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QUEER IN BRIGHTON: LGBTQ+ History Club with Simon Watney this Sunday

HIV/AIDS Activist Simon Watney is the guest speaker at the eighth edition of Brighton’s LGBTQ+ History Club this Sunday, June 25.

Simon Watney
Simon Watney

Simon Watney has a long-established reputation in the field of HIV/AIDS as a writer, founder of numerous charities and not-for-profit companies, educator and service provider.

From 1985 to 89, he was the founding chair of the Terrence Higgins Trusts Health Education Group, where he oversaw the development of the trusts pioneering HIV-prevention campaigns.

From 1988 to 95 he wrote a respected monthly column on HIV/AIDS issues in Gay Times; in 1990 he was a co-founder of the activist group OutRage.

His principal publications on HIV/AIDS are Policing Desire: Pornography, AIDS and the Media, Practices of Freedom: Selected Writings on HIV/AIDS, and Imagine Hope: AIDS and Gay Identity.

Simon was awarded the 2001 Pink Paper Annual Lifetime Achievement Award, London, for his long campaigning for lesbian and gay rights and the rights of those affected by HIV and AIDS. Openly HIV-positive, he was a trustee of the charity Crusaid from 2007 to 2010, with a particular interest in questions of AIDS and poverty in the UK. He is also a widely published art historian and was a senior lecturer in art history at the University of Westminster.

The history club is open to all (18+), but please consider making a donation if you’re able to help them support future sessions.


Event: LGBTQ+ History Club: Eighth Edition with Simon Watney

Where: Brighton Museau and Art Gallery

When: Sunday, June 25

Time: 3-5pm

Cost: To book your place, click here:

Cowboys, Queens and fine dining at the Old Ship Hotel this Friday

It’s time to enter the Wild West, have some fun and raise money for the Rainbow Fund.

Cowboys and Queens at the Old Ship Hotel promises a night of fine dining, line dancing and cabaret from the fabulous Kara Van Park.

Enter the Wild West, have some fun while raise money for the Rainbow Fund.

The Rainbow Fund give grants to LGBT/HIV organisations who provide front line services to LGBT+ people in Brighton and Hove.

Tickets costs £39 and include a 3 course steak dinner followed by a night of entertainment and line dancing.


Event: COWBOYS & QUEENS charity fun night with Kara Van Park and fun line dancing

Where: Old Ship Hotel Brighton, King’s Road, Brighton BN1 1NR

When: Friday, June 23

Time: 7.30pm

Cost: £39

To book tickets online, click here:

Kara Van Park: Photo: Hugo Michiels
Kara Van Park: Photo: Hugo Michiels

 

Council to improve safety at The Level

New measures improving safety at The Level will be introduced over the next few weeks.

The improvements are among a package of recommendations arising from a recent security review.

Visitors to the playground will see the two play units modified and made ‘open sided’ so users can always be seen.

Park lighting will also be improved. The central columns near the fountains will be raised to provide additional light over the lower park area near the pavilions. There are also plans to install an additional police CCTV camera on a new column

The council is also hoping to secure funding for a full-time park manager to work at weekends as well as during the week, carrying out daily park-wide inspections and maintenance.

To help tackle litter issues, large bins will be installed on the edges of the park.

These improvements will compliment other measures to enhance safety on The Level introduced over the past few months.

They include:

♦          Additional motion-sensitive lighting installed on the community pavilions;

♦          Additional 24-hour monitored CCTV cameras, linked to the police station, , including a new one on the café building, bringing the total to 13.

♦          ‘Windows at the community pavilion reinforced with toughened protective layers

♦          New signage on park noticeboards and inside community rooms giving people direct contacts to report concerns at the park

♦          City Parks staff carrying out litter picks and playground inspections at weekends.

♦          Increased police visits and patrols including use of drug dogs

♦          Community Safety partnership group expanding to include more council and community representatives

Cllr Gill Mitchell

Councillor Gill Mitchell, chair of the Environment, Sustainability and Transport Committee, said: “Community Safety at The Level is an ongoing issue and council works closely with the police, community groups and park users to identify problems, tackle anti-social behaviour and improve safety.

“We are currently working through the all recommendations in the community safety report with a view to making further improvements over the coming months.”

She added that many issues can be managed by a combination of good design and maintenance such as keeping shrubs and other vegetation cut back, repairing and maintaining fencing, and moving benches to more visible locations.

Regular visits by council contractors, to empty litter bins, deal with offensive graffiti, service public toilets, maintain fountains and clean community rooms all contribute to increasing safety in the park.

Initiatives to attract public use of park outside normal hours have also helped increase community safety.

The new café is now open 7 days a week, the two community rooms are used regularly and the park offers a varied programme of volunteer- led activities, community group events and activities.

For more information about events, activities and volunteering opportunities at the level, click here:

PREVIEW: Wig Out! at the National Theatre

Queer Theatre: LGBT+ Stories & Social Change – In partnership with Pride in London.

The National Theatre will mark the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales by staging its first Queer Theatre event series from July 6 – 10 July 2017.

A group of world-class actors and directors will look at how theatre has charted the LGBT+ experience through a series of rehearsed readings and post-show discussions in the Lyttelton Theatre.

Wig Out! Is the second in the series of LGBT+ rehearsed readings at the NT. Written and directed by Tarell Alvin McCraney (Moonlight), Wig Out! tells of the fiercest battle in New York as the House Of Light compete with the House Of Diabolique for drag family supremacy at the Cinderella Ball.

When Eric meets Wilson, it’s a good old-fashioned boy meets boy fairy tale. However, when Wilson reveals his drag alter-ego Nina, questions of masculinity and gender come to the fore. In the tradition of Paris Is Burning, this big, bold and riotous play looks at gender, drag and fabulousness.

Wig Out! is on stage in the Lyttelton Theatre on July 7 at 7.30pm, cast includes:

Tarell Alvin McCraney (Rey Rey), Arun Blair-Mangat (directions), Tunji Kasim (Eric), Alexia Khadime (Fate), Kadiff Kirwan (Ms Nina), Abiona Omonua (Faith), Jonjo O’Neill (Serena), Tom Rhys-Harries (Loki), Ukweli Roach (Lucian), Cat Simmons (Fay) and Craig Stein (Venus).

The NT’s Queer Theatre event series is hosted in partnership with Pride in London and includes:

Neaptide by Sarah Daniels, directed by Sarah Frankcom, Thursday 6 July, 7.30pm
Wig Out! written and directed by Tarell Alvin McCraney, Friday 7 July, 7.30pm
Certain Young Men written and directed by Peter Gill, Saturday 8 July, 7.30pm
Bent by Martin Sherman, directed by Stephen Daldry, Sunday 9 July, 2.30pm
The Drag by Mae West, directed by Polly Stenham, Monday 10 July, 7.30pm

Free post show talks will follow each reading exploring the issues in the plays and in a wider context for the LGBT+ community.

To book tickets online, click here:

 

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