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All Out.org LGBT Russia Fundraiser

LGBT Russia

Disco Deviant’s Promote Diversity Special: No Crime No Punishment, a club night raising money for the lobby group All Out.org and their continuing work promoting diversity and defending the rights of LGBT people now under attack and facing criminal charges in Russia, takes place at Audio on Friday, September 6.

The idea of the club night came about after Disco Deviant’s Pablo Contraband, DJ Kate Wildblood and artist Karol Michalec of Brighton Supports LGBT Russia discussed the abominable situation Putin’s anti-gay propaganda laws are creating in Russia today.

All profits made on the evening, which will feature DJs Seamus Haji, Jon Pleased Wimmin, Hifi Sean, Kate Wildblood, Queen Josephine, Pablo Contraband and host Karol Michalec, will go towards the All Out campaign, and each performer has donated their time for free to maximise the profits.

DJ Hifi Sean, said:

“I am getting involved with Disco Deviant’s Promote Diversity Fundraiser simply because human rights are being attacked in Russia in an immoral and barbaric way, right now, in the year 2013.

“If we don’t do something now and make our voices heard then what future lies ahead of us all?”

Event: Disco Deviant’s Promote Diversity Special: No Crime No Punishment

Where: Audio, 10 Marine Parade, Brighton.

When: Friday, September 6.

Tickets: £7 in advance, £10 on the door. All profits will be donated to All Out.

For more information, CLICK HERE:     

For more information on the All Out campaign, CLICK HERE:   

 

Lunch Positive Community Cafe raises £2,764

Lunch Positive at Pride

Lunch Positive’s Community Café at Pride on Preston Park this year was a great success and raised £2,764 towards the ongoing costs of running the weekly lunch club, which provides a healthy meal each Friday for people who are HIV positive.

The Community Cafe was a real team effort, involving twenty-five volunteers and lunch club members, who together gave over 200 hours to make the event happen. People worked very hard and exceptionally well as a team –  undertaking roles and tasks which were new to them, and pulling together for a common aim.

People volunteering at Preston Park served over 600 people and  400 meals within the first five hours.

Gary Pargeter, volunteer project manager, said:

“This year’s Pride was our best yet, and a fantastic event to have been part of. Preparing for and running the café was hugely enjoyable for everyone, and a great demonstration of how people work well as a team when we have a common goal and know that our individual efforts support everyone who is involved. People took on roles and responsibilities which were new, and it showed how effectively they did this by how easily we served such large numbers of Pride-goers on the day. The café was well received, serving affordable hot food and drinks, providing a seating area and also giving refreshments for emergency services. With so many people volunteering, everyone also had spare time to enjoy the Pride celebrations. We’d like to thank Pride for the opportunity to stage the café, everyone who helped promote our presence, and of course everyone who came along and supported us on the day.”

Thank you from the Gay Village Party

Pride Street Party 2014

The annual Gay Village Party took place over the Pride weekend on August 3-4 in St James’s and adjoining streets on the Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon. Over the two days it is estimated that over 40,000 revellers attended the event without any major incident.

This years party cost over £20,000 to stage but sadly once again no contribution was received from the major retailers in the St James’s area including the main supermarkets.

However, the organisers do send their heartfelt thanks to the following businesses for their participation and donations, be they many hundreds or just the ten. “Every little helps” as one non-contributor might say.

Participating bars and businesses included:

Bar 56
Betty LaLa’s
Brighton Rocks
The Bulldog
Cafe Rococo
The Camelford Arms
City News
Cornel’s
Izzy Cafe
Latest Music Bar
The Marine Tavern
The Marlborough
The Mucky Duck
Poison Ivy
The Queens Arms
Subline
The Three & Ten
The Zone Bar
14 St James’s Street Off License

Donating businesses, guest houses and bars included:

A Bar @ The Amsterdam
Bannings @ No. 14
The Brasserie Pizza Pasta
Brighton Wave
Cavalaire Guest House
Charles St
Colson House
Craven Court
Eighty Eight Barbers
Guest & The City
Jurys Out
Morris & Jacques Cafe
Neighbourhood Bar
New Steine Hotel & Gullivers
Nice n Naughty
Revenge
The Royal Oak
Sean Paul Hair & Beauty
St James Tavern

Drinks Sponsor: was Proof Drinks (Aqua, Briska Cider, Piston Head Beer).

Sharon Barr, owner of the Zone Bar and Chair of the Gay Village Party, said:

“I would like to give special thanks to the public for making the event safe and enjoyable and throwing their change in the collecting buckets and  all the businesses and residents of the area for their continued support.” 

Pride Street Party 2014

THE THEBAN SEASON: The Scoop, London: Review

The Scoop

Free theatre in London? What, absolutely free? And running throughout the rest of the summer? Yep, that’s exactly what you get down at The Scoop, right next to Tower Bridge and City Hall, the one catch being that, boy, aren’t those paving slabs hard on the arse!

Now in its 11th season, More London this year offers up an early evening play for families, followed by two heavy-hitters for adults, all based on the story of Oedipus, that most dysfunctional of fellas.

First up is Prince of Thebes, an interactive romp that kids will love although adults might find a little jarring. The piece introduces us to Oedipus by showing us his adventurous (and happily non-mother-loving) journey to become king. Accompanied by a prince who’s been turned into a wisecracking talking bear (a cheeky Joseph Wicks), Oedipus (Philip Scott-Wallace) becomes a ‘hero for hire’ and the audience gets a lot of joking around and a bevy of modern songs with updated lyrics which, although well-written, might be a touch too cheesy for some.

The choreography by the wonderfully named Racky Plews is good in this part of the show, lending the cast a useful dynamism. They dart through the audience, puns rat-a-tatting from Archie’s mouth, while Pandora (Charlotte Whitaker) scurries about looking like a steampunk Minnie the Minx.

the scoop

It’s ultimately all good fun and the kids in the audience obviously adored the hour’s entertainment and the parents were, of course, happy that it was all free.

An hour’s interval done and dusted, and with a mostly new audience intake, we settled down to the more harrowing part of the show, the intense double feature of Oedipus and Antigone, both adapted by Lisa Kuma which – the programme teases us – is a pen name of a well-known academic and playwright.

The story is probably familiar to most but if you’re new to the details I’m not doing spoilers as it’s a shocking, rum old affair which will have you sitting there going ‘Eh?’ and ‘You’re kidding me!”

Scott-Wallace reprises his role of Oedipus, now king of Thebes, and is called on to do some pretty intense emoting which he’s passable at, although it’s all a little ‘one-note’ after the first half hour.

Stand out is Robert Donald as blind Teiresias, a careful performance of power and assurance which cuts through all the histrionics with ease.

As the sun goes down over the Thames, the tragedies really begin to rack up leaving you emotionally and physically wrung out. It’s not an easy two hours to swallow with belief having to be suspended somewhere near the top of the Shard, and if you make it through the whole four hours (including interval) without getting a numb bum and serious bone-ache, well, you’re probably much younger and fitter than me. This venue is certainly a bit of a challenge in the old comfort department. Yes, you can rent a cushion pad thing for a quid but it only softens the blow a little.

So I’d recommend that you either go for the first hour if you have younger members you want to entertain, or the concentrated second half if you fancy a hefty Greek emotional punch.

And don’t forget to get there early: they close the amphitheatre to newcomers once the plays have begun.

WHAT: The Theban Season

WHERE: The Scoop, Tower Bridge, London

WHEN: Until September 1, Weds to Sun 6pm for Prince of Thebes and 8pm for Oedipus and Antigone

TICKETS: Free!!

MORE INFO: CLICK HERE: 

RUNNING TIME: An hour for each part

WOULD I SEE IT AGAIN: No. Too bum-numbing and too hysterical for me, but hey, it’s free so go see!

 

 

 

HOME: The Shed, National Theatre: Review

In Nadia Fall‘s new production at the National Theatre’s pop-up space, The Shed, she weaves together a narrative from 48 hours of interviews conducted with young people living in a large interim homeless shelter in East London.

Listening to these voices could have made for a grim, dispiriting evening of theatre, and sure, there is a good deal of misery and awfulness in these lives, but the overwhelming emotion turns out to be one of hope. It’s truly amazing what, especially young, people can get through and still come out the other side with a cheery optimism.

The Shed

Target East is a fictional institution overseen by the stern but caring manager, Sharon (a confident and nuanced performance from Ashley McGuire), and her not quite so effective colleague played by Trevor Michael Georges. Sharon turned the place around when she arrived and believes in her ability to help such troubled youngsters although she also has a healthy streak of cynicism (“We’re just benefits experts these days – we don’t to social work no more”).

Her (in the horrible parlance of today) clientele are a mix of older teenagers, all made homeless, mostly from abuse or neglect from their parents. Some are pregnant or young mums, and most of the boys have kids themselves that they no longer see.

Rather than a straight narrative, Home is a patchwork of these stories, intertwining, meeting, and sometimes clashing in the clinical surroundings of Target East, Ruth Sutcliffe‘s stark but effective design spilling out into the lobby of The Shed, made into an institutional room full of anti-STD posters and whiteboards, and upwards to the balcony of a high rise.

The conceit is that it’s us, the audience, who are the ones conducting the interviews, and we sit passively as the cast catch our eye and hold our gaze as they tell us their tales of being chucked out by mum’s new boyfriend, or entering Britain in the back of a lorry, or of having to care for parents and snapping under the strain.

Music is used beautifully throughout, with Beyonce and Rihanna songs given a surprising poignancy in the mouths of such lost souls, and there’s also original music from Tom Green, including a haunting spiritual that you’ll be humming throughout the interval.

Jade, a heavily pregnant girl, speaks only in ‘beatbox’ but her phone conversation to some nameless official translates very easily in the mind, while her vocal stylings accompany the rest of the cast superbly, all of whom can sing and rap wonderfully.

Two parts of the evening crackle in particular. The first is Eritrean Girl’s (yes, names would have been more helpful) terror as she’s made to lie in the back of a lorry while being brought into the country, and the other is Tattoo Boy’s rant, a particularly angry version of “I’m not racist but….” which made some of the audience visibly discomfited.

Home: The Shed

At times the production feels a little directionless, but then so are the lives of the people depicted and that’s possibly the point. Characters come in and out of focus as the cast cross on stage, sometimes dancing, joshing with each other, sometimes running at full pelt around the smallish Shed. It’s lively, it’s textured, and a little chaotic, but that’s its charm.

I was also gratified that politics weren’t left out totally, and if you come to this piece with a pre-conceived idea that somehow it’s easy to get a council house by being an immigrant, or by getting yourself knocked up, or by being kicked out of the parental home, you’ll walk away thinking perhaps things aren’t quite that Daily Mail simple.

 

WHAT: Home

WHERE: The Shed, National Theatre, London

WHEN: Until September 7, various times

TICKETS: £12 and £20

MORE INFO: CLICK HERE:

RUNNING TIME: 2 hours 20 minutes

WOULD I SEE IT AGAIN: Yes, but perhaps in a month

 

 

 

 

 

 

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