menu

Tonight at the B RIGHT ON LGBT Community Festival: 70s/80s Disco Ball goes ahead at 7.30pm

The B RIGHT ON LGBT Community Festival comes to a close this evening (Saturday March 3) with the 70s/80s Disco Ball, raising funds for the Rainbow Fund.

The Ball will bring down the curtail on seventeen days of events at the Phil Starr Pavilion, that have been Brighton’s contribution to LGBT History Month. Despite the appalling weather only a couple of the 72 scheduled events were cancelled due to the site being flooded.

Dance the night away this evening on the disco bunny dance floor from 7.30pm.

LIVE ACTS WILL INCLUDE:

Abalicious – The UK’s Number One Abba Tribute Duo

EPIC80s– The South Coast’s Ultimate 80s Live Band

The English Disco Lovers – Supporting the utopian vision of Disco!

Dress to impress! Prize for the best DISCO DIVA!

Hot food available

All proceeds go to The Rainbow Fund


The B Right On LGBT Community Festival celebrates LGBT History Month, is organised by the volunteers of the Brighton & Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum and takes place at the Phil Starr Pavilion – a multi functional, fully accessible, heated performance, conference and community space with a licensed bar which is located on Victoria Gardens, Brighton, BN1 1WN.

REVIEW: Sondheim on Sondheim @Royal Festival Hall

Choices of songs for compilation shows are always tricky – what to leave out is usually the problem, and whether to have a narrator interjecting with comments is another crucial decision.

In this one-night only tribute to the works of Stephen Sondheim who better to ask than the maestro himself – and who better to tell the story of our greatest living theatre composer and lyricist.

So the evening, at London’s Royal Festival Hall,  led by the BBC Concert Orchestra under the energetic and marvellously sympathetic conductor Keith Lockhart, intersperses solos, duets right up to sextets with Sondheim himself on film in recent footage plus archive interviews from the 1960s and 70s.

He’s about as open and honest as you could imagine and the clips work best when they give us an insight into the inspiration behind and genesis of particular songs.

The problem – and there is one – is that something is lost when a live solo is cut off before its end by a film insertion which really doesn’t seem fair to the performer on stage who wanders off in the dark without his or her big ending and with no applause.

That said, there are some telling insights into how some of Sondheim’s terrific repertoire came about. Sondheim tells us that on his 40th birthday he got a letter from his estranged mother saying her one regret was having given birth to him. He looks visibly still shocked by this event and the ensuing Children Will Listen from his musical Into the Woods becomes much more poignant – “Careful the things you say – children will listen.” go the lyrics.

He also reveals that the show which turned out much as he intended is the theatrical rarity Assassins, and from that grisly humorous series of pastiches about people who have tried to kill US Presidents, Julian Ovenden bitingly spits out The Gun – very topically about the power a madman feels when holding a weapon.

In just over 2 hours we get 34 songs or parts of songs and all 6 singers are on top form – but head and shoulders above them are Liz Calloway and Claire Moore who sing a wonderful blending of two great diva torch songs – Losing My Mind and Not a Day Goes By. They quite rightly bring the house down.

Staged simply but effectively by Olivier winner Bill Deamer, the cast play well off each other and make the concert seem less static and staged than it is. Very exciting orchestrations for this combination of voices really hit you when coming from this 60-plus group of musicians and you hear things you’ve never heard before.

Obviously with such a large ensemble it’s not a show that will ever get a commercial run but you can hear it for the next 30 days on the BBC Radio 3 website. I urge you to do so and who knows someone might get round to making it commercially available – it would be quite a collector’s item

Brian Butler

Brighton Fringe PREVIEW: Wan In Wan Oot

As part of the Brighton Fringe Mama Koogs Arts present Wan In Wan Oot, a heart-warming queer comedy about the extraordinariness of ordinary family life.

Miss Mckay is with child, having been artificially inseminated by the sperm of her wife’s best pal in their tiny flat. And she’s very worried about the size of his head.

Miss Mckay’s wife wishes there were no such thing as bloody Dr. Google.

Mrs Mckay senior is in her own words “on her way oot”. She is telling death to “fuck off”. She is telling the Nurses to “fuck off” and she is having a wee laugh about the “wumman in the bed next to her”.

First performed at the PBH Edinburgh Free Fringe in 2014, Wan In Wan Oot is a play about the extraordinariness of ordinary family history, memories and what happens to families when those we love come into our lives and when they leave.

Mama Koogs Theatre Company was formed in 2011 by Leanne Mckenzie and Katie Lambert. They created Mama Koogs as a reaction to the lack of good theatre parts available to women (especially queer women) at the time.


Event: Wan In Wan Oot presented by Mama Koogs Arts

Where: Sweet Dukebox, The Southern Belle, 3 Waterloo Street, Hove, BN3 1AQ

When: Saturday May 12 and Monday May 14 – Saturday 19

Time: 12.30pm

Cost: £8.50 (conc £6.50)

To book tickets online, click here:

 

X