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Today at B RIGHT ON LGBT+ Community Festival: “The Walk of Survivors”

This is the second year for The Walk of Survivors organised, run by The Survivors Movement.

IT will starts with a march from The Level (Brighton) commencing at 12.30pm proceeding to The Phil Starr Pavilion, Victoria Gardens for a family friendly event.

The Survivors Movement is a grass route movement set up on the grounds of social impact to provide and build a peer to peer support network for adult survivors of sexual abuse and violence.

The concept of The Walk of Survivors is to essentially create a pride for survivors to be proud of the survivor they are today.

The organisers aim to send out a message of empowerment, courage, strength, solidarity. As survivors themselves, they realise and understand the importance of changing how the general public look upon this as a stigmatised and taboo subject they feel its time to create a platform to speak out and encourage future generations to speak out sooner.

This year they are very proud they will be collaborating with The LGBT Community Safety Forum and the B Right On LGBT Community Festival.

They need the support of the whole community. They will make no assumption on the day of peoples individual survivor status. You do not have to identify as a survivor to attend but the organisers ask that you join other attendees in creating a safe and empowering place for a potentially triggering subject matter. Everyone is welcome.

The event aims to create platforms for approved and regulated networks and organisations to promote their services and support networks for survivors of sexual abuse and violence so that attendees have a greater awareness of what is accessible to them.

END THE STIGMA, STOP THE SILENCE!


Event: The Walk of Survivors

Where: March from Level to Phil Starr Pavilion

When: Sunday, March 31, 2019

Time: Starts from the Level at 12.30pm: Community stalls, bar & live music at the Phil Starr Pavilion 2pm – 6pm

Entry: Free
To guarantee entry to Phil Starr Pavilion, click here: OR call 01273 855773


If you have any access requirements email: access@lgbt-help.com or call 01273 855620 and select option 4

The B RIGHT ON LGBT+ Community Festival celebrating LGBT+ history, lives and culture, 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 located on Victoria Gardens, Brighton, BN1 1WN.

Tickets also available without booking fee from the Phil Starr Pavilion Box Office, Victoria Gardens, Brighton or The Rainbow Hub, 93 St James Street, Brighton.

Lunch Positive Supper Group

In addition to the weekly HIV lunch club each Friday, Lunch Positive runs a regular evening  supper group for people with HIV who are over 50.

THE supper group is funded by the Rainbow Find to pilot for 12 months runs every 6-8
weeks. Progress has been very successful with each session reaching existing and many new members, all of whom have remarked on the food, peer-support, welcome and friendliness of the group.

An average of 36 people have attended each session commenting enthusiastically about the project filling a much-needed gap in what’s on offer locally.

Supper group sessions are put together by the Lunch Positive volunteer team, and supported by a
trustee of the charity.

In addition to the enjoyable social opportunity, the next session on April 16 will also provide an opportunity for group members to feedback and influence on how the project develops, and
to start discussing any other support that the project could provide for people as they age with HIV.

Richard Jeneway
Richard Jeneway

Lunch Positive Trustee Richard Jeneway says: “The supper group was one of the ideas on the wish list from the Lunch Positive focus group and service evaluation in Spring 2018. Since November 2018 we have now provided three events with some great levels of attendance.

“It is important to say from the outset that none of this could have taken place without the hard work, passion and dedication of lead volunteer Tony, and volunteers in the kitchen and front of house who have been truly inspirational.

“As a service user and Trustee I feel privileged to be connected on a personal level with this new and much-needed event.

“The HIV community in Brighton has a high level of people aged 50 and over. According to statistics provided by the Lawson unit over 48 per cent of patients with HIV are aged 50 and over, and this will continue to grow.

In addition to the very successful weekly lunch club we hope that the community support we provide will continue to develop with this additional service.

We are always reaching out to meet new people and welcome them to our service, so if you or someone you know might like to come along then please do get in touch by emailing supper@lunchpositive.org.

For more information about Lunch Positive, click here:

Hey Mr Producer!

From the luxury of Frank Sinatra’s Las Vegas dressing room to a portakabin in Brighton’s Victoria Gardens, theatre and show impresario Quintin Young has seen it all, as he tells Brian Butler.

BRIGHTON-based producer/director Quintin Young has had a world-wide career, first performing and then stashing shows of all shapes and sizes.

Growing up in Ayr, Scotland, Quintin’s earliest influence was the famous 5-month summer season at its Gaiety Theatre, where the shows were twice nightly and the production changed every week. “It was my early foundation for work in show business,” he says.

After drama college, he found himself involved in variety shows on Scottish Television and later graduated to do the same at London Weekend TV.

“I was given responsibility at an early age to be dance captain and choreographer. My other great skill at school was maths, so I could count the dance steps and balance the books.” he jokes.

After performing in Edinburgh at the Royal Lyceum in productions of The Boyfriend, Cabaret, and the King and I he later found himself in London, his base for the next 25 years. He became international tour director for Spirit of the Dance – the first spin-off from the celebrated Irish dance show Riverdance, incredibly being responsible for 15 productions of it all over the world.

At this time there were five productions of it in the USA and so Quintin found it easier to be based there than in London. Vowing that he would never do another dance show he found himself almost immediately being responsible for the stage version of Strictly Ballroom as associate producer. The show, featuring Lionel Blair and Jane Macdonald played worldwide for 4 years.

With Debbie Reynolds
With Debbie Reynolds

In Las Vegas the Hollywood and Broadway legend Debbie Reynolds fronted the show and she and Quintin became close friends. “The precision of that kind of dancing was almost military on aspect and the Chinese for one came to love it.” Another fan was the now controversial Michael Jackson with whom Quintin worked on 2 charity shows in Korea and Munich.

“The massive set was just loaded on a jumbo jet and flown from Korea to Germany.” he says.

A David Essex musical All The Fun of the Fair followed and then the Proclaimer’s show Sunshine on Leith, which he believes is due for a stage revival.

He thinks his early responsibility – being thrown in at the deep end – helped him understand the challenges facing performers but also those facing producers and venues to make productions succeed, artistically and financially.

He’s a strong believer that local and regional theatres survive because they fully understand the demographics of their audiences. “As a producer you have to work with the venue and its marketing department to get the best outcome.”

Having moved to Brighton five years ago he feels it’s a shame there is no big mainstream family pantomime in the city in a major theatre. “It gets their next generation of audience into the theatre. It’ s also a shame that amateur theatre companies can often no longer afford to mount shows in big commercial venues. I’d like to see the commercial theatres help out.” he added.

As creative director of Brighton’s Gay Men’s Chorus he knows too well how expensive large venues like the Dome can be.

Playing Buttocks in the Casino Production of Cinderella 1989 with from left to right Maisie Trollette, Scott St Martyn, Quintin Young and Mandy from the Oriental
Playing Buttocks in the Casino Production of Cinderella 1989 with from left to right Maisie Trollette, Scott St Martyn, Quintin Young and Mandy from the Oriental

His preoccupation in April is staging the Alternative Panto at the Phil Starr Pavilion in Victoria Gardens – with a portakabin as his base – a far cry from his Las Vegas luxury dressing room which has formerly been home to Frank Sinatra. But he thinks the venue, which is a new home for the show will work well, with 100 seats on the flat and a further 150 on tiers.

Frank Sinatra's dressing room in Las Vegas was home to Quintin
Frank Sinatra’s dressing room in Las Vegas was home to Quintin

“I treat this show the same as I would a major world tour.” And this year he has swapped roles round so that the cast are playing characters they haven’t played before. The cast which includes six Brighton drag acts – Davina Sparkle, Miss Jason, Sally Vate, Dave Lynn, Lola Lasagne and Stephanie Von Clitz have worked together before which helps since there are only eight days rehearsal available before the curtain goes up. The cast also includes stage and cabaret singers Allan Jay, Jason Lee and David Anthony.

“I have my ideas of how it should be played, but so do they and many have experience of playing family pantos. I do have to be a headmaster occasionally to avoid their becoming just eight individual acts. The fun is it’s live and interactive with the audience and very different every performance.”

Asked what advice he would give the young Quintin, he pauses for quite a while then says: “Don’t be too shy, and grasp every opportunity that comes your way. Don’t doubt yourself.”

So what’s in the future? “I think I have one more big musical to do, but I don’t know what it is….” Then he adds “An all-male Guys and Dolls would be fun.”

But after the panto run it’s down onto the sea-front to manage the highly successful Luna Beach open air cinema in July and August .

Big Dick Whittington and His Pussy runs at the Phil Starr Pavilion from April 4 to 14 with tickets costing a mere £23.

To book tickets online, click here:

 

 

Switchboard appoint new CEO

Lyndsay Macadam
Lyndsay Macadam

Last month Switchboard announced Daniel Cheesman would be stepping down as CEO after two years in the post.

FOLLOWING a successful recruitment campaign Switchboard have announced that Lyndsay Macadam will be taking over as the new Chief Executive Officer later in the spring.

Lyndsay comes to Switchboard from Brighton-based community development charity TDC where they were Director of Equalities, specialising in reducing health inequalities and isolation, and empowering and involving communities.

Prior to this Lyndsay has many years’ experience in the community and voluntary sector in Brighton, London and Scotland, supporting and representing communities of identity through their work in infrastructure and community development.

Lyndsay is committed to equalities, inclusion and social justice, particularly ensuring that minority and intersectional communities are represented in decision-making processes and have access to appropriate services, as well as challenging stigma, hate crime and inequalities.

Dawn Draper
Dawn Draper

Dawn Draper Chair of Switchboard said; “We are delighted that Lyndsay will be joining us as our new CEO later this year. It is an exciting time for Switchboard as we plan for our 45th year and Lyndsay has the skills, experience and knowledge that we are looking for.”

Lyndsay will take over from Daniel Cheesman later in the spring.


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