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Trinity the Tuck to perform at Heaven during Student Pride

All Star 4 finalist Trinity the Tuck to perform at National Student Pride which returns to the University of Westminster, Marylebone and G-A-Y venues from Friday 22 – Sunday 24 February, 2019.

Trinity the Tuck
Trinity the Tuck

FRESH from celebrating getting to the final – however, it pans out – Trinity the Tuck will help celebrate LGBT History Month in the UK at National Student Pride’s after party at iconic London gay venue Heaven.

 Trinity has been slaying and winning hearts all season long on RuPaul’s Drag Race All Stars 4. And, not to mention her out-of-this-world, music video released a few weeks ago “The Face, The Body” – so queers everywhere should be very excited about her performance on Saturday, February 23, 2019 at Heaven.

This year’s panel debate at National Student Pride will feature speakers Sir Ian McKellen, Paris Lees, Evan Davis, Moud Goba, Munroe Bergdorf, Reece King and many more.

Elsewhere at the daytime event at the University of Westminster, actor Sir Ian McKellen will be interviewed by BBC Broadcaster Evan Davis in a live recording of the #QueerAF podcast.

The daytime event is free for all to attend, and features the biggest LGBT+ careers fair in the UK with more that 80 organisations registered to attend! Not only that but your £5 wristband gets you free entry and drinks deals across all G-A-Y venues.

The main focus of the event in 2019 is challenging racism on the LGBT+ scene, and the Pride Not Prejudice discussion with Attitude Magazine will see Munroe Bergdorf, BBC LGBT+ correspondent Ben Hunte, Brexit whistleblower Shahmir Sanni and UK Black Pride representative Moud Gouba.

The day will end with a Strictly Come Vouging competition, where students from all over the UK will vouge for a chance to win – and will hopefully remind popular TV show formats, that same-sex partners can dance together with professional voguers performing too.

Tickets bought online must be exchanged for wristband at one of the registration desks at GAY Late on the Friday evening OR the registration desks at the daytime Saturday event at the University of Westminster, Marylebone. Student Pride Wristbands will not be exchangeable at Heaven.

National Student Pride began at Oxford Brookes University in 2005 as a response to the Christian Union’s ‘Homosexuality and the Bible’ talk. Following staging the event in Brighton and Hove for a few years it moved to the Campus of University of Westminster in 2013.

For weekend wristbands with afterparty entry £5, click here:

For up to date information on the event, click here:

 

Union calls on NHS to heed warnings on scrapping 4-hour A&E targets

GMB Southern, the southern branch of the general trade union, call on the NHS Chief Executive Simon Stevens to heed the warning of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM), and pull back from scrapping the four-hour A&E target.

Simon Stevens
Simon Stevens

RCEM sent a letter about their concerns to Simon Stevens. 

The letter reads;  “I would have thought that no-one wants to go back to the days of endless hours of waiting in A&E departments. Removing the standard will do this and hide the true scale of problems within our health service. The only ones who benefit from this are Ministers and NHS Managers, and certainly not patients.”

The Four-Hour Standard was introduced to the NHS in England in 2004 to combat crowding in Emergency Departments, and has seen waiting times reduced since its introduction.

Paul Maloney
Paul Maloney

Paul Maloney, GMB Regional Secretary, said:“GMB urge the NHS Chief Executive to heed this warning from the Royal College of Emergency Medicine and retain this important four-hour A&E target. 
 

“These are the front line professionals who know what they are talking about. The Chief Executive should listen to them for the good of the public who depend on the National Health Service.”




The full text of the letter to Simon Stevens from RCEM reads; 

Dear Mr Stevens,
I fear that you are hell bent on undermining the benefits that the four-hour A&E standard has delivered to patients over many years, a decision you claim that so called ‘top doctors’ want. 
It begs the question who are these ‘top doctors’ you quote? They are not from the leaders of the body representing over 8,000 people working in our A&Es, the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, who believe the target is vital for timely, high quality patient care.

They also cannot have spent much time with patients in emergency departments, as if they had they would know that the service is perfectly capable of triaging patients and determining who needs what and when. Minor issues are not the problem and can be dealt with quickly; major issues are always prioritised. 

The only practical issue with the standard is when chief executives fail to see its achievement as a hospital wide issue and, it has to be said, too often there is a lack of support from other specialties. To this can of course be added the lack of beds, lack of staff and chronic underfunding of the NHS and social care. Get these right and it is very much achievable.

I would have thought that no-one wants to go back to the days of endless hours of waiting in A&E departments. Removing the standard will do this and hide the true scale of problems within our health service. The only ones who benefit from this are Ministers and NHS Managers, and certainly not patients.

The public has a right to know who these individuals are who want the target removed, not least given that in the NHS Plan with many laudable objectives, this attack on the patient interest stands out alone as the only cut in services proposed.

So Mr Stevens, who are these doctors with such contempt for the patient interest? 

Yours faithfully,

Derek Prentice

PREVIEW: 96 Festival @Omnibus Theatre Clapham

A spectacular celebration of queerness and theatre at the Omnibus Theatre, Clapham, London.

96 FESTIVAL, a no holds barred extravaganza of queerness and theatre, returns to Omnibus Theatre this year from Wednesday, February 20 – Sunday, March 31, 2019.

Events and performances setting up camp in the Clapham venue span the worlds of theatre, cabaret, drag, burlesque, comedy, music, art and activism.

Headlining this month-long festival is writer and director Sarah Chew’s LIPSTICK: A FAIRY TALE OF IRAN, part theatre, part drag, a timely story of rage and redemption.

The launch night on Tuesday, February 19 kicks off with a discussion exploring how queer communities experience divides around class, ability, race and gender and how art can bring us together in shared moments of connection. How can we reinvent queer activism?

Facilitating the conversation will be Linda Riley, board director of GLAAD and Diva Magazine publisher; Lady Phyll, co-founder of UK Black Pride, Rebecca Root actor in The Danish Girl and Colette; Jan Gooding, chair of Stonewall UK; Cassie Leon, producer of The Cocoa Butter Club – the queer collective celebrating Performers of Colour; and Nemo Martin, writer, producer, podcaster and theatre-maker.

After the conversation, a selection of artists from 96 Festival’s glittering programme will take to the stage, sharing snippets of dance, theatre and cabaret.

96 FESTIVAL was conceived in remembrance and celebration of the iconic Pride party on Clapham Common in 1996. This year the festival is being held in association with DIVA magazine.

Marie McCarthy
Marie McCarthy

Omnibus Theatre’s Artistic Director Marie McCarthy said: “I’m delighted that 96 Festival is back by popular demand, this time with glittering events that bring neo-burlesque, poetry, comedy, drag, dance, and voguing together for one spectacular celebration of queerness and theatre. The festival is poignantly headlined by Sarah Chew’s vital play Lipstick: A Fairy Tale of Iran, a fearless story that straddles Tehran, Derry and London.”

For a full list of events, click here:

PREVIEW: [title of show] @Above The Stag Theatre

Above the Stag presents: [title of show] – A musical comedy about writing a musical comedy with music and lyrics by Jeff Bowen, book by Hunter Bell and directed by Robert McWhir.

JEFF and Hunter have a dream – and that dream is for their work to be selected for the upcoming New York Musical Theatre Festival.

The submissions deadline is only three weeks away, and our heroes don’t actually have a musical to perform. But that’s not going to get in their way – because they have a whole three weeks to write it.

Recruiting two more friends to work with them, they embark on their journey, full of naive hope and wild optimism – even if nobody can come up with a killer name for the show.

Excitement mounts; if the show is a hit, they could replace the four ugly mismatched chairs on the set with chairs covered in diamonds.

And then … their little three-week-old musical defies the odds and is CHOSEN for the prestigious slot, and what’s more when it comes to performance time, fancy industry people are in the audience.

The show is a HIT. Plans progress toward taking the musical to Broadway …but that’s when the egos start to clash, and everything begins to unravel…

The more successful they become, the more the four begin to drift apart, and to wax nostalgic over younger, happier, less complicated days.

Will they remember that their relationship and the quality of their creation are more important to them than commercial success? And more importantly – will they ever get their diamond chairs?

[title of show] was actually genuinely chosen for production by the Musical Theatre Festival and premiered there, in September 2004, in New York City. It later ran off-Broadway at the Vineyard Theatre in 2006, earning a second limited run the same year, then played at Broadway’s Lyceum Theatre and was nominated for a Tony Award for Best Book of a Musical.


Event: [title of show]

Where: ABOVE THE STAG THEATRE, 72 Albert Embankment London, SE1 7TP

When: runs till March 10

Time: Tuesday – Saturday 7.15pm, Sunday 2pm and 5.30pm

Cost: £25

To book tickets online, click here:

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