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The first AIDS Histories & Cultures Festival comes to London in July 2018

How has AIDS been experienced, represented, and remembered throughout modern history?

DURING July, over twenty events will take place across London as part of the first AIDS Histories & Cultures Festival, including workshops, film screenings, talks, parties, music, poetry and performance.

The festival will explore some of the histories and cultures of HIV/AIDS from the 1980s to the present day, with many events free to attend.

Highlights of the month-long festival will include:

♦ A screening of film After Louie, starring Alan Cumming, followed by a Q&A with director Vincent Gagliostro.

♦ The HIVe Memories walking tour in East London.

♦ Rehearsed readings of a new play, Sunday’s Child.

♦ A workshop exploring the ‘80s archives at the Bishopsgate Institute.

♦ The soft launch of the #AIDSMemoryUK Campaign, and

♦ Terrence Higgins Trust’s Positive Voices a talk from two people living with HIV, Rebecca Tallon-De Havilland and Jonathan Blake, who was part of Lesbians and Gays Support the Miners and was portrayed by Dominic West in 2014 film Pride.

The play Sunday’s Child, written by long-time GScene contributor and columnist Craig Hanlon-Smith, explores the origins, immediate and long-term impact of Clause (Section) 28 on the LGBT+ communities in the shadow of the HIV/AIDS crisis and thirty years later upon the individual. ‘Section 28’ and its consequences continue to reverberate within the LGBT+ communities, as an entire generation grew up without open or kind discussions regarding sexual orientation identity.

Dr Janet Weston, one of the organisers of the full festival, said: “The crisis prompted by the emergence of AIDS in the 1980s is starting to recede from popular memory, but historians are beginning to engage with the subject; new art, exhibitions, and documentaries are reflecting back on the life and politics of HIV/AIDS; and activism has been given new energy by the arrival of Pre – and Post-Exposure Prophylaxis and the U=U campaign (Undetectable=Untransmittable).

“The lives of many of those living with HIV/AIDS have been transformed by medical advances, especially over the last 20-odd years, but even so, inequalities, ignorance, and stigma remain and are often shaped and informed by the early days of the epidemic. We hope you’ll join us for this important festival as we connect past and present, history and the arts, drawing together heritage, academic, charitable, and cultural organisations to explore memories and experiences of HIV/AIDS, then and now.”

The festival has been convened by the Raphael Samuel History Centre, with arts events curated by Ash Kotak at Aesthesia. The RSHC is an outreach and research centre supported by Birkbeck and Queen Mary, University of London, dedicated to exploring public, interdisciplinary, and experimental history across periods and regions.

For the full programme of events, click here:

To book tickets for Sunday’s Child, click here:

For more information: communications@bbk.ac.uk or telephone: 020 7380 3133

Fringe REVIEW: Circus’Sission @BOSCO

Head First Acrobats presents: Circus’Sission – Those That Made The Cut!

Bosco Tent – Spiegeltent

A VARIETY mashup of circus stars and acts from Brighton Fringe, presented by your favourite Aussies, the boys from Head First Acrobats.

The endlessly lovely boys keep us occupied with their energetic hosting and performances which mesh well with offerings from a surreal and manic comedian and two different types of hoop work. Five short shows in one and the added pleasure and tasty eye candy of the Aussie trio with plenty of audience participation and  culminating with Rowan Thomas spinning naked on his giant steel ring.

Superb cross-section of performers, the tent is fun, the atmosphere electric and we left having been entertained, a little bit of this, some of that and plenty of the other. Host Cal Harris who certainly knows how to keep a Brighton audience hyped up and the participants all have their own engaging traits. It all felt a little unsafe, unhinged and bonkers and that’s just what a decent montage show should feel like.

Recommended as an excellent, cross-section of the best fringe physical and comical acts and its worth a punt as you can’t go wrong with that wide a spread.

June 1

For full details of the show. click here:

You can join the handsome trio in Worthing this summer at the Worthing Summer of Circus workshops. .

Brighton Fringe Award winners announced!

Last night (June 3), Brighton Fringe’s biggest and brightest congregated at the annual awards ceremony to take their curtain call for 2018.

Cinebra present the Pebble Trust Award
Cinebra present the Pebble Trust Award

EVERY year, the Brighton Fringe Awards celebrate the outstanding performances and events that make the festival fly.

A whole host of awards celebrate the variety of art forms on show at the Fringe, and each award recognises the respective recipients in a unique way. All companies who win an award also win a free registration to take part in Brighton Fringe the following year.

This year Brighton Fringe hosted two new awards: the Voice Arts Award, supporting the development of creativity and leadership skills; and the Marlborough Development Award, supporting LGBT+ performers taking risks and working in interdisciplinary ways.

With a plethora of exciting new talent and people gathering from all around the country, almost 90,000 tickets were sold at Brighton Fringe 2018.

Love Letters to Rappers win Audience Choice Award
Love Letters to Rappers win Audience Choice Award

Fringe Festival Awards 2018

NEW Voice award winner: Standard: Elite – Nominees: Lippy, Fix My Brain

NEW Marlborough Development Award winner: Oozing Gloop

The Argus Fringe Archangel Award winner: Edith Piaf Live At Nimegue – Nominees: Pelican, Joseph Morpurgo: Hammerhead

International Youth Arts Festival Best of Brighton Fringe-Theatre winner: Bully Beef

International Youth Arts Festival Best of Brighton comedy winner: Now That’s What I Call Archie Henderson

International Youth Arts Festival Best of Brighton Fringe family show winner: Margo & Mr Whatsit

First & Foremost Entertainment winner: “Hello La Voix” New Show, New Shoes, Old Earrings – Nominees: The Tap Pack, Circus Vegas

Balkan/Otherplace Award winner: Garry Starr: Garry Starr Performs Everything – Nominees: What We Leave Behind, Meadow by Meadow, Nathan and Ida’s Hotdog Stand

South East Dance ‘Space to Dance’ Award winner: A Night with Thick and Tight – Nominees: My Feminist Boner, Watching

ONCA Green Curtain winner: Subira – Nominee: Efemera

Best Design for Print winner: Passionate Machine – Nominee: Franz Kafka – Apparatus

The Brighton Fringe International Touring Bursary in Association with The Pebble Trust winner: A Night with Thick and Tight – Nominees: Bomb Sex, The Sorrowful Tale of Sleeping Sydney

New Writing South Best New Play Award winner: Passion Machine – Nominees: The Sorrowful Tale of Sleeping Sydney, Gun

Visual Arts Award in Association with HOUSE and AOH winner: The Museum of Ordinary People – Nominees: Open Studios 2018, One Can Not Be Too Careful

Radio Reverb: Out in Brighton LGBTQ Award winner: Hot Gay Time Machine – Nominees: The Morning After the Life Before, Gypsy Queen

Broadway Baby Bobby: Best of the Festival winner: Victorious – Nominees: Hymns For Robots, What We Leave Behind, Always, With a Love That’s True

Latest Live Music Award winner: Glenn Rob – Nominees: The Turbans, Glenn Richardson

Latest Comedy Award winner: Joseph Morpurgo: Hammerhead – Nominees: Garry Starr: Garry Starr Performs Everything, Schutte the Unromantic

Fringe Review Outstanding Theatre winner:  The Polished Scar

Primary Times Children’s Choice winner: Oskar’s Amazing Adventures – Nominees: Let’s Build a Planet, The Tale of the Cockatrice, I’m a Magician Get Me Out of Here

Audience Choice – Best Event winner: Love Letters To Rappers

Audience Choice – Best Venue winner: Junkyard Dogs

Spirit of the Fringe Award winner: David Weedall

Julian Caddy
Julian Caddy

Julian Caddy, Managing Director of Brighton Fringe, said: “We’re extremely proud of the caliber of performers that Brighton Fringe draws, and pleased to be a part of so many new, exciting works. Congratulations to all our winners, nominees and everyone who has been a part of Brighton Fringe this year. This is your festival, and we can’t wait to see you all again next year.”

Brighton Fringe is the largest open-access arts festival in England and one of the largest in the world. It is an international festival that is at the same time rooted in the community, embracing every art form, every form of artistic expression and supporting both new and established performers in trying out new work and taking risks. Their mission is to bring artists and audiences together and to act as a catalyst for creativity.

 

Greater Brighton cycle challenge on Sunday, July 1

The Greater Brighton Cycle Challenge on Sunday, July 1, 2018 will be a celebration of cycling and the world-class environment that we live in.

LOCAL homeless charity, Brighton Housing Trust (BHT) has teamed up with The Living Coast to create a family event that all ages and abilities can get involved in and enjoy.

Cyclists can enjoy the beauty of The Living Coast, a designated UNESCO World Biosphere Region, by cycling a 30 or 58 mile route out to the South Downs, starting and finishing at the Velodrome in Preston Park.

Or you can take the Around the World Challenge at the velodrome anytime between 7am and 7pm. The aim is to collectively ride the distance around the world, 40,075km, throughout the day. 

Family-fun entertainment including a Smoothie bike and other refreshments will be available.

Cyclists can raise money for BHT’s work to combat homelessness, including the First Base day centre, or for other good causes of their choosing.

Andy Winter, Chief Executive of BHT said: “We are extremely excited about running an even bigger and more exciting event this year.  We didn’t quite clock up the mileage around the world last year, but we were overwhelmed by the support of over 350 people on the day who raised over £15,000 to help people to move away from the streets and live independent and healthy lives.”

Rich Howorth, Biosphere Programme Manager for The Living Coast, added: “By partnering with BHT at this event, we are linking our local social and environmental objectives whilst raising money for great causes. 

“We want the local community to enjoy and help sustain The Living Coast that brings together the towns, downs and coast of this UNESCO-designated World Biosphere Region.”

For more information and to register, click here:

Or check out the event on FACEBOOK

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