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REVIEW: Basement: 4 Guys Chillin’

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This is a verbatim drama based on interviews with a number of men who go to ‘chill out’ parties or, to be perhaps slightly more accurate, ‘drug-fuelled orgies’. As it starts off it seems as if it’s going to be a basically sensational tale of hedonistic gay men and the hijinks they get up to. There’s a comic discussion of the North/South divide (Northern orgies are friendlier than the ones in London), stories of days lost to ‘partying’ and the character who, getting a measly three condoms from his local GUM clinic, tells the nurse ‘that’s not going to last me the tube ride home, love’.

But as the evening progresses darker, more interesting themes emerge. The whole racism on grindr topic (‘No Asians – no offence, just not what I’m into’) is covered, as is the choices men make about putting themselves and others at risk of various STIs. But more than the damage these men can possibly do their bodies, the play is not afraid to ask about the psychological damage a seemingly continual round of sex and drugs can do.

Some of it is, to be frank, pretty disgusting. And at times I wondered if maybe the interviewees had perhaps exaggerated their stories. One character talks about the excitement he felt walking home from a chill out with – and look away now if you’re squeamish – come oozing out of his arse. But his confession about then eating the ooze on the way home feels like a piece of grand guignol. And another man confesses he likes going with guys who have gonorrhoea as it improves the ‘gloopiness’ of their ejaculate. (After one particularly horrific revelation a member of the audience practically shouted ‘Oh my God’ with the outraged horror of a Lady Bracknell.) Of course it’s also possible that the director lucked out and just happened to get hold of the country’s most depraved gays. This naturally leads to questions about just how representative these stories are. You wouldn’t look at the effects of alcohol consumption by focussing solely on those drinking a litre of vodka a day. Surely there exists men who go to these chill outs maybe once a month or a couple of times a year. I’m sure they’d tell a completely different story.

The most interesting character is that of a Pakistani man who feels duty bound to marry a woman and produce kids. It seems that despite having sex with men the marriage sort of works. Of the performances Elliot Hadley stands out being utterly convincing as a man who can’t resist the lure of sex and drugs whilst having no illusions to the potential problems of this lifestyle.

4 Guys Chillin’ is interesting and complex; it’s certainly not preachy and shows the thrills and the rush of modern sex parties without being an advert for them.

Continues until May 25 at the Basement, Kensington Street.

For more information and tickets click here.

THT to improve Sexual Health in Brighton and Hove

Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) launches Brighton STI Testing Week in bid to improve city’s sexual health.

Terrence HIggins Trust

RESIDENTS in Brighton and Hove will be encouraged to take free STI tests from sexual health and HIV charity THT as part of the city’s STI Testing Week at the end of June.

Following the success of National HIV Testing Week, THT will be running pop-up STI screening clinics offering chlamydia and gonorrhoea tests at a variety of community settings and venues across the city from 29 June until 5th July.

Ben Tooke, Senior Engagement Officer at Terrence Higgins Trust in Brighton, said: “STI screening methods are quick and easy and simply require a swab and urine sample. We hope Brighton STI Testing Week will encourage STI testing, promote awareness of the services that are currently available throughout the year, and increase public knowledge on how to prevent onward transmission of STIs. Many people are still unaware that STIs do not always display symptoms and that infection can occur through the mouth. Whatever the result we are here to provide advice and support.”

The majority of STI testing will take place at Terrence Higgins Trust’s centre on Ship Street and the Claude Nicol Clinic, although other venues including the Brighton Sauna on Marine Parade will also provide STI testing.

Brighton and Hove has a high prevalence of sexually transmitted infections with certain groups particularly affected including men who have sex with men (MSM), Black Minority Ethnic communities and young people.

Latest figures show 1,747 people in Brighton and Hove were diagnosed with STIs per 100,000 of the population, higher than the national average of 832, however this could be attributed to increased STI testing in Brighton and Hove.

Diagnosis rate for young people with chlamydia is also higher in the city compared to the national average, with 3,133 per 100,000 of the population diagnosed with chlamydia compared to a national average of 2,016.

However, rates of chlamydia screening are again higher in Brighton and Hove, which may explain why the diagnosis rate for the city is higher than the national average.

Help take the Brighton Pride Parade to the next level!

Do you want to be an exotic participant in the Brighton Pride Parade?

Now is your chance to find your inner ANIMAL and get involved, courtesy of a new project by andwhatarts and costumier extraordinaire Mandinga Arts.

Proud Interventions funded by Arts Council England is a stylised costume based processional work that will be brought to life by YOU,  – gay, straight, lesbian, trans, or bi, because this is a work about community.

As a volunteer you will receive 1.5 days (of FUN) training with andwhatarts, Mandinga Arts and a professional choreographer, to perform in one of Europe’s best Pride Parades. You will get free entrance to the party in the park.

Above all you will be part of something really special, get to wear amazing, bespoke and cheeky costumes designed by Mandinga and contribute to a project that injects high quality art and political motifs into the Brighton Pride parade.

Overall it will be an AMAZING (and FREE) experience!

Pride need around 40 committed volunteers. Come in groups or on your own.

For more details email Andrew at:  andwhatarts@gmail.com 

No experience is necessary just a willingness to get involved, dress up and have great fun.

PREVIEW: Jungle Book comes to Emporium, Brighton

Emporium will be staging its own tribute to Rudyard Kipling, the Rottingdean based writer born 150 years ago, with a musical version of his most famous work, The Jungle Book.

The Jungle Book

THIS classic tale of Mowgli the man cub raised by wolves, taught by a bear but hunted by a tiger, will transport its audiences from seagull-squawking Brighton to monkey-chattering India between July 7 and 31 with a script that was one of The Guardian’s ‘Top Five – not to be missed‘ shows when it toured in 2002/2003.

Playwright Mike Carter knows that the shadow of the Disney adaptation is a long one but feels the story is strong enough to bear more than one telling, with its power to both entertain and enthrall:

Mike said: “The element of danger is never far away.

“Shere Khan has made a vow that he will kill the man-cub before he grows up and the Chief Monkey threatens to eat Mowgli for breakfast for refusing to explain the mystery of fire to him!”

But it is the fire of friendship that fuels this particular story, as Mowgli’s love of his adoptive wolf mother, as well as of his mentor and protector Baloo the Bear, helps the man cub overcome the challenges he faces.

Along with Carter’s Earwig Productions, Emporium kicks off the summer with an epic adventure offering puppets, a live band and magical special effects suitable for children (and grown-up children) aged three years and older.

In keeping with the family feel, The Jungle Book reunites director James Weisz and choreographer Nathan Potter from last year’s hit pantomime Sleeping Beauty, working with a multi-ethnic cast and chorus drawn from across the region: a truly Sussex production befitting its original author.

The show marks the passing of a century and a half since  Kipling’s birth and the author has since been adopted by the Brighton area, given his time spent living at The Elms in Rottingdean, where he wrote a number of his best-loved works, including the Just So Stories.

Gordon Winter
Gordon Winter

This adaptation was originally performed at The Gardner Arts Centre at the University of Sussex in 1995, making this production not just a double anniversary, but also a homecoming: the jungle returns to the city.

The cast includes: Gordon Winter (Brothers of War / Mike Leigh’s Secrets & Lies) as Chief Monkey. Suzanne Proctor (Fran in Coronation Street, Isobel in C4’s Cucumber) as Bagheera and Kamari Romeo as Mowgli.


Event: The Jungle Book

Where: Emporium, 88 London Road, Brighton

When: July 7 to 31

Time:  7:30pm and 2pm (July 18/19/25/26)

Tickets: £12 (cubs), £15 (big cats), £50 (wolf packs of four).

This production will be raising money for the UNICEF Nepal Earthquake Appeal.

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