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Today Saturday May 19: Bird la Bird’s Travelling Queer People’s History Show

To mark IDAHOBIT – International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia (IDAHOBIT) – in the city this year, the Brighton & Hove City Council LGBT Workers Forum (BHCC LGBT WF) and Jubilee Library present this innovative and entertaining re-reading of Queer history.

Photo: Holly Revell
Photo: Holly Revell

BIRD la Bird is a queer femme performance artist whose work on reclaiming working class queer history has been created for and performed in some of the highest cultural institutions of the land.

Bird exposes museum foundations and founders in some raucous, provocative, intersectional, highly entertaining performances. Her show is somewhere between a comedy show and a lecture. You are not likely to ever see history like this on the television. This is a chronicle queer history with a rock and roll punk sensibility.

Film maker Campbell X is a big fan of Birdie’s work tweeting:
“(Bird) shows us how we have all been duped by elite colonizers: their only project was gaining wealth, breaking our ancestral queer, working class, and global POC minds”

Bird, the po-mo homo historiographer par excellence, has broken free of the museums and brought some of the best material together to tour around the UK and beyond.

Bird’s aim is to educate herself about the interlocking histories of homophobia, the British Empire, discrimination and class exploitation then share what she’s learnt with her audience in a fun, relevant and engaging way.

Photo: Bird la Bird as Tippi
Photo: Bird la Bird as Tippi

Birdie how do you keep an audience’s attention on history?
“Ha, I use laugh out loud comedy, high femme glamour and a working class point of view, it’s griping and entertaining. I take the usually stuffy format of a history lecture and transform it into relevant, informative and inclusive entertainment. With joyful panache I fling the doors of the queer past wide open bringing important historical information which is often glaringly overlooked into the open for all audiences, not just academics.

“It’s gripping, dark, shady, shocking, thrilling and raw emotional stories of Queer people, our stories, hidden away. My shows change the way audiences think about queer history and inspire curiosity to find out more. People love stories that talk to them about themselves, and these are hidden in plain sight, our Queer history, literally buried under our feet.”

We saw Going Down – Queer Convicts at Tate Britain and loved it, tell us where that came from?
“I used the decriminalisation of male homosexuality as a starting point and Millbank Prison which once stood on the site of Tate Britain and uncovered stories of the queer dispossessed working class. I also looked at the lives of queer convicts of the past and included present day LGBTQI asylum seekers being held by the British state in Victorian gaols once used to house convicts. I’m passionate about highlighting the interlocking forces of colonialism and homophobia. For example, last year we celebrated partial decriminalisation in the UK, but homophobic laws instated by the British empire are still law in 32 countries.”

You’re bringing your stunning show down to Brighton, what can folk expect to see?  My Travelling Queer People’s History Show is the history show you’ve always dreamed of. I take the audience on a startling journey underneath the foundations of some of Britain’s biggest galleries to uncover a history of queer prisoners, prisons and penal colonies. The story then follows the route of prisoners transported to Australia to trace the global and colonial story of convicts and transportation. Then for balance, I flip the focus and attention to the elite white colonialists responsible for anti-gay laws cutting them down to size using humour and historical material.”

And I heard there’s an after tea party?
“Yes there is! After a performance I want people to stay and talk, discuss and connect, to explore my ideas and enjoy the space. I’m delighted that our wonderful organisers will be treating us to the finest cakes in the city being served up to them – for free – with a nice cuppa too. We will indeed have our cake and eat it!

Photo: Bird beauty by Martin Le Santo Smith
Photo: Bird beauty by Martin Le Santo Smith

When, where, why and how much?
Bird la Bird’s Travelling Queer People’s History Show is at Jubilee Library on May 19 for a 2pm start. Thanks to the generous support of the BHCC LGBT WF the event is free to attend.

So go along, the library is a fully accessible venue, which is recognised for its excellent work on being LGBT+ friendly and inclusive to all, and the show will have life speech to text for deaf and hard of hearing people.

The performance lasts about 75 minutes with some time afterwards with lashings of free cake and bottomless tea, a friendly and cosy opportunity to discuss, debate and connect.

Bird la Bird’s Travelling Queer People’s History Show will celebrate IDAHOBIT in a positive way, bringing the focus back on to, queer working class people telling our loud proud stories, but also showing how we have been, and often still are silenced, hidden away and erased from our own cultural spaces and histories.

The Jubilee Library is a wheelchair accessible venue.

Twitter : @birdlabird


Event: Bird la Bird’s Travelling Queer People’s History Show

Where: Jubilee Library, Jubilee St, Brighton BN1 1GE

When: Saturday, May 19

Time: 2pm – 75 min duration – followed by tea and cake.

Cost: Free event everyone welcome

Festival REVIEW: XFRMR @The Spire

XFRMR

The Spire, Brighton Festival, May 18

VISUAL artist Robbie Thomson harnessed the power of the Tesla coil, the 19th century invention that first allowed people to see electricity spark under control and dance. A very loud throbbing  soundtrack with light touches of frobeat and ambient electronica by the artist on laptop and synthesiser  was blended with projected visuals and the discharged sparks from the Tesla coil, shooting sonic bombs and visual fireworks flaring through the Faraday cage that contains it.

Light fused with sound in this unique sensory phenomenon and it was certainly the oddest and weirdest thing I’ve seen in the Festival (or Fringe) this year.

The principle behind the Tesla coil is to achieve a phenomenon called resonance. Coil’s shoot current just at the right time to maximise the energy transferred into the secondary coil. Think of it as timing when to push someone on a swing in order to make it go as high as possible. The Team at the Spire have set up a Tesla coil in it’s very safe metal box (google Mr Faraday) with an adjustable rotary spark gap giving some control over the voltage of the current it produces. The coils can then create lightning displays and play music timed to bursts of current.

It’s certainly very cool, in a blacked out semi-decaying church filled with smoke and artfully playing lights it seemed cool too, but it failed to spark me. I really enjoyed the Tesla coil, more, much, much more of that please, it’s a thrilling thing to observe. The music failed to electrify and the projection detracted from the sparks themselves.

The Tesla Coil sat there, throbbing like some developmental dangerous God, an Old One angry and spitting the energy of destruction at us, and it felt like we were being led in to observe it’s humbling, with the cage always hinting at it’s destructive power, the power of life itself.

An excellent concept, in a superb venue which somehow is less than its parts, but again, astonishingly weird and it’s got to get some festival brownie points just for its close up views of the coils lightening-like plasma brush discharge!

Play until Sunday, May 20

The Spire

To book or for full details of the event, click here:

MUSIC REVIEW: ENNOR – West Coast

Cornish band ENNOR create an ode to the old land with their latest release.

A DEEP voice is humming on the wind. The air is thin and cold, but jangling and bright guitar melodies call in the sun to shine down on the beach below you.

Wistful “oohs” and “aahs” from the vocals layer themselves like clouds to fill the previously eerie landscape with a hopeful mist. The smooth chorus of voices are calming; they’re carefully coaxing the gentle tide out from its hiding place. Slowly the water comes into view, touching the beach oh so slightly with every new guitar melody and striking of chords. You’ve been staring blissfully at the sparkling ocean before you for what feels like mere seconds, but it’s been so much longer. Each note, each melody in the song passes the time quicker and quicker – it’s hard to believe in its entirety the track lasts four minutes.

A speeding guitar, full of the classic rock charm in its warbling tone, charges across the landscape, gripping tight the hands of a thriving drum pattern. All of a sudden you’re running towards the sea, desperate for a taste of the welcoming waves. ENNOR make you feel as though you are five again, out on your summer holiday trip to the beach and ready to learn how to swim.

The beach of Cornwall is a curious topic for a song, but ENNOR have a medieval magic that enchants each trembling guitar strum and lightly breaking vocal, as they celebrate their home town. It’s a charmingly nostalgic sound that the band seem to create, bursting with passionate melodies and driving vocal chants that not only show, but convince, you of the place’s beautiful charisma.

The Guitars slow, and drums mellow as you look out, immersed in the subtle waves of water, at the horizon and smile.

Marine Tavern fundraise for MindOut all weekend

To mark Mental Health Awareness Week – the Marine Tavern in Broad Street have organised a full programme of fundraising events this weekend to raise money for their nominated charity, MindOut.

ALL monies raised during the weekend will be donated to support MindOut, who provide mental health services to LGBT+ people.

The party kicks off tonight, Friday May 18 with a charity raffle and entertainment from Jade Justine, who will be on stage at 9pm.

Tomorrow, Saturday May 19 a coffee morning and flee market with stalls takes place from 9am – noon inside and outside the Marine Tavern. There are a few spaces left for stall holders @ £5 each. All money goes to MindOut.

Fun and games are planned all afternoon, including Staff Pie-In-The-Face and the Ice Bucket Challenge at Candi Rells Takeover.

In the evening put on your chaps and boots for a fancy dress Country & Western Night with themed cabaret act from 9pm, followed by Marine Late until 4am with DJ Jim and Linda Bacardi.

On Sunday, May 20 there is a Sponsored Sunday Roast, where they will be trying to beat their record of more than sixty sunday roasts sold between 12noon and 5pm. For every roast dinner sold, £1 will be donated to MindOut.

Finally in the evening from 8.30pm till midnight its Drag Roulette featuring many of your favourite cabaret acts.

For more information about MindOut, click here:

 

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