Site icon Scene Magazine – From the heart of LGBTQ+ Life

Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus: shoulder to shoulder with community groups at Brighton & Hove Pride

Images by Nick Ford Photography

Brighton Gay Men’s Chorus (BrightonGMC) stood shoulder to shoulder with other community groups against the elements on Saturday, August 5 for the Brighton & Hove Pride Community Parade, which assembled on Hove Lawns.

BrightonGMC’s parade float took to heart the Pride organisers’ call: Dare to be Different. Using the pink triangle and black text stylings of the campaign to abolish Section 28, the float celebrated 20 years since the law change which legalised being different in UK education.

For 15 years, this vindictive and disabling law banned local authorities and schools from ‘promoting’ homosexuality. Introduced by Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government in 1988, Section 28 also banned schools and councils from “teaching the acceptability of homosexuality as a pretended family relationship,” and from publishing any material which promoted homosexuality.

BrightonGMC members include many current or past teachers, who can now be positive and diverse role models in schools. They’re also able to give LGBTQ+ students appropriate support and relationships education. This is something that the hostile educational environment of Section 28 denied to a whole generation and which is now being replicated by ‘Don’t say gay‘ laws elsewhere.

Thirty-seven chorus members individually styled in pink and black costumes sang out against Storm Antoni’s equally punishing weather on Saturday, celebrating queer lives and identities and bringing carnival energy and smiles to spectators lining the parade route. While numbers were a fraction of the usual crowds, those who overcame both the elements and the rail company’s train cancellations were not disappointed.

A week earlier, the chorus had opened the Pride celebrations with their show OUT! reviewed in Scene magazine HERE. This heartwarming coming out tale about an inner storm of thoughts and emotions was performed to packed audiences and raised funds for fellow LGBTQ+ charity akt. And as this year’s queer ‘Christmas’ begins to fade into memory, BrightonGMC now turn their attention to their winter season and Christmas show Sing-deralla at Brighton Dome on Saturday, December 2.

BrightonGMC always welcomes new members and their next taster evening is on Tuesday, September 12. Anyone wondering about adding their voice to the country’s largest gay men’s chorus outside London is welcome to attend and try it for themselves! Simply contact membership@brightongmc.org for more details. As a community chorus, there’s no audition and the chorus director will help you find the right section for your voice. You’ll be paired with an experienced member as a buddy for the evening, get the feel for a typical rehearsal and find out what the chorus’s three ‘S’es – singing, socialising and support – are all about.

While Brighton & Hove Pride may come but once a year, the support that community groups offer to help LGBTQ+ people live our everyday lives continues year round. This is often through a combination of the networks, skills, talents and sense of belonging which are nurtured by groups such as BrightonGMC. They form a vital part of the community space which helps people from all backgrounds and of all identities to flourish.

For more info on BrightonGMC, CLICK HERE

Exit mobile version