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B RIGHT ON LGBT+ Community Festival: English Disco Lovers – Don’t Hate Gyrate!

The English Disco Lovers Community Group team up with the organisers of the B RIGHT ON LGBT+ Community Festival to bring you the Best Disco in Town! on Saturday, March 30.

ON the opening Saturday of the Festival (March 30) at The Phil Starr Pavilion on Victoria Gardens, dance the night away to great music for a great cause – The Rainbow Fund!

The English Disco Lovers have been promoting inclusivity while raising funds for worthy causes in Brighton for 6 years. They have raised over five thousand pounds since 2016 for 20 charities in and around Brighton, through activism, fun and DISCO!

Join them at the Phil Starr Pavilion on Saturday March 30 from 10pm to dance the night away: See you out on the floor!


Event: ENGLISH DISCO LOVERS – DON’T HATE GYRATE!

Where: The Phil Starr Pavilion, Victoria Gardens, Brighton

When: Saturday, March 30, 2019

Time: Doors 9.30pm. Event: 10pm – 2am

Cost: Tickets: £9 /£8* (£1 of each ticket donated to the Rainbow Fund)
To book online, click here:

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.

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.

B RIGHT ON LGBT+ Community Festival: Lunch Positive Community Lunch & Celebration on Saturday

Lunch Positive, the weekly HIV lunch club are holding a Community Lunch & Celebration as part of The B RIGHT ON LGBT+ Community Festival on Saturday, March 30 in the Phil Starr Pavilion on Victoria Gardens, Brighton.

ABSOLUTELY everyone is invited to go along to share good food and good company together for this very special Community Lunch and Celebration.

The lunch is FREE to everyone, informal, and will be celebrating the 10th anniversary of Lunch Positive and the fantastic contribution of theirs volunteers over the years.

They will be serving a range of tasty home cooked hot food including vegetarian and vegan options, tea and coffee and delicious cake.

To check out the menu choices, click here:

Lunch will be served from 12.30pm–3.30pm, just drop in when suits you.

This is a free event. There’s no need to book ahead, just turn up on the day and take along all your friends!

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.

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.


Event: Community Lunch and Celebration – Celebrating 10 years of Lunch Positive

Where: Phil Starr Pavilion, Victoria Gardens, Brighton

When: Saturday, March 30

Time: 12.30pm – 3pm

Cost: Free entry

Village People to appear at Stockholm Pride

Disco is not dead! Village People to appear at Stockholm Pride to show all the old dance moves are alive and kicking!

WITH a number of timeless classics including- In the Navy, Go West, Macho Man and of course YMCA, the band has sold over 100 million records.

This summer they’ll visit Stockholm Pride, with a great live band, front man Victor Willis center stage and other well known characters.

Other members of the group touring this summer are Angel Morales (Native American), James Kwong (Construction worker), Chad Freeman (Cowboy), James Lee (G.I), and J.J. Lippold (Leatherman).

The debut album Village People was recorded in 1977 before the group was actually formed and featured Victor Willis and back-up singers.

Demand grew for a band to perform live and following an advert in the media saying; “Wanted – macho men for well known disco group, must dance and have a moustache”. The rest is, well, history!

“Booking this legendary band was done with so much joy, I can’t wait to see the whole audience in Pride Park dancing to YMCA. My mail goal with this festival is to bring butterflies to everyone attending Stockholm Pride, I think this concert will definitely do that,” says Gunn Lundemo, stage producer Stockholm Pride.

Stockholm Pride is the largest Pride festival in Scandinavia and will take place in Stockholm city center between July 29 and August 4 in 2019.

Village People will perform on the main stage in Pride Park on August 2, 2019.

 

The Great Dabbler

Gyles Brandreth, Scrabble expert, murder mystery writer and ex MP, best known for his radio and tv appearances on programmes like Just a Minute and Countdown tells Brian Butler about acting lessons from Sir Roger Moore, and the vital importance of words.

Photo Greg Macvean
Photo Greg Macvean

GYLES Brandreth’s current one-man show, due in Brighton later in April, had its very beginnings at school. He went to a preparatory school in Kent and his maths master was an ex-military man of discipline one Major Douch.

Now it turned out that Major Douch had trained a military recruit who turned out to be a big star of television called Roger Moore.

So it was that the 10-year-old Gyles first met the star of The Saint, who later became one of the most popular James Bonds on the big screen.

“Roger gave me a masterclass in acting with his eyebrows – for which he was famous. He could raise both independently. I could only manage the left one. His answer to me was simple – that I was only half the actor he was !” says Gyles.

And that anecdote along with many others know features in his theatre-story show Break a Leg.

“I have met so many delightful people in show business and been influenced by them and others – Donald Sinden, Kenneth Williams, Frankie Howerd and June Whitfield to name only a few.”

Indeed June best remembered for Ab Fab, recorded a song with Gyles just before her death last year. “She features in my show – we hear her recording and I sing along live,” he said.

I put it to the comic performer and writer that words were everything. “Yes, they are. They are my obsession. My latest book Have you eaten Grandma ? deals with that.”

“I am a bit of a word nerd – and did you know that word was conjured by Dr Seuss in 1953, he invented a character called Nerd.”

‘Words are fundamental.You can do a lot with an emoji but language is everything.’

I asked him if he prepared for appearances on Radio 4’s long-running Just a Minute where the celebrities have to talk for 60 seconds without hesitation, repetition or deviation: “You can’t prepare. It’s recorded in real-time and the audience can see the clock ticking down. It’s a great adrenaline rush. That’s why I love live TV.”

And it’s why he loves doing live stage shows. “People are coughing, fainting, walking out. I tell the audience to leave their mobiles on. Any interruption I get might be the best bit of the show.”

He has done so many different things in his life from writing murder mystery novels to his love of Scrabble and Monopoly, teddy bears and the works of Oscar Wilde. “But my career was not planned. I’m still trying to work out what I should be doing with my life. Really I have not yet left school. I’m doing exactly what I did there 60 years ago.”

Asked what advice he would give to the young Gyles he says; “Find a life plan and change your name – no-one can ever spell it. The three most valuable words are – don’t dabble; focus . I don’t regret dabbling but a focus might have helped.”

Break a Leg has some improvised elements – including some audience participation. And he readily admits that’s the fun – especially when it goes wrong.

In one performance a heckler shouted out “What about the fish? Where’s the fish?” It turned out that the man had misread the ticket website and thought he’d come to see a de-boning demonstration by celebrity chef Rick Stein.

He’s even had the unfortunate experience of an audience member collapsing, being carried out and unsuccessfully given the kiss of life.

His love of Oscar Wilde has led him to write seven murder mysteries with Oscar and his friend Arthur Conan Doyle as the detectives. The latest one features the Jack the Ripper case. “Oscar lived in the same street as the Ripper case detective.” adds Gyles who hopes the books will be taken up for TV or films.

His life-long ambition to go into politics was achieved in 1992 when he was elected MP for Chester and eventually became a Government Whip – a period he describes in his book Breaking the Code. But the Blair landslide of ‘97 saw him lose his seat, his political career came to an end and he decided the Tories would be out of office for so long he had better get on doing something else.

Asked about current politics he is enigmatic but on one thing adamant “I give my audience a guarantee that the show is a Brexit-free zone. It isn’ t funny any longer, we’ve had enough of it. Even President Trump is ceasing to be amusing.

“When you’re out of politics as I am, you are out. I’m rising above it. I don’t read the newspapers or watch the news, because life goes on. It’s like in the Second World War – shows went on; people did panto with the bombs dropping around them. It’s the same with Brexit. We will survive it. I’m looking at the sunny uplands.”

Break a Leg is at the Komedia in Brighton on Monday, April 15.

Badges return for Trans Day of Visibility!

Following a huge take-up last year, badges helping raise awareness that you can’t assume someone’s gender identity and the pronouns they use will be available again across the city next week.

THE badges are part of a campaign to raise awareness of trans and non-binary people to mark Trans Day of Visibility on Sunday, March 31.

The badges are being made available to council and partner organisation staff, as well as members of the public who want to take part from Monday, April 1. Wearing the badges is, of course, voluntary.

Where to get your badge!
You can pick up one of the badges at any of the city’s libraries, the council customer service centres at Bartholomew House and Hove Town Hall, the receptions at Brighton Town Hall, Hove Town Hall and Portslade Town Hall, or in Brighton Museum, Hove Museum and the Register Office in Brighton Town Hall.

The badges available will be:

  • She, her, hers
  • He, him, his
  • They, them, theirs
  • Please use my name
  • Blank, for the wearer to fill in
  • Trans Ally

This year, there will be a number of stickers available in the city’s secondary schools for any young people who want to show their support.

The campaign has been put together by the council with support and involvement from local LGBT+ community groups, including The Clare Project, Trans Alliance, Allsorts Youth Project, the council’s LGBT Workers Forum, local NHS trusts, NHS Eastbourne, Hailsham and Seaford Clinical Commissioning Group, East Sussex Fire & Rescue, University of Brighton, University of Sussex, and Sussex Police.

Read the badge, respect people:
The message of the campaign is to read the badge and respect people. It’s that easy.

We all define our own gender and we should respect other people’s identities, and rights. While there is more freedom and safety to be ourselves, there’s still much more to do.

Who a person is may not match what you expect and may not be defined easily. If someone’s pronouns differ from what you assume, it’s for you to adapt and it’s okay to ask.

The initiative follows the city’s Trans Needs Assessment and Trans Equality Scrutiny group which identified the trans and non-binary community as a vulnerable group and highlighted the need to remove the stigma and build relationships.

Brighton & Hove is proud of being a diverse city, and the council is committed to equality and inclusion for everyone including all trans and non-binary residents and appreciate from a range of evidence that gender is more complicated than traditionally recognised.

The council’s equality and inclusion strategy supports those who are experiencing greatest disadvantage and the council will work with people to reduce their exclusion and ensure equality of opportunity by working in partnership with national and local organisations and communities.

To report a Trans Hate Incident, click here:

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