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OBITUARY: Roy Davis 1935 – 2017

 

Roy Davis passed away suddenly, unexpectedly and peacefully on November 30, 2017, in the company of close friends, at the Sussex County Hospital, having suffered a stroke at the age of 82.

He maintained many friendships throughout life, and was a dear friend to many in the LGBT+ communities of Brighton and Hove. Having lived here for over 45 years, he is hugely missed, as is the keen involvement and enthusiasm he gave so happily to his many interests, always with a sense of fun, a generous heart and a twinkle in his eye.

Living more recently in Patching Lodge Retirement Apartments, Roy came to Sussex from his home town of Bristol during the 1960s.

A naturally friendly, sociable and gregarious man he successfully applied these personal qualities to his career and business ventures.

He and his late partner Richard (“my Richard” as Roy always called him), owned and ran Rowland Guest House, St Georges Terrace, Kemptown, and both were renowned for their love of throwing big parties and fancy dress!

Richard died in 1993 aged 54 and Roy always kept his photo by the bed.

After Richard died, Roy continued his generous socialising, only scaling down when he moved to Patching Lodge eight years ago. However, never being one to think on a small-scale, for his 80th birthday he invited 150 guests to the Royal Albion Hotel to help him celebrate this milestone!

Always public-spirited, Roy was a keen and valued member of both Brighton Gems and Older and Out, and participated in many charities, in the past having been Vice President of Brighton Cares, an early HIV/AIDS charity and also being involved in the creating of the AIDS Memorial commemorative statue in New Steine Gardens, Brighton.

A very outgoing and forward-looking man, more recently he was determined to master the use of his smart phone, and was currently taking lessons with some success, since he saw it as a new way of keeping in touch with his many friends.

Roy spent what proved to be his last day, in a way that was typical of the man, and perhaps sums him up very well. He joined his swimming group pals for lunch, (also, as usual, making eyes at the waiter), and from where he sent out drinks party invitations to all the group members via his smart phone. Later that evening he was out to dinner with friends.

When back at home he was taken ill with what proved to be a fatal stroke.

Greatly missed by his friends, he will live on in the hearts of so many of us.

Roy’s funeral was at Woodvale Crematorium Brighton, on January 8, 2018, was very well attended, and proved to be an uplifting celebration of his life.

By Paul Baddeley

Brighton Bear Christmas Quiz raises £278.73 for Rainbow Fund

The annual Brighton Bear Christmas Quiz organised by Brighton Bear Weekend at the Camelford Arms raises £278.73 for Rainbow Fund.

The Camelford was so busy for the annual quiz people were perched on the bar and sat in the Moroccan garden out the back to play. This year £278.73 was raised for The Rainbow Fund who give grants to local LGBT/HIV community groups who deliver effective frontline services to LGBT+ people in the city.
The money raised from the quiz and the raffle was boosted by a personal donation by Alistair Mackinnon-Musson, the owner of the Camelford of £50. The winning team just missed out on the £300 cash prize, but everybody went home with chocolate bars from the night.
Graham Munday
Graham Munday

Graham Munday, Chair of Brighton Bear Weekend, said: “The Camelford Arms has a wonderful atmosphere at Christmas time and is the perfect place for hosting our quiz. Thanks go to Ben and Tom for running a smooth night and Alistair for his generosity. 

“Everyone at Brighton Bear Weekend team would like to take this opportunity to say a big thank you to the Camelford manager, Jay Hopkins, who is leaving the Camelford Arms after several years. His good nature, genuine warmth and support over the years have made holding Brighton Bear Weekend and other events at the Camelford a smooth, hassle-free process. We all wish him great success in his new career.”

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LGBTQ stop smoking campaign launched

“Quitting smoking was the beginning of a powerful and rewarding experience for me.”

LGBT Switchboard, through the LGBT health improvement project (HIP), has been working in partnership with Brighton and Hove City Council to launch a new campaign encouraging LGBTQ people to quit smoking.

It’s a concerning fact that more LGBTQ people are likely to smoke than straight people. As many as 1 in 3 LGBTQ adults compared to 1 in 5 straight adults.

The time has come for us to come together as a community to raise awareness of the benefits that stopping smoking can have.

Stopping smoking has immediate health benefits, no matter how long you’ve smoked for, it’s the best thing you can do for your health.

Switchboard has worked with local LGBTQ people in designing this campaign. Through a series of focus groups and one to one interviews LGBTQ people told them what has worked for them.

Switchboard’s Scarlett Langdon, who led the campaign, said: “It has been clear that what is important to people is that they do not feel like they are being told off.  Most people know the dangers of smoking but wanted some messages that conveyed the dangers in a brighter and more positive way.  Together we worked to create a campaign that aims to achieve this.”  

A number of local Brighton and Hove LGBTQ residents worked with Switchboard to develop the awareness campaign and organisers say it was interesting to learn what motivated them to quit smoking,

Eric said: “I really felt like I was Bette Davis, and then I remember seeing Bette Davis after having had 4 strokes and been really ravaged by smoking, and I thought actually I am going to become that if I’m not careful.”

The aim of this campaign has been to ensure LGBTQ people know there is support available for them to stop smoking. Brighton & Hove’s ‘e-cigarette friendly’ service offers free one to one support along with licensed stop smoking medications at the cost of a prescription.

Local resident Pam, who also worked on the project, had this to say to those thinking of quitting: “don’t think you can’t do it, I won’t say it’s easy because it’s not, there’ll always be an excuse not to give up, but set a date and stick to it.”

Be inspired by other people’s stop smoking stories.

To find out what support is available to help you stop smoking view: click here: 

Homeless Pride community blanket donated to Brighton MCC

Following Homeless Pride last summer, organisers needed to find a home for the Community Blanket woven on the day by those attending.

Homeless Pride 2017, a free family event to enable the homeless, members of the public and service providers to come together, took place at The Level on Sunday, August 20, 2017.

There was something for everyone from live music to poetry, tug of war games and races, food for those in need and tea for everyone. During the course of the afternoon, attendees helped weave the Homeless Pride Community Blanket.

Imogen Di Sapia of Brightmoon Weaving, said: “Homelessness is a complex umbrella term for what is a very real, vibrant and large community, especially here in Brighton. I met so many wonderful people, and the loom was really calling to people to connect with their stories, journeys and histories, and in its own special way, facilitated people to just talk and weave. It was a huge privilege to be part of this event, and the outcome is this Homeless Pride Community Blanket (Pictured above) which was made by many hands.”

Pastor Andrew Ramage and MCC volunteers
Pastor Andrew Ramage and MCC volunteers

The blanket was presented to MCC Brighton at their Street Church project which takes place every Wednesday at 4pm on the Old Steine.

Pastor Ramage
Pastor Ramage

Pastor Andrew Ramage from Brighton MCC, said: “It is an honour to receive the fruit of so much great community spirit. MCC Brighton is very much involved in the Homeless and Rough Sleeping community and Homeless Pride 2017 was just one example of how that community comes together and supports one another. I had a great day, caught up with some old friends, made new ones and saw a number of people I had helped during the year. I look forward to the next one.”

 

OPINION: I have a phobia by Ray A-J 

What is a phobia? What defines it? What separates it from a fear?

Fear has me trapped,
Like a bird in a cage;
It wasn’t his fault,
But it grows with age.
Green vines,
Twisted and skewed,
Pull at my skin.
Feathers left, few.
Until my beak,
Bent and broken,
Falls off.
Amidst a sea,
Raging ocean of blue.
It had me
Consumed,
Soul raptured,
With the splinters of before,
Thirteen years old.
The shrapnel,
Married to my Core.
And it is now,
That I can stand,
Finally,
Having taught myself
To forget,
Leave feathers behind.
I am not a bird,
No longer am I caged;
But I am a survivor,
Released unscathed.
In burning hope,
I learnt.
I don’t mourn my wings,
For a phoenix has to lose a few
before it can begin
Again.
Okay, so I have a phobia. I’m not the only person either. Around 6-8% of people in the West suffer from the excruciatingly debilitating hold of a phobia. Previously we established the unrelenting pain and suffocating effect an intense fear can have on its victim, and I think it’s only fair that the severity of the barbed wire phobia that wraps itself around your life and digs into you at every moment should be explored.
So, the first stop on our map of such intense fears: identifying your phobia.
The turning point for me was realising what this exaggerated and often embarrassing response to something as normal as someone’s face was. As long as I could remember I was unable to look at anything resembling the Harry Potter character Peter Petigrew, and I knew this was weird; I had been taught by the mockery I received that this wasn’t normal.
But if no one else could understand the response the way I did, what exactly was going through my head to make me the weird one?
I was taxed with questions as to why the fear never left me as I grew up, and what would happen when I’m an adult and still break down in a fit of frenzy if I happen to pass another person with rat-like features. I can’t remember exactly, I think I actually started googling phrases like ‘random panic attacks’ or ‘fear for more than a year’ in a desperate attempt to understand this thing better. I wanted to be able to talk it through with someone, or get it straight in my head at least.
It was like being lost in a foreign country, surrounded by people who don’t speak like you, and scrambling through a phrase book for a way to communicate with anyone. So I searched the terms. Pages and pages of irrelevant lacklustre information later, I found a key phrase – light for the dark path; “A phobia is an overwhelming and debilitating fear of an object, place, situation, feeling or animal. Phobias are more pronounced than fears. They develop when a person has an exaggerated or unrealistic sense of danger about a situation or object”. 
That was it. That’s exactly what I felt. Finally the tangled mess of panic attacks and uncontrollable crying was put into a clear stream of words. So I clicked the link.
Luckily I had happened upon an NHS page entitled ‘Phobia’ – relief. If it was on the NHS, it must be real. Reading through the symptoms and recipe for my condition, I realised that the thing I was experiencing was a phobia, a clinically diagnosed proper medical thing. So I wasn’t crazy. I wasn’t being an over sensitive crybaby. Honestly if you’re reading this, regardless of whether you suffer from a phobia or not, read that page. It helps.
Finally I wasn’t weird, I was just unfortunate to be inflicted with such an under the radar condition. It’s an anxiety disorder – real.
Of course I was desperate to find a cure, a way out, so I clicked straight onto the treatment section of the page. Ah, ‘Medication’ and ‘Professional Help’, maybe not. I’d recommend these to any adult struck with a debilitating fear like flying or people, but for me, aged nine, with my fear in particular, they weren’t options. So I was left on my own to figure out what to do.
To save you the confusion and time to get over your phobia, I’d say that step one is naming your demon. What is your particular phobia called?
I still don’t have the exact name for my condition. It’s probably something to do with anamorphia. But knowing it was similar to other fears (like musophobia, the fear of mice and rats), was enough for me to begin to tackle it. So step one: name your phobia. Try googling your symptoms and triggers, or seeing a psychologist.
Recently, I looked up my phobia again. After a lot of research and desperation to properly name it (vainly), I found there was so much more to them then first thought. As it turns out, as well as the name (like arachnophobia for fear of spiders), phobias can be broken into two main types: complex and specific. The latter picks its victim when they are young and is easy to overcome, whereas complex phobias set in during adulthood and are much more crippling – think agoraphobia (fear of people or venturing out of your home) and social phobias.
In the next issue, I’ll cover this in more depth, so don’t worry. But if you’re reading this and you do suffer from a phobia (big or small), please feel free to send your opinions or stories on it and perhaps it may help both me and anyone else understand them better.
Also, if you feel like sending in any artwork or poetry or anything about your phobia or experience with the topic, go for it. I’d love to include more than just my own experiences.

Bear-Patrol raise almost £30,000 for good causes in 2017

Bear-Patrol Christmas party at Camelford Arms in December raises £605.38 for Rainbow Fund.

This makes the total raised by Bear Patrol in 2017 to £29,968.28, bringing the running total raised for good causes since the group started fundraising in January 2011, to £188,098.02.

Amounts in 2017 were raised for: The Sussex Beacon, £15,416.01: MindOut, £5,305.56: Brighton & Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum, £4,193.04: Sussex Cancer Fund, £2,855.30: Rainbow Fund, £1,321.97: Brighton & Hove Sea Serpent, £350.00: The Deans Beach & Environment Volunteers, £266.54: Rockinghorse Children’s Charity, £259.86.

Pictured: Chair of Rainbow Fund, Chris Gull with Danny Dwyer from Bear-Patrol and Tom Morris assistant manager at Camelford Arms.

Lunch Positive volunteer receives Rotary Club Citizens Award

Lord Lieutenant of East Sussex presents Rotary Club of Brighton’s Citizens Awards to volunteers who have made an outstanding contribution to the community, at a presentation event on December 20, 2017.

Mark Lindsey Jones (left) and Gary Pargeter, Lunch Positive Service Manager
Mark Lindsey Jones (left) and Gary Pargeter, Lunch Positive Service Manager

Mark Lindsey Jones a volunteer chef at Lunch Positive, the HIV Lunch Club received an award for his contribution to the work of the HIV charity.

The lunch club is delivered by volunteers, and brings people with HIV together to share a regular healthy meal, build supportive friendships, and combat the HIV stigma that still exists for many.

Mark has volunteered as a chef at Lunch Positive for the last two and a half years.

Gary Pargeter, Lunch Positive Service Manager, said: “Mark is enthusiastic, a great team player, cares passionately about the food that he and the kitchen volunteer team provide, and the people who share this at the lunch club.

“He produces amazing healthy and enjoyable food, all on a shoe-string budget and he feeds between 40 to 60 people every Friday. This has also greatly enhanced the social support at the lunch club.

“Mark truly is a great example of someone who fully immerses themselves in a cause they care passionately about, and this has had a huge and positive impact on many people, members and volunteers alike.”

Mark, added: “I’m overjoyed to receive this award. Volunteering at Lunch Positive is like being part of a happy family, and something I care deeply about. Fridays at Lunch Positive are so important to me. There’s nothing better than banging a few pots together, getting out some good food and feeding people! Thank you everyone for supporting me in getting this award, it means the world.”

REVIEW: Warhorse @Brighton Centre

It’s close to two years to the day since the exciting announcement was made that the acclaimed National Theatre production of Warhorse would be coming to Brighton for a two week run – part of a prestigious tour of just a handful of lucky UK cities.

Warhorse premiered at the National Theatre in 2007 before eventually moving up the road to the New London Theatre. By the time it finished its run in March 2016 it had been seen by around 2.7 million people in the capital, with millions more seeing the show worldwide.

Now this iconic play has finally arrived at the Brighton Centre, and judging by the reaction of the packed audience on the first night it was well worth the wait for the city’s theatre lovers.

Warhorse is a simple story told against an epic background. A foal is bought by a struggling Devon farmer on a drunken whim, and the horse is entrusted to Albert, the farmer’s young son, who is tasked with raising the foal as a working animal which can eventually be sold on. But from the moment they meet there is a strong connection between Albert and the horse, who is named Joey by the boy. Both are innocents, and the rest of the play follows their story as they are separately drawn into the epic conflict of the First World War, with Joey first sold to the yeomanry cavalry and shipped abroad, and Albert, underage, enlisting shortly after in a quest to be reunited with his horse.

The play is based on Michael Morpurgo’s best-selling children’s book, with the horse’s journey at the centre. In many ways Joey is the most rounded ‘character’ in the play, with all the other characters, even Albert, deliberately drawn in a one-dimensional, children’s story book fashion. This being the case, and with help from the remarkable and breath-taking puppetry which literally appears to bring the animal to life in front of our eyes, we see events unfold from the horse’s perspective, allowing a powerful message about the pain and futility of war to be be told in a way that is neither judgemental nor partisan. It works brilliantly.

If the horses and puppeteers are the real stars of this show, they are also wonderfully supported by a cast of over thirty actors and musicians. There’s a charming and heart-warming performance at the centre from Thomas Dennis’s Albert, and Bob Fox is also excellent as the folk singing, accordion playing chorus, hauntingly delivering John Tam’s beautiful folk songs as they introduce and link the narrative.

Adrian Sutton’s fine orchestral score is at times bucolic and nostalgic, at others discordant and visceral. It’s full of power and emotion and highlights the story and the drama in all the right places.

A great strength of this play is its innovative, unfussy, multi-media staging, with Rae Smith’s brilliant design and Paule Constable’s wonderful use of lighting seamlessly transitioning scenes from peaceful rural pastures to terrifying battlefields.

Much credit must therefore go to the Warhorse team and to the Brighton Centre for transforming the auditorium into a sympathetic space which works for the full scope and scale of the drama. This is a wonderful play, and these adaptations have ensured that it remains a truly immersive and genuinely theatrical experience for the Brighton audience.

Warhorse, plays at the Brighton Centre, to February 10, 2018.

For information about performances and tickets, click here:

OPINION: ‘Craig’s Thoughts’ by Craig Hanlon-Smith

Child’s Play. Or the exhausted Funcle, by Craig Hanlon-Smith @craigscontinuum

Within almost a month of meeting my then boyfriend, now husband, he became an uncle for the first time. I remember receiving the text from him, which screamed in capital letters; I AM AN UNCLE. My automatic, and I concede extremely unattractive response, was one of searing jealousy. I had, until this moment in life, managed to avoid boyfriends worth any mention (because if you don’t ‘feel’ it why bother, right?) but this one was serious and I did not intend to compete for him with a frickin’ baby.

A few days later we both met baby Ryan. It was an intense affair as this was also the first time I had met the tiddler’s parents too – the boyfriend’s brother and long-term partner. This is where I should poetically write something beautiful about the joy of a baby child and the love that leapt from my chest, but I really didn’t feel anything then. Now, yes, but then no. He was just somebody else’s baby. And let’s be honest, except for immediate family (and I was the new boy remember), newborn babies are a bit rubbish – they don’t even do anything.

Time changes the cynic, I quickly became a member of the family establishment and as baby Ryan grew, we began to spend more and more time with him and he was a joy. The hilarity of his obsessive dancing to Kylie’s Can’t Get You Out of My Head and our marching him all the way home from Brighton seafront teaching him Beyoncé’s Crazy In Love – of course.

Our gratuitous present buying, which included an electric car we used to parade him up and down the seafront in. Filming his birthday present opening ceremony on behalf of the family and narrating to my future husband how awful most of the presents were compared to ours, not realising there was a built-in microphone in the camera which played back on the home-DVD. Rookie-Uncle error. There would be others.

Seventeen years later and baby Ryan has just passed his driving theory test and has graduated from an electric car to the real deal. What’s more, there are now a total of six offspring between our shared families, three from each end, four nephews, two nieces and every one has been a delight to have in our home.

Even when crayoning the table, pouring shower water through the ceiling and light fittings below, and my all time favourite (the individual shall remain nameless) when nearing the end of potty training and following my exact instruction to take the nappy off and have a proper pee, the little angel promptly weed against the wall and decorated my Laura Ashley wallpaper. You may think I had a hysterical gay moment at the time, but actually I laughed. He was, after all, just following an instruction. To the letter. Shame the little bugger’s never followed one since.

In our days of growing acceptance and familial integration, much is being made of the gay-Uncle or ‘Guncle’, and what is the Auntie equivalent? A ‘Guntie’ ? I prefer Funcle, which an acquaintance shared with me recently. But in reality, we’re just Aunts and Uncles who happen to be gay – is that really special?

It may have helped our brood of borrowed Von-Trapps that we do not have children of our own, so that when they visit, they are the absolute focus of our planned activities and consequently feel special. Each band of three has only ever had to compete with one another for our attention, not one another and another set to boot. It is also not every day, and so the visits are occasions and marked as such.

And so the Guncles make the effort to get up on Saturdays and Sundays at 05:30 for early morning baking, painting, and Twister sessions. (I’m being kind, one of us did, in fact we used to knead bread dough to the rhythm of Uncle Keith still snoring). To rotate the activities every 15 minutes so that the kiddiewiddiewinkies don’t bore easily. To quickly learn that anything brightly coloured and liquid in form should not go into the child’s digestive system after midday if anyone wants any sleep that weekend. To learn that you cannot go onto the pier with a budget, because if the tiddler sees it, it’s easier to just go with it and say yes. To kick yourself for not realising candyfloss has the same effect as brightly coloured liquid and you gave it to them at 4pm. To enthuse about terrible films and pretend how great they are so as not to bruise their enthusiasm (even if you hated Street Dance 4 – who knew there was a 1, 2 & 3?), to visit every play park within a three-mile radius of the house. To exhaust them with races, treks, games, camel rides (I am the camel), to wonder amidst the 30, now 40-something exhaustion, why they are never seemingly exhausted. As they grow, to rifle through their bags for missing hair-wax and mobile phone chargers but to love them when they convince you they had no idea how it got there. To race upstairs to the tantrumtastic five-year-old who has strewn your books and cosmetics across the room and when you ask what on earth is going on, not lose your head when he tells you it was a mouse. A mouse. A frickin’ mouse. And now to be slightly disappointed at the lie-ins they have inherited from my husband. Although coffee in silence – who knew it held such beauty. And to be secretly thrilled as you over hear one of them say to your brother: “You’re funny Dad, but Uncle Craig is funnier” BOOM!

And this is where I finish with another seemingly poetic moment about how the joy is all mine and I never want anything in return, I did it with love. Uh-uh. If anyone of those six reads this, let me tell you how this inheritance thing works. In the words of our lady Britney Spears: You better work b*tch. I changed your nappies for years and dealt with everything that went with it. Me. I did it. So in 40 years time, you’re changing mine kids. Twister. 05:30am. Just saying.

FEATURE: Trains by day, training by night

Polly McGillivray, Operations Learning Manager for Southern Railway hears wedding bells.

Polly McGillivray
Polly McGillivray

Polly has worked at Southern Railway since the summer of 2014, joining from London Underground where she was a train driver. At Southern she is a trainee train driver instructor, serving in her role as an Operations Learning Manager at the Selhurst Training Centre in Croydon.

Hailing from Brighton, when she isn’t inspiring the next generation of train drivers, Polly is a body builder, entering competitions all over the south, and currently holding the title of London’s Strongest Woman.

In the last three years she has won a number of titles; Strongest Woman in London 2015 (2nd), Strongest Woman in Worthing 2016 (2nd) and the top woman in a 9 Tonne Truck Pull earlier this year, as well as coming third overall, and these are just her podium successes.

With a lot of impressive competition results under her leather-covered weight-lifting belt, Polly was well on the way to and had qualified for bigger comps like Britain’s and England’s Strongest Woman. However, another date began to loom, one hopefully shrouded in love rather than sweat.

She says: “With my wedding day coming up in January I have taken a temporary step away from body building for vanity’s sake! I’ll have to show my legs on the day and Strongwoman and competition training comes with some juicy bruises; these just wouldn’t look good in the photos!”

Polly is set to marry Skylar Smith, a government official, at the end of January.

Skylar and Polly
Skylar and Polly

“I think it is fair to say that at the moment I am in training for my wedding. This basically means doing the one thing that all body builders and strength trainers hate… Cardio!

Looking beyond the wedding, Polly plans to jump back into heavy lifting, with some specific goals already on her mind. “After the wedding I will be returning to body building, bruises and all! I will be focusing on training more across the three disciplines of Bench, Squat and Deadlift. I might even try my hand at a bit of Powerlifting!

“I’m certain a Strongwoman competition will be on the horizon if my trainers have anything to say about it – and I’ll be able to take my new wife along with me as a personal cheerleader.”

When it comes to training, she is very keen to dispel some of the myths around weight training and bodybuilding – which is a very topical subject at the moment – and also is involved in the body image movement.

As if she didn’t have enough on her plate with work, planning a wedding and the dreaded cardio training schedule, Polly also finds time to give back, volunteering for The Girls’ Network which works to inspire and empower girls from the least advantaged communities.

The Girls’ Network mentoring was established in 2013 and supported 30 girls in the first year. It was soon in high demand, and the charity now operates across London and the South Coast, working with more than 1,000 girls each year.

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