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Family stories sought for World War One exhibition in Brighton

World War One Photos

World War One stories, photos and mementoes and being sought for a major new exhibition at Brighton Museum & Art Gallery, which will commemorate the centenary of the start of the war next year.

Curators from the exhibition are hosting a drop-in day at the museum on Saturday, September 21 from 1pm, where people can share their stories, family histories, pictures and keepsakes that relate to the war and Brighton & Hove.

Cllr Geoffrey Bowden
Cllr Geoffrey Bowden

Councillor Geoffrey Bowden, Chair of Brighton & Hove City Council’s Economic Development and Culture Committee, said:

“We want to tell the story of World War One through the life stories of around a dozen real people caught up in it – it could include a Tommy, for example, an officer, a woman working on the home front, and a child growing up in wartime.

“So many people have a family connection with the war and we are interested in hearing their family stories, which have perhaps been passed on by parents, grandparents or great grandparents. Personal stories highlighting the impact of the Great War on individuals will help bring history to life for younger generations and we hope people will come along to these sessions to share their family stories, photos or mementoes.”

The exhibition, which is being organised by the Royal Pavilion & Museums, part of the Brighton & Hove City Council, is due to open at Brighton Museum & Art Gallery in summer 2014 and will run until early 2015. The exhibition is part of a European funded Interreg 2Seas project, working with museums in Belgium and France.

If you are unable to attend the drop-in day, telephone the museum team on 01273 292845.

Brighton Visitor Information Centre to close

Brighton Visitor Information Centre

The Brighton Visitor Information Centre (VIC) at the Royal Pavilion will be fully closed to the public from Monday, September 30.

The last full day of operation is Thursday, September 26, which will be followed by a limited VIC service on Friday 27, Saturday 28 and Sunday 29.

To replace the existing single VIC, eight new Visitor Information Points (VIPs) will join the two existing VIPs at Brighton Toy & Model Museum and Brighton Pier, from the beginning of October,

These will be located at the following places around the city:

• Brighton Centre Box Office

• Jubilee Library

• Thistle Brighton Hotel

• St Paul’s Church ( West Street )

• Churchill Square Shopping Centre

• Brighton Hotel (corner of Kings Road / Bedford Square )

• The Old Market (off Western Road on Brighton / Hove border)

• Royal Pavilion Shop (a limited service initially as works relating to the expansion of the Royal Pavilion Shop and introduction of a Peyton & Byrne Tea Bar will be undertaken in early October.)

VIPs will be manned by staff from the host organisation who will deliver information, help and advice to visitors in the city.

Stewart Lee: Brighton Dome: Review

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Political comedy is notoriously hard to get right: on one hand you can end up slightly too earnest, too right-on and not particularly funny (a lot of ’80s alternative comedy). On the other you can appear merely snarky and even hypocritical (The 10 O’clock Show). Part of Lee’s greatness is that he’s obviously politically committed and he’s also brilliantly, disarmingly funny. The one mention of Mrs Thatcher leads to a pleasingly puerile gag about anal sex.

Lee’s latest show has no unifying theme – he candidly informed the Dome that it’s a try-out for an upcoming TV series – but it demonstrates a master at work. Not just a great writer, his laconic slightly world-weary delivery is always strangely captivating, even for those rare moments when something doesn’t work. But even then he can rescue any apparent failure through an inciteful analysis of where the joke went wrong or, more likely, where we the audience failed in our collective duty.

One of the joys of any Lee show is his use of repetition – he’ll come back to a word or phrase almost incessantly until his innocently quizzical tone renders it ridiculous. One of the hits of the evening is a cabby’s observation that ‘these days you just have to say you’re English for them to throw you in jail‘ which forms the only words of a duologue, going back an forth in some crazed conversation, like a surreal verbal duel.

The bit of paper I brought into the show is filled with great gags, inspired word play and playful insights which should appear in standard quotation dictionaries. But writing them down would, of course, only spoil them as no stand-up joke is enhanced by appearing in print. The only solution, dear reader, is to catch Lee at the earliest opportunity.

For details of upcoming gigs click here. 

 

GAYZED: at The Strand Gallery, London

GAYZED: Gay photographers

Gayzed, the annual exhibition by the Gay Photographers Network, will be taking over The Strand Gallery, London from Tuesday, October 15 to Sunday, October 20.

Image Manel Ortega
Image Manel Ortega

The annual exhibition once again highlights the eclectic styles of the network’s members (from emerging talent to established photographers) and covers a spectrum of genres with over 100 images on display.

The Gay Photographers Network will once again be supporting the Disabled Photographers Society and this year the River House Trust, with donations and a percentage from sales that have helped raise thousands of pounds for charity since the first exhibition in 2010.

GAYZED: Gay photographers
Image by Manel Ortega

 

EVENT: Gayzed

WHERE: The Strand Gallery, 32 John Adam Street, London WC2N 6BP

WHEN: Tuesday, October 15 to Sunday, October 20. Tuesday-Saturday 11am-6pm; Sunday 11am-3pm

COST: Entry is free.

For more information, CLICK HERE:   

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