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TONIGHT: Charity Gala – ‘Out of the Darkness & Into the Spotlight’ with Gay Men’s Dance Company

The GMDC (Gay Men’s Dance Company) host their third annual Charity Gala on Saturday April 13, 2019 at the Troxy, music venue in London.

Out of the Darkness & Into the Spotlight is a variety show with a cast of around 150 GMDC members from their voguing, musical theatre, pole dancing and choir groups.
Expect an uplifting celebration of LGBT and Queer culture and this year organisers will be focusing on Mental Health issues.
In late 2018 a member, one of the GMDC family committed suicide making them more determined than ever to try to help combat all of the problems and stigma surrounding mental health issues today and to try to stop more people from feeling the need to take their own lives.
Last year they raised almost £20k, and this year want to smash that target.
All profits will be donated to Opening Doors, Mind Out, GMFA, London Friend, Positive East, ELOP, Dean Street & Diversity Role Models to help with their amazing work.
GMDC funds scholarships for low-income members and people struggling, so they can attend their classes and be a part of the amazing GMDC community who have been able to do a deliver a few of their own community projects.
All net proceeds raised will go to the GMDC Foundation, helping to create a healthy and connected community.

Event: Gay Men’s Dance Company presents a Charity Gala: Out of the Darkness & Into the Spotlight

Where: TROXY Music Venue, 490 Commercial Road, London E1 OHX

When: Saturday, April 13

Time: Doors open 6.30pm – show starts 7.30pm

Cost: Tickets from £25

To book tickets call: 0844 249 1000

Preview: Trojan Horse / Rainbow Flag @Marlborough Pub & Theatre

Artist Ian Giles’ Trojan Horse / Rainbow Flag, a programme of artist films about LGBT+ spaces, is to be screened at the Marlborough Pub & Theatre in Brighton on Friday, April 26 from 6.30pm.

Produced by videoclub and supported by Arts Council England, this screening of artist Ian’s newly commissioned film, which provides the conceptual springboard to show works by Sam Ashby, Rob Crosse, Mathew Parkin and Hannah Quinlan andRosie Hastings, will be followed by an informal discussion about LGBT+ spaces with local leaders and organisers.


Event: Trojan Horse / Rainbow Flag

Where: Marlborough Pub & Theatre, 4 Prince’s St, Brighton, BN2 1RD.

When: Friday, April 26.

Time: 6.30pm doors and bar, 7pm screening.

Tickets are free but booking required.

For more information, and to reserve your place, click here:

 

Four local LGBT+ projects receive grants from LGBT+ Future Fund

CONSORTIUM, the national umbrella body for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender + organisations announce the successful recipients from the first round of its new LGBT+ Futures Fund which includes four Brighton based LGBT+ organisations.

24 LGBT+ organisations across England will share the funding, with grants ranging from £1,000 to £19,000, and undertake a range of work, from engaging young LGBT+ people through to several pride organisations.

Funding will support LGBT+ communities to be more visible and organisations supporting LGBT+ communities more sustainable.

Funding for the programme is thanks to money from the Government Equalities Office, who are investing in the LGBT+ sector as a result of their National LGBT Survey—the largest survey of LGBT+ people undertaken by any Government.

The LGBT Action Plan details over 75 actions, including support for the infrastructure working with those LGBT+ people most in need.

Brighton based organisations receiving funding include:

Allsorts Youth Project: receive £12,525 to create a programme of work specifically aimed at improving BAMER/POC inclusion.

Marlborough Theatre C.I.C & New Writing South: receive £9,475 to stage The Coast is Queer, an LGBTQ writers festival in Brighton.

MindOut LGBTQ Mental Health Service: receive a £10,961 sustainability grant to build the capacity and capabilities to plan the next 3-5 years.

The Clare Project: receive £8,000 to create a TNB drop-in in Hastings, a dedicated opportunity for trans and non-binary communities.

Baroness Susan Williams

Minister for Equalities, Baroness Susan Williams, said: “Local LGBT groups are incredibly important to the work of the Government Equalities Office and the advancement of equality in the UK. We are giving these fantastic organisations the resources to tackle the real issues faced in their communities, and to provide training and development to grow and become more sustainable. This investment will be vital in making sure our LGBT action plan brings about real, lasting change across the whole country.”

Paul Roberts OBE
Paul Roberts OBE

Paul Roberts OBE, Chief Executive at Consortium, added: “This is one of the first dedicated pots of funding for LGBT+ communities in England. We are delighted to be working with the Government Equalities Office to invest in some amazing organisations. The funding will help support diverse parts of our LGBT+ communities to be more visible and to help those organisations supporting LGBT+ people in need become more sustainable. Whilst a relatively small injection of money into the sector, we hope to make a big impact and we will be supporting both our grant recipients and other LGBT+ organisations to develop the skills and knowledge to get to the next level. We will also be making a further £200,000 available in the second round of the LGBT+ Futures Fund, launching in early May.

“We hope this programme is just the start of longer-term support and funding for the LGBT+ sector, not only in England, but across the whole of the UK. Consortium will be working with other funders and stakeholders to look at how we can use this opportunity to leverage further new money to support LGBT+ people and communities.”

A spokesperson for the Brighton based, Clare Project, said: “We’re absolutely delighted to be receiving the LGBT+ Futures Fund Grant to extend our TNBI support service ‘TNB’ across East Sussex. Not only will this offer a chance to kick-start a sustainable support group and socialising opportunity for our community, but also enable us at The Clare Project to empower our service users into becoming volunteers”.

Projects funded will undertake their work up to March 2020, alongside further grantees that will be awarded following the second round of grant applications which will open on May 3.

For the full list of successful organisations receiving grants, click here:

Consortium runs a contract for the Government Equalities Office to deliver both a small grants programme and associated skills development and training programme up to March 2020 across England.

For more information about the programme, click here:

For details of all organisations in receipt of funding through the LGBT+ Futures Fund, click here:

OPERA REVIEW: Gounod’s Faust @Royal Opera House

Experience the decadence and elegance of 1870s Paris in David McVicar’s spectacular production of Gounod’s best-loved opera, Faust.

Faust
@Royal Opera House
Covent Garden, London

Disillusioned with life, the aged philosopher Faust calls upon Satan to help him. The devil Méphistophélès appears and strikes a bargain with the philosopher: he will give him youth and the love of the beautiful Marguerite, if Faust will hand over his soul. Faust agrees. Initially seeming to love Marguerite in return, he soon abandons her. Her brother Valentin returns from the war and is furious to find his sister pregnant. Will Faust repent his destructive actions, and can his soul, and Marguerite’s, be saved?

 Image by Tristram Kenton
Image by Tristram Kenton

This is the fifth revival of Faust at Royal Opera House (ROH), but the first time for me, so fresh eyes on an obvious favorite for the audiences.

A last-minute  cast change due to illness saw Soprano Mandy Fredrich flown in – with a pretty seamless adaptation to the role of Marguerite – an onstage announcement that Erwin Schrott who was singing Mephistopheles was also feeling unwell made one think there was rather a lot of things going wrong on this opening night. We raised our eyebrow and settled down to the marathon first act.

I’m no great fan of French opera, but very quickly relaxed under the baton of conductor Dan Ettinger who brought the ROH orchestra to a purring powerful energy, engaging the music, underscoring the narrative and acting with just the right amount of emotional flex, allowing the music to flow and ebb before rising to the inevitable dramatic conclusions.

Image by Tristram Kenton
Image by Tristram Kenton

The three principal singers looked as if they’d been rehearsing together for weeks, Fredrich’s rich tones underscored the tender innocence of Marguerite progression and ultimate fall whilst never letting us forget her lack of agency. There were moments where I wanted her to soar, but perhaps considering she took over the role at the last-minute, she did an impressive job.

Schrott brought a rather cheeky authority to his role, with real warmth and bombastic charm, and hardly any sign of his sore throat, contrasting well with tenor Michael Fabiano whose rich lyrical voice filled the auditorium and pleased the full house.

The chorus were on full form, having as much fun as possible without smiling and giving power and diction to the contrasting passages, jingoistic or catholic, at the best, they are convincing to hear and interesting to watch. I adored them.

Gounod’s Faust is curious, heaving with melodrama, overflowing with toxic masculinity and utterly bonkers in parts, but then it’s an opera about struggle, desires and vanity reflecting the time of its writing and also, it’s setting.  The opera reflects these dichotomies in a crepuscular campiness of quite gothic proportions. The lurking sets, strike the most decayed decadent pose keeping the eye focused on the action and Charles Edwards’s designs are superb. Choreography and dancing combine in some impressive atmospheric large cast set pieces which unfold with a precise and natural feeling.

Image by Tristram Kenton
Image by Tristram Kenton

With a troupe of acrobatic dancers who double as sinister, lithe and insectile demons, and a trio of ballet numbers there’s plenty to watch as well as listen to. David McVicar’s original production set in Paris during the Second Empire does very little to flesh out thinly drawn characters and this revival by Bruno Ravella seems to stick rather close to what is, after all, a much-loved production. The dancers echo the sordid decent into destitution with some genuinely creepy ballet and give a sombre terror to the death of Marguerite’s child.

Image by Tristram Kenton
Image by Tristram Kenton

This was an exercise in high camp done with a deftness of touch from conductor Ettinger which gives the music a serious emotional heft regardless of the sometimes daftness being played out on stage. Schrott’s Mephistopheles followed this lead giving us a gloriously tongue-in-cheek delight to his acting and allowing some humour to reflect off the glittering darkness of the narrative.

Standing surrounded by sensuous posed and gilded famous queens of history and decked out in a huge cape – before throwing it off and exposing himself glittering in an exquisite jet black rhinestoned ball gown, there was a hint of – dare I say it – Rocky Horror about Schrott’s divine and exquisite self-adoration in the role, rescuing it from serious interpretation, allowing his carefree wickedness to flood the stage.

Plays until May 6

Performances on April 15, 18, 25, 30, May 3 & 6.

For more information or to book tickets, click here:

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