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THEATRE REVIEW: Therapy

image1tTherapy

Tara Harley

Marlborough Theatre 29th March 2015

The all new La La Theatre Company gave an excellent performance of this new comedy drama, called Therapy, set in the eccentric world of New Age retreats.

The plot is pretty straight forward, four characters arrive at a therapy retreat with the kooky therapist and peculiar challenging doctor, as they unwind secrets are revealed with unexpected consequences. The actors are all fine with one of two of them shining out, Cyril Cottrell as Dr Morter in particular was delightfully odd managing his sharp twisting retorts with an ever changing stack of emphasis, very funny. They all worked very hard to ensure the play rolled on and blended well together to ensure the laughs kept coming. There were some fine physical jokes and  the play really took off when the clowning was allowed to bloom, the Marlborough is an intimate space and with five folk being strange and manic on stage it can be quite an electrically funny. One or two of the characters could have been a little more believable with their motivation but then to keep them self deluded we could revel in their silliness.  Harley obviously writes from the heart as none of the characters were unpleasant even though some of them were written to be belligerent.

The plot rocks and unfolds with a plenty of whistle stop surprises and one or two missed volleys, but when the ideas come as thick and fast as this it’s not such a bad thing that one or two are going to miss the mark, perhaps less dénouement and more engagement would have been in order, but I was possibly the only person wondering about the finer plot details, everyone else was  busy laughing and enjoying themselves. The narrative thrust is bold and relentless and it’s played with a highly committed energy from the cast. The play is written in three main parts with the final being direct to the audience.

Written and directed by Tara Harley who also runs the theatre group, did the the staging and I suspect makes everyone tea. It was a tight show and it’s nice to enjoy the talents of a polymath. Harley has a good surreal touch; sure and odd and her conviction manages to carry some of the more obscure or silly jokes right through into funny land. There were moments on stage where the action shifted into dream state and through some tight writing and fine choreography this staccato surreal dream turned out very well, it’s always a difficult shift on a small stage but the actors, props and sets worked well to make the scene believable.

image2I was unsure of the change of pace with the final 4th wall tumbling down and the actors all addressing the audience in a rap-cum-Shakespearean-style-morality-play-rhyming-Dr Seuss-thing, (and yep it was like that), for a moment it seemed to be slipping away but it held, balanced and carried on in a different direction. However the audience loved it and the narrative tension was kept up, the actors were convincing and full of conviction and it all made sense at the end. It had the air of a restoration comedy, bawdy but sharp, rococo but finely focused, nonsense with a happy moral ending and it feels authentic, as if Harley has speared some of her own experiences and gutted, filleted them and served them up fresh for our delights, and then kippering the odd one to throw at us when we least expect it with an expertly judged backhand volley.

All in all an unexpected treat; I laughed, was surprised and also delighted by some of the lines. I do love a silly surreal one liner and Therapy seems to have the ability to tuck them in and use them just at the right moment, that’s a real skill for a new writer to display and one worth cherishing.

A fine debut performance for this new theatre troupe and also for this new playwright, I enquired and they had quite rightly sold out each of their four performances, not bad for a brand new show.

At 90mins with no interval it could have been a tad shorter, but this was a fun engaging night out, full of surprise, surreal delights and laughter and the full house gave the actors a well-deserved rollicking applause. I for one would be happy to see another production from this innovative and fast paced writer.

 

The cast

Shari – Gratia Churchill

Dr. Morter – Cyril Cottrell

Tony – Warren Saunders

Helen – Coralie Maynard Banks

Davey – Nicholas Purton

Kirsty – Hellen Ward

 

BOOK REVIEW: Blood Relatives

Blood-RelativesBlood Relatives by Steven Alcock

This splendid debut novel from Steven Alcock is a coming of age and coming out story woven into the hot summer and horrible happenings of the backdrop of the Yorkshire Ripper murders is far more appealing than its premise would suggest. With each chapter opening with one of the Rippers victims and a first person narrative voice filled with working class Northern grit, inflection and slang it’s a an interesting read as well as a gripping one.

‘The milkman found her. On Prince Philip Playing Fields. He crossed the dew-soaked grass toward what he took to be a bundle of clothes, but then he came across a discarded shoe, and then t’ mutilated body. her name wor Wilma McCann.’

That’s the voice of Ricky, our joyful protagonist with who we cartwheel through his early gay fumbling and life in the suffocating heat of that 70’s summer and the claustrophobic council estates that he’s living and working on.  With sexual opportunity and emotional development wrestled from the smallest chance meeting. Alcock manages to be both evocative and disturbing on occasion and although the murders are a kind of hideous vivid 70’s wallpaper; all pervading, they are never centre stage, just the affects they have on people and the growing feeling of being under siege and the closing of the world against strangers, terrible speculation and freedom.

Ricky is a charming rogue and Alcock paints a vivid charming picture of this time of huge social change and nails the feeling of this time of roasting hot summers, royal jubilee, stalking terror and crates of pop. Set where the first of the Rippers victims were found in the Harehills suburb of Leeds, Alcock vividly recreates the fear and panic of the Yorkshire communities.   The family connections are wonderfully funny and then take a hard tack to allow some touching sentiment and working class compassion to shine out of this book.  There plenty of story here too, all told from Ricky’s relentlessly optimistic practical point of view and on occasion its bluntness shocks and jerks us into another space altogether.

Ricky’s bold assured steps out into gay life, paralleled by the changing music scene of punk, and the social disjoined politics of the far right butting up against the nascent projection of Gay Power and LGBT politics is a seriously convincing portrait of the acceptance and development of a man on the verge of change.

It’s also funny, touching and made me smile time and time again, although not Northern my own childhood mirrored Ricky’s, the pop, the dusty playing fields, the music and plastic technology, the distracted hard boiled old women and their endless, endless tea. Alcock has written that most lovely of books, a trip down memory lane for those that grew up in the 70’s and a wonderfully spot-on working class positive coming out story of the most precious kind, authentic, self-defined and rough, but veined with hope. Authenticaly British too.

It’s refreshing to read a book with a happy comfortably well-adjusted gay character who’s also working class and intelligent, likes his life and enjoys his sex. (Perhaps being riven with doubt, guilt and shame is a middle class indulgence). I enjoyed the book a lot and would recommend it for some light summer reading, it’s the prefect book to take away, interesting, evocative and funny. The Leeds dialect it’s written in may be a  fun exercise for an author but it started to grind on me after a while, it didn’t develop or adapt to any gay slang and seemed a little too ‘this is 70’s northern’ on occasion, however a small criticism for a great big wonderful first book.

Out now £14.99

From all good bookshops or from the publisher’s website here:

Brighton Housing Campaign celebrates change in law and the end of ‘revenge evictions’

Home Sweet Home activists from Brighton and Hove are celebrating a change in the law, banning the practice of ‘revenge eviction’.

Home Sweet Home cookies
Home Sweet Home cookies

CAMPAIGNERS celebrated their victory by handing out free treats and leaflets outside the Theatre Royal to tell people about their rights as tenants under the new law, which should come into force in October 2015.

Campaigning by groups across the country, including Movement for Change’s Home Sweet Home campaign, put the practice of revenge eviction under scrutiny in November last year when the Tenancy (Reform) Bill was defeated in the Commons by two Conservative MPs who filibustered the bill.

As a result of that scrutiny and pressure, the changes proposed by the Tenancy (Reform) Bill were put into the Deregulation Bill as amendments in the House of Lords.

After weeks of uncertainty about whether the bill would pass through the House of Commons and the House of Lords before Parliament closed for the General Election, the Bill finally gained Royal Assent last week. In doing so, the bill outlawed the practice of revenge eviction for good.

The changes should come into force in October this year.

The change in law was warmly welcomed by Home Sweet Home campaign leaders.

Whilst speaking about the need to protect tenants against revenge evictions, Home Sweet Home’s Jack Spooner said: “For too long landlords and agents have been able to evict people from their homes rather than maintain the standards of the properties they let. An end to revenge evictions is an end to something completely unjust, and good tenants and good landlords should welcome this move fully.”

Candice Armah, Home Sweet Home campaigner and President of Brighton Students Union, added: “This is a huge win for private renters, not just within the university community, but for everyone who rents in Brighton and Hove and the rest of the country. It’s a fantastic example of what you can achieve when community groups come together and organise.”

The campaign is now calling for tenants to submit evidence to Brighton and Hove Council’s consultation on expanding its current landlord licensing scheme to new areas of the city. A discretionary licensing scheme already exists in the five Lewes Road wards, and the consultation wants views on expanding the scheme to cover other areas of the city in Brunswick and Adelaide, Central Hove, East Brighton, Goldsmid, Preston Park, Regency and Westbourne.

To view details of the proposed scheme and consultation click here:

 

 

HIV’s answer to a home pregnancy test to be sold on Freedoms Shop website

By May 2015 self-testing HIV kits will be available from Central and North West London (CNWL) NHS Foundation Trust’s online Freedoms shop.

Freedoms ShopTHE UK’s first legally approved HIV self-testing kit is anticipated to go on sale in the next few weeks on CNWL’s Freedoms shop website costing £29.95.

The self test is the first of its kind in the UK as it allows individuals to receive their results at home, like a home pregnancy test.

It uses a very small amount of blood from a finger-prick sample to detect the presence of HIV antibodies within 15 minutes. The test comes with a bag in which the used testing kit can be sealed and disposed of in household waste.

The Freedoms shop is stocking the HIV self-testing kits to encourage people who do not want to access NHS services to test for HIV. It is estimated that around 26,000 people in the UK are unaware they have HIV and are unknowingly responsible for the majority of onward transmissions.

Almost half of newly diagnosed cases in 2013 in the UK were diagnosed later than treatment should have started, affecting health and life expectancy.

Testing at home means those individuals who do not currently arrange an NHS HIV test can discreetly test themselves when it’s convenient to them and in a place of their choosing.

Mark Maguire, CNWL’s Service Director Sexual Health and HIV, said: “Our NHS clinic will still provide a free testing service, but this is a huge development in HIV testing, normalising HIV testing and enabling people to take responsibility for their health care. We can provide the option for people to get tested in a clinic and now people across the country can test and get their results in a setting that they might be more conformable with.”

The HIV test is produced by BioSURE, a company specialising in the provision of rapid in-vitro diagnostic testing solutions.

Legends sponsors the legendary Brighton Pride Cabaret Big Top once again in 2015

Legends Hotel, Bar and Club will again be sponsoring the renowned Cabaret Big Top in Preston Park this August.

WEB.600.60

TONY Chapman, owner of Legends, has over the years been one of the most generous contributors to the LGBT/HIV communities in Brighton and Hove and in 2015 he will once again be leading the way by sponsoring the Cabaret Big Top.

Paul Kemp
Paul Kemp

Pride Director Paul Kemp said: “Tony has not only been one of the biggest investors in the commercial Brighton LGBT scene over many years, but without fanfare he has been one of the most generous contributors to community fundraising for our local LGBT community groups and organisations.

“Without Tony’s support Pride would simply not be able to deliver one of the biggest Cabaret tents at any Pride in the UK.”

The Legends Cabaret Tent is the biggest at any UK Pride and delivers a day of thrilling entertainment in an unforgettable electric atmosphere.

Organised and hosted by Stephen Richards, a.k.a. Lola Lasagne, the Legends Cabaret Tent is at the very centre of Brighton Pride’s celebrations with top cabaret stars performing to a capacity crowd.

Paul continued: “Pride is extremely grateful for the support of businesses who help contribute to the Pride weekend fundraising effort. Even the smallest contribution helps Pride deliver the LGBT community Parade and extra resources for the Rainbow Fund”.

In 2014 Legends was awarded best supporting (large venue) at the Pride businesses awards, recognising the support given by the business community to our local LGBT/HIV community groups.

To see 2014 business fundraising support for Pride, click here:

For more information about Legends, click here:

‘Carnival Collective’ brings the carnival to Brighton Pride

The legendary Carnival Collective will be helping Brighton Pride celebrate its 25th anniversary this August.

Carnival Collective

Carnival Collective boasts 30+ musicians and delivers an irresistible tidal wave of energetic music. Once described as Brighton’s 21st Century Big Band, the Carnival Collective sound ranges from live drum & bass and jungle to reggae, cumbia, swing and funk. The Collective will be making its Brighton Pride Main Stage debut, delivering a vast battery of Brazilian drums and shaking the ground beneath a fat horn section and dirty bass lines, topped off with lush vocal harmonies.

After a successful year for the group, including the release of its LP Another Thing, performances at Glastonbury and Secret Garden Party and the celebration of its 20th birthday, 2015 looks set to be another exciting year of memorable Carnival Collective celebrations with Brighton Pride a real highlight.

Carnival Collective’s Tim Lincoln said: “We are wildly excited at the prospect of a show at Brighton Pride in its 25th and our 21st year! Pride is one of Brighton and Hove’s best-loved events and typifies the glorious flamboyance and inclusivity of our great city. Thank you so much for having us, we can’t wait!”


Event: Brighton Pride Festival

Where: Preston Park, Preston Road, Brighton

When: Saturday, August 1

Time: Noon-10 p.m.

Tickets: Early Birds Sold out: £16.00 advance (first release): Advance £18.50/£21.00 (£25.00 on the day). Joint tickets available for Festival and Village party.

To book online, click here:

Danny to pound the streets for Canine Partners

Fundraiser Danny Dwyer will be turning his attention to animals later in the year in his attempt to raise £2,000 for assistance dog charity Canine Partners.

Danny Dwyer

CANINE Partners is a registered charity that helps people with disabilities to enjoy a greater independence and quality of life through the provision of specially trained dogs, whose well-being is a key consideration.

These life-transforming dogs also provide practical, physiological, psychological and social benefits, including increased independence and confidence as well as improved motivation and self-esteem. A canine partner also brings companionship and a sense of security and increases social interaction.

Danny, 39, has signed up to the Bright10 Canine Partners team and will take part in the new 10-mile race on Sunday, October 18.

The money Danny raises will enable the charity to train more assistance dogs, transforming the lives of people with disabilities.

Canine Partners, which is based near Midhurst, trains dogs to perform tasks such as opening and closing doors, undressing, pressing buttons, retrieving items, unloading washing machines, taking cards and cash from ATMs and other everyday tasks that disabled people find difficult, painful or impossible to perform for themselves.

Danny, an experienced runner, has taken part in numerous running events during the past four years.

He said: “I am running in memory of my dog Nero, who unfortunately passed away in December.

“I was signing up for the run and came across the option to run for Canine Partners, and I thought it was a fantastic coincidence. I had found the right charity at the right time to raise money for.

“The more I learn about the charity the more amazing I think it is. I just love what they do in changing people’s lives for the better.”

Canine Partners, formed in 1990, is celebrating its 25th anniversary this year and has successfully partnered 530 assistance dogs across the UK to date. These amazing dogs have changed the lives of those they are helping, restoring independence, giving family members peace of mind, allowing disabled partners to return to work and even saving lives by responding in emergencies.

More than 1.2 million people in the UK use a wheelchair, and a significant number of them would benefit from a canine partner.  The dogs are carefully matched to the applicant’s needs and lifestyle, no matter how challenging.  They are trained to help with everyday tasks such as opening and shutting doors, unloading the washing machine, picking up dropped items, pressing buttons and switches and getting help in an emergency.  The charity is working in partnership with Help for Heroes, and aims to train dogs to meet the needs of people with even the most complex disabilities including members of HM Armed Forces.

Canine Partners receives no government funding and is wholly dependent on public donations and legacies.

To sponsor Danny, click here:

To register to run the Bright10 race with Canine Partners, click here:

Or telephone Holly on: 01730 716013

For more information about Canine Partners, click here:

 

 

PREVIEW: Brighton Fringe Festival: 4 Guys Chillin’

A graphic, gripping, funny and frank verbatim drama exposing the gay Chill-out scene.

4 Guys Chillin'

“Wanna pair of shorts? Shot of G? Line of Meth?”

From surgeons to students, couples to kink, guys that love it and lost guys longing to be loved. An original look into a drug-fuelled, hedonistic, highly secret world of chem-sex, Grindr and instant gratification.

Past productions include:

Signal Failure: **** Scotsman **** Broadway Baby **** Edinburgh Guide

Frank Sent Me: ***** New Current **** Scotsgay ****Three weeks

Mysterious Skin: Broadway Baby ***** Fringe Review ***** Fringe Guru *****

Taken from over 50 hours of interviews from guys found through Grindr and other social media, this is an important look at the relatively new scene that they have been fundamental in creating.

4 Guys Chillin’ looks at changing attitudes to sex, to HIV and to our perception of what sexual relations can and should be.


Event: 4 Guys Chillin’, an Em-Lou Production

Where: Otherplace at the Basement, 24 Kensington Street, Brighton, East Sussex BN1 4AJ

When: May 22, 24 and 25

Time: 9.30 p.m.

Tickets: £10 / £8.50 conc.

To book online, click here:

 

Twitter: @emloupro

Stonewall Equality Dinner raises record amount

Stonewall’s annual equality dinner, which took place at the Hilton on Park Lane, raised £470,000 for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender (LGBT) Equality last week.

Stella Duffy
Stella Duffy: Photo SHOTBYROB.com

THE event took place at the Hilton on Park Lane and was supported by Aviva, with a champagne reception supported by E.ON.

Speakers on the night included Stonewall CEO Ruth Hunt; Vicar of Finedon, broadcaster and writer Reverend Richard Coles; and award-winning writer, actor and director Stella Duffy. All emphasised in their speeches that while there are certainly legislative achievements to celebrate, there is still a lot to do to achieve social equality for LGBT people.

Clare Balding and Alice Arnold: Photo SHOTBYROB.com
Clare Balding and Alice Arnold: Photo SHOTBYROB.com

Guests on the night included Graham Norton, Clare Balding, Marcus Collins, Robin Windsor, Alicya Eyo, Lord Alli, Stella Duffy, Jack Monroe and John Amaechi.

Money raised from the event will support Stonewall’s work to go deeper into communities and help to improve the lives of LGBT people.

Top auction prizes included a private dinner with Liz Hurley and Joan Collins, a mint condition 7” single signed by the Pet Shop Boys and Dusty Springfield, lunch with Lord Michael Cashman in the House of Commons, and a signed self-portrait of Sir Ian McKellen.

Jan Gooding, Chair of Stonewall’s Board of Trustees, said: “The Stonewall Equality Dinner is an extremely important event in the organisation’s fundraising calendar. Not only is it a chance to celebrate how far lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans equality has come, but it’s also an opportunity to focus on the work that’s left to do and raise vital funds to achieve it.”

Rev Richard Coles and  Stonewall CEO Ruth Hunt: Photo SHOTBYROB.com
Rev Richard Coles and Stonewall CEO Ruth Hunt: Photo SHOTBYROB.com

Ruth Hunt, Stonewall’s Chief Executive, thanked supporters on the night, saying: “We’ve come so far in our journey towards equality, but there are still so many big issues that affect different parts of our community. Our work will not stop until every LGBT person, in every country, school, church, street, hospital and school, is free to be themselves and is accepted without exception.”

Marcus Collins and Robin Windsor: Photo SHOTBYROB.com
Marcus Collins and Robin Windsor: Photo SHOTBYROB.com

 

Emporium needs your help

Emporium, Brighton’s only professional producing theatre, is raising funds to improve its facilities and provide a better experience for audiences and performers alike.

Emporium

Since opening its doors in April 2013, Emporium on London Road has coped with temporary seating and kind gifts of technical equipment from supporters, but now in its second year it is looking to create a permanent space that can be used by theatre companies.

A crowd-funding page has been created ro raise a small amount of money for carpentry, building, plumbing, electrical work and some painting and decoration.

All money will be spent engaging local contractors to carry out the work.

Artistic Director James Weisz said: “We want to be the best for our community, so we are asking the community for help”.

You can join in and provide support, from as little as £5, and receive a reward for your philanthropy.

Emporium is also becoming a Community Interest Company (CIC), which means that every penny earned goes back into the business to ensure that the venue operates successfully for the local community.

They have a few weeks to raise the money to ensure that the venue can operate with a full programme of events in 2015.

Brian Capron
Brian Capron will play Dr Prentice in ‘What the Butler Saw’

The Theatre will re-open with a staging of What The Butler Saw starring Coronation Street star Brian Capron from April 25 to May 9. Joe Orton’s final play is a hilarious farce which revolves around Dr. Prentice, a psychiatrist attempting to seduce his attractive prospective secretary, Geraldine Barclay. As part of the job interview he convinces her to undress. When his wife enters, he attempts to cover up his activity by hiding the girl behind a curtain. His wife, however, is also being seduced and blackmailed by a Nicholas Beckett. She therefore promises Nicholas the post as secretary, which adds further confusion, including Nicholas and Geraldine dressing as the opposite sex. Dr. Prentice’s clinic is then faced with a government inspection… What follows is a near faultless piece of theatrical invention as these ingredients form the basis for a perfect recipe of outrageous confusion!

You will find Emporium at 88 London Road, Brighton, BN1 4JF

To make a small donation, click here:

For more information about Emporium, click here:

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