notting Hill and bolshy relationships with work colleagues in the southern hemisphere, before settling back in first London and now Brighton as an artist. “I love this country” she tells me much later, “not ‘Britain’! That’s another of these political constructs, but England, and all it has to offer – the opportunities!”

web-600-10Glass refilled as it is many times that evening, my bottom barely brushes the cushions of the sofa before she’s back from the kitchen and we’re off for a tour of the art. “Come to the bedroom and meet David!” she hurries, which does nothing to settle my heart-rate. David, it turns out is a painting and I am not at all disappointed to find a three dimensional Pop-Art inspired painting of David Bowie looming at me from above the bed, its colours and silver gleaming base as vibrant and arresting as its creator. The Bowie piece is one feature of a series of paintings appropriately named Icons, and as she talks of each work and its inspired name-sake, I am struck at how she speaks of the completed works and their inspirations as though long-standing friends, Michael Jackson, Grace Jones, Annie Lennox, Freddie Mercury and Elvis amongst the newly arrived dinner guests. I had spotted ‘Grace’ the moment I had stepped into the flat and took great delight in what I perceived to be a potential ice-breaker.

“I’ve seen her!” I gushed “great show!”

web-600-9“I’ve met her” she responds, “she’s tiny!” And yet nothing Lez shares could ever be perceived as a name drop or show off when delivered with such warmth, humour, and a continuous sense of child-like wonder, which is contagious. Dinner is interrupted for Lez to say “I have to bring out Madonna, you must see her” and the compact living room fills with another larger than life painting that I just know would delight its namesake as much as it is does me.

“Touch her” an instruction Lez repeats with all the works she shares with me. “I want you to feel the texture, the paint, put your hands on it, go on! I’m not precious about my work” and I am instantly aware of how most usual art appreciation is distant, removed and locked away from the spectator behind a velvet rope. This experience is more akin to live theatre and I am sitting on the actors’ knee. It’s unusual, unnatural, unnerving but I like it.

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Such is her apparent enthusiasm for my company, I am in little doubt that should I find myself in her corner she would see to it that team Lez give me as much support and attention as their main charge. She has an alarming yet I am certain fortunate ability to make her guest feel as though we have known one another for years, and I have to remind myself several times not to simply lap up the captivating company or wolf down the delicious food she has clearly spent hours preparing, that I am there to work.

web-600-8Our evening is laced with intensely personal accounts of her youth, her family, relationships and most movingly of taking care of both her dying mother and immediately following, her former long-term partner;

“I was devastated when my parents died, my mother and my father and when my relationship ended” and over dinner she shares intensely personal memories of the aftermath of such loss.

I ask Lez to describe her work and spot the only moment in our evening together when I may have said something to irritate my host. “I can’t describe my work, I don’t describe it. It’s how I feel. I can tell you how I feel about it” and then launches into an explanation of how terrified and shaken she felt post 9/11, events which inspired one of many wall covering pieces ‘Super Girl’ from her collection of Super Heroes. “What’s bothering me now, is what a fucked up world we’re living in, how terrible it all is, the waste, the greed and the corruption” and I see in the art work she walks me through, an escape from all that bothers her, colour, light, and a fantastical sense of ‘other’.

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Pop Art has a clear impact upon her work, but when pressed her inspirations straddle the decades: “Warhol, Hockney, Van Gogh people who broke the mould, who were ahead of their time”. Before I have chance to ask if she’s aware that all her listed influences are male she fixes me with that excited tractor beam of a stare to tell me “in my past life I think I was a man, I know I was a man. Because in this life, I think like a man”.

lez the artist

And so what next for Lez Ingham? “Portraits – something I have wanted to do for a long time. Portraits of people I admire, people I love and respect, people who stand out”. And as our evening together draws to a close and I dance off into the rainy late evening, infused with her contagious energy, one statement she shares echoes around my head:

“I love painting. I just love it. It really is the only thing to do”.

Information:

Lez’s work can be viewed at: Taylor-West & Sloan Optometrists, 80 Church Road, Hove

Photos by Jean-Luc Brouard: www.jeanlucbrouard.com

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PREVIEW: NEVER GOING UNDERGROUND: the fight for LGBT+ rights

2017 marks the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of homosexual acts in England and Wales (1967 Sexual Offences Act).

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The events that took place before and after this form a major exhibition at the People’s History Museum in Manchester (opening, February 25 2017); charting from 1967 when it was illegal for men to have sex together, lesbianism was condemned as sinful or seen as a medical misfortune, and trans rights were non-existent to 50 years later when LGBT+ legal protection and equality is almost UK-wide.

web-200Never Going Underground takes its name from the campaigning and protesting against Section 28, an infamous piece of legislation that forbade the ‘promotion of homosexuality’ and which saw the UK’s largest ever gathering for LGBT+ rights in Manchester in 1988.

The exhibition is the culmination of almost two years of intensive work to present the political and legal fight for LGBT+ rights, past, present and future.  Spanning a full season the programme will include exhibitions, events, talks, community projects and a schools learning programme; it will discuss, explore and navigate the LGBT+ movement showing the struggles and the social and historical context of decades of activism.

web-200-2The lead exhibition is being curated by a group of 11 volunteer Community Curators, who have been appointed by the People’s History Museum, who have gathered materials and memories to creatively inspire their vision for how the anniversary is marked and how this significant chapter of LGBT+ history is told.

Catherine O’Donnell from the People’s History Museum, says: “Never Going Underground isn’t just about a moment in history, it’s about the activism, campaigning, people’s stories, past and current issues facing the LGBT+ community.  Manchester itself is a huge part of this story and, as the home of ideas worth fighting for, we are hugely excited about the plans we have in place to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1967 Act.”

Four partners are working with the People’s History Museum on Never Going Underground: The Proud Trust, LGBT Foundation, Proud 2b Parents and Manchester Lesbian and Gay Chorus.

For more information on the People’s History Museum, click here:


Event: NEVER GOING UNDERGROUND: the fight for LGBT+ rights

Where: People’s History Museum, Left Bank, Spinningfields, Manchester M3 3ER

When: February 25 2017 to September 3 2017

 

 

TONIGHT: LGBT Community Safety Forum AGM

The Brighton & Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum stage their Annual General Meeting and pre-Christmas Public Meeting at the Queens Hotel this evening starting at 7pm.

web-600You are welcome to go along and hear about the work the Forum have been engaged in during the last 12 months and meet members from partner organisations the Forum work with.

This evenings speaker will be from Brighton & Hove Healthwatch, your local consumer champion for health and social care.

The venue is wheel chair accessible and a British Sign Language (BSL) Interpreter will be present.


Event: Brighton & Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum AGM and Public Meeting

Where: Queens Hotel, 1-3 Kings Road, Brighton

When: Wednesday, October 26

Time: 7pm

For more information about the B&H LGBT CSF, click here:

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REVIEW: Breakfast at Tiffany’s@Theatre Royal

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Breakfast at Tiffany’s

Truman Capote

Theatre Royal

Brighton

Based on Truman Capote’s novel, this is the story of a young woman in New York City who meets a young man when he moves into her apartment building; this stage adaptation by Richard Greenberg tries to recapture the elegant sense of the film.

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Although presented as a simple and familiar romantic love story there is much deeper stuff going on in this play but the failure of Georgia May Foote to connect and convince of Hollys’ trembling iron clad vulnerability let down the subtler edges. May Footes’ characterisation was brittle, her voice a little too shrill, slightly too vacant, not giving the moody silences of the character enough space to emerge, it all seemed far too fake and not polished or phony enough.  Her singing however was superb, just the right note of insouciance, wistfulness and fragility,  perfect moments in the show.

Her Holly didn’t feel dark, bruised and complex, but more defiant, shallow and greedy.  It’s a seriously difficult role to get right, but utterly vital that it does as the whole of the plot circulates around the dense gravity of Holly’s triumph of self-delusion and the way men are attracted to her. Matt Barber as ‘Fred’ does well, expositioning himself constantly to the audience and manging his complex staging with ease, he’s a consummate actor, again I thought the subtleties lost, and playing him (literally) straight & confused seems a cop out, but he’s convincing in the role.

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The supporting cast do well with these two dimensional characters and Capote only meant them to be walk-ons, so they get some laughs, Naomi Cranstone as Meg is a delight who slides across the stage, the perfect lush and her accent also slides around quite a lot. Robert Calvert’s Doc, was superb, his honesty and sadness perfectly honed and seemingly only more genuine against the complex machinations and manipulations of the other characters. Charlie De Melo as José was sexy, swarthy and fun but should learn how to pronounce his name in Portuguese, rather than Spanish… as that’s how they speak in Brazil and Melaine La Barrie  gives us constant light relief as the odd  judgemental roller skating Mme Spanella.  Holly Golightly became Capote’s favourite character of all the ones he created, probably because he lived the high life that Holly does herself, bumping around the world, hobnobbing with Earls and moneyed elites.

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The sets from Matthew Wright were whisked on and up and down in  scene changes bringing focus to the rapid change of place and space while keeping the feeling of being in a busy vibrant city. The lighting from Ben Cracknell hinting at brick lined canyons and mimicking Bernice Abbot’s photography and the lighting of some epic cityscape photos from the 40’s. This constant change of pace keeps the narrative moving on, as it must, and also serves to increase the tension as things slowly build to their inevitable conclusion.

Some of the important plot points have been removed by Richard Greenberg’s adaption, which is odd as this leaves the moral judgements of the play seriously askew and it’s a finally balanced book.  It’s curious how many adaptations remove the fact that Fred is also earning his way by selling his company (and one assumes his body) when they first meet.  There are few laughs and some of them are harsh.   At its core it’s a story about finding yourself, and the struggle we all go through looking for something to believe in, some validation we can hold on to and something we want, seriously want, to be. Holly bashes and crashes around society and dodgy men trying to find her meaning in life and ultimately runs away to Brazil avoiding the police as she goes, we’ve all been there……

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The truth at the heart of this play is the reason people love it; that there’s a little bit of Holly in us all,  May Foote manages to demonstrate this, almost as an afterthought and it’s these moments when she owns the character that are the best.

The packed theatre enjoyed every moment of the play it must be said, it’s a popular film and people have a fondness for it, in this touring production they are presented with a clever and lightly presented version of Capotes story, with enough moments of glamour and reflective monologing to keep everyone on board and engaged with the story, it’s a pity the film looms so large over this production as the inevitable (and unfair) comparison are going to be made by fans and also fostered by the slick marketing surrounding this production which deliberatly evokes the film (and the hair colour of Audury H even though Capote specifices Holly is blonde.)

Oh the cat was superb, (he has his own twitter site)  the two ladies sitting behind me entranced by how well behaved it was, how it caught all its cues and how it enjoyed wandering around the set as if it owned it.

It did.

Until Saturday October 29

Theatre Royal

New Road, Brighton

For more info or to buy tickets see the Theatre Royal website here

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