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Barnardo’s Assistant Director appointed to new Government LGBT+ advisory panel

Marcel Varney, Assistant Director for Children’s Services at Barnardo’s, to sit on a new LGBT+ Advisory panel announced by the Government.

 

Marcel Varney
Marcel Varney

MINISTER for Women and Equalities Penny Mordaunt has appointed the first ever National Adviser for LGBT+ Health, and Advisory Panel who along with other new members of the LGBT+ Advisory Panel attended the Government Equalities Office (GEO) conference in London on, Monday, March 18.

The panel guides the Government on policy, helps to deliver the LGBT+ Action plan, acts as a sounding board, and provides evidence on the experiences of LGBT+ people.

Javed Khan, Barnardo’s Chief Executive, said: “We are proud to that our Assistant Director Marcel Varney has been appointed to the Government’s first LGBT+ advisory panel. We welcome this fantastic opportunity to represent the experiences of LGBT+ children and young people. Marcel has been a beacon for LGBT+ colleagues across Barnardo’s as well as leading pioneering services to children, young people and communities.
 
“Barnardo’s champions awareness about LGBTQ issues in schools so that teachers can support all their students effectively and young people can support each other, promoting equality and respect for all.” 

Last month Barnardo’s celebrated training over 8,000 staff and over 640 parent, community and pupil ambassadors through an anti-homophobic, biphobic and transphobic (HBT) bullying programme. The Positive Identities service delivered has worked with more than 160 schools. It is funded by the Government Equalities Office and supported by the Department for Education, is in schools across Yorkshire & Humberside.

For more information about Barnados, click here:

‘Junior Snailway’ raises £44,000 for Martlets Hospice

£44,000 has been donated to Martlets hospice through the Junior Snailway project and the fundraising efforts of children in the Brighton and Hove area.

Launch of the Martlets Junior Snailway Campaign in Jubilee Square: Photo by Finlayson/Vervate

Over 22,000 children engaged with the city-wide art trail Snailspace by creating their own snail-shaped artwork at local schools, nurseries, youth groups and clubs and undertaking additional fundraising activities.

Across Brighton and Hove, 57 schools and children’s organisations signed up to the Snailspace Learners Programme to design and paint their own ‘junior’ snail sculpture. Some sculptures were decorated by a single gifted member of their community, while others were decorated by hundreds of children – each school, nursery or club creating something totally unique to them.

Photo by Finlayson/Vervate
Photo by Finlayson/Vervate

These smaller Snails were then displayed at cultural and educational venues, including libraries and Martlets Shops, alongside the main city-wide Snailspace art installation featuring 50 giant Snails.  The Junior Snailway sculptures were then returned to their creators to enjoy.

Each school, nursery or club taking part committed to additional fundraising and children were encouraged, using resources provided by Martlets, to engage in different ways with the project.  A variety of events took place to raise money, from snail hunts to cake sales, discos, music concerts, non-uniform days and sponsored walks.

Award-winning author and illustrator Nick Sharrat became a Junior Snailway Ambassador and worked tirelessly to promote the project for Martlets, inspiring local young people to be creative and getting everyone drawing.

Headline sponsor for Snailspace, The Aldridge Foundation, also supported the Learners Programme helping to make it such a spectacular and educational event for the whole community.

Sir Rod Aldridge said: “Martlets Hospice is a wonderful charity and we were delighted to be able to support them to raise this money by doubling the number of schools and youth groups taking part in this year’s trail. Developing creativity is an important part of our education and life skills and it’s something Aldridge Academies place a real accent on. What better way to raise money and celebrate the creativity of this city and of our young people than through this wonderful event?”

Liz Davies Community Fundraising Officer at Martlets added: “We are so grateful to the thousands of children that engaged with our Junior Snailway project and all the schools and youth organisations that took part.  We’re delighted that the feedback has been so positive from everyone and that they felt proud to be part of such an inspiring and creative project.  The figure of £44,000 is amazing and money is still coming in.  It will go towards helping Martlets give the very best care to local people with terminal illness and their families.”

 

Great British Spring Clean – events in Brighton & Hove

Residents across the city roll up their sleeves, don their gloves and gear up for this year’s Great British Spring Clean.

Volunteers from the Great British Spring Clean-Up 2018
Volunteers from the Great British Spring Clean-Up 2018

VOLUNTEERS from the council’s Tidy Up Team, members of Friends Groups and other organisations are teaming up with the council’s park rangers to take part in a month long programme of events.

The Great British Springclean is part of a national campaign organised by Keep Britain Tidy.

Events in Brighton & Hove kick off with a launch on March 22 and include:

Keep Britain Tidy Great British Springclean Launch event on New Road, March 22, 10am to 2pm

Residents can sign up to take part in litter picking events in parks and open spaces across the city during the great British Spring Clean 2019.

♦ Surrenden Field, March 23, 12noon to 3pm
Join the Friends of Surrenden Field and council rangers for a litterpick.of the field and woodland.

♦ Whitehawk Hill, March 24, 11am to 1pm
Help to keep Whitehawk Hill looking spectacular by getting involved in this litter pick as part of the Keep Britain Tidy #GB Springclean. All tools and equipment will be provided

♦ Ladies Mile, March 26, 11am to 2pm
The council’s Tidy Up Team and the council’s rangers are joining forces to organise a Big Tidy Up at ladies Mile Nature reserve.

♦ Withdean Park Making Dog Waste Bag Dispensers, March 27, 11am to 2pm
The Great British Spring Clean is not just about litter. The council’s rangers are organising events to reduce waste too. Learn how to make dog waste bag dispensers for your local park and home.

♦ Coney Wood, March 28, 10am to 1pm
Join the council’s rangers for a woodland tidy up. All tools and equipment will be provided. Meet by the windmill and wear practical footwear for walking in the woods.

♦ Hodshrove Woods, March 30, 10am to 1pm
Meet at the playground at the end of Goodwood Way. Wear practical footwear and clothes.

♦ Three Cornered Copse, March 30, 10am to 1pm
Join members of the Friends of Three Cornered Copse, regular supporters of the Great British Spring Clean, for a litter pick event.

♦ Bevenclean II, March 31, 10am to 1pm
Following the success of last year’s event, residents are invited to join cityclean staff and the council’s rangers for Bevenclean II.

♦ Racehill, April 1, 11am to 1pm
You’d be a ‘fool’ not to come along to this litter pick at the Race Hill! Volunteers will be clearing litter from the orchard and surrounding meadows.

♦ Benfield Hill, April 2, 11am to 2pm
Meet the council’s Rangers for a litter pick on this downland site. All tools and equipment will be provided. Please wear suitable footwear.

♦ Blaker’s Park, April 3, 11am to 2pm
Blaker’s Park is one of the cleanest and tidiest in the city thanks to Tidy Up Team volunteers. Join them to pick up litter and neaten the path edges. Brooms and edging tools will be provided.

♦ Stanmer Park, April 4, 10am to 4pm
This litter pick is being organised by the council’s rangers in partnership with the Sussex Wildlife Trust as part of the Great British Spring Clean.

♦ Craven Woods, April 5, 11am to 2pm
Meet the council’s rangers at the end of The Causeway to take part in this litter pick in Craven Woods.

♦ Falmer Pond, April 8, 11am to 2pm
Wellies are a must for this litter pick at Falmer Pond, organised by the council’s rangers. All tools and equipment will be provided.

♦ Saltdean Oval, April 9, 11am to 2pm
Volunteers are invited to help tidy up this lovely park on the city’s border. Tools and equipment will be provided, but please wear suitable footwear.

♦ Falmer Road Multi-use track, April 10, 10am to 2pm
The council’s rangers and South Downs National Park staff are joining forces for a litter pick along the multi-use path that runs parallel to Falmer Road, from Woodingdean.

♦ Horsdean Recreation Ground, April 14, 10am to 2pm
Members of sports teams, community payback, residents and rangers will be working together to litter pick and support the Great British Spring Clean.

♦ Coldean Woods, April 15, 10.30am to 1.30pm
Meet opposite the hikers’ rest on Coldean Lane to take part in this litter pick with the council’s ranger and Friends of Coldean Woods.

♦ Whitehawk Hill, April 20, 11am to 1pm
Whitehawk Hill is spectacular and you can help keep it that way by joining the rangers and taking part in this litter pick.

♦ Preston Park Easter Egg Hunt and Rock Painting, April 21, 11am to 2pm
Design and paint a rock with a litter related message and win a prize in this Easter Egg Hunt and competition organised by the council’s rangers and Friends of Preston Park.

♦ Make an Eco Brick Demonstration, April 22, 11am to 2pm
Join Brighton’s eco-brick maker at the Old Steine, who will be demonstrating how to create effective eco-bricks.

To sign up and take part in any of these events, click here:

Cllr Gill Mitchell
Cllr Gill Mitchell

Councillor Gill Mitchell, chair of the council’s environment committee said: “It’s great to see communities coming together to help organise a packed programme of Great British Spring Clean events to help us tidy up our city – the biggest and best yet!

“Not only will they be improving the appearance of the city’s parks and open spaces, but encouraging other residents to take more care of their local environment too.”

City centre visitors can look out for special Big Litter Ballot bins inviting cat and dog lovers to cast their votes for their favourite pet. The bins can be found at public spaces in the city every Friday from 11am to 2pm.

People will be asked the question: “Which do you prefer, cats or dogs?” and invited to drop their litter in the relevant bin. The result of the ballot will be announced on April 23. The bins will be unveiled at the launch on March 22, moving to Preston Park on March 29, Dyke Road Park on April 5, The Level on April 12 and Hove Park on April 19.

There will also be plenty of opportunities during the month for residents to attend training and become a signed up member of the councils’ Tidy Up Team. Training and induction sessions will be held at the Leaning Resource Centre at Hollingdean depot on March 25 and April 13, 17 and 18 join more than 150 volunteers who have already been through training and induction to receive their Litter Pick Kit, all kits are provided using money collected from fines for littering and fly-tipping.

For more information on the Tidy Up Team, click here:

Brighton Bears Annual Easter Quiz

Time to test your knowledge and crack those eggheads!

PUT a team together and trot down to the Camelford Arms on Thursday, April 18. Grab a table, answer the most questions right and £300 cash prize money, is there for the taking.

The quiz starts at 9.00pm but arrive at least before 8.00pm to grab a table. Better still have dinner at The Camelford Arms from 7 pm which will guarantee you a table.

You can phone up and book a table if eating. Businesses, community organisations and social network groups are all invited to enter teams.

If you’re not winning the quiz then you can always win big on the Easter raffle.

So whether you are from the Bear-Patrol Community Group, Brighton & Hove Sea Serpents RFC, My Genderation, LGBT Brighton & Hove Network , Brighton and Hove LGBT Community Safety Forum, Brighton & Hove LGBT Switchboard, MenTalkHealth UK, Peer Action, Older and Out, The Sussex Beacon, Rainbow Chorus, Lunch Positive, MindOut, GScene Magazine, Subline, or any other group put your team together and win that £300 cash

It’s just £2.00 a head, to enter the quiz. All money raised goes to The Rainbow Fund – Brighton & Hove who give grants to LGBT/HIV organisations who provide effective frontline services to LGBT+ people in Brighton & Hove.


Event: Brighton Bear Weekend Annual Easter Quiz

Where: Camelford Arms, Camelford Street, Brighton

When: Thursday, April 18

Time: 9pm

Cost: £2 per person

REVIEW: SIngEasy@The Piano Works

If you’re looking for the best way to kick off an evening of theatre or karaoke, SingEasy is an absolute must.

IS it cheesy? Yes. Is it camp? Obviously!

But by the time I had finished a three course meal, I was well and truly ready to belt out Total Eclipse of the Heart at any nearby karaoke bar I could find.

The premise of SingEasy, is that while you order, wait and devour a course (or three), you get to hear several very talented waiters belt out classics and musical theatre favourites chosen by you the audience. If you want a specific tune, just request it and either your waiter or another one in the room will perform it just for you. All the songs were accompanied by a talented pianist who did a fantastic job both singing and playing along.

The service was by far the standout part of the experience. The waiters were so full of energy, and all had incredible voices. No matter the genre, they were prepared and eager, and their serving was treated exactly the same. I was there for about two hours and there wasn’t a single drop in energy from any of the singing waiters throughout the evening.

Is there a downside?  If you don’t want to be bombarded with powerful vocals and show tunes while you dine, maybe SingEasy is not the place for you. The songs come pretty much one after the other, so the focus of the night is on the dulcet tones of the waiting staff. If you want a dining experience to catch up with old friends you haven’t seen for a while you might need to look elsewhere. If you want a dining experience with friends where your in control of the musical content, this is the perfect place for you!

There are two menus available to diners, a pre-theatre and regular dinner menu. The regular dinner menu does have a few more options available than the pre-theatre, but neither choice is particularly extensive. I was eating off the pre-theatre menu and did find it rather limited, but vegans and vegetarians were well catered for. Even though the choice was small, the food that was served was really delicious.

There is also the option to just go along just for cocktails, that have some really great names (Dancing Queen, Wannabe and I’m Still Standing, amongst others) costing a reasonable £10.50. Vegans are catered for with their own cocktail menu with Aquafaba used as an alternative to egg white.

Overall, I’d say SingEasy is a wonderful night if you’re up for a bit of not-so-serious fun. I believe it’s better to go a bit later in the evening as by that time there’s more people, more alcohol consumed, and more audience participation.

The musicianship and talent of the waiters is top notch, and the food is excellent too. So yes it’s cheesy, and yes it’s camp, but who doesn’t love a bit of cheesy camp goodness every once in a while?

SingEasy runs from Monday to Saturday @The Piano Works. Daily offers available so important to check out the website for options.

To make booking online, click here:

Review by James Cunningham-Curry

Historic LGBT+ memorabilia to be auctioned in New York

Swann Auction Galleries to host The Pride Sale, celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising, LGBT+ campaigning and WorldPride Events.

SWANN Auction Galleries will hold their first Pride Sale, an exploration and celebration of the art, influence, history, and experience of the LGBT+ communities, on June 20 in New York.

Staged to mark the 50th Anniversary of the Stonewall Uprising, the event credited with launching the international gay rights movement, the sale heralds the largest LGBT+ Pride celebration ever held in New York City, with both WorldPride (for the first time in the United States) and events marking the Stonewall Riots anniversary.

The auction will be a unique and event, featuring work from artists and writers including James Baldwin, Tom of Finland, Gertrude Stein, Alice Walker, Robert Mapplethorpe, and many more.

The art, literature and ephemera on offer chart significant developments in the emergence of LGBT+ culture dating as far back as the late 19th century and include some outstanding and historic pieces.

Highlights include a Remembrance copy of Walt Whitman’s Memoranda During the War, inscribed to Pete Doyle, from “the author, with his love”, and published in 1875-76. The estimate is $50,000 to $75,000. Much has been debated about Whitman’s sexuality, but his masterpiece, Leaves of Grass, published in 1855, included some of the earliest writings made public that explore what appear to be gay love. As such, he is an important figure in the history of the LGBT+ movement.

A signed, extra-limited first edition of Oscar Wilde’s play The Importance of Being Earnest, A Trivial Comedy for Serious People, dating to 1899, also features and is estimated at $40,000 to $60,000.

From around 1920 comes Gerda Wegener’s watercolour, chalk and wash painting Two Women in a Window, estimated at $15,000 to $25,000, while from 1953 comes a first edition of James Baldwin’s Go Tell It On The Mountain, the novel that started the author’s exploration of gay and bisexual themes. The estimate is $800 to $1,200.

Fred W. McDarrah captured the Sip In, an event that presaged Stonewall by three years when three young men, members of the early gay rights group the Mattachine, set out to challenge bars in New York City that refused to serve gay people.

After several false starts at bars that were either closed or unwelcoming, the three were indeed served drinks – on the house – by two bars after declaring their homosexuality, before moving on to Julius, a bar that was already under threat of losing its licence for effectively promoting gay activity.

As the bartender started to serve them, the men told him they were gay, at which point he refused to continue by putting his hand over the glass, and it was this moment that McDarrah captured on camera for The Village Voice. A silver print of this 1966 image, printed in the 1990s, is on offer in the auction at an estimate of $1,500 to $2,500.

Important lots from the early 1970s include Su Negrin’s Gay Liberation poster, based on a photograph by Peter Hujar transformed into a poster published by Times Change Press in 1970, estimated at $400 to $600, and Donna Gotschalk’s poster, Sisterhood Feels Good, also published by Times Change Press, in 1971 and estimated at $400 to $600.

Later in the decade, the gay rights campaigner Harvey Milk became the first openly gay elected official in the history of the state of California. Winning a seat as a city supervisor in November 1977, Milk used his brief time in office to champion LGBT+ rights by successfully sponsoring a bill banning discrimination in various areas, such as housing and employment, on the basis of sexual orientation.

It was during this period that he wrote the signed, autograph letter to two friends declaring how he thought they “should have a memo from the 1st up front gay mayor of any city – it’s for real!!”

Tragically, Milk’s campaigning was brought to a premature and violent end on November 27, 1978 when he was assassinated alongside Mayor George Moscone by Dan White, another city supervisor.

Despite the brevity of Milk’s official political career, his influence and importance have made him an icon in the LGBT+ rights movement. The letter is estimated at $4,000 to $6,000.

Another great icon of the LGBT+ movement is Robert Mapplethorpe, the New York photographer, whose highly stylised black and white images encompassed striking subjects as diverse as portraits of celebrities, still lifes of flowers and homoerotic and BDSM culture. The sale includes an example of his Z Portfolio of 13 silver prints from 1981, with an estimate of $40,000 to $60,000.

Mapplethorpe fell victim to HIV/AIDS, dying as result of complications related to the disease in 1989 aged just 42. It is another stand-out lot in the sale that recalls the rise of this pernicious and frightening contagion in that decade. Silence = Death, from 1987, is a politically charged poster published by the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, which demanded to know what President Reagan, the Vatican and the Centers for Disease Control, the Food and Drug Administration were doing when it came to the fight against AIDS. The estimate is $800 to $1,200.

Into the 1990s and McDarrah appears once again, this time as he captures Las Buenas Amigas, a march celebrating Latina Lesbians from 1991. The black and white image has an estimate of $1,500 to $2,500.

“Swann is thrilled to be hosting its inaugural Pride Sale and proud to continue supporting the community through a fundraising effort alongside the auction,” says President of Swann Auction Galleries, Nicholas D. Lowry.

“We see this as an important and unique event among the many happening this June, recognizing the historical, literary and artistic achievements of LGBTQ+ writers, artists and activists,” Lowry continued. “This auction will celebrate the community and give collectors, connoisseurs and the curious an opportunity to observe and bid on a range of material from the last two centuries, with manuscripts, autographs, literature, art, photography, posters and more.”

The exhibition of lots officially opens on Saturday, June 15

For more information about the auction, click here:

 


Event: The Pride Sale at Swann Galleries

Where: Swann Galleries

When: Thursday, June 20,  Preview dates: June 15, 12-5pm; June 17-19, 10-6pm; June 20, 10-12pm

Time: At 1:30 pm (EST).

Proposals for new affordable homes in Whitehawk halted

Proposals from the Homes for Brighton & Hove partnership to develop more than 200 new affordable homes on a site in the north of Whitehawk are to be stopped.

THE decision taken at a Homes for Brighton & Hove board meeting on Monday, March 18 follows a report identifying that the development of affordable housing would not be financially viable due to a number of access and technical difficulties on the site.

Homes for Brighton & Hove a partnership between Brighton & Hove City Council and the Hyde Group, aims to build 1,000 new much-needed affordable homes for rent and sale in the city for lower-income, local working households.

The Homes for Brighton & Hove board is made up of three councillors from the main parties on the council’s Housing & New Homes Committee and three representatives from Hyde.

The Whitehawk site had been identified for housing development in the Draft City Plan Part Two, following the requirement to look for sites for 1,000 new homes on the city’s urban fringe to help meet the urgent need for housing established in the City Plan Part One.

Feedback from the public consultation and some local opposition expressing concerns about the environmental impact of the proposals were noted by the partners.

Landscape and ecology studies have shown that, with certain ecological mitigations in place, housing could be developed on the site without significant adverse impacts on the Local Nature Reserve.

Plans for the first two Homes for Brighton & Hove proposed developments in Portslade and Coldean are progressing, while further sites are being investigated.

PREVIEW: Booking now open for Theatre Royal Brighton’s new season

Good news for all theatre lovers out there – booking is now open for Theatre Royal Brighton’s upcoming season, with promises of top-quality entertainment from spectacular musicals and gripping dramas to fun shows for all the family.

MUSICAL highlights include the welcome return of Priscilla Queen of the Desert (December) alongside other hit shows running throughout the year including Avenue Q, Little Miss Sunshine, Hair and Green Day’s American Idiot.

If you like your drama a little more serious maybe take a look at Jon Brittain’s Rotterdam, which comes to town in April. It’s a bittersweet comedy about gender, sexuality and being a long way from home.

Other drama highlights include visiting productions of Glengarry Glen Ross, The Girl on the Train, The Mousetrap, and the funny but devastating Stones in his Pockets.

There’s also plenty on offer for families and younger audiences this season. In August Chitty Chitty Bang Bang flies into town with a production from the Brighton Theatre Group.

Other family friendly shows include David Baddiel’s ANiMALCOLM, and Tom Gates Live on Stage!

For tickets and a full list of events running from now through to the end of 2019 click here:

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