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New route for Brighton & Hove Pride Community Parade in 2019

The Brighton & Hove Pride Community Parade – Generations of Love Celebrating 50 years of campaigning with Pride – has a new route in 2019.

DUE to Brighton & Hove Council carrying out landscaping work around Old Steine and Victoria Gardens as part of the controversial Valley Gardens Scheme, the Brighton Pride Community Parade on Saturday, August 3 has been re-routed.

Starting as usual at 11am on Hove Lawns seafront by the Peace Statue, the parade will pass easterly along Kings Road seafront turning left up West Street.

The Parade will progress past the clock tower along Queens Road towards Brighton Station, turning right down North Road just past Community Base.

At the bottom of North Road the Parade will turn left to re-join the old route to process up Gloucester Place and London Road finishing in Preston Park.

Brighton & Hove Pride raises money for the Brighton Rainbow Fund who give grants to local LGBT/HIV organisations delivering effective front line services to LGBT+people in the city.

The present Pride organisers have raise £705,000 for good causes in the city.

 

For more information about the Brighton Pride Community Parade, click here:

THEATRE REVIEW: Girl on the Train @Theatre Royal

A girl goes missing and is found dead. There are 5 suspects but can we follow the clues to the real murderer?

IT’S not Cluedo and its not Agatha Christie, but this modern-day psychological thriller grips us every minute of its 2 hour traffic on the stage.

Based on Paula Hawkins best-selling novel and the Hollywood movie which starred Emily Blunt, it makes its audience gasp in horror and surprise and also inexplicably laugh at times.

The inappropriate laughter is caused I think by the tension of the piece, and there are comedic moments, which as we end up laughing at the tragedy of the drunkard are not quite what we should be doing.

The plot twists and turns but always centres on Rachel Watson, the girl of the title, played wonderfully by Samantha Womack. Bleary-eyed, unsteady on her feet, only semi-aware of her surroundings, Womack holds our attention every second she is on the stage.

She’s supported by somewhat stagey performances from her fellow actors – John Dougall for instance is the stereotype ex-drunk detective who suspects everyone and gets nowhere near the truth.

Adam Jackson-Smith is a highly likeable ex-husband who has a dark side. In fact all the characters have something to hide, some secret flaw that makes them all imperfect in this dystopic drama.

Director Anthony Banks moves the episodic scenes along at a high speed train pace and the scenic devices of the train, and the other locations are believable, backed as they are by a filmic soundscape reminiscent of a Hitchcock classic.

For those who don’t know the plot, I won’t spoil it for you, but enough to say that we are all guilty of building our own fantasies and then believing them.

Rachel Wagstaff and Duncan Abel have taken a well-known and loved novel and a striking film version and converted them extremely well for the confines of a live performance on a stage.

You’ll be thrilled; you’ll be shocked and you might think twice about staring into other people’s lives from the windows of your train journey.

The Girl on the Train runs at the Theatre Royal, Brighton, until Saturday, June 22. It will later transfer to the West End.

Review by Brian Butler

 

REVIEW: Randy Roberts @Crazy Coqs, London

Whatever else you do this week, get a ticket and go see the 5-star phenomenon that is Randy Roberts.

CALLING him a female impersonator makes him sound less stunning than he is, because he not only brings legends Bette Midler and Cher to the cabaret stage; he also adds his own secret ingredient- a kind of self-deprecating parody.

Opening in a red glitter jump suit, he adds to the costume a skirt and huge red feather headdress and belts out a terrifically powerful medley from Hello Dolly.

Randy‘s skill is that he not only looks like his heroines, but he also sings and speaks like them.

The high cheekbones, the wide-eyed knowing look, the very walk is Bette’s .

“I know what you came for, and I’ve got it in excess “ he tells us and he’s not wrong. He’s quickly out into the audience and picking a victim – who is of course a willing participant. Last night it was Matt, who manages BA pilots. The digs and references to Matt in both dialogue and song come thick and fast and it’s all in “ the best of all possible taste” as the late Kenny Everett would have said.

The show is in three distinct parts, and while he rushes into the “kitchen” as he describes it, we get a video of song and chat to keep us amused. In a few minutes he is back – looking every inch Cher. “Bang bang” leads into “If I could turn back time”.

He’s all huge black curls and sparkly black and silver outfit, with legs that go on forever.

His Cher is a little more parodied and his strangulated speaking voice gets lots of laughs. But when he sings – OMG – it IS Cher, who he claims is on her 17-year farewell tour.

Poor Matt, who is loving it, gets dragged up on stage, and with added Sonny wig and false moustache, plays his part in “I got you babe”. The voice is perfect again – I particularly love “it’s in his kiss” where Randy accentuates “kee-ass “.

Then it’s offstage again and we get a video of Randy as a man, transforming before our eyes while singing “I put a little more mascara on”.

When he returns it’s as a fiery redhead, still in drag, but this time a persona of his own creation. It’s what he calls his “lounge act” and the songs bring out the best in him when he’s not trying to be someone else.

I particularly loved “If I can’t sell it, I’m gonna sit on it – I ain’t gonna give it away” – which he says refers to a piece of furniture but is actually stacked high with bodily innuendo.

As he ends his 75 minute set, he gives us his true male baritone in an electrifying rendition of the Phantom’s Music of the Night.

He could certainly grace any stage with a Phantom or even a Norma Desmond. Viva Randy.

Randy Roberts is at the Crazy Coqs, off Piccadilly Circus until June 23. His latest CD Back in Business is out now.

Review by Brian Butler

 

Trains to run throughout the night during Pride 2019 celebrations

Trains will run throughout the night to make exit from the city for visitors smoother following this years Brighton Pride celebrations.

GOVIA Thameslink will run longer trains throughout the night during Brighton Pride this year while operating a ‘rainbow themed’ queueing system to help disperse crowds quickly and safely from Preston Park.
Last year following the appearance of Britney Spears on the main stage at Pride, the train company struggled to disperse the crowds from Brighton Station quickly and effectively after Sussex police gave the order to lock the gates to Brighton station, leaving departing trains running empty from the station.
This year, a new queuing system with Rainbow signs will be in operation to help crowds disperse quickly after the appearance of Kylie Minogue at Preston Park on Saturday, August 3.
Angie Doll
Angie Doll

Angie Doll, Passenger Services Director for Southern and Gatwick Express, said: “We are really proud to play our part in making sure travellers can get to and from this year’s Pride, which promises to be another dazzling celebration of inclusivity. 

“This year, we are really pleased to support the organisers and partner agencies with an enhanced queuing system which will really help get people safely away from the event towards the train station. We are providing extra services but as you would expect for such a popular event, it will be very busy, so I would ask everyone coming to the event to plan ahead and allow plenty of time to get home.” 

A spokesman for Govia Thameslink added: “We have additional trains late into the night from Brighton which will provide capacity for 10,000 extra passengers into London after 10.30pm on Saturday, August 3.

“All our London trains except one will be full-length, 12-carriage services (normally many are eight-to-10 carriages long).”

Paul Kemp
Paul Kemp

Paul Kemp, Managing Director of Brighton & Hove Pride 2019, said: “Pride is an important event for our City with visitors coming in from across the UK & worldwide. We are extremely heartened by the positive working partnership and support over Pride weekend and the enthusiasm from all at GTR.”

Further details about Brighton Pride, click here:

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