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Pride in London announce line-up of events during London Pride Festival

“Pride in London is not only a celebration of the LGBT+ community, it’s a celebration of the city itself”

Showcasing the full spectrum of London and its LGBT+ communities, this year’s London Pride festival will celebrate the true diversity of London’s art, history, theatre, film and music from June 24 – July 9. The theme of the Pride parade on Saturday, July 8 is Love Happens Here.

The official opening will take place at Tate Britain to celebrate their major new exhibition Queer & Now.

More than 60 new and returning events are expected to be a part of the two-week festival throughout the city, with highlights including:

♦     A Big Gay Iftaar, bringing together the Muslim and LGBT+ communities to open a fast together during Ramadan

♦     Cheeky historical tours of Soho with Saucy Soho Tours, a guided tour looking at characters who’ve lived and loved down Soho’s streets.

♦     City Dash Game, a high-energy, immersive treasure hunt specifically themed for the festival and LGBT+ Picnic in the Park, a special Pride picnic with entertainment from local favourites Shkembe Soup and Broken Swing Band

♦     Celebrating the 21st Anniversary of London’s Gay Symphony Orchestra, the UK’s oldest LGBT+ orchestra will be performing in St John’s Smith Square, featuring Russian classics as well as a new commission from Michael Finnissy.

♦     For under 18s Pride Prom 2017 will provide an evening of entertainment from LGBT+ performers and DJs in a healthy and safe environment

Sadiq Khan
Sadiq Khan

Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan said: “London’s LGBT+ community is one of the largest in the world, and I was proud to lead last year’s Pride march and to be Mayor of a city that doesn’t just tolerate diversity, but truly embraces and celebrates it. This year’s Pride in London programme reflects the full spectrum of the capital’s LGBT+ community and I urge all Londoners to immerse themselves in the festivities, proudly wave the rainbow flag and make this year’s Pride in London the biggest and most colourful yet.”

Peter Flynn from Pride in London added: “Pride in London is not only a celebration of the LGBT+ community, it’s a celebration of the city itself. London is one of the most diverse, welcoming and accepting cities in the world and we’re proud to be part of it, and we’re delighted to work with Visit London. Pride in London strives to be a beacon to the rest of the world, and hope people from across the U.K. and beyond will come to London this year and join the celebrations.”

Visitlondon.com, London’s official guide to the city, is the digital home and partner for this year’s festival. A dedicated website visitlondon/Pride-in-London will launch on May 19 to provide information and inspiration for visitors to the festival and parade day.

For more information about Pride in London, click here:

Seventh edition of Queer in Brighton’s LGBTQ+ history club

The seventh edition of Queer in Brighton’s LGBTQ+ history club takes place from 3-5pm on Sunday, May 28 at the Brighton Museum & Art Gallery.

Sirens
Sirens

80’s womens band, Siren will play a selection of their songs and talk about their experience as a lesbian feminist band and theatre company in the punk and post punk time in Brighton.

The songs set the tone for the period when Siren members developed as activists, campaigning for lesbian and gender equality, as well as challenging the specific policies of the Thatcher government.

From rehearsing in the ‘vaults’ (a series of underground burial chambers in North Street) during the late 70’s, to attracting levels of violence when they toured, Siren members will talk about their memories, and why the punk movement was so revolutionary for women who had always wanted to play in a band.

The event is FREE – but please RSVP here so we know how much cake we need to bring!


Event: Queer in Brighton LGBTQ+ History Club seventh edition

Where: Brighton Museum & Art Gallery, Royal Pavilion Gardens, Brighton BN1 1EE

When: Sunday, May 28

Time: 3-5pm

Cost: Free entry but click here: to RSVP so organisers know how many people to cater for.

The LGBTQ+ History Club #8 will be on Sunday June 25 when pioneering HIV/AIDS activist Simon Watney and activist and artist Dan Glass will be speaking.

Lib Dems call for PrEP to be made available on the NHS

The Liberal Democrats will ensure access to the HIV prevention drug Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) on the NHS for people in high-risk groups if elected at the General Election on June 8.

Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) is a once-a-day pill that reduces the risk of HIV infection by 86%.

Despite its proven efficacy and potential to deliver long-term savings, the NHS has yet to approve its use, and it is currently only available in the UK through a private prescription that costs approximately £400 for a month’s supply.

In November 2016 The Court of Appeal ruled in favour of the NAT (National AIDS Trust) in a judgment that confirmed an earlier high court ruling in August 2017, that NHS England could legally fund the HIV prevention drug PrEP.

The Government took the decision to the Court Of Appeal in November 2016 and lost. The Court of Appeal ruled that NHS England, alongside local authorities, had the power, although not the obligation, to fund the provision of anti-retroviral drugs for the prevention of HIV, known as pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).

In December 2016, NHS England announced a new HIV initiative in partnership with Public Health England to fund a PrEP clinical trial for 10,000 people over the next 3 years with the first phase of implementation being early in the 2017/18 financial year.

Norman Lamb MP
Norman Lamb MP

Liberal Democrat Shadow Health Secretary Norman Lamb said: “PrEP is a vital weapon in the fight against HIV, and it’s high time that it was made routinely available to those who are at risk of infection.

“The Liberal Democrats in Parliament have led calls for PrEP to be made available to all high-risk groups.

“We know that PrEP is highly effective in reducing transmission of the virus. Prevention is always better than treatment, so it makes absolutely no sense to delay roll-out of the drug any longer.”

Tim Farron
Tim Farron

Liberal Democrat Leader Tim Farron added: “Offering PrEP on the NHS is the smart thing to do and the right thing to do, the needs of the communities this affects have been ignored for too long.

“The Liberal Democrats will act quickly to fix this injustice.”

PrEP user and campaigner Nick Perry, said: “It’s absolutely right for the Liberal Democrats to press the NHS to get on with commissioning a wholly effective and proven HIV prevention tool – PrEP – across the UK.

“Prevention isn’t just better than cure clinically – trials and modelling have shown it to be highly cost-effective too.

“Each day 16 more people in the UK are diagnosed HIV positive.

“The end of new HIV infections is in our grasp, and the NHS needs to make it happen.”

PrEP is endorsed by the World Health Organisation and widely available in other countries, including Australia, France, Canada, Israel, Kenya and USA.

To treat someone who has HIV/AIDS is considerably more expensive than prescribing PrEP as a preventative is. At present, a year’s supply of PrEP officially costs £4,330 per person, although the NHS obtains a discount and may pay around £3000 per year.

A lifetime of HIV treatment costs up to £360,000 per patient.

Brighton business frying high with the Seagulls

Brighton’s award-winning Belgian chip shop BeFries has created a new blue and white mayonnaise to mark Albion’s promotion success.

The limited edition Albion-aise sauce will be launched on Sunday when thousands of fans pack into the city for an open-top bus parade following the teams success in winning promotion to the Premier League.

Like many across the city, those at the restaurant in West Street, Brighton, have been cheering Brighton and Hove Albion up the Championship all season.

With the season now over and the Seagulls winning promotion to the English Premier League, BeFries wanted to mark the achievement in their own unique way.

The Albion-aise will be made available on Sunday, May 14, when tens of thousands of fans are expected to pour into Brighton city centre for an open-top bus parade to celebrate the Seagulls success.

Dash and Chan
Dash and Chan

Dash Beevers, of Befries, said: “The Seagulls have well and truly put Brighton on the map through their remarkable promotion to the Premier League.

“As a long-standing resident of the city I have experienced the ups and the downs of the Albion in the last 20-plus years.

“Now they are in the top flight, it’s only right that the whole city comes together to thank everyone at The Amex for doing their bit.

“As a small independent business we want to play our part – and this blue and white sauce will help Seagulls fans show their true colours during the open top parade.”

The colourful dip will be made available to those visiting the BeFries restaurant throughout Sunday although stocks are limited. Other sauces, such as curry ketchup, hot peanut sate and spicy samurai, will also be available.

Dash, who opened the family-run business with his brother Chan, said: “Having opened in July around the time that the football season started, we have made great strides.

“Highlights include winning our first award, where we were recognised as the city’s Best Bites on a Budget. Much like the Albion that success is down to our loyal supporters.

“The Seagulls are an amazing example of to all independent businesses in the city that if you dream big, you can achieve the impossible.”

 

A1 line-up for Newcastle Pride’s 10th birthday celebration

Chart-topping boyband A1 and X Factor star Sam Bailey are among the first acts set to perform at this summer’s Newcastle Pride 2017 festival.

The popular festival, now in its 10th year, will return with a host of entertainment from June through to August, including the main weekend of live music at Newcastle’s Town Moor from July 21 – 23.

A1, featuring original members Ben Adams, Christian Ingebrigtsen and Mark Read will be headlining Newcastle Pride’s Manchester Airport Main Stage on July 22, with 2013 X Factor winner Sam Bailey taking top spot the following day (July 23).

Internationally successful pop group A1 scored several number one hits across the globe, including two UK No. 1s within nine weeks, with a cover of a-ha’s Take On Me, followed by the self-penned Same Old Brand New You.

The trio had eight UK Top Ten hits, three successful albums and were awarded a prestigious BRIT award for British Breakthrough Act in 2001.

They will be joined by a host of top stars across the weekend including British singer-songwriter and I’m Gonna Get You star Angie Brown, the Diva from Down Under – Kelly Wilde and Steps tribute band Steptastic.

LGBT community choir Northern Proud Voices and London cabaret star Danni Dee and The Broadway Dancers – who are best known for their performances at Newcastle cabaret club, Boulevard – will also be performing.

The Manchester Airport Main Stage, hosted by Boulevard’s Miss Rory, will also see the Hi-NRG – recording artist Jason Prince perform, along with Lee Lambert from X Factor 2013, Czech five-piece girl group Pink Angels and Newcastle Drag Idol 2017 winner, Dragon & The Whale.

Mark Nichols, Chair of Northern Pride, which organises Newcastle Pride, said: “The Manchester Airport Main Stage programme is one of the most popular aspects of Newcastle Pride and this year we’ve gone all out to offer an amazing array of acts across both days.

“With A1 and Sam Bailey leading the line-up, we hope that people will really make a weekend of it and enjoy everything the festival, and the North East as a whole, has to offer.

“And that’s not all, as we have a second announcement – with even more amazing acts – coming soon.”

Newcastle Pride, organised annually by LGBT charity, Northern Pride, attracted more than 73,000 visitors and contributed more than £10.1m to the economy in 2016, and this year, as well as the Main Stage weekend at the Town Moor, the festival will also feature an extended range of satellite events at venues around Newcastle.

For full listings for all of these events, including a LGBT+ Youth Prom and Black Tie Ball, click here:

The festival itself is free to attend, however a number of Gold Circle and VIP tickets are available for those who want to guarantee prime viewing spots for the performances on July 22 and 23.

Some of the satellite events may also incur an additional charge.

Can you provide a loving home to a child with a disability?

PACT appeals for people who can provide a loving home to a child with a disability.

Parents And Children Together (PACT), the adoption charity is calling for people to consider adopting a child with additional needs.

PACT offers outstanding Ofsted rated adoption services to families across the South East. Last year it placed 87 children with 62 families through its adoption services. There are currently more than 2,000 children waiting to be adopted in England.

PACT is particularly looking for couples or individuals, including those from the LGBT+ communities, who can consider adopting children who have additional needs, including a physical or learning disability.

Nicola and her husband Mike adopted Amelia, who has cerebal palsy, when she was 18 months old through PACT. The couple already had a birth son who was four years old when they first approached PACT in 2014.

Nicola said: “Our birth son was the result of seven years of IVF and we did not feel we were able to go through that process again. We also felt our family was not complete, so we decided to adopt. We approached PACT as we had attended some of their local events and felt the ethos and approach matched ours.”

The couple, whose circumstances meant their adoption journey was more complicated than some, spent three years of preparation and waiting until they met their daughter.

She continued: “The endless paperwork seemed so removed from a living, breathing child and truthfully we struggled to see a light at the end of the tunnel. However, we knew there was a child out there for us, so we persisted.

“The wonderful matching team at PACT were there for us throughout the process, reassuring us it was about the right child and not just any child. And, of course, they were right. We were eventually matched with a child that put us well out of our comfort zone, but who is the most loving, sweetest addition to our family.”

Nicola said their decision to be matched with a disabled child was followed by hours of worrying about whether they had the capacity to raise a child who would spend her life in a wheelchair. But she said that as soon as they met Amelia they knew it was the right decision.

She said: “As I walked through the corridor of the foster home I was so worried we could not give her the life she deserved and worried her needs would negatively impact our son’s life.

“But then we turned into the doorway and saw her for the first time. She was sitting up and she turned her head to us. She immediately gave us the biggest, heart-melting smile, reaching her hand up to us. All the preparation and photos meant she recognised us immediately. In that minute, I knew it would all be okay. I knew we could love her and give her what she needed. Suddenly her disability became assigned to paper, and she became a real, living child.”

Nicola said the first few months were tough as Amelia settled into her new family and they got used to a child with a physical disability. The family received amazing support from PACT during this time and Amelia is now much more settled and making great progress emotionally and physically, and shares a very special bond with her older brother.

She concluded: “She may be disabled and she may be adopted, but that is all just one part of who she is. She is my family and we are hers. There is no longer a distinction between her and us. She makes me angry, she makes us sad, she makes us laugh, and she brings endless joy. It is a natural relationship and I frequently forget we do not share a genetic link.

“We are four and we are happy. Good days, bad days, sunny and rainy days. We will be together.”

Jan Fishwick
Jan Fishwick

PACT Chief Executive Jan Fishwick, said: “At PACT we are dedicated to finding forever homes for children who can be harder to place and who often have the longest wait for a permanent family. We are therefore always keen to hear from anyone who could provide a loving home to a child who has additional needs, including a physical or learning disability. We can also offer specialist support to families who do adopt a child with additional needs through our Strengthening Families Team and award-winning Family And Children Therapeutic Support (FACTS) service.”

Names above have been changed to protect identities.

To find more about PACT, click here: 

Or telephone: 0300 456 4800.

 

 

 

Line-up announced for Isle of Wight Pride on July 15

Organisers of Isle of Wight Pride invite everyone to join them on the beach in Ryde for a free, family friendly celebration event on Saturday July 15.

Freemasons

The main event will take place on Harbour Beach in Ryde, following a colourful parade through the heart of Ryde starting at 11am.

Speakers including Peter Tatchell, Linda Reilly and Justine Smithies amongst others will be raising issues facing the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT+) communities across the World in 2017.

Joining them in what will be the first ever UK Pride event to take place on a beach, will be headline acts Freemasons, Horse McDonald and La Voix.

The Freemasons are best known for their classic club and chart hits such as Love on My Mind, Rain Down Love, Uninvited and When You Touch Me.

Horse

Horse McDonald described by Iain Banks as having “a voice like folds of very rich chocolate” is recognised as one of Scotland’s best songwriter vocalists and a veteran supporter of Pride events.

La Voix who reached the semi finals of Britain’s Got Talent in 2014 will be opening the event with her Va Va Voom Boys.

Other acts appearing will include Reigns, Nicki French, Allan Jay, Miss Jason, The Bunker Girls, Alfie Ordinary, Jacqui Swallows, Saski Singer, the Medina Community Chorus and the Southampton Gay Men’s Chorus.

Away from the beach arena and main stage, the Pride Village will have food stalls, a small acoustic stage, family fun area, retail stalls and information stands.

The official After Pride Party will be at the Balcony Bar in Ryde where The Freemason will make a further appearance along with Gaydio’s DJ Alex Baker and Tony Walton from the The Waltons will be making a special guest DJ appearance, especially for Pride.

Tickets for the main event on the beach are free, but you need to pre-register as there will be a controlled maximum capacity. You can buy tickets online for the VIP area and the evening event at the Balcony Bar.

Committee member John Brownscombe, said: “Team Pride welcomes everyone to this fabulous family friendly event.  With the support of our sponsors, local businesses and individual donations and the hard work of the team of volunteers, we are thrilled to be able to put on this event for free. At the heart of the day is an Island community celebration for everyone who shares our belief in equality irrespective of your sexuality or what gender you identify as. Alongside the fun festivities there will also be information and speakers talking about the struggles still facing the global LGBT community.  It is shocking and tragic that there are still people being killed just because of who they are or who they love.”

Committee member Yve White, added: “IW Pride will be open to everyone.  All of our Fringe events have been attended by a broad range of people and we want the main event to be no different.  You don’t have to be LGBT+ to come along, join in the fun and share in this landmark event for the Isle of Wight.

Personally, I cannot wait to see La Voix live and will also have my dancing shoes on ready for the amazing Freemasons!  It’s time for us all on the Island to recognise that Love really does Win.”

For further information, registration for taking part in the Pride Parade and all tickets for the event, click here:

 

Casino evening raises £401 for cancer charity

A charity casino night at the Camelford Arms last month staged in association with Bear-Patrol raised £401 for a local cancer charity.

Full size Roulette and Blackjack tables were installed in the bar by professional croupiers, one being Camelford regular Gary Smith, who donated his services for the night.

The money, raised for the Sussex Cancer Fund will be used to buy 10 heat warming pads for the Sussex Cancer Centre at The Royal Sussex County Hospital for patients to put around their arms to help improve circulation when chemotherapy is being administered.

For more information about Sussex Cancer Fund, click here:

HIV life expectancy ‘near normal’ due to treatment advances

A study in The Lancet has found that young people diagnosed with HIV in the US and Europe now have a near normal life expectancy because of improvements in drug treatments.

Twenty-year-olds who started antiretroviral therapy in 2010 are projected to live 10 years longer than those first using it in 1996. This means many people can expect to live as long as those without the condition.

Antiretroviral therapy, or ART, first became widely used in the mid 1990s. The drugs block the HIV virus’ replication which helps prevent and repair damage to the immune system. They also work to reduce onward transmission.

Jason Warriner
Jason Warriner

Jason Warriner, Clinical Director at The Sussex Beacon, said: “The advances that have been made in HIV treatments are incredible. People diagnosed with HIV have gone from being told it was effectively a death sentence, to being told to expect a long, healthy life. Not only that, but the new drugs need fewer doses, have fewer side effects and can suppress the virus so much, it’s very difficult to pass on. The work that’s been done in this area is really something to be proud of.”

While many people now live well with HIV, The Sussex Beacon supports people with serious HIV related illnesses, cancer, or those with drug regime or mental health problems.

There will be challenges ahead supporting a new generation of older people living with HIV as people aged over 50 now represent one in three of all those living with HIV.

Prompt diagnosis and treatment is key to living a normal lifespan. Prevention campaigns, testing and treatment all work hand in hand to tackle HIV and reduce the number of new diagnoses.

To find out where to take a test locally, click here:

The Sussex Beacon provides both inpatient and outpatient services to promote independence and improve health.

For more information about the Sussex Beacon, click here: 

BRIGHTON FRINGE REVIEW: This Boy Tom – a New Musical @Ralli Hall

Brighton college drama teacher and BBC Bursary winner Natalie Sexton has written a challenging and entertaining piece about bullying in school, about guilt, hatred, revenge and reconciliation – and all performed by 10 very young actors/singers/dancers who have more talent than an entire Premiere League side.

From its Annie-like opening chorus about how boring school lessons are, the pupils respond to their unseen teachers with vitality and wit.

Central to the story is Tom (played wonderfully by Eliot Milward) a boy with a facial Harry Potter-like scar and a much deeper inner wound. Mocked by his classmates as a freak, he is the subject of hatred and violence because his school chums blame him for the death by house fire of his younger brother Alfie (played with beauty and grace by what I assume is his real life brother Frankie Milward).

The songs and dialogue seem at times very episodic and arbitrary in how they advance the plot, but all are performed with great enthusiasm and skill by this young cast. There are times when the backing tracks overwhelm the young voices and mar the clarity of their words, but it’s a technical issue that can be solved in the rest of the run.

The major problem with the show is that the story is very one-dimensional and once the basic issue is stated, the story doesn’t truly develop. The reconciliation, when it comes is therefore unconvincing.

That said I think the show has great prospects as a school production that many teachers and youth groups will want to take up.

With some development and re-writing , there could even be another Matilda in the making.

Clara Shepherd-Thompson as Tom’s on-off new friend, and Fleur Aston as the feisty Jessica are outstanding in a largely strong cast. Scout Adams has a powerful presence as Jade but she isn’t given enough to do.

The show runs at Ralli Hall, Hove on various dates in May and ends on 2 June.


THIS BOY TOM by Natalie Sexton

Presented by: JW Productions

Venue: Ralli Hall, 81 Denmark Villas, Hove, East Sussex

Dates: May 13, 17, 21, 24 @ 7pm: May 14 @ 2pm: June 2 @ 11am and 2pm

Reviewer: Brian Butler

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