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City appoints new Mayor

Councillor Mo Marsh was appointed Mayor of the City of Brighton & Hove at a meeting of the full council on May 18.

She replaces the present Mayor Cllr Pete West and will serve the city for the next 12 months. Cllr Marsh has been a Labour councillor since 1995, balancing her civic life representing the residents of Moulsecoomb and Bevendean with her family life, spending time with her daughter and grandchildren while indulging her love of the arts and culture.

Born in Leicester, she left the city in 1965 to study at the University of Sussex for a BA and Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE). In Brighton, she met and married the father of her daughter, who was raised and educated in the city.

Cllr Marsh enjoyed a busy professional career in education, working at different times as a teacher, school governor, administrator and examiner. She spent a year in Michigan, USA studying for an MA and went on to earn diplomas in teaching English as a foreign language, counselling and career guidance at the University of Brighton.

Cllr Marsh is a friend of the Brighton Philharmonic Society, a member of the Brighton Dome and Festival and an active member of the Brighton Little Theatre. She was first elected to Brighton Borough Council representing Marine Ward in 1995 and has represented the residents of Moulsecoomb and Bevendean since 2007. Over the years she has been a regular member of Licensing Panels and chaired the Licensing Committee in 2015.

Cllr Marsh who is celebrating her 70th year in 2017 will be raising money for five charities during her year in office, Albion in the Community, The Marlets Hospice, RISE, The Clock Sanctuary and The Sussex Heart Charity.

In her first speech to full council, Cllr Marsh said:  “My Lord Lieutenant, fellow Councillors, ladies and gentlemen … special guests … for a small person, this is a big moment, in fact you might say it’s my Mo-ment.

To be made Mayor of a city I’ve loved since I first set foot here is a genuine privilege … and something I’m going to cherish. Our communities give our city its’ distinct and unique personality; and it’s to them that I will dedicate my time and energy.

I’m always amazed … and often surprised … by the diversity of peoples that make Brighton and Hove what it is … a vibrant, complex, contrary, fascinating and beautiful place.

I hope to put the ‘Mo’ in mobilise and help galvanise the goodwill, creativity and compassion that our communities provide. I’ll be paying particular attention to the five charities that I have chosen to support this year; Albion in the Community, the Martlets Hospice, RISE, the Clock Tower Sanctuary and the Sussex Heart Charity. These are organisations that give support too and gain support from the people of Brighton & Hove and my hope is that there will be reciprocity and mutual gain between our communities and charities.

As a city, we need more than ever, to harness the goodwill and generosity of our residents; there is no doubt that the hard times that challenge us are due to continue … and though I will be scrupulously a-political during my year I intend to underline the point that its by working together and seeing the best in one another that will ensure our city has a better, brighter future.

To that end I’d like to extend my personal congratulations to Cllr Dee Simson, whom I know will make an excellent Deputy Mayor and I’d like to thank Pete and his family for acting as our first citizens over the last year.

Finally I’d like to thank my Group and in particular my friend Cllr Meadows for nominating me and I’d especially like to acknowledge my friends and family for their love and thoughtfulness.

For this honour to be bestowed on me this year is particularly pertinent as in two weeks’ time, I will turn seventy; which feels quite the landmark …and to have these two events happen in the same year is both amazing and Mo-mentous.

Thank you all for your support and encouragement thus far, I hope to be able to recognise and repay that kindness during my year in office.”

https://thespeechman.co.uk/

BRIGHTON FRINGE REVIEW: The Starship Osiris @Komedia Studio

 

George Vere’s hour-long confection is a riotous piece of grade-Z science fiction in which a rather bijou starship has to battle cheaply made monsters, a demoralised cast, Vere’s monstrous ego and some of the worst sci-fi power ballads known to humankind. Slowly its creator’s ego trip, during which we learn a lot about his character’s good looks and sexual charisma, goes off course as the other actors mutiny against the writer’s poor grasp of plot, character and even basic science.

Captain Harrison (Vere) has objectively been proven by the ship’s computer to be Starfleet’s bravest and most handsome captain. Perhaps his character owes some small debt to a certain James T. Kirk – like Kirk, Harrison wears the same tight polyester outfit, is irresistible to women and has something which often sounds like an American accent. Although there is a nominal villain in the form of Zaglar, it’s fellow crew member Evans (Aiden Willis) who seems to be bear the brunt of Harrison’s contempt.  Willis is eventually pushed to breaking point as his, and the cast’s, resentment of getting paid nothing to appear in a crap show results in them breaking the rules of theatre and rewriting the show on the hoof. Rather in the manner of Kirk taking the Kobayashi Maru test.

It’s a lovely evening of theatre, and I certainly look forward to Vere’s next production. My only quibble would be the show’s paucity of actual, crafted jokes. Though as the whole enterprise (pun intended, obvs) runs perfectly well on its leading character’s demented self-belief maybe it doesn’t needy anything more sophisticated than some missed cues, knitted space aliens and some terrible, terrible songs.

 

 

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