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PREVIEW: Magid El-Bushra’s A Willesden Liederkreis (‘A Willesden Song-Cycle’)

Operatic countertenor Magid El-Bushra’s acclaimed one-man drag opera cabaret A Willesden Liederkreis comes to the Marlborough Theatre this weekend (March 22).

A Willesden Liederkreis (‘A Willesden Song-Cycle’) is a funny, provocative and touching work from acclaimed countertenor Magid El-Bushra, based on Schumann’s famous opus 39 song-cycle.

Bringing his “vocal beauty and fine presence” (Opera Magazine) to an eclectic range of music – from Handel and Schumann to Weill and Sondheim, Bjork and Nina Simone – he tells the story of a lonely Muslim boy, trapped in 1980s suburbia.

Encouraged by the likes of Prince, Madonna and Joan Collins, who appear to him through his TV set, he finds the strength to imagine a different world.

‘A Willesden Liederkreis’ was smartly scripted, deeply touching and beautifully sung… For the title alone, it deserved notice. But to hear it was a joy….. Michael White, Catholic Herald.

The performance on March 30 includes a Q&A with Dr Rachel O’Connell, Director of Sussex University’s Centre for the Study of Sexual Dissidence.

Magid is a countertenor noted for his gentle countertenor sound (Opernwelt), his dramatic depth (Diapason Magazine), and described as a true countertenor discovery (Der Tagesspiegel).

He is developing a notable career in the opera, oratorio and recital repertoires. Engagements include Hamor in Handel’s Jephtha at the Wiener Festwochen, a solo recital with the Berner Symphonieorchester at Konzerttheater Bern, the alto solos in Bach’s St John Passion with Concerto Köln, and the Cheshire Cat in Will Todd’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden.

Operatic engagements have included the Sorceress in Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas, and David in Handel’s Saul. He made his debut with Glyndebourne on Tour as Nutrice in Monteverdi’s L’Incoronazione di Poppea (2010), and has covered the roles of Mago Christiano (Rinaldo) and Nireno (Giulio Cesare) for Glyndebourne Festival Opera (2011/2009). He has also performed the role of Tolomeo in Handel’s Giulio Cesare, and Tragedia/Dafne in Caccini’s Euridice. He was recipient of a Royal Philharmonic Society Susan Chilcott Scholarship in 2011.

Magid was born in Khartoum, Sudan and studied Music at Magdalen College, Oxford, where he also held a Choral Scholarship. He continued his studies at the Royal College of Music, where he was a winner of the Century Prize for Early Music, and at the Flanders Opera Studio in Ghent.

In November 2008, he won first prize at the Concorso Musica Sacra in Rome, and, with his baroque ensemble La Sfera Musicale, was a prizewinner at the international early music competitions in Brugges and Yamanashi.

Colin Scott is the pianist for the production which is co-produced by Julia Burbach and designed by Elijah Kinne


Event: Magid El-Bushra’s A Willesden Liederkreis (‘A Willesden Song-Cycle’)

Where: The Marleborough Theatre, Princes Street, Brighton

When: March 22, 24 & 30

Time: 7.30pm

Cost: £9.50/£7.50 concs

To book tickets online, click here:

PREVIEW: Queer British Art 1861-1967 @ The Tate

Tate Britain present Queer British Art 1861 – 1967, the first exhibition dedicated to queer British art.

Gluck (Hannah Gluckstein) Self-Portrait 1942, NPG © National Portrait Gallery, London
Gluck (Hannah Gluckstein) Self-Portrait 1942, NPG © National Portrait Gallery, London

Featuring works from 1861–1967 relating to lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer (LGBTQ+) identities, the show marks the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of male homosexuality in England.

Queer British Art explores how artists expressed themselves in a time when established assumptions about gender and sexuality were being questioned and transformed.

Deeply personal and intimate works are presented alongside pieces aimed at a wider public, which helped to forge a sense of community when modern terminology of ‘lesbian’, ‘gay’, ‘bisexual’ and ‘trans’ were unrecognised. Together, they reveal a remarkable range of identities and stories, from the playful to the political and from the erotic to the domestic.

With paintings, drawings, personal photographs and film from artists such as John Singer Sargent, Dora Carrington, Duncan Grant and David Hockney the diversity of queer British art is celebrated as never before, presenting work from the abolition of the death penalty for sodomy in 1861 to the passing of the Sexual Offences Act in 1967 – a time of seismic shifts in gender and sexuality that found expression in the arts as artists and viewers explored their desires, experiences and sense of self.


Event: Queer British Art 1861-1967

Where: Tate Britain, Millbank, London SW1P 4RG

When: April 5 – October 1, 2017

Time: Monday to Sunday 10.00–18.00

Cost: Free entry for members:  Adult £16.50 (without donation £15): Concession £14.50 (without donation £13.10). Under 12s free (up to four per family adult) Family tickets available (two adults and two children 12–18 years) by telephone or in the gallery

OPINION PIECE: “Take Pride in the Police” says Sophie Cook

I was deeply disappointed to see the recent National Union of Students transgender conference (March 7) vote to try to block police from attending Pride events.

Sophie Cook
Sophie Cook

The motion ‘No Pride in the Police expressed the view that the police were racist, classist and transphobic and said that “many trans people have faced mistreatment and violence at the hands of the police.”

I’m disappointed on a number of levels. Firstly I’m disappointed that the delegates felt the need for this divisive motion rather than working towards a solution.

Secondly, I’m disappointed that people still feel marginalised by the police and that the support I see in the forces I work with isn’t filtering down to the public, there’s obviously more work to be done to win back hearts and minds.

As someone who is old enough to remember the bad old days when I was terrified of leaving the house as my true self, not because of attacks by the public but because of the fear that any interaction with the police would lead to me being outed I know how bad the relationship between the police and the trans community has been.

But that was twenty years ago, times change, society has changed and so, I believe, have the police.

I’ve worked with a number of police forces including Sussex, Surrey and Bedfordshire to raise awareness of trans identities and issues and I have met nothing but honesty and support from the officers and staff that I’ve had the honour to work with.

Of course there are still a small minority of officers with bigoted views, the police are part of society and reflect the diversity that exists on our streets, both good and bad. But, the overriding impression that I get from the police I meet is of the need to support minority groups and to work together to make society a safer place for everyone.

The world improves when people work together to combat injustices, not when we fight those whose roles are to protect us. The way forward is conversation and inclusivity, not censure and exclusion.


The motion submitted by University of Manchester Students Union said:

Trans Conference Believes

1. The police disproportionately target trans people, along with sex workers, working class communities and communities of colour for policing, leading to an increase in those groups in the prison population.

2. Many trans people have faced mistreatment and violence at the hands of the police.

Trans Conference Resolves

♦ To not work or collaborate with the police.
♦ To encourage Prides to not have a police presence as part of parades, especially Pride events organised by students unions.
♦ To support and organise actions against police presence at Prides.


Sophie is a former RAF engineer, motorbike racer, newspaper editor, football and rock photographer. She is a self harm and suicide survivor and the first transgender newscaster on European terrestrial TV for Brighton’s Latest TV, and is the head of Latest LGBT+ TV, the UK’s first terrestrial LGBT+ TV channel where she hosts Beyond The Rainbow, a weekly LGBT+ news and chat show.

She is the first trans woman to work in the Premier League as club photographer for AFC Bournemouth, she is an ambassador for Kick It Out, patron of Just A Ball Game? and has spoken at Wembley Stadium and the TUC.

Sophie is also a Hate Crime ambassador for Sussex Police and speaks regularly at conferences about LGBT+ issues and consults with a number of major companies about inclusion and diversity.

‘Time to talk’ about sex and drugs – a different approach to community engagement

The Brighton Time to talk project is an idea inspired by the Let’s talk about gay sex and drugs project in London which began as a response to a rise in heavy drug use, HIV and hep-c transmission in the capital.

It’s clear that the LGBT+ communities in Brighton & Hove are very divided about drug use, sexual behaviours and organisers say: “maybe its Time to talk about it.”

Dexter says the aims of holding such an event are too many to list…. but, he and his 15 strong steering committee, want to create an entertaining poignant, funny, honest evening with a mixture of speakers broken up with DJs playing music.

Their focus is to open up an honest dialogue about drug use, sexual habits, behaviours and expressions. To create a supportive environment where open, real discussion is promoted and allowed, without judgement. A space where guest speakers can share their thoughts and community members can share their experiences should they choose to volunteer to do so.

A kind of ‘Open Mic’ night to try to unravel what is fast becoming a worrying epidemic of self harm in the city’s LGBT+ communities.

Although the buzzword ‘chemsex’ is prolific in the gay male communities across the city and organisers aim to encourage this demographic to attend, it is important that any member of the Brighton communities feel welcome to be part of it. Gay, straight, lesbian, queer, men, women and trans people have all encountered sex and drugs at some time.

A spokesperson for the steering group, said: “Together, if we can make it seem normal to openly discuss the highs and lows of personal experience, our insecurities, our good and our bad choices, we could be doing something to help encourage our communities to make better choices about how they explore sex and drugs.”


Event: Time to Talk

Where: Subline, 129 St James’s Street, Brighton, BN2 1TF

When: Thursday, May 25

Time: 8pm-10.30pm

Cost: Free entry

For latest information about the project, click here:

Years & Years added to Brighton Pride main stage line up

Years & Years will perform a UK Pride exclusive show at Brighton Pride’s Summer Of Love Festival at Preston Park, on Saturday, August 5.

Years & Years

The band declared by NME as “the most important pop band of our time”, are winners of the coveted BPI Critics Choice Award, BBC’s Sound of 2015, MTV Best UK and Ireland Act and five Brit Award nominations.

Olly Alexander’s openness about his sexuality, his willingness to campaign for equality and his frank interviews about living with depression have made him an important spokesperson in our online age.

Olly says: “I want to make videos and songs and art that celebrate all different kinds of sexuality and queer identities.” His approach has enriched and emboldened the lives of a generation of LGBT+ people.

Dulcie Weaver from Brighton Pride, added: “Through their enchanting electronica and timeless song writing Years & Years deliver life-affirming pop that stands as a beacon in a world where the darkness of inequality can often overwhelm so many. Brighton Pride put community and campaigning at the heart of everything we do, and we cannot think of an artist that better embodies our Summer Of Love than Years & Years.”

Years & Years join UK Pride exclusive festival headliners the Pet Shop Boys who will be performing their complete show on August 5 at the Summer of Love festival on Preston Park.

Pet Shop Boys

Brighton and Hove Pride is operated by Brighton Pride CIC, a not for profit community interest company. All ticket revenue raised goes directly to the operational and running costs of producing the Pride Festival, LGBT Community Parade, Pride Village Party and community fundraising for the Rainbow Fund and Pride Social Impact Fund.

Over the last four years Brighton Pride has raised over £310,000 for the Rainbow Fund and Pride Social Impact Fund. The Rainbow Fund has a remit to receive donations and use them to make grants to LGBT+/HIV groups and organisations in Brighton and Hove who deliver effective front line services to the LGBT+ communities in the city.

The Pride Social Impact Fund benefits local good causes impacted by the Pride footprint and gives grants to a range of local groups.

To purchase tickets for Brighton Pride, Festival of Love on Preston Park, click here:

 

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