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Countdown begins to Brighton Fringe opening as events hit 1,000

With two days until opening, Brighton Fringe has hit 1,000 events for the first time in the festival’s history.

When Brighton Fringe announced its programme in March, 970 events had registered to take part, but additional artists registering online means Brighton Fringe 2017 now includes 1,000 events.

There will be more than 300 world premieres and over 100 international shows covering comedy, world-class theatre, dance, cabaret and circus, music, spoken word, visual art, events and film.

England’s largest arts festival kicks things off with a fireworks display on Thursday, May 4.

Free tickets are now available for up to 2,000 people to view the display from the South Side of St Peter’s Church and enjoy entertainment courtesy of Fringe City.

Fringe City, Brighton Fringe’s free outdoor creative showcase, returns to New Road to bring the North Laine alive every weekend during the Fringe.

On Saturday, May 6 Fringe City will consist of two stages packed with taster performances all afternoon. Highlights include comedy from Zach and Viggo, winners of last year’s Best Comedy Award, music, acrobatics and cheerleading from Brighton’s all-male cabaret Der Wunderlich Revue and a taster performance from the HIP Trip of Brighton, a psychedelic celebration of 1970s Brighton.

On Sunday, May 7, Fringe City audiences can dust off their dancing shoes for the Big Brighton Fringe Festival Ceilidh, try their hand at a free pottery workshop and enjoy a wealth of comedy, cabaret, music and theatre. Look out for performers from WINDOW, Brighton Fringe’s showcase for exceptional new work, including Cabaret From The Shadows and Behind The Lines.

Also happening on May 6 is the first of two Brighton Fringe Family Picnics in the Pavilion Gardens, the second of which takes place on the first Saturday of half term (May 27).

For the first time this year Fringe City will also take place on Thursdays and Fridays at Bartholomew Square from May 11, in association with Sweet Venues and on the evening of June 2 there will be a Late Night Fringe City on New Road as part of The Fringe’s Final Fling.

Also new for 2017 is the Fringe City Charity Day on May 8, which will host the finish of the Mayor’s Paris-to-Brighton Charity Cycle Ride, plus community stalls and live Fringe performances.

Julian Caddy
Julian Caddy

Julian Caddy, Brighton Fringe’s managing director, said: “I’m delighted to see the record growth of Brighton Fringe. It is a massive celebration of local, national and international creativity, all thanks to the tireless work of thousands of people, to create an arts festival like no other. I look forward to joining you to explore and open my mind to the wonders that await.”

Brighton Fringe 2017 runs May 5 to June 4.

To book tickets, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 917272.

OPINION: Transitioning with Sugar: Trans exclusionary feminism by Ms Sugar Swan

When I came out very publicly as trans, I was flooded with love and respect and within the first month of ‘being out’ half a dozen people had contacted me and come out as trans.

Sugar Swan
Sugar Swan

Some of them I knew from Brighton, some I didn’t, but they all had the same message for me: “Thank you for talking about this and normalising things and allowing me in turn to come out”. Some of these people are still yet to come out to anyone else and I’m their only confidant.

At this point I realised that there was some good that could come from my transition, not just for me, but for other trans and cis people too. I had an inner conflict about whether or not I wanted to waive my right to a private transition but had an overwhelmingly strong feeling that the more visible I was the more people I could help.

I continued to document my transition on social media and although I do keep a private side to my life, as one must for one’s sanity, I started to make my posts, especially my posts around transition public.

This of course opened the floodgates to messages of hate alongside the growing number of people who were coming to me for help. Late last year, I was asked by Gscene to write a monthly column and I knew that in doing so I could open myself up to more hatred. However, I decided that the good I could do would outweigh the bad.

Fast forward to May and I’ve been writing this column for five months and, as expected, the hate continues to pour in: from people telling me that I am mentally ill at the easier end of the spectrum, to wishes of death at the other. This isn’t helped when once highly respected feminists Germaine Greer and Fay Weldon spin their hate against trans women and try their hardest to undermine our very existence. This is something that upsets me far more than any hate coming from mostly cis gender men over the internet, it is intelligent, feminist women hating on me and trying to turn other women against me.

 This makes me feel betrayed by the gender I am, female. This rips my heart out.

Anyway, I digress. What I’m trying to focus on is the positive that being so open can bring. Since Gscene gave me this platform, along with the extra hate that it was bound to bring, the loving floodgates have opened and I’m busy connecting newly ‘out’ trans people to services and helpful doctors, pinpointing support groups and offering 1-2-1 Skype and email/message support to individuals.

Last month I went for the first two days of work on my head in Latvia. I was as open as ever about this and in turn it’s brought about something wonderful. I was approached by someone who felt empowered to have surgery and they asked me to accompany them for moral support.

I write now from a farming community village with a population of 400 in rural northern France, 160km from Paris, 40km from the Belgian border, 30km from the nearest city, and the private hospital in which they underwent surgery.

We’re staying with one of their longest-serving friends, Jo, a young widow, under 50, who has opened her home up to me and couldn’t be more welcoming. A staunch feminist, she and I have discussed feminism and especially trans feminism and the hurt I feel from the likes of Greer and Weldon.

Jo assures me: “Sugar, Weldon and Greer do not represent the ordinary feminist or even woman on the street. They come from a position of privilege, especially Weldon, who is incredibly wealthy. I stopped thinking of her as a feminist years ago. Greer is someone I once felt inspired by, but unfortunately she became intellectually petrified some decades ago”.

Jo is not trans exclusionary in her feminism and has welcomed me with opened arms, I feel I’ve made a friend. Living in such an isolated place, Jo doesn’t see many trans people, in fact, in 16 years of living in rural France she’s only met one very brave woman who has transitioned here.

Attitudes towards me here are even worse than they were in Latvia. I’m probably the first trans woman that many of these people have ever seen and I’m laughed at and stared at every day and it’s draining.

When I’m with Jo I have the protection of being with another and the hate isn’t so bad, but when I’m on my own it’s much more hateful and particularly upsetting. People feel they’re able to abuse me more when I’m alone.

Social etiquette is different here. In the UK it’s considered rude to stare or point at someone and usually if I make eye contact and give a death stare to someone judging me in a negative way they’ll often look away feeling most embarrassed.

Here, that isn’t the case. When I stare back at someone in rural France, they’re unfazed and that is quite frightening but amidst my feelings of discomfort amongst the locals and the hatred I receive both online and in the writings and speeches of the Trans Exclusionary Feminists, some good has come from this month. I’ve empowered someone to have some work done and I’ve made a new friend and maybe, just maybe, I’m doing my bit for trans awareness in this remote part of the world.

Next week we return to the UK and I have two weeks at home before I return to Latvia for the second instalment of my surgery, a week after which I will be celebrating my six month mark of Hormone Replacement Therapy.

Things are good.

FEATURE: Sauna Jak

Jak tells Gscene what its like working as a trans guy in an all-male sauna.

“My name is Jak. I’ve worked on the scene at the Brighton Sauna for two and half years now and I love it. It’s varied, entertaining and ultimately I get to meet a lot of different people. They get to meet me too. You see, I’m a trans guy and as far as I know, the only openly trans guy who works in an all-male sauna in the country (I’d love to be wrong about that).

I came to the job the same way a lot of people find a job – I asked a friend, and now colleague, if there was anything going there. I had just moved back to the area and was sofa surfing so I needed an income quick. I was staying with him at the time, and had never really stepped foot onto the scene but was definitely intrigued by his job. I asked how to apply on the off-chance and he gave me Paul, the owners email. I had no idea what a sauna was but I thought working in an environment with other men would help with my gender dysphoria.

Past experience with gay men gave me the feeling going into it that I was going to have to educate, which made me all the more determined to get the job. The interview was just the start of that process really.

When I first sat down in the office with Paul, he asked me for all the usual ID and documents except all I had was my old ID and a deed poll. I didn’t know how or when to mention it until he asked if I had been married, hence the deed poll. I decided right then to just go for it and told him “I’m trans” and we tend to do that sort of thing.

I half expected the interview to end right there, I was so nervous. It’s hard to predict how someone will react when you out yourself as trans. He paused, looked at me, looked away and back again and then said; “Oh. Well I guess we’ll have to write some policy about that,” and then we just carried on. I can’t begin to tell you the relief I felt, like I’d passed some sort of test and by the end I was offered the job.

All of a sudden I was a sauna boy. I didn’t ‘pass’ very well at the beginning. Nearly every shift for the first six month or so I was misgendered or asked if it was weird being a girl/lesbian working in a sauna. An ironic question since I’ve never identified as a lesbian or been on the lesbian scene. At the same time I was trying very hard to learn the job and prove everyone wrong who thought I wouldn’t last in the job.

Very early on it was easier to just out myself and be openly trans. It didn’t stop all the misgendering but it did help to stop it faster. Of course this meant I now took on the role of educator. I ended up drawing from experiences in my previous job as a telephone fundraiser in order to help me communicate my story to people. It’s a very different line of work but the soft skills I learned, such as objection handling, mirroring and learning to read people fast so I could adapt my approach, all came in handy when talking to customers and colleagues.

Most people in my experience aren’t asking inappropriate questions out of malice but out of ignorance and I realised that it’s easier for people to connect to an idea if it’s standing right in front of them in person rather than reading about it on a screen. I’ll admit, it gets tiring sometimes especially if it’s a busy night and the towels are piling up but I consider it just as much a part of my job now as anything else I do at the sauna.

Fast forward two and a half years later and I think I’ve made my mark in my own small way. I’ve managed to reach a large audience of gay men and let them know that trans (and gay!) men exist and we’re just like any other guys. I’ve been able to talk to a lot of people about all kinds of issues surrounding trans men, non binary people and trans women. They’ve all got to know me as a person, one of the guys, and I’m not a curiosity or unknown quantity anymore.

Paul and my colleagues have all been great supporters, especially by giving me the means to make the scene more accessible to trans people by letting me start our new trans-exclusive night on the fourth Monday every month. We’re such a unique venue and the perfect place to host a safe and body positive space that’s free from harassment where no one has to explain themselves. Plus it allows people to use things like a jacuzzi or sauna, things they feel like they might not get to use otherwise.

All things considered, I’m lucky that I work in a place that’s supportive, affirming and taught me a lot about the kind of man I am. I’m not ashamed of what I am and I’m privileged enough not to have to hide it. I think most of my regulars have forgotten that I’m trans in truth and now I’m just the guy that’s there every weekend on the night-shift, looking after all my boys.”

Brighton Fringe Preview: BoxedIn Theatre presents WOOD

Camping is all fun and games. Until someone dies.

Following their 5 star smash-hit production of Romeo and Juliet, BoxedIn presents WOOD, an explosive piece of new writing that examines gender constructions, sexual labels, and what to expect when you go camping.

When a group of students arrange their Spring holiday, they’re pretty sure that they’re in for a nice, relaxing break. It’s a camping trip, right, what could possible go wrong? But when Tom discovers Nick lying dead in the middle of the camp-site, the trip takes a turn that none of them could have expected.

This summer, BoxedIn Theatre Company will be welcoming you on to the camp site to scrutinise the way that gender and sexuality is constructed in their newest production – WOOD. Audiences will join 6 students on a camping trip that goes horribly wrong, and will be whisked through the group’s history to ultimately ask – how well can we ever really understand ourselves?

And if the first performance catches your interest, come back the next night for something completely different. The show will be alternating between straight and queer performances, with actors playing characters of their own gender one night, and playing across genders the next. Be treated to two completely different productions of the same show, and watch as the way that gender is performed every day is brought to light.

All of this will be taking place in the context of an entirely new performance genre – BoxedIn developed the ‘Immersive-Lite’ style for WOOD, in the hope of creating a deeper connection with their audience by bringing them right in to the location where the story takes place.

Oli Savage, Artistic Director of BoxedIn Theatre, said: “Immersive theatre is incredibly powerful – it creates engaging pieces of theatre by bringing audiences right in to the location where the story takes place, in a way that is both challenging and entertaining. Immersive-Lite takes this one step further by bringing that location to them.

“We realised early on that we’re discussing a lot of important issues with WOOD, so we started asking ‘can we find a way to harness the power of this enchanting and unique genre while communicating with a wider group of people than usual?’ Someone had the idea of taking the show on tour, which seemed crazy at first, but the more we thought about it, the more it made sense. So the ‘Immersive-Lite’ style grew from that, and we’ve ended up with a show that can create deep and meaningful connections with a wide variety of audiences.”


Event: BoxedIn Theatre presents WOOD

Where: New Steine Gardens, New Steine, Brighton, East Sussex BN2 1PB

When: May 22 – June 4

Time: 7pm

Cost: Free

For more information, click here:

For more information about Boxedin Theatre, click here:

Brighton Diversity Games to include Same-Sex Dance Championships

Brighton Diversity Games, organised by BLAGSS, Brighton LGBT Sports Society, will take place over the weekend of July 8 and 9, 2017.


The Games include Same-Sex Dance Championships, which comprises two sessions and will take place at the Mandela Hall, University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9RH on Saturday, July 8.

The Morning Session from 11am–3pm will include the Women’s Ballroom and Men’s Latin competitions.

The Afternoon Session from 4pm–8pm will include the Men’s Ballroom and Women’s Latin competitions.

The closing date to enter is July 5, 2017.

To enter, click here:

A BLAGSS spokesperson, said: “Spectators are very welcome and make a valuable contribution to the atmosphere of the day. There will be opportunities for social dancing throughout the day and a guest appearance from the Sugar Dandies, as featured on Britain’s Got Talent.”

For spectator tickets, click here:

A small number of tickets may be available on the door.

A Golf Tournament will take place on the Downland Course at Hollingbury, Brighton on Saturday, July 8 from 8.30am with tee times from 9.30am.

Golfers are invited to take part in the individual Stableford competition and the tournament is open to men and women with a congu or society handicap of 36 or lower.

The tournament will be played at two levels: the Pride Shield – for those with a congu handicap; and the Rainbow Challenge – for those with a society handicap. There are Men’s and Women’s competitions within both categories.

To enter, click here:

The entrance fee includes course fees, entrance, prizes and refreshments, including coffee and bacon (or egg) roll on arrival.

Full locker room facilities will be available at the clubhouse along with plenty of parking.

REVIEW: Queer British Art 1861-1967 @Tate Britain

This year marks the fiftieth anniversary of the passing of the Sexual Offences Act, which decriminalised consensual sex (in private) in England and Wales between men aged 21 and over.

Henry Scott Tuke: The Critics © Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum
Henry Scott Tuke: The Critics © Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum

In commemoration and celebration of this landmark legislation, and with a mission to continue to push for positive change, Tate Britain has put together an impressive retrospective of what it calls queer British art, though in some cases the art in question has a queer sensibility as opposed to being overtly created, commissioned or promoted by people who might have empathised with or self-defined as what we now call LGBTQI.

The show includes works from a period of over 100 years, and is bookended by the 1861 Offences against the Person Act, which abolished the death penalty for sodomy, and the ground breaking 1967 legislation.

Given the scope of this exhibition and the dramatic shifts in attitudes, society, science and law which span these years, this collection has to be seen as a snap shot rather than a definitive selection of queer British art. But as snap shots go it is at once panoramic and detailed, and provides a diverse showcase for some defining and important works of art, in this queer sphere of interest and beyond.

The show is spread over eight themed rooms and broadly runs chronologically.

In the first room many of the studies include images of beautiful young men and women which seem loaded with ambiguities that leave the works open to homoerotic interpretation.

Simeon Solomon: Sappho and Erinna in a Garden at Mytilene © Tate Britain
Simeon Solomon: Sappho and Erinna in a Garden at Mytilene © Tate Britain

They range from Henry Scott Tuke’s voyeuristic oil paintings of boys bathing, to the beautiful and heart-breaking paintings and drawings of Simeon Solomon and Sydney Harold Meteyard, whose works here evoke a resignation and despair perhaps caused by lost or unfulfilled same-sex desire and love.

Charles Buchel, Radclyffe Hall, 1918 © National Portrait Gallery
Charles Buchel, Radclyffe Hall, 1918 © National Portrait Gallery

The exhibition moves on to cover public indecency, looking at how public debate over sexuality and gender identity was stirred up by scandals, campaigns and scientific studies. It references the trials of Oscar Wilde and Radclyffe Hall and includes striking portraits of both protagonists, as well as memorabilia relating to Wilde’s imprisonment, notably the infamous calling card left by the Marquis of Queensbury which contained the damning accusation: “to Oscar Wilde posing as a sodomite.” Other notable exhibits include a portrait of Aubrey Vincent Beardsley alongside some of his sexually explicit drawings, and portraits of pioneering sexologist Henry Havelock Ellis and radical free-thinker and author of Homogenic Love, Edward Carpenter.

The next room looks at how queer perspectives could find public expression on the stage, and poses the question as to how far audiences were aware of their idols’ sexual personas and preferences, be they matinee heart-throbs or variety hall male and female impersonators.  There’s a wonderful selection of publicity photographs, including the late Victorian ‘Funny He-She Ladies’ Fanny and Stella, Vesta Tilley’s much loved Burlington Bertie, and a spectacularly glamorous shot of Danny La Rue, who we learn preferred the term ‘comic in a frock’ to female impersonator.

Bloomsbury and Beyond looks at the artists and writers who famously ‘lived in squares and loved in triangles’ as they pushed the boundaries of what might be considered ‘normal’ relationships and created honest, unashamed art and literature that reflected their loves, passions and beliefs.

Duncan Grant: Erotic Embrace c.1950, Charleston House Trust, Lewes, UK © Estate of Duncan Grant
Duncan Grant: Erotic Embrace c.1950, Charleston House Trust, Lewes, UK © Estate of Duncan Grant

The room contains a number of works by Duncan Grant, including paintings which he himself never publicly exhibited because of their explicitly erotic gay content. Grant’s other sensual though less sexually explicit paintings of men bathing hearken back to Henry Scott Tuke’s paintings earlier in the show, though now there is a much stronger sense of male community and homoeroticism. A sense of a utopian, same-sex community, this time of women, is also reflected in Dame Ethel Walker’s large-scale oil painting, Decoration: the Excursion of Nausicaa.

William Strang: Lady with a Red Hat 1918
William Strang: Lady with a Red Hat 1918

Women feature strongly in room five, both as artists and subjects. Here women artists are seen as defying convention, for example in their unapologetic eroticising of the naked female form, while in other paintings, such as Dorothy Johnstone’s Rest Time in Life Class, there’s again a representation of an idyllic and exclusive female community which is intimate and self-supportive.

This room also contains several portraits of famously strong, creative women who challenged gender norms and traditional relationships during this period. They include Vita Sackville-West, Virginia Woolf and Vernon Lee.

David Hockney: Going to be a Queen for Tonight, 1960 © Royal College of Art
David Hockney: Going to be a Queen for Tonight, 1960 © Royal College of Art

The exhibition moves on to cover London as an Arcadian epicentre for queer art and culture in the 1950s and 60s, and finishes with a room dedicated to Francis Bacon and David Hockney’s honest and defiant depictions of male same-sex desire which were in fact painted before the 1967 Act.

Francis Bacon: Figures in a Landscape, 1956-57, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (Birmingham, UK) © The Estate of Francis Bacon 2017. Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd
Francis Bacon: Figures in a Landscape, 1956-57, Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (Birmingham, UK) © The Estate of Francis Bacon 2017. Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd

These latter years where a time when more people were self-defining as LGBT+ and seeing themselves as part of a flourishing queer community, with artists in relationships living openly together and some, like Joe Orton, even having a gay notoriety and celebrity.

But while works here by Bacon and Hockney are fearless, with Hockney even painting the word ‘queer’ into his 1961 painting Going to be a Queen for Tonight, the works of Keith Vaughn for example, though very beautiful, seem shadowy and ambiguous and linked to an awkwardness, furtiveness and even shame. In his diaries Vaughn referred to the ‘social guilt of the invert’, and despite the changing times he, like many others, still lived in fear of prosecution and even blackmail.

The exhibition mini guide cites that ‘this is a history punctuated by bonfires and dustbins’. No doubt many significant works have been destroyed, lost, or never saw the light of day up to 1967 and indeed beyond.

Tate Britain’s chairman writes in his forward to the book accompanying the exhibition: “Our ability to bring together a collection of queer British Art and to expose our audience to a once taboo topic demonstrates the progress made in the last fifty years. But the fact that this is the first exhibition of its kind shows that society has yet to fully accept LGBTQ+ culture.”

It’s a sobering thought. We should all celebrate and support this exhibition and be hopeful for its legacy.

Queer British Art 1861-1967 @Tate Britain runs until October 1 2017.

For information and tickets click here:

 

PREVIEW: New book will be first dedicated to work of iconic San Francisco photographer

This summer will see the publication of a new photographic book which records LGBT+ life in San Francisco during a seminal period in the development of the LGBT+ movement.

LGBT: San Francisco is the first book dedicated to photographer Daniel Nicoletta’s archive of powerful images tracing the burgeoning lesbian-gay-bisexual-transgender (LGBT) mecca that was San Francisco in the 1970s to the present day.

Nicoletta is well-known for his iconic images of Harvey Milk, one of the world’s first openly gay elected officials who was assassinated by a homophobic colleague in 1978, but his photographs are also a unique insider’s perspective on the years that followed Milk’s death, taking us through the ebullience and the pathos of the times.

The book features a foreword by film director Gus Van Sant, who directed the Oscar nominated bio-pic, Milk, and has an introduction by Chuck Mobley.

In his foreward, Van Sant writes: “Danny’s photos are a treasured artistic record of the people who initiated a movement from within their own neighbourhood, and this work links that exuberant time to the larger history of LGBT people. This book is a very welcome addition to our enduring collective memory.”

From the outrageous and flamboyant to the political and poignant, Nicoletta’s images capture the excitement of the alternative theatre scene, the dazzling drag queens and kings, the rise of AIDS activism, and the unfailing bravery of the marriage quality movement.

Chuck Mobley writes in his introduction: “Perhaps it is helpful to remember that the majority of the people depicted in Nicoletta’s photographs – especially in the years prior to the digital deluge – did not necessarily grow up surrounded by the kind of imagery found in this book. Everything that they were experiencing – the politics, the love, the parties, their activism, their artistic endeavours, and the community they were creating – was entirely new. They were making it up as they went along; they weren’t simply mimicking what they had grown up seeing in films and photographs. All the while, Nicoletta was there alongside them, quietly building a sustained practice out of what was essentially a collective enterprise: the life and times around him.”

LGBT: San Francisco will be available from the end of June 2017.

It’s currently available for pre-order on Amazon and you can follow on Facebook, here:

BRIGHTON FRINGE FESTIVAL: The Picture of Dorian Gray@The Warren, Studio 2

Argus Angel Award winning Box Tale Soup return to Brighton Fringe with a thrilling new adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Commissioned by the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, UCLA, Box Tale Soup’s new adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray is an inventive and thought-provoking take on the classic tale of debauchery and scandal.

Young and beautiful, Dorian Gray sinks deep into a lifestyle of luxury and abandon, unchanged by corruption and untouched by age. But behind a thick, locked door, beneath a dark, heavy curtain, Dorian’s portrait tells a different story… In the company’s signature style, The Picture of Dorian Gray features captivating handmade puppets, but is also their first piece to include a larger cast – their previous shows have all employed just two performers.

Box Tale Soup have performed extensively around the UK, including appearances at the Little Angel, Lyric Hammersmith, Wilton’s Music Hall and the Bridgewater Hall. They have also taken work to China, America and Europe.

Recent collaborations include work with world-renowned choral ensemble The Sixteen, and Guardian Charity Award winners Music Action International. The company’s previous visits to Brighton Fringe have been well received by critics and audiences alike.

★★★★★  “..a triumph of stagecraft.”….. The Latest (for Northanger Abbey)

★★★★★  “..an uplifting, intelligent and emotive triumph..”…..Broadway Baby (for Manalive!)

★★★★★  “..their intensity grips us.. It’s brilliant!”….. SGFringe (for Casting the Runes)

“They are wonderful.”….. The Times


Event: Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray

Where: The Warren: Studio 2, St Peter’s Church North, York Place, Brighton, BN1 4GU

When: May 6 and 7

Time: 6pm

Cost: £11/£9.50

To book tickets online, click here:

For more information about Box Tale Soup, click here:

 

Concerns raised about safety in city taxis at LGBT Community Safety Forum public meeting

Concerns about personal safety in city taxis were raised by entertainer Dave Lynn at the quarterly meeting of the Brighton & Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum (Safety Forum) at the Queens Hotel last month.

He told the meeting about an incident he experienced in a taxi when he felt threatened and had to demand the driver stop and let him out.

Peter Wileman the casework manager at the council’s community safety team responded saying that the council’s licensing committee takes homophobic abuse very seriously and encouraged people to report all incidents to his team. He said the council’s licensing committee had recently suspended a taxi driver’s license for 3 months while they investigated an allegation by two gay men who claimed they had been homophobically abused by him in his taxi.

The Safety Forum agreed to write to all local taxi companies to see what LGBT+ awareness training they deliver to their drivers.

Speakers on the night included Sgt Peter Allan the Hate Crime Sergeant and Trans Equality Advocate at Sussex Police and the new CEO of Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard, Daniel Cheesman.

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The Safety Forum presented certificates for money they raised at the B RIGHT ON Festival during LGBT History Month in February for other organisations as well as certificates for money raised for the work of Safety Forum by entertainers from the Adult Panto (£3,814.02) and the Queens Arms (£610).

Money raised by the Brighton & Hove, LGBT Community Safety Forum for other organisations during the B RIGHT ON Festival, included: Sussex Beacon £2,870,98: Rise £106.05: Safety Net £216.79: Cancer Research £1,063.27 and MindOut £417.44.

A special award was presented to Kim Hobson and her photographer husband Graham Hobson for their help during the 17 day festival.

If you are the victim of a hate crime dial 999. If you are not confident to report to the police you can report it to the Council’s Safety Team www.safeinthecity.info

Or telephone the LGBT Community Safety Forum on 01273 855620.

 

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