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REVIEW: Amélie The Musical @Devonshire Park Theatre

 

Amélie The Musical,

Devonshire Park Theatre,

Eastbourne

SO, a confession, I’d not seen the film, I like to go into these things uninformed, a musical should stand alone, proud and constructed with love and great tunes to work and shine.  I was thrilled from the tightly woven opening number, gripped by the carousel of musicians who whirled and played their way around the stage and moved by the wonderfully rich harmonics of the full cast ensemble singing.

My companion had seen, and loved the original film so was my touchstone for authenticity and was pleased that this kept mostly to the narrative of the film while still giving itself space to shine and grow in a theatrical live performance space.

It’s constructed by someone who obviously loves musicals, the protagonist’s journey whilst keeping true to the film’s original narrative having its own bursts of fantastic reimagined action and some excellent extra theatrical pieces thrown in. The music, although in the same style as the film, is original and well-constructed. Composer and lyricist Daniel Messe and Nathan Tysen working tightly together to make these songs hum, and radiate emotion, and with a large cast of strong singers doing tight and exquisite harmonies on stage this level of commitment to the message of the song, as well as the tune payed off big time.

The set is a noir Gallic delight, shifting, spinning and turning to suggest home, café,  metro/underground, street or cathedral, the colour palates and costumes are spot on, make up and soundscapes filling in the atmosphere perfectly and the lighting crew give us ambience and crepuscular style in abundance, this is a seriously well-polished show. There were some lovely visual jokes, lots of quick nods to the film, and the end of the first half, a superbly dark and surreal Elton John playing at the funeral of Lady Di was a laugh out loud delight of reimagined riotous campness. I’d like to list all the creative and technical crew who worked on this, as I was impressed on many levels, but you can check them all out here.

The narrative arc is honest, done with subtle delight and all the stage performers get a turn to shine, it’s a lovely ensemble show. Amélie is an oddly passive protagonist in many ways, and the narrative gives her the scope to develop while staying honest to her values, upbringing and oddly segued perspective on the world.  The musical constructs an engaging series of episodic moments brushing in and through peoples loneliness, distance from each other and the isolation that can create, it’s guided by the film’s narrative and also, through the joy of call-backs, reprises and reflection of songs and melody manages to bring to life the feeling of the fundamental interconnections of all things, and especially of all people.

Audrey Brisson as Amélie is touch perfect, petite, sharp, delicate, spontaneous, terrified, thrilled and open to her huge imagination. Her voice fills the space and reflects the characters simple clean strength and tenderness. I was enthralled by her performance the choreography of the stirrings of love done with engaging honesty. My companion felt her depiction of this much loved character an empathic frenzied triumph. The whole cast is simply great here, almost all of them playing instruments as they sing, dance, whirl and play, it’s a superbly choreographed piece, which – although constantly moving- gives time for reflection, contemplation and the important melancholic sadness of some of the characters to unfold.

Special mention to the puppets from Dik Downey, giving us a poignant younger Amélie and a riotously funny Gnome in the second half.

Was there anything wrong with this beautifully wrought show? Hmmm, I had the tiniest issue with the Allo’ Allo’ accents interspersed with plenty of actual French, but everyone committed completely to them and most even hit a decent Parisian accent, there was some rare muffling of some of the rather superb lyrics because of the accents, but that’s a very small observation of what was a superbly put together piece of musical theatre.

Listen very carefully, I shall say this only once;  Amelie is a superbly entertaining, heart-warming and thrilling musical, ticking all the boxes, in all the right ways and leaving you with a huge warm smile as you head home.

The Devonshire Park theatre is such a lovely space, and adds its warm comfortable charm to this superb show.

To book tickets or for more information, click here:

Until Saturday, October 14

 

MUSIC PREVIEW: Punk Politics and Pop – Siren @The Brunswick

Time keeps moving on, but Brighton lesbian band, Siren, is still here after 40 years, still writing, still rocking, still rebels to the core!

FIVE-piece lesbian indie/alternative rock band Siren emerged from the flourishing Brighton music scene in the late 70s, pushing the boundaries with their politically radical songs and punchy, eclectic style.

Siren toured nationally as a theatre company during the ‘80s, producing two albums, Siren in Queer Street and Siren Plays and some members of the group were also in Devil’s Dykes and Bright Girls (who were featured on the Brighton compilation albums “Vaultage 78” and “80”).

“[Siren] began bleeding the raw, kick-ass anarchism that their older music was all about – only now packaged up in a beautifully refined style of classic rock….. Although the politics was practically bubbling in hot fury throughout their performance that night, their wonderful sense of humour and light tales of love, were injected into each song”…….Gscene Magazine

Join the original bad girls of punk for their big birthday celebration gig at The Brunswick with sexy, soaring vocals, some damn fine musicianship with original songs and a good few covers, as well as an ‘80s quiz with prizes!

Your guaranteed a night of post punk fun, politics, pop and a bop.


Event: Siren 1979 – 2019: Punk Politics and Pop

Where: The Brunswick, 1 Holland Road, Hove, BN3 1JF

When: Friday, October 18

Time: 7.30pm

Cost: £8

To book tickets online, click here:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/sirenbrighton 

To listen to Siren, click here:


Greens call for emergency council meeting to plan for Brexit

Green Councillors on Brighton and Hove City Council call for an emergency meeting to discuss the council’s response to Brexit.

RALLYING against the suspension of Parliament by Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Green Councillors say the city’s communities must not be denied their opportunity for democratic scrutiny and debate.

Brighton and Hove City Council’s emergency plans for a ‘hard’ or ‘no-deal’ Brexit have been explored by a Brexit Working Group – a team set up to review the impact of leaving the EU on the city council. [2]

With less than two months to go before the planned date of departure from the European Union (E.U), Greens ask for the city’s communities and business to be given sight of the council’s contingency arrangements and call for a letter to be sent to Prime Minister Boris Johnson condemning his attempts to suspend Parliament – moves that Greens say prevent the city’s elected MPs from providing further scrutiny or democratic oversight.

Given the possible impacts of Brexit on the city, Councillor Phélim Mac Cafferty, Convenor of the Green Group, said that city residents “deserve to know that their elected representatives are taking the issues seriously.”

Cllr Mac Cafferty said: “As the council’s own impact assessments make painfully clear, all forms of Brexit will harm our city. We remain concerned about critical issues such as the impact on our European residents, community cohesion, the local economy and the effects felt by our many local and small businesses.

“Greens have said repeatedly that any legislation on Brexit affecting our council must be properly scrutinised – and have been horrified to witness Prime Minister Boris Johnson effectively close down Parliament, just weeks before October 31st. Suspension of Parliament is just one way that scrutiny and democratic debate has been denied to us all.

“From the news that residents who are EU citizens are struggling to obtain the right to stay in the country, to the potential impact on the peace process in Ireland, it’s clear there is so much at stake.

“The Conservative Government clearly sees no issue with leaving councils in the dark. Greens say: we owe it to our city’s communities and businesses to not only let them see how the council is preparing, but also, to know that these matters are being discussed by all 54 councillors. But above all, in a city that voted overwhelmingly to remain part of the European Union, residents deserve to know that their elected representatives are taking the issues seriously.”

Cllr Marianna Ebel
Cllr Marianna Ebel

Councillor Marianna Ebel added: “As a Councillor who is also a non-British EU citizen, I know that European citizens residing in Brighton and Hove are alarmed about the most recent developments – particularly the attempts by the Prime Minister to undermine democratic debate and scrutiny. I am deeply concerned to learn that many EU citizens in Brighton and Hove who have met the requirements for ‘Settled Status’ are not being granted it due to flaws in the system.

“Non-British as well as British EU citizens in Brighton & Hove feel their views on Brexit are being ignored – and their right to participate in the process is being denied. This is understandable as their elected representatives cannot debate the topic if Parliament is suspended. It is vital for our communities and businesses that our council is able to continue debate, discussion and democratic oversight at this time.”

Fast Track Cities conference 2019 opens in London

London Councils welcome International HIV conference to the capital“We’re proud that London is a global leader in HIV prevention”.

THE Fast-Track Cities conference 2019, is taking place at the Barbican Centre in central London till September 11.

The conference is the first global gathering of more than 270 cities that are accelerating their responses to HIV. With the aim of highlighting successes achieved across the Fast-Track Cities network, delegates will hear from world-leading experts and share best practice for reducing HIV and other infectious diseases.

Fast-Track Cities 2019 meets less than a week after Public Health England published data showing that new HIV diagnoses are at their lowest level since 2000, with London making especially good progress.

Overall new diagnoses in London declined 42% between 2015 and 2018 (from 2,585 down to 1,504).

Cllr Ray Puddifoot
Cllr Ray Puddifoot

Cllr Ray Puddifoot, London Councils’ Executive Member for Health & Care, said: “It’s fantastic that London is hosting the first Fast-Track Cities conference and that HIV experts from around the world will be visiting our city.

“Boroughs are proud that London is now recognised as a global leader in HIV prevention. Local authorities have played a crucial role in London’s success through our collaborative London HIV Prevention Programme, and we’re fully committed to achieving the goal of zero new HIV infections by 2030.

“I hope delegates enjoy their time in London and have a productive conference. Fast-Track Cities 2019 is an important opportunity to share knowledge from around the world and strengthen our collective resolve to end HIV altogether.”

Through the collaborative London HIV Prevention Programme (LHPP), London boroughs run co-ordinated city-wide campaigns and services. These include the Do It London campaign, an award-winning initiative set up in 2015 that helps Londoners understand how to look after their sexual health and prevent HIV transmission.

Paul Steinberg
Paul Steinberg

Paul Steinberg, Lead Commissioner of the LHPP, added: “We’re very excited London is hosting this prestigious conference bringing together some of the world’s leading HIV experts. 

“London is proud of its achievements as a Fast-Track City thanks to our public health campaigns, our world-class sexual health clinics and NHS services, our HIV voluntary sector, and the leadership of activists and politicians alike. This conference is a chance to share best practice as we strive towards our goal of zero new infections and zero stigma.”

London is a member of the worldwide Fast-Track Cities initiative and became one of the first global cities to meet the UN’s ambitious HIV diagnosis and treatment targets. Working together with other cities, London has pledged to achieve three key HIV goals by 2030: zero new transmissions, zero deaths, and zero stigma.

For more information about Fast Track Cities, click here:

eLearning company raises £663 for local LGBT+ charities

Digital learning specialists, Learning Technologies Group, raise over £650 for two Brighton LGBT+ charities during Pride Month.

LEARNING Technologies Group, a global provider of digital learning and talent management solutions, has a long history of charitable fundraising and donations, having previously supported charities such as Mind Out, Cancer Research, Crisis UK, Shooting Star Children’s Hospices, the Alzheimer’s Society and Cat’s Protection.

To celebrate Pride, some of the Brighton staff decided to organise fundraising events to raise money for two local LGBTQ+ charities: a bake sale, with funds going to the Brighton Rainbow Fund and a raffle, with funds benefiting the Brighton and Hove LGBT+ Switchboard.

Staff donated their baking skills as well as several prizes, including board games and artwork, to raise just over £331, which was then generously doubled by LTG for the final total of £663, split between the two LGBT+ charities.

Learning Technologies Group, which also has offices in London, Sheffield, several US cities, Hong Kong, Canada, Germany and Brazil, is a local employer in the fast-growing digital learning sector.

The organisation employs around 150 people in its Brighton office, including employees from several of LTG’s award-winning eLearning brands, including LEO Learning, gomo, Instilled LXP, Watershed and PeopleFluent.

Nick Bowyer, LTG’s Director of Operations, said: “Learning Technologies Group is one of the biggest employers in Brighton’s thriving digital learning sector. As an equal opportunity employer, we’re delighted to have many members of the LGBTQ+ community in this office, as well as other offices globally, and are equally delighted to support this great fundraising initiative.” 

School mental health services receive £350k boost

Mental health services for schools in Brighton & Hove to receive extra investment of more than £350,000.

THE funding will pay for a new mental health support team to provide more and hopefully better services on top of all the work already happening in schools in Brighton and Hove.

Seven new staff are being recruited into the city’s inclusion support service.

The team will launch its service during the autumn term, focusing on schools in areas of deprivation with funding secured jointly by the council and the local NHS.

Cllr Nick Childs
Cllr Nick Childs

Chair of the council’s children, young people and skills committee, Councillor Nick Childs, said: “Our inclusion support service and public health team are already doing excellent work in schools to address mental health issues.

“This new team will mean even more children will benefit.

“I believe our schools are at the forefront nationally in terms of using a ‘whole-school approach’ to address mental health problems.

“It’s not just about 1-1 work with children, and making sure teachers get the training they need to support children who are having a difficult time.

“Our schools are also looking at how exercise, the arts and good diet can improve children’s mental health.

“We believe the new team’s work will help more children to fulfil their potential, reduce exclusions and improve attendance.”

To find an update report to the council’s children, young people and skills committee on mental health services for children and young people, including the new mental health support team, click here:

 

Brighton and Hove ‘Ageing Well Festival’ set to be the biggest ever

Formerly the Older People’s Festival, now renamed The Ageing Well Festival, returns with over one hundred events in over fifty venues across the city.

PRODUCED by Impact Initiatives the two week festival for people aged 50+ will run from September 30 – October 13.

The Festival includes tours and talks, music and arts events, opportunities to try new physical activities alongside fashion and feel good sessions and the chance to learn new skills and meet like-minded people.

Venues will include Theatre Royal, Duke of York’s cinema, the Hop 50+, Larches Café, Amex Stadium, Fabrica Gallery, Rampion Wind Farm, Brighton Table Tennis Club, and Hangleton’s St Richard’s Community Centre.

The Deputy Mayor, Councillor Alan Robins officially launches the Festival at the Hop 50+ in Palmeira Square on Monday, September 30.

The Launch event will run from 10.30am – 3.30pm including singing, and by popular demand the return of the Brighton Beach Boys. Food and drinks will be available and all festival information including programmes will be on hand.

Impact Initiatives CEO Caroline Ridley said: “We have once again worked with some amazing people to bring the festival together. We have included some old favourites alongside new and exciting events especially for this year. The Festival which is based around the United Nations International Day of Older Persons is the only event like it in the UK and has grown from one or two events to a staple in Brighton and Hove’s festival calendar. We are incredibly proud of this year’s programme and are looking forward to the events.”

David Brindley from Brighton and Hove Council’s Public Health team added: “Brighton and Hove has around 85,800 people aged 50 + and this is increasing every year. We want the people of Brighton and Hove to age well and to add life to the years as well as years to life. We have always invested in the festival and have this year combined it with the wider Ageing Well service, and been able to confirm funding for the next three years. The Ageing Well service provides a range of support and activities across the City accessible through one phone number and email address. This makes it easier for people to find out what is on offer and to get the information they need to get involved.”

For more information and to pick up a programme contact Impact Initiatives on 01273 322940

Or to book on-line, click here:

PREVIEW: The Coast is Queer

The Coast Is Queer – a radical new festival featuring some of the best LGBT+ literature.

THE Spire in Kemptown plays host to a four-day festival of LGBT+ literature bringing together an impressive line-up of writers for a new venture presented by New Writing South and the Marlborough Theatre.

Sarah Crompton, general manger of New Writing South said: “Our ambition is to bring together the most vital LBGTQ+ voices to give them a platform to share their thoughts and ideas, and celebrate their own careers and lives.”

The 4-days of events will include writers, performers, academics, activists and readers for an extended weekend of events, workshops, panel discussions and performances to celebrate queer lives and writing.

Speakers will include Patrick Gale, Lesley Thomson, Juno Dawson, Jonathan Harvey, Kate Davies, Eley Williams, CN Lester, Sharan Dhaliwal, Emma Franklin and Dean Atta.

Eley Williams
Eley Williams

The programme commences at 6.30pm on Thursday, September 12 with a session with Eley Williams, a writer whose debut prose collection Attrib. and other stories was awarded the Republic of Consciousness Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize in 2018.

CN Lester, a classical and alternative singer/songwriter as well as LGBT+ and transgender rights activist presents Trans Like Me at 4.30pm on Friday, September 13.

Jonathan Harvey
Jonathan Harvey

Jonathan Harvey is best known as the creator of TV series Gimme Gimme, the stage play Beautiful Thing and he wrote the book for the Pet Shop Boys musical Closer to Heaven. He has written more than 200 episodes for Coronation Street while his solo show Musik, written with the Pet Shop Boys has just played at the Edinburgh Fringe and in London’s Leicester Square Theatre. Jonathan will be interviewed by David Sheppeard, Director of the Marlborough Theatre on Saturday, September 14 starting at 4pm.

For a full lineup of events and to purchase tickets online, click here:

 

FILM REVIEW: Kanarie (Canary)

The ‘canaries’ are the white male members of the South African Defence Corps Church Choir and Concert Group- a bunch of 18 and 19-year-olds who have a bewildering equal love for God and the Army.

IT’S an unusual subject for a gay-themed musical film set in the turbulent period of 1984/5 apartheid and at a time of the prolonged border war.

It’s also the era of Depeche Mode, Boy George, Culture Club, Ziggy and many Moreno– icons.

So our hero Johanes, played in a beautifully wistful far-away style by Schalk Bezuidenhout, finds himself at Valhalla Air Force Base with 22 other young men, subjected to a brutal corporal and his harsh punishment regime. It’s a kind of cross between The History Boys and It Ain’t Half Hot Mum, and the amazing thing is that it works on all sorts of levels. Johanes salvation is his obsession with Boy George, and his disappointment that his hero hasn’t ‘come out’.

Mostly naturalistic, it has occasional excursions into a kind of pop music video style, which for me didn’t come often enough. Johanes is a shy boy on the periphery of the group, overshadowed by the plump Ludolf played for all the laughs he can get by Germandt Geldenhuys.

When Ludolf is repeatedly bullied by both staff and other choristers, Johanes is his staunch defender. But the real plot development is the growing affection between Johanes and his room-mate, the brilliant pianist Wolfgang, played in a sensitive coming of age way by Hannes Otto.

It is of course a forbidden kind of love and predictably Johanes is torn between his Christianity and desire to be ‘accepted’ and a growing realisation of his gay nature.

As he starts the film cruising down his hometown Main Street in wedding dress and veil, we the audience have no doubt of his sexuality.

But there’s a touching kind of sensitivity in his physical fumbling with Wolfgang.

When the choristers are confronted with criticism from a left-wing anti-apartheid supporter at a concert, they have no real answer – it’s as if they had not thought about the real brutality of 1980’s South Africa.

Only when they go to sing for the troops on the front line of the border war does some sense of reality dawn and then not for long.

Full of original songs by co-writer Charl-Johan Lingenfelder, the film poses many weighty questions about right and wrong, truth and falsehoods, honesty and being closeted.

Director and co-writer Christiaan Olwagen gets top-class performance from his largely young cast and they are nowhere better than when singing in close harmony.

It’s an uplifting film that could well have a sequel as we find out about Johanes and Wolfgang’s future fate.

Kanarie (Canary) is distributed by Pecadillo Pictures.

Review by Brian Butler

REVIEW: Spring Awakening @The Spire

The Brighton-based Apollo Company has chosen for its inaugural production an award-winning musical that speaks strongly to today’s teenage audience.

IMAGINE Romeo and Juliet, with a rock musical score, and more than a nod to shows like Rent, Hair, Matilda and the pupils of Hogwarts school, but based on a 19th-century German play by Frank Wedekind.

Spring Awakening is bang up to date with its complex overlapping themes of teenage angst, mental illness, gay encounters, young male suicide, teen pregnancy and abortion. If all that sounds a heady mix for musical theatre, this show – book and lyrics by Steven Sater and music by Duncan Sheik – carries it off largely due to the huge talent and exuberance of its young cast.

Locked away in some kind of religious school, the boy pupils break all the rules and mix with the local girls in a story of emerging adolescent awareness that in this story leads to three personal tragedies.

Katy Markey directs, produces and choreographs her young players releasing their pent-up emotions and physical desires in sometimes frenzied, wild dance moves and angry revolutionary punk vocals.

Ollie Wray is outstanding as the brilliant, precocious but self-conscious radical atheist teenager Melchior Gabor who finds himself irresistibly intertwined with the hauntingly innocent Wendla, played with a touching innocence by Jody King.

The trio of leads is completed by a disturbingly real performance by Ollie Hawes as the deeply troubled Moritz, who ultimately can find no way out of his unhappiness except by blowing his brains out.

The music is by and large accessible and there are some fine numbers – Wendla’s solo Whispering is but one example, and Touch Me is an ensemble piece that graphically explores the youngsters’ growing awareness of what’s happening in their adolescent bodies.

When his two dead friends visit Melchior we are blown away by their rendition of the trio Those You’ve Known.

Apollo is an offshoot of Apollo Productions and the linked Apollo Academy, through which training ground many of the performers have come.

Performing in a very spacious venue like this former church presents its own problems and the lighting veers from beautifully effective to downright dreadful. There are times when the cast just aren’t lit and others when the back lighting is so much in the audience’s eyes that it kills what’s going on onstage.

That said, this is an inspiring start to a new company and they will be a group to watch in the future on the Brighton stage scene.

Spring Awakening runs at the Spire Centre, Kemptown until September 7

Review by Brian Butler

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