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REVIEW: Master Harold and the boys @ National Theatre

Master Harold and the boys 

National Theatre

The deep-rooted irony of this modern classic by Athol Fugard starts with its title. For the “master “ is a teenage white schoolboy and the “boys” are grown-up black employees.

The anachronism and injustice of apartheid and racial prejudice are laid bare in this customer-free afternoon tearoom in a South African park in 1950.

The tearoom is ruled over in his parents’ temporary absence by the teenager Harold – or Hally as everyone calls him. And what starts as a gentle, heart-warming comic piece about the rigours of a ballroom dancing contest, in which both the black servants are competitors, soon becomes a battle of emotions, intellect, ignorance and injustice and all set to the tempo of the heavy rain beating down on the cafe’s sloping glass roof.

The 90-minute story has distinctly different moods- happiest when Hally , sharply and uncompromisingly played by Anson Boon, remembers with fond detail his younger days in a boarding house with the two black servants.

But his raging adolescent insecurity , bolstered by his personal sense of injustice at having to look after his drunken invalid father, bubble to the surface and we see his unconscious prejudice openly manifest itself, changing the three men’s relationship with dire consequences.

A racist joke sparks devastating and seemingly irrevocable results, and we are horrified by its enactment. Thought the theme of dance starts as an evocation of art and skill, not just entertainment, it is cruelly misrepresented by the white boy as some kind of uncontrolled release of primitive instincts.

Lucian Msamati literally never sets a foot wrong as he glides among the cafe tables, teaching the younger more top-heavy Willie, gently and warmly played by Hammed Animashaun.

In the end we feel that Sam’s dignity and humanity will win through- as we now know historically it did- that as Willie says “ tomorrow will be fine “, though he says it with uncertainty ringing in his voice.

All three characters were real people in Fugard’ s life – his mother ran such a tea room and he himself had the nickname Hally.

And though the jury may have retired yet again to reach a verdict on South Africa’s uncertain future, at least in the play’s finale there is the exuberance and grace of ballroom dancing to send us out into the night rejoicing.

Master Harold and the boys is in repertoire at the National Theatre, London until 17 December.

For more info or to book tickets see the website here

 

Work Positive Sussex taster workshops at THT Brighton

Are you living with HIV and looking to gain skills and build your confidence?

Work Positive Sussex at Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) Brighton will be hosting a series of personal development taster workshops for people living with HIV in November and December, which are a taster of THT’s wider Work Positive Programme and are designed to support and build skills and confidence, and are a good opportunity to meet new people.

Tuesday, November 26: Overcoming Hurdles to Work and Volunteering

Thursday, November 28: Managing Your Health and Wellbeing in the Workplace

Monday, December 2: Building Self-Confidence

Wednesday, December 4: Writing a Successful CV for Volunteering, Study or Work

Tuesday, December 10: Writing a Successful Application for Volunteering, Study or Work

Thursday, December 12: How to Succeed at Interviews for Volunteering, Study or Work

To find out more, or to book your place at one of more of THT’s personal development taster sessions, email: workpositivesussex@tht.org.uk, or call Laura on: 01273 764 226.

All workshops are from 10.30am–1pm with light refreshments provided.

Terrence Higgins Trust

Brighton

61 Ship Street

BN1 1AE.

LGBTQ+ health expert welcomes call for NHS sexual orientation monitoring

LGBTQ+ health expert Dr Joanna Semlyen from University of East Anglia’s Norwich Medical School has welcomed a new government report, Health and Social Care and LGBT Communities, which recommends mandatory sexual orientation and gender identity monitoring across the NHS and in social care.

Dr Semlyen, whose research previously found health disparities including higher levels of common mental disorder, smoking, hazardous alcohol use and levels of unhealthy body mass index (BMI) in the UK LGBTQ+ population, said: “I am pleased to see the Women and Equalities Committee’s recommendation to ensure mandatory sexual orientation and gender identity monitoring across all NHS and state social care providers and thus in line with ethnicity monitoring. This an important commitment to and recognition of the role of data in demonstrating disparities in health and health service use and guiding resource allocation and intervention development, both key in addressing LGBTQ+ health in the UK population. 

“I am pleased to see the Women and Equalities Committee’s recommendation for the development of LGBT-specific public health interventions. Our research finds higher levels of common mental disorder, smoking, hazardous alcohol use and levels of unhealthy body mass index (BMI) in the UK LGBTQ+ population. These health disparities need to be addressed through not only the development of interventions that are sensitive to the needs of this population but also the development of more inclusive mainstream services.

“I welcome the Women and Equalities Committee’s recommendation for a review of guidance for medical schools regarding LGBTQ+ curriculum content development. It is crucial that all our doctors have access to training on LGBTQ+ health in addition to our medical students and so it is important that training is extended beyond higher education into both postgraduate training and continued professional development for qualified doctors.”

Read the full report here:

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