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From the East End to the West End!

Rita Simons to play Miss Hedge in the award winning musical, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie.

Rita Simons
Rita Simons

Best known for playing Roxy Mitchell in EastEnders, Rita will take to the stage in the role of Miss Hedge in the musical Everybody’s Talking About Jamie at the Apollo Theatre, London.  She will take over the role from Faye Tozer on August, 5, 2019 for a limited season.

Rita Simons said: “I am so excited to be playing Miss Hedge in what is by far my favourite show…I went to see it when it opened and always wanted to be part of this incredible show…roll on August!

Rita Simons is best known for playing Roxy Mitchell in BBC’s EastEnders and is one of Britain’s best loved TV actresses. She won Most Popular Newcomer at the National Television Awards and Best Newcomer at the Digital Spy Soap Awards. Rita most recently starred in the film The Krays: Dead Man Walking and was a campmate on the hit ITV reality show I’m a Celebrity…Get Me Out Of Here! in 2018.

Everybody’s Talking About Jamie opened at the Sheffield Crucible in 2017 and is now playing at the Apollo Theatre in the West End, booking until January 25, 2020.

To book tickets online, click here:

Help explore history of Stanmer Park

Help explore the history of Stanmer Park and capture its fascinating past?

BRIGHTON & Hove City Council are on the lookout for ten Oral History volunteers to help document the captivating stories of Stanmer Park’s past and present place.

The volunteers will record people’s feelings and attitudes towards the park, as well as the rich heritage of the Estate, its landscapes, and the people who have lived in the area over the years.

The Stanmer Park Oral History Project is a participatory, heritage-focused oral history and memory collection project, funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund and BIG Lottery Fund.

As part of the Stanmer Park Restoration Project’s Activity Plan, the chosen volunteers will be trained, in three separate 2 ½ hour sessions, in oral interviewing techniques and recording processes to enable them to undertake interviews for the Oral History Project.

Volunteers will also assist at public drop-in Memory Days. These events aim to engage with local communities and encourage residents to share stories, photos and other memorabilia they may have of Stanmer Park.

The training sessions will take place in Brighton in September, and volunteers should commit to attending all three. Volunteers should also be able to commit to conducting at least two oral history interviews, and to assist with Memory Day events.

Cllr Anne Pissaridou
Cllr Anne Pissaridou

Councillor Anne Pissaridou, Chair of the Environment, Transport and Sustainability Committee, said: “Stanmer Park is very well loved by so many of our residents, including my own family, and I’m sure there are many interesting stories to be shared.

“I would encourage anyone with an interest in the park and its history to consider becoming one of our ten volunteers and help us to capture and document these personal memories for future generations.”

Anyone interested in volunteering should email: Stella Richardson at stanmerproject@brighton-hove.gov.uk to request an application form.

The deadline for receipt of completed applications is Friday, July 12, 2019.

Shortlisted applicants will be invited to attend an informal interview on July 18, prior to the final selection of the ten volunteers.

The Stanmer Park Restoration Project will:

♦ Restore the Walled Garden and surrounding areas
♦ Restore the 18th century landscape and historical features
♦ Provide hundreds of education, training and volunteering opportunities – plus other activities as part of the new Activity Plan (of which the Oral History Project is part)
♦ Improve and increase park-wide access and movement for all
♦ Explain and celebrate the park’s history and importance
♦ Plant over 250 new trees
♦ Create a long-term management vision for the park for the next 10 years, including an estate-wide Woodland Management Plan
♦ Provide a dedicated onsite team to deliver the 10 year vision and beyond.

For more information about the Stanmer Park Restoration Project, click here:

 

REVIEW: Rainbows In Summer @St Georges Church

Who would have believed that 50 years after a group of outraged LGBT + protesters took on the thuggery of the New York Police outside the Stonewall Inn, that 3 to 4 million people would celebrate in the same streets of NYC?

WITH that very firmly in our thoughts, the Rainbow Chorus latest show could not have been more timely. Brighton is amazingly lucky to be blessed with so many LGBT+ choirs, all of whom have their own strengths and their own followers.

In the sweltering heat of our hottest day of 2019, they showed how a choral group can grow, mature, broaden and deepen their tonal qualities and give 100 per cent commitment to all they do.

There were a few old favourites on the bill, including the magical Rhythm of Life and the startlingly good Bohemian Rhapsody.

The phenomenon that is their charismatic director Aneesa Chaudhry, seems to not so much conduct as squeeze every note out of her singers, pulling their enthusiasm towards her and past her to us.

New members have certainly improved the tone and sheer power of the group and yet they are also capable of great moments of tenderness and beautiful harmonies – as in Eric Whitacre’s  composition the Seal Lullaby, written for the movies and rejected by Disney.

Time to Say Goodbye was cleverly reconstructed as was their Andrew Lloyd Webber Pie Jesu – written for high trebles and here solo performed by representatives from the four vocal sections of the choir.

If the evening could have got more poignant it did so when the group dedicated In This Heart to the memory of the tragically early death of Actually Gay Men’s Chorus member Richard Tredgett, who passed away less than  2 weeks ago on the eve of his own group’s summer concert.

LGBT choirs have a very important part to play in the history of the fight for gay rights – literally giving a voice to a community that still faces death and persecution in many parts of the world.

St. George’s Church is a great venue but sometimes difficult acoustically. The sound team balanced the voices better than I’ve heard before in this venue. But the obtrusive disco-style lighting effects are unnecessary when all our senses need to be concentrated on the glorious voices.

Rainbow Chorus can be seen and heard again on Brighton Pride Parade .

For more information about the chorus, click here: 

The Rainbows in Summer concert on Saturday, June 29 at St Georges Church, Kemptown was review by Brian Butler.

Healthy volunteers needed for ME/CFS/FM research

Dr Jessica Eccles and her team at Sussex University are keen to recruit healthy controls for their current ME/CFS/FM study.

UNAFFECTED family or friends may consider taking part.

The team are looking for healthy volunteers to take part in research which seeks to understand the biological and physical mechanisms of chronic pain and fatigue.

The study involves three study visits to Brighton and Falmer of up to 5.5 hours each, with routine medical procedures, including brain scans, heart rate and blood pressure measurement, upright tilt testing, questionnaires and blood tests.

This project is a collaboration between the Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust & Brighton and Sussex Medical School(BSMS).

They are seeking healthy volunteers aged 18 or over. You will be reimbursed and receive a copy of your brain scan.

Those interested, please contact the research team on PainandfatigueStudy@bsms.ac.uk or call Dr Kristy Themelis for further information on 01273 873121.

PREVIEW: Bitter Sour Is Back! @The Caroline of Brunswick

After a brief hiatus, Bitter Sour returns with a bang to celebrate PRIDE!

BRINGING to pride weekend Brighton’s biggest underground drag show to celebrate all kinds of queerness through the ages and beyond!

Your hosts for the evening are Cherry Fakewell and Count Addiction who will be joined onstage by Vlad Von Kitsch, Anchovy, Calypso, Danny Ash, Oedipussi, Riley and Thorn Hill.

Cover yourself in glue, jump in a vat of glitter, put on your non waterproof mascara and get ready for a journey you will never forget!

This will be their fourth Pride party and biggest yet. So get your tickets ASAP!

Rest your weary feet after a long day of Pride and go along and make some noise in the name of DRAG, CABARET, AND PRIDE!


Event: Pride Through The Ages

Where: Caroline of Brunswick, 39 Ditchling Rd, Brighton BN1 4SB

When: Saturday, August 3

Time: Doors open 7pm – show starts 7.30pm

Cost: Advance tickets £7.50 – door tickets £10

To book tickets online, click here:

Queen of the high seas invites her fans on cruise

Sail Away with Jane McDonald
Sail Away with Jane McDonald

Queen of cruising Jane McDonald charters her own ship for fans to join her on an exclusive week on the high seas.

Sail Away with Jane McDonald sees everyone’s favourite cruise star charter Royal Caribbean’s Anthem of the Seas in September 2020.

Jane’s exclusive charter of the ship will allow passengers an unprecedented Jane McDonald experience including guaranteed entry to see Jane perform two different exclusive headline shows, a one-of-a-kind Audience-With event and a seven-night holiday.

Sail Away with Jane McDonald is a Southampton round-trip visiting Cherbourg, Vigo and Lisbon.

To secure an exclusive pre-sale cabin on this exclusive cruise from 10am today (June 29), click here:

You can make a phone booking from 12midday by calling 0333 300 3455.

Jane said: “I can’t begin to tell you how excited I am to be having my own special cruise.

“As everyone knows, I’m just a true Yorkshire lass who loves performing and enjoying a cruise or two, so it makes perfect sense to charter my own ship.

“This is something I’ve wanted to do for a long time so to finally have the opportunity to invite everyone to come on holiday with me is very exciting.

“We’ll have a whale of a time and I can’t wait to see everyone there.”

Jane McDonald won a place in the nation’s hearts and became an instant star in the BBC’s documentary series The Cruise back in 1998.

Since then she has toured extensively and released 8 studio albums. While Jane has made a couple of one-off performances on cruise ships, Sail Away will be the first time everyone’s favourite cruise star has chartered a ship for her own dedicated cruise.

As well as seeing Jane perform during the cruise, passengers will also get to enjoy a special ‘Audience With’ event where Jane will be interviewed live on stage about her life and career.

And if that isn’t enough, Jane will be onboard for the duration of the cruise making special appearances throughout the ship.

Sail Away with Jane McDonald departs Southampton, September, 20, 2020. Passengers will enjoy Royal Caribbean’s luxurious Anthem of the Seas with full board dining and amazing features including the incredible Bionic Bar – where you can order cocktails mixed by robots, the FlowRider surf simulator, the signature Royal Caribbean Rock Wall, SeaPlex – the largest indoor active space at sea, RipCord by Ifly – the first skydiving experience at sea and North Star, providing 360-degree views 300 feet above sea.

For more information click here:

Supporting global LGBT+ human rights at World Pride

This year’s Pride is one of reflection as we celebrate the 50th anniversary of Stonewall.

WHILE we’ve certainly come a long way since the first Pride march was born from the Stonewall Riots of 1969 and we continue, despite backlash in some countries to make progress – progress has simply not come fast enough in other parts of the world.

Sixty-eight countries still criminalise same-sex relations. Sixty-eight places where being Queer is not only unsafe: it’s illegal.

As we celebrate Pride, so many members of our global LGBT+ communities suffer in a variety of unjust, illegal, and even brutal ways all over the world.

In Chechnya, attacks against our communities began anew earlier this year. People “perceived” to be anything but straight have been incarcerated, interrogated, and sometimes even tortured.

In the Caribbean, same-sex relations are still illegal in nine countries, with hate groups regularly rallying supporters to abuse members of the LGBT+ communities.

In Brunei, the Sultan recently expanded the criminalisation of same-sex relations to be punishable by death. People can be sentenced to death by stoning, just for being who they are.

Jessica Stern
Jessica Stern

Jessica Stern Executive Director of OutRight Action International, the LGBTIQ Human Rights Organisation said:  “This is egregious. But together we can and are standing up against discrimination and violence, and when do – we win.

“Think of Bhutan and Botswana, which recently struck down their anti-homosexuality laws. Think of Taiwan and Ecuador, which have become the most recent countries to legalise marriage equality. And this year, for the first, time, the World Health Organisation depathologised being transgender – which is no longer classified as a mental illness. 

“Now more than ever, during World Pride, is the time to think globally. What happens in one country can directly affect what happens in another.

“Unite with us and support our critical global work during Pride month? We need you, and we are so grateful for your solidarity and your support!”

For more information about World Pride, click here:

 

Seaside Special – a fundraiser for Sussex Beacon at The Grand

Britain’s Got Talent impressionist, Drew Cameron, vocal trio and stars of The Voice, The Flat Pack, have been added to the line-up for a benefit at The Grand Hotel, Brighton.

Seaside Special, a fundraiser for The Sussex Beacon will be hosted by Miss Jason, Maisie Trollette, Davina Sparkle and Poo La May. 

Wear your best ‘seaside outfit’ and you could be a SEASIDE STAR!

Drew Cameron
Drew Cameron

Have Mystic Maisie tell you your fortune! Meet Mr. Punch.

Enjoy traditional fun fair games, raffles, prizes as well as a three-course sea-side fish and chip supper!

Tickets for this fun packed evening cost just £40pp and are available from The Sussex Beacon Shops (London Rd., St. James’ St.) and from The Grosvenor Inn, Western St., Hove BN 1 2PG

For more information about the Sussex Beacon, click here:

 

Boris, Hunt, and their unfinished business with the Zaghari-Ratcliffes

As the Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt roadshow hits a town near you, it is crucial that the questions they face are not only about #Brexit.

BEFORE they can secure the keys to Number 10, they should certainly make a stop at London’s latest tent city whose existence is a direct result of an international crisis that they have both failed to resolve.

Outside the Iranian embassy in Knightsbridge, one of London’s finest neighbourhoods, a desperate father is on the street.

Wedged between the car of the Iranian ambassador, Hamid Baeidinejad, and the iron railings of the Kensington mansion block that houses the embassy, sits Richard Ratcliffe, who is now in the second week of his hunger strike in support of his wife, Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who is also on hunger strike in an isolated Iranian prison cell. He is surrounded by small tents and a blanket of flowers, while behind him looms a giant metal screen which was erected in front of the railings by embassy staff and which has become a huge noticeboard bearing messages of solidarity, love and goodwill from the steady stream of visitors Richard constantly receives, people from all walks of life, ages, faiths and nationalities, including many Iranians and MPs from across the political spectrum, all horrified that an ordinary family on holiday could find themselves ripped apart by opaque international politics they do not understand.

Meeting Richard to interview him for this article had something of a spiritual pilgrimage about it. He is really no different from any of us, just an ordinary man caught up in circumstances beyond his control, and yet a tangible and distinctive energy radiates from this deeply loving husband and father that impresses, humbles and inspires everyone who meets him. Some of these people, recognising how extraordinary he is and horrified by what has happened to this family, have stayed and have formed a small support team around him, the main focus of whose activity on the afternoon of my visit was pleading with the crowd not to touch, lean or even breathe on the ambassador’s car. As Richard and I begin our interview, the embassy staff decide to start painting the railings, for no obvious reason.

Both candidates in the race to be our next prime minister, Johnson and Hunt, are implicated in this tragic situation. While foreign secretary, Boris Johnson not only failed to secure Nazanin’s release but managed to make matters much worse when he told a parliamentary committee that Nazanin was “simply teaching people journalism,” a statement which the Iranian government seized on as proof that she was engaged in “propaganda against the regime”.

Utterly and disastrously wrong! Nazanin worked for an international charity, but her visit to Iran was an entirely private, family affair; she was taking their five-year-old daughter, Gabriella, to visit her Iranian grandparents. Mr Johnson is always very quick to distance himself from the fallout from his disastrous, cavalier and incompetent intervention, especially when the Tory-leadership race was underway, and this has outraged Richard. He was particularly upset by Johnson’s comments during the BBC debate that attempted to minimise the significance of his gaff. Richard insists that Johnson’s laziness had certainly aggravated the situation, and feels even more betrayed as he had genuinely believed, on the basis of assurances given to him by Johnson, that the foreign secretary would eventually have been able to bring his family’s nightmare to an end.

I doubt that Johnson will take the time to come and visit Richard as he keeps his vigil. Shielded from any proper scrutiny or questioning by expensive PR and media gurus, he is keen to push to one side the mess and embarrassment he caused the government and the foreign office by spectacularly failing in his duty of care to this British family, and to have people focus instead on his supposedly highly successful time as Mayor of London. He would be more than happy for the plight of Gabriella, her mum and dad, and her grandparents to fade into complete obscurity. I sincerely hope that we will not allow this to happen. It is precisely by giving his tired “do or die” mantras a rest and by meeting Richard, and engaging humbly and honesty with his family’s situation and the part he played in it, that Johnson could begin to display something like the moral fibre we should require of our prime minister.

It is Jeremy Hunt who, as foreign secretary, is now responsible for dealing with this situation, and the way in which he goes about securing Nazanin’s release must surely be regarded as one of the most important tests of his fitness to be our prime minister. The first responsibility of any government, and of the prime minister who leads it, is the safety of British citizens, and yet the two candidates very much give the impression that they have not been and still are not taking seriously enough the fact that a five-year-old British citizen, Gabriella, has had her British passport confiscated and is being prevented from returning to Britain and being reunited with her father while her mother’s mental and physical health continues to deteriorate as she is held captive by the Revolutionary Guard. What has happened to this ordinary family could happen to anyone of us who wishes or needs to travel in this increasingly unpredictable world, and we would certainly like to think that our government would do everything in its power to look after us.

We can all do something to help the Zaghari-Ratcliffes. Almost 3 million people so far have signed the Free Nazanin Ratcliff petition on the Change.org website (http://chng.it/MV6774YV5j) and a new global Twitterstorm campaign will be launched on July 4, 2019, 8-9pm GMT, and will then take place at the same time on the first Thursday of every month, the same time slot that was used for the enormously successful Twitterstorm campaign that secured the release of the Yemeni civil-rights activist Hisham Al-Omeisy.

Please join us and use the hashtags #FreeNazanin, #Hunger4Justice, and #NazaninKids4Justice.

A new, global children’s postcard-writing campaign is also being launched, in the hope that the gentle and wise voices of children will be able to succeed where the often inappropriate and careless words of adults have failed. Parents, teachers, youth workers, and everyone who works or cares for children, can tell them about what has been happening to Gabriella and her mum and dad, and help and encourage them to write a postcard to Hassan Rouhani, the president of Iran, expressing in loving and gentle words their concern and support for Gabriella and asking him to do what he can for her and her parents.

Postcards should be sent to:

President Hassan Rouhani
c/o The Embassy of Iran in London,
16 Prince’s Gate,
London SW7 1PT.

It is hoped that he will very soon receive over a million postcards and that they will remind him of what he swore to do in the oath he took when he first became president:

“I, as the President, upon the Holy Qur’an and in the presence of the Iranian nation, do hereby swear in the name of Almighty God to safeguard the official Faith, the system of the Islamic republic and the Constitution of the country; to use all my talents and abilities in the discharge of responsibilities undertaken by me; to devote myself to the service of the people, glory of the country, promotion of religion and morality, support of right and propagation of justice; to refrain from being autocratic; to protect the freedom and dignity of individuals and the rights of the Nation recognized by the Constitution; to spare no efforts in safeguarding the frontiers and the political, economic and cultural freedoms of the country; to guard the power entrusted to me by the Nation as a sacred trust like an honest and faithful trustee, by seeking help from God and following the example of the Prophet of Islam and the sacred Imams, peace be upon them, and to entrust it to the one elected by the Nation after me.”

Ray Barron Woolford latest book is The Last Queen of Scotland the biography of most important UK & Scot born LGBTQ Civil Rights activist of the past 100 years, Kath Duncan. Published by Austin Macauley

 

 

Don’t You Want Me photographic project seeks subjects

Don’t You Want Me (DYWM), a global documentary photography project showcasing the beauty and resilience of LGBT+ people with their rescued dogs, seeks subjects to take part in the project.

CURRENTLY in Toronto, Canada and Brighton, DYWM couples compelling images and personal narratives, show that individuals of all stripes have the ability to transform their lives when they are given love and the question of ‘who rescued who’ becomes universal, no matter how you identify.

Jack Jackson, DYWM co-founder, said: “Why is this project important? The project shows what happens when LOVE is taken away – by discrimination, hate and ignorance – and how people flourish when it’s given back.

“For many reasons, queer people can end up living outside of the typical familial structure and it’s easy to see how dogs might provide that sense of family. Queer people simply need the same as everybody else – love, purpose and family. Many of our participants to date have been trans, and their stories are a powerful resilient previously silenced voice teaching society how discrimination and gender inequalities harm us all.”

To get involved, click here: 

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