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Hove man sentenced for assaulting Transgender woman

A man has been sentenced following an incident where a woman was assaulted.

Philip Poole, 41, of Shirley Street, Hove pleaded guilty to common assault and intentional harassment, alarm and distress when he appeared at Brighton Magistratesā€™ Court on Wednesday, April 26.

Poole, a cleaner admitted verbally abusing a transgender woman, before punching her and pulling her hair following an incident in St. Jamesā€™s Street, Brighton at 00.30am on Saturday, February 11 this year.

Poole also admitted verbally abusing a police officer who responded to a call from a member of the public.

He was given a 12 month prison sentence, suspended for 18 months and a Rehabilitation Activity Requirement of up to 25 days, as well as having to pay costs of Ā£45 and a Victim Surcharge of Ā£115.

Sgt. Peter Allan
Sgt. Peter Allan

Additionally Poole was fined Ā£40 for the offence against the police officer.

Sussex Police hate crime sergeant, Peter Allan, said: “I am pleased the court have convicted the defendant in this case. No-one should be targeted in such a personal and public way because of who they are.

ā€œThis sentence sends out a clear signal that we will take a robust approach to those who target individuals based on their disability, gender identity, race, religion or sexual orientation. I hope this case will encourage other victims of hate to report such behaviour to the police.

ā€œWhat was really pleasing to me in relation to this case, is that four members of the public came to the assistance of the victim, one of whom called the police and waited with the victim until they arrived. You do not have to become physically involved to stand up to hate; offering a supportive word and calling the police is more than most people would do.

ā€œI wrote a letter of thanks to the member of the public, acknowledging her actions in supporting a fellow human being in their time of need.

“Hate crime can be reported to us by calling 101, or 999 in an emergency and online for those who prefer to do so.”

Heathrow partners with Gay Star News

Heathrow partners Gay Star News to share editorial and social media news on the travel section of Gay Star News, Gay Star Travel.

The partnership aims to bring interesting and relevant information, tips and news highlights to LGBT+ travellers to enhance their experiences, each time they fly.

Seventy fiveĀ million passengers fly through Heathrow, the UKā€™s only hub airport each year. The partnership will bring them the most up to date travel innovations and services to help them make the most of their journey.

Heathrowā€™s business lead for marketing, Rebecca White, said: ā€œAfter a successful year working with Gay Star News, we wanted to continue the partnership to offer interesting news, relevant to the diverse mix of travellers we see each day. We hope the stories we share make people feel excited to start their travel experience as soon as they arrive through our doors.ā€

After engaging with LGBT+ communities on successful campaigns last year, Heathrow is developing a larger and more encompassing campaign to demonstrate its commitment to diversity and inclusiveness.

Tris Reid-Smith
Tris Reid-Smith

Tris Reid-Smith, Editor-in-Chief of Gay Star News, added:Ā “Heathrow is one of the most diverse places on earth. It’s literally a place where people from around the world come together. And it’s fantastic Heathrow is embracing the LGBT+ part of that diversity.

“As Oscar Wilde said: ā€œTravel improves the mind wonderfully, and does away with all oneā€™s prejudices.ā€ This seems the perfect partnership to share that message.”

Jaime Tabberer, Editor of Gay Star Travel, said:Ā We at GSN share the Heathrow team’s passion for exploring the world and making connections with people, so it’s the perfect partnership.

“I’m a firm believer that a positive airport experience can make or break a trip. Indeed, your holiday should start as soon as you check in, and it’s always a pleasure whenever I visit Heathrow. I’m looking forward to encouraging readers to enjoy Heathrow’s famous customer service, its plethora of amazing stores, restaurants and hotels, and its countless fabulous lounges.”

Tel Aviv to host the world’s first bisexuality themed Pride parade

City’s world-famous parade to promote Bisexuality Visibility in June 2017.

The City of Tel Aviv-Yafo has announced the theme of the 2017 LGBT+ Pride Parade will be Bisexuality Visibility, making itĀ the first large-scale pride parade in the world to ever celebrate bisexuality as its theme.

Hundreds of thousands of people from Israel and around the world are expected to descend on Tel Aviv starting June 3 for a nonstop week of parties, events, and shows that feature and celebrate the cityā€™s vibrant LGBT+ communities, culminating in a massive parade through the city streets on June 9.

Tel Avivā€™s pride parade is the largest pride event in Asia and the Middle East, and boasts one of the largest parades anywhere in the world.

Past themes have included last yearā€™s Women for a Change and Transgender Visibility.

This year, the city has chosen a themeĀ that reaffirms its support for the diverse and inclusive atmosphere that has led to Tel Aviv being dubbed ā€œthe worldā€™s gayest cityā€ by The Boston Globe and ā€œthe gay capital of the Middle Eastā€ by Out Magazine.

The Tel Aviv Pride Parade is fully sponsored by the city who have over the last few years invested heavily to promote gay tourism to the city, and expect 35,000 tourists to arrive in Tel Aviv this year to take part in the pride events.

Efrat Tolkowsky, Tel-Aviv Yafo City Council Member, in charge of LGBT+Ā Affairs, said: ā€œBoth in Israel and around the world, many bisexual people feel that they are an invisible group within the LGBT+ community. Here in Tel Aviv, we are committed to celebrating each and every LGBT+ person and ally equally, so that we can all be out and proud togetherā€.

For more information about Tel-Aviv Pride, click here:

BRIGHTON FRINGE REVIEW: Fannytasticals @Sweet Dukebox

If you are a man attending this show on your own ā€“ beware ā€“ for most of its duration you will be quite justifiably the target of sharp, witty and very crude humour from this 6-woman ensemble.

Through song, parody, sketches and gags, the show explores womenā€™s bodily functions coupled with the inappropriate behaviour of men.

Some of the lyrics and dialogue are not suitable for publication here but all are done with a touching sense of melancholy and a brave attempt at not equality but respect and individuality.

We see various patients at a sexual health clinic, explaining their conditions in graphic detail but coupled with humorous song and dance. And we have the beauty parlour which replaces its offer of nails and facials with pubic topiary.

In parodies of Supercalifragilistic etcā€¦ we get to hear about bacterial vaginosis, and in a rip off of Mama Mia ā€“ they sing cheerily about gonorrhea. Theres a plaintive lament from Disney film female characters longing to be liberated and a Country and Western take on ā€œthings women do on their ownā€œ which leaves nothing to the imagination.

In a version of Cell Block Tango we find out just what pisses women off about their men, and in a telling role reversal we get ‘chavvy’ women using the language of the building site on passing men.

Modern day pressures to conform are achingly relayed in a sketch between a heavily pregnant young woman and her older friend who is not the least interested. ā€œHow can you not want to have a baby ?” elicits a very, very, very long list of why not.

This show is mainly about what my Auntie Gladys would have called ā€œwomenā€™s trouble” which makes precisely the reverse point ā€“ itā€™s not their trouble itā€™s our societyā€™s problem.

It would be impossible to separate out the performances, because Lisa Caira, Judy Bignell, Sarah Charsley, Amy Maynard, Sarah Davies and Heather Andrews all work their socks off, and the mostly female audience hoot with approval and recognition throughout.

So my advice to the guys reading this is take a female friend with you ā€“ and she can explain the bits you donā€™t understand.

Fannytasticals runs at the Sweet Dukebox (at the Iron Duke pub) 3 Waterloo Street, Hove, BN3 1AQ on May 9, 10 and 26-28.

To book tickets online, click here:

BRIGHTON FRINGE REVIEW: Super Hamlet 64: Parody DLC @ Warren 2

 

Super Hamlet 64: Parody DLC

Edward Day

The Warren:Ā Studio 2

Armed with an ocarina, a ukulele and a thirst for revenge. Techno-retro-deconstructo clownoĀ Edward Day battled through four decades of video game nostalgia, in his personal physical explosion of Shakespeare, live music, and projection mapped, 16 bit ridiculousness.

Using his premise of clashing the themes and narrative of Hamlet with retro video games and our workaholic culture and addiction to technology, Dayā€™s Hamlet drives himself to the brink of sanity in an unending quest to kill his uncle Lugi and win at life, time after time.

Although Day suggested there was an undercurrent of introspection and his reflections on mental health I didnā€™t feel this accomplished, what did come across is what happens if people spend too long practicing miming and voicing the action of computer games they have played.Ā  I drifted off after about ten endless minutes of ā€˜ptooohhhā€™ and ā€˜twangggā€™, ā€˜bababooshā€™ and ā€˜clunngggkā€™ that were rapid fireā€™ d out interspersed with snatches of soliloquy and literally lost the plot.

The inclusion of a rather interesting song, with furious lyrics far too dense to completely catch was a nice aside, not quite sure of what it was doing in the show other than to show case Dayā€™s ability to play a few instruments rather well and provide a layered built up backing track for his ethereal ocarina playing, (nice Zelda reference). Iā€™d have been very happy to have a few more moments of the ocarina and less ā€˜pataowwwā€™, ā€˜blatashhhā€™ and ā€˜exxxplungggge!ā€™ with the accompanying hand movements.

Overall there were some brilliant flashes of dark humour, I particularly liked the idea of an ‘easy life’ to a ‘hard life’ at the beginning, but this examination of white male privilege was quickly abandoned in favour of shoot-ups, played out violence and murderous rampages. Ā A missed opportunity and perhaps something Day should consider working up further. Some of the meshes of Hamlet with the low ā€“tech also worked well, both exposing the silliness (and well-loved indulgences) of the other and the use of video projections to run alongside and interact with his highly physical content worked well.

I took along the most geeky geek I knew who got all the game references, and there was an encyclopaedic collection of them, I guess every single game platform and title ever made was quoted at some time and the rest of the audience seemed to delight in this name checking. There was quite a lot of this, and as a non-gamer it washed over me, Dayā€™s obvious love of Shakespeare shines though and his ability to insert some serious daftness into Hamlettā€™s narrative gave me the biggest laughs.

The deeper element to this comedy quickly became overpowered by the more ridiculous elements of culture clashing and the thick vein of interesting potential; the effects of technology on our mental health and feelings of connectivity to our fellow humans became an optional side quest which was not properly explored.

Day is an energetic and engaging performer; he is charming and fun and clowns with a furious passion, helped along by an ability to contort his plastic features and sinuous lanky frame in many ways at once. His ability to perform to extreme is aided by the well thought out video mapping and under-stated sophistication of his technical support and the show as a concept worked well. It could do with a little trimming and some added depth, but thatā€™s one opinion from an audience that left rather pleased with this show and certainly seemed like theyā€™d had the geek 64 bit splatter fest promised.

Dance & Physical Theatre

Edward Day

May 8: 19:45 MayĀ 20-21:Ā 14:30
Ā£9.50(Ā£8) Student Ā£7 [1hr]

 

BRIGHTON FRINGE REVIEW: Help! I Think I Might Be Fabulous @Brighton Spiegeltent: Bosco

It’s been quite a while since I’ve failed to connect with a show as deeply as I failed to connect with this one ā€“ it might as well have been performed in Lithuanian so little did I appreciate what was happening on stage.

Alfie Ordinary, the son of a drag queen, is sent to Madame LeCoq’s Preparatory School For Fabulous Boys which is like Hogwart’s for the gender fluid. He tells us about coming out as ‘fabulous’, sings songs such as YMCA and, in a terrible misstep even for a show I wasn’t keen on, gives us a mini-lecture about heteronormativity.

Although Ordinary certainly has presence, and there’s something interesting about the character, the material is pretty substandard. At LeCoq’s he does his GCSEs which here stands for Gorgeous Certificate of Sassy Excellence.

Nearly all the jokes are pretty much of this calibre – they kind of work without actually being funny. The school doesn’t have Eton-style fags, it has ‘fabs’. However, there’s one bit where the off-side rule in football is explained in terms of buying shoes which comes closer to hitting the mark ā€“ it’s at least recognisable as a tight piece of writing.

There’s something about the performer I warmed to but just before the final song we get a ridiculously sententious speech about how Alfie’s world doesn’t exist and how awful it is that gender stereotypes are foisted upon children in order to further the aims of capitalism. I’ve no problem with this politically, but if you have to laboriously spell out to the audience what the show is about it probably needs a bit of a rewrite.

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