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REVIEW: BalletBoyz – theTALENT

Ballet Boyz

Theatre Royal, 

New Road, Brighton

It’s now 14 years since Michal Nunn and William Trevitt first brought us BalletBoyz, and their all male dance company is still going strong, delivering on its manifesto to promote men’s dance and make modern ballet and contemporary dance more accessible to a wider audience. But this doesn’t necessarily mean giving audiences an easy ride.

The Murmuring, the first part of this double bill, is challenging on every level. Choreographer Alexander Whitley was inspired by murmurations, mass flocks of starlings in flight, to create a dark and difficult piece exploring the relationship between the group and its members, where individuals and especially free thinkers are at once supported and yet restrained by those around them.

Whitley succeeds in creating a dark and disturbing, dystopia, his choreography often reminiscent of the stuff of nightmares as his dancers variously struggle to break free of each other. His vision is well supported by Jackie Shemesh’s shadowy lighting and the ominous, pounding, grinding soundtrack written by electronic duo Raime.

The dancers were an outstanding ensemble, capturing a society and a dynamic where freedom of expression must ultimately give way to order and conformity.  The final image of the piece, projected on to the stark back wall of the set, was a hauntingly beautiful photograph of a single, tortured dancer, who we assume has failed to escape the clutches of the group and now languishes unfulfilled and in despair.

As with The Murmuring, Mesmerics, the second part of the evening, was introduced to the audience by a short film in which choreographer and dancers shed light on the dance’s creation and development. As before, this provided the audience with an icebreaker to the piece to follow and also intimated a possible sense of narrative and meaning. Some purists and intellectuals may not appreciate this, but it is a device which is entirely fitting for a company whose mission is in part to demystify dance.  It worked on the night.

In contrast to the first half of the evening, Mesmerics is a joyfully uplifting, life affirming piece, in which Christopher Wheeldon’s wonderful choreography draws a series of beautiful tableaux filled with harmonious shapes, elegant lines, and groupings and interactions which impart tenderness and grace.

Natasha Chivers’ simple blue and white lighting lit each vignette like a piece of classical fine art, and alongside Philip Glass’ neo classical score and Wheeldon’s moving choreography created a performance that was both mesmerising and truly beautiful.

Once again the piece showcased the talents of all the dancers, with the whole company interpreting Wheeldon’s steps with insight, power and grace. It was a wonderful finale to an absorbing evening and the company deserved their standing ovation at the end.

theTALENT spring tour continues until, June 7.

For tickets and information on other performances on tour, click here:

 

 

 

Paris Lees scoops top award

University of Brighton alumna and transgender role model Paris Lees has been named Young Campaigning Journalist of the Year.

Paris LeesTHE writer, TV personality and transgender activist was presented with her gold award at a gala even organised by MHP Communications.  Paris was one of the winners of MHP’s 30 to Watch 2015, an annual awards ceremony which recognises up and coming media talent.

The event took place at the home of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts in London on May 19.

Paris, who graduated from Brighton University in 2009 with English Language and Literature BA (Hons), said: “This award is lovely on a personal level, but, more importantly, it validates a cause I’m so passionate about – human rights for trans people.

“When I first transitioned, like many trans people, I was depressed and isolated. I looked to the media for inspiration and all I saw were people like me being ridiculed. Five years on and things are looking very different. I’m very proud to have shared a special moment at the awards with so many promising young journalists who don’t hate but in fact celebrate diversity.”

Paris, who has presented on Channel 4’s Creative Diversity, has met with executives at the Daily Mail, EastEnders and BBC Comedy through her awareness-raising project All About Trans.

Last year she was named Ultimate Campaigner at the Cosmopolitan Ultimate Woman of the Year Awards and was invited to a reception at Downing Street with Samantha Cameron. She has also topped the Independent on Sunday’s Pink List.

Paris was previously honoured by Brighton University for her outstanding intellectual and public contribution in a variety of media to subjects surrounding transgender issues.

REVIEW: The Bald Prima Donna

Eugene Ionesco’s classic absurdist play was first performed in Paris in 1950 and since then has gone on to become one of the most performed plays in France.

The Bald Prima Donna
© Image by Paul H. Lunnon

THIS is perhaps not surprising given that, situationally, the play is set in the suburbs of London and takes great delight in poking fun at the strange lives and antics of its English, lower middle class protagonists.

But this wonderful comedy is less about making fun of rosbifs, and much more about the frailties and nuances of language.

The dialogue is an endless cycle of non sequiturs and contradictions, with characters inhabiting a space where words appear to hold no consistency, meaning or truth. The outcome is an evening of relentless farce and much hilarity.

In Slip of the Lip Theatre Company’s production, Griselde Williams and Brian Merry nicely capture the comic angst, repression and isolation of the seemingly straight laced Mr and Mrs Smith, while Sarah Dorsett and Peter Easterbrook are very funny as their mysterious, slightly racy neighbours, their dialogue delivered with deadpan innuendo and some fine comic timing.

All four are well supported by Annie McKenzie’s sexily subversive maid, and Guy Remy’s dimwit of a Fire Captain.

The evening was funny throughout and at times side-splittingly hilarious.

Despite being over 60 years old, the play remains as relevant as ever in an age of so called communications, where we fritter away so many words on mobile phones, texts, emails, and social media yet often fail to say anything that is meaningful.

The Bald Prima Donna plays at the Purple Playhouse Theatre, 36 Montefiore Road until May 27

REVIEW: Fringe: Stalin’s Daughter at the Rialto

Stalin's DaughterIn Stalin’s Daughter, David Lane’s powerful and disturbing monologue presents us with a haunting psychological examination of the later life of Joseph Stalin’s daughter, Svetlana Alliluyeva.

Uprooted and transient after her defection to the United States three decades earlier, the story opens with Svetlana arriving by taxi in Clifton, a quaint neighbourhood of Bristol. As the taxi pulls away, Svetlana’s wide, slightly teary eyes convey an unsettling mixture of hope and anxiety as she looks to establish another new life in yet another new country.

Now in her 60’s, Svetlana rents a dingy flat and re-invents herself as Miss Phyllis Richards.  Longing to be integrated into her new community, we see her tentatively flirting with the local greengrocer, on whom she has a crush, and dancing at the Women’s Institute.

But hiding her true identity means that Svetlana is always ‘observing not participating’.

Her recollections are at times bitter-sweet and convey a nostalgic yearning for the mother country she has chosen to turn her back on. But more harrowingly, her attempts to move on as Phyllis and other subsequent identities are constantly thwarted by the terrifying childhood memories which pervade her everyday life.  These ‘poison memories’ are personified by the disturbingly ever-present Leika, an imaginary playmate once invented by Svetlana’s tyrannical father to keep his daughter in her place.

At the centre of all this, Kirsty Cox is powerful, convincing and moving as Svetlana, finely portraying the inner turmoil of the daughter desperately wanting to live an ordinary, unfettered life in the present but forever shackled by the ghosts of an extraordinary past.

Much praise also goes to David Lane’s relentlessly rhythmic, wonderfully poetic text, which Cox delivers uninterrupted for a full seventy minutes – a remarkable achievement in itself.

Rialto, Dyke Road until May 17.

First LGBTQ Leadership Summit to be held in Israel this summer

LGBTQ leaders from around the world are being invited to join their peers at the 40 Years of Pride conference in Tel Aviv from, June 9-11, 2015.

40 years of PrideTHE conference is organised by The Aguda, the National Israeli LGBT group which serves as a human rights organisation working to improve the lives of LGBT people, and A Wider Bridge, North America’s pro-Israel LGBTQ organisation.

The event aims to bring together a diverse group of LGBTQ leaders to inspire and strengthen each other, build skills and networks, and celebrate 40 years of LGBTQ progress in Israel.  It will culminate with Tel Aviv Pride, a celebration that attracts 150,000 people from across the world.

Many nations and communities will be represented, with an array of religious and secular practices, races, ethnicities, sexual orientations and gender identities.

WEB.600.3

Arthur Slepian, Executive Director of A Wider Bridge, says: “A Wider Bridge and The Aguda are LGBTQ organizations that each see that part of our respective missions is to be an active player in the global LGBTQ struggle for equality. This conference is a vehicle to move that struggle forward in a positive way. We hope this conference leads to a framework for greater global collaboration. We are holding this conference in Israel because we believe the Israeli LGBTQ community has something important to add to the global conversation about LGBTQ rights.”

Topics on the agenda include:

·       the role of religion and faith in the movement for LGBTQ equality

·       LGBTQ legal activism across the globe

·       the struggle for transgender rights and economic empowerment

·       making our communities and schools a better place for LGBTQ teens

·       the challenges faced by minorities within a country’s LGBTQ community

·       what can we learn from the United States’ success with marriage equality?

Christophe Girard, Mayor of the Fourth Arrondissement of Paris, will be the opening keynote speaker, and Ed Murray, Mayor of Seattle, will deliver the closing keynote address.

Other speakers include Jennifer Pizer (Lambda Legal), Karine Jean-Pierre (Columbia University), Marsha Botzer (The Ingersoll Gender Center), Vincent Jones (Reinvent Communications), James Kirchick (The Daily Beast), Rev. Dr. Monica Corsaro (United Methodist Church), Alice Kessler (Equality California), Maria Federico-Moscati (Sussex School of Law), Frederick Hertz (Attorney and Mediator), Davis Mac-Iyalla (Nigerian LGBT activist), Brad Sears (The Williams Institute), and Vince Garcia (The Point Foundation).

Delegates will have the opportunity to travel to the historic city of Jerusalem to tour the Old City, visit Yad Vashem (the Holocaust memorial & museum), and meet with key Israeli policy makers and community leaders in the Knesset (the Israeli Parliament). There will also be a celebration featuring leading Israeli musical and artistic performances.

The conference will culminate with the Tel Aviv Pride celebration, which this year has transgender rights and visibility as its theme.

For further information and to register, click here:

Widespread support for Europe’s first permanent rainbow crossing in Devon

Proud2Be Project, the Devon-based LGBT community organisation, has received widespread support for its plans to install Europe’s first permanent rainbow crossing in the Rural Town of Totnes, Devon.

Totnes Rainbow CrossingTHE charity hopes the crossing will be a way of celebrating diversity in Totnes and raising awareness of issues still faced by LGBT+ people all over the world.

Proud2Be are also working closely with the council and other community groups to ensure that the crossing is safe for all and is not confusing for some groups of people, for example those with dementia or learning difficulties.

Last year, Proud2Be laid down a temporary crossing outside St Mary’s Church in the High Street, in the lead up to the second-ever Pride event in Totnes.

Although other cities, including London, Brighton and Sydney, have had temporary multi-coloured crossings, if plans are approved, Totnes will be the first in Europe to make it permanent, putting the town up there with Vancouver in Canada, which already has a permanent rainbow crossing.

Proud2Be has successfully obtained support from the town council and the Traffic & Transport Forum and in the next couple of weeks will approach Devon County Council with a proposal, asking for permission to proceed.

Jon Price, who set up Proud2Be with his twin brother Mat, said: “We have had a hugely positive response from the local and national press and the local LGBT and wider community have also been hugely supportive and excited by the proposal.”

The charity is asking people to help the campaign for the rainbow crossing. To pledge your support, click here:

 

REVIEW: Fringe: Mirando the Gay Tempest

Mirando The Gay Tempest

As well as being our most celebrated dramatist, Shakespeare was a prolific story-teller. In Theatre North’s Mirando, the Gay Tempest, which has just finished a run of performances at Brighton Fringe, Martin Lewton’s one man show brings Shakespeare’s play to new life through a remarkable tour de force of storytelling and physical acting.

The performances were staged in a reception room of the terraced house in Kemp Town which is home to Lewton and his partner, Andrew McKinnon, who directed the piece.  Apart from some coloured LED lighting the design is completely stripped back, much like Lewton himself, who remains completely naked throughout the duration of the performance.

In the absence of props and costumes, Lewton uses his naked body as a tool for telling the story, differentiating his many characters through tone of voice, manner of gait and small, subtle gestures here and there. And like Prospero, Lewton makes the most of his significant power over language and artifice to transport his audience and achieve the sense of magic that is central to the play.

At the heart of this gay imagining of the story, Lewton’s Prospero uses his mysterious powers to bring together Mirando, his son, with Ferdinand, the son of the King of Naples, who had conspired with Prospero’s brother Antonio to usurp and exile him.  The two sons fall in love, and in fashioning their betrothal Prospero restores justice and order to the world after 12 years of injustice and exile. With the gay marriage secured, Prospero breaks his magic staff and relinquishes his magical powers.

Lewton’s storytelling is boisterous and compelling throughout, but also deeply touching, especially in the central love scene between Mirando and Ferdinand. But while the sons’ marriage restores order and brings justice and resolution, it also results in an end to magic, and there is perhaps a suggestion from Lewton that although equal marriage has brought us equality, it is also another step towards making our lives more mainstream, less different, and maybe less magical for it.

More than half of young people are bullied because of appearance

New research published on April 16 shows that 51 percent of young people are bullied because of their appearance.

Ditch the Label

WORKING in partnership with schools and colleges across the UK, the Annual Anti Bullying Survey 2015, published by anti-bullying charity Ditch the Label, surveyed 3,600 teenagers between the ages of 13 – 20.

The report found that appearance is the key reason for bullying in the UK, to the extent that nearly half the young people surveyed (47%) wanted to change their appearance, with:

• 56% wanting to weigh less

• 17% wanting breast implants

• 5% wanting Botox.

The research showed that teenagers as young as 13 are considering these procedures, while 14% developed an eating disorder as a result of bullying.  30%  of those questioned admitted to having had suicidal thoughts.

For the first time, the charity also surveyed teenagers to establish how many people are perpetrating the bullying. It found that 50% of young people have bullied another person, with 30% of those bullying others at least once a week.  13% of teenagers reported being bullied by a teacher.

The report also highlights that there is much work to be done in schools to support those who have been bullied. 92% of bullied young people have turned to a teacher for support but only 51% were satisfied with the support they received, whereas of the 86% that turned to a family member only 18% were dissatisfied.

Liam Hackett
Liam Hackett

Liam Hackett, Founder and CEO of Ditch the Label, says: “Our Annual Bullying Survey 2015 cites attitudes towards the appearances of young people as the most common reason for bullying in the UK. The implications of appearance-based bullying are significant and can have devastating, long-term impacts.

“The evidence is clear: young people are now considering drastic and invasive measures to alter their appearances due to insecurities and bullying. Teens as young as 13 are adding things such as liposuction and breast implants on their wish list because they want to feel accepted by their peers and society. This report also identifies that young people are also being failed by the existing support measures that are currently in place.”

Ditch the Label provide comprehensive support, training and intervention materials for schools, colleges and parents on their website at www.DitchtheLabel.org. They additionally urge people to think differently about bullying and to try and understand the perspective and motive behind the person doing the bullying.

Professor Ian Rivers
Professor Ian Rivers

Professor Ian Rivers, psychologist, author and Professor of Human Development and Head of School of Sport and Education at Brunel University, comments: “This report demonstrates the importance that we now place upon physical appearance, weight, size and body shape. It is a sad indictment on society that young people judge by how a person looks rather than by their actions or deeds. We need to encourage young people to look beyond the surface and value one another. Ditch the Label celebrates diversity in all its forms. It would be a boring world indeed if we all became stereotypes.”

To view the full report, click here:

To donate or to support the work of Ditch the Label, click here:

Or alternatively you can text DITC12 and your donation amount to 70070.

London LGBT arts festival seeks applications from artists, filmmakers and performers

Gaywise FESTival (GFEST) has announced the 2015 call for entries from Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex (LGBTQI) artists.

GayWISE Festival
GayWISE Festival

THE London based event invites expression of interest in three main categories: film (shorts and features), visual arts and performance.

Niranjan Kamatkar, director of GFEST, said: “This year we will work with venues that will actively promote the profile of LGBTQI artists. The festival has been offering an excellent platform for LGBT films and artworks over the last 8 years now. GFEST 2015 presents an ideal opportunity for sponsors to show their commitment to LGBT equality and diversity.”

GFEST has been supported in the past by a number of prestigious London venues including the National Gallery, the Victoria and Albert Museum and the UK Parliament – where the festival has been launched for the last three years.

The festival is internationally recognised as a high profile event by media and fellow festivals, and provides a unique opportunity for young talent to showcase their work alongside established names and to network with industry professionals.

Last year GFEST presented new commissioned works by three visual artists and two performers. The organisers hope to present further new commissioned works at GFEST 2015.

GFEST is organised by arts charity Wise Thoughts. 

Visual artist and Wise Thoughts new trustee Dr Trevor Wood MBE, said: “I am delighted to be associated with this year’s GFEST, a unique festival showcasing outstanding work of artists from the LGBT community (that) has helped many new and aspiring artists with their careers. Taking part in GFEST can help promote your work within the mainstream arts industry in London and wider afield.”

To learn more or to make a submission, click here:       

Expressions of interest for all three categories must be submitted by 30 June 2015.

Reseach shows same-sex couples face hostility

Many same-sex couples arranging civil partnerships and marriage encounter hostility.

BSA

NEW research shows that many same-sex couples arranging civil partnerships and marriage ceremonies encounter hostility and disrespect from families, colleagues and the public.

However, others did find respect and affection when they announced their decision, Dr Mike Thomas told the British Sociological Association’s annual conference in Glasgow on Friday, April 17, 2015.

Dr Thomas, of the University of Kent, interviewed 13 gay couples and five lesbian couples in the UK, and another 27 same-sex couples in California and Canada. They were aged between 21 and 75 and had been together for up to 40 years.

His research was carried out from 2010-12, after legislation was passed in the UK to allow same-sex civil partnerships but before same-sex weddings were legalised in 2014. Same-sex marriage had been legal in California and Canada during his research.

Dr. Mike Thomas
Dr. Mike Thomas

Dr Thomas told the conference:a number of narratives highlighted what couples interpreted as being denied respect or recognition, or not being listened to. Equally, these stories revealed a sense of powerlessness and a degree of anger, resentment, and fatalism about the disrespect couples received. Negative reactions from family members were a regular theme.

In the UK, Martin, a man in his 50s, told Dr Thomas about informing his father of his forthcoming civil partnership ceremony. “My father, when I told him, sort of hung his head and I said, ‘what’s wrong, dad?’ And he said, ‘well, you’re abnormal.’ So I spent about two days working through this bloody shame that I’ve been carrying for 40 years.”

Dr Thomas said that Martin recalled this extreme reaction as replicating his experience of coming out to his father as gay many years previously.

Another gay British man, Fred, told Dr Thomas about the preparations for his civil ceremony: “We invited my brother, sister-in-law and their two children and I think eventually my brother said he would come, but he would be coming on his own. I think the official reason was that my sister-in law had come to the conclusion that she wouldn’t know how to explain it to her children, which I can’t say I was particularly impressed with. And I’d been best man at his wedding.”

Dr Thomas also told the conference that the task of organising a ceremony brought couples into contact with a range of service providers, including registrars and local government officials, celebrants, hoteliers, caterers, jewellers, photographers and outfitters.

In the UK, Hamish and Drew, a couple in their mid-30s together for six years, recalled their trip to the jeweller’s to buy rings for their civil partnership ceremony.

Hamish told Dr Thomas: ‘We found the guy who was doing it quite frosty and we just weren’t sure what he was making of the fact that two men were coming in to buy rings. He wasn’t nasty, he was just very matter of fact. He was just a bit cold with us. I mean, we spent quite a bit of money. I wouldn’t go back there again though.’

Dr Thomas said: “For those who took part in the study, there was a depressing familiarity and even a predictability to the stories they told. If legal recognition raised couples’ expectations about their social status, the response of hostile relatives, indifferent officials and disrespectful service providers sometimes provided a check on these aspirations.”

However, there were also positive stories.

Eric, a 47-year-old British man, in a relationship with Tom, his civil partner for 27 years, said: “I’ve always been treated very much as an in-law, but now in my brain I do think I’m an in-law and I definitely am my nephews’ uncle now. I remember Tom’s sister introducing me as her brother-in-law for the first time and it felt good.”

Dr Thomas said this and similar stories can be seen as evidence of the successful deployment of couples’ new status in a range of contexts, from legal recognition, to respect and goodwill from officials, service providers, family and friends.

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