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PREVIEW: A Very Queer Nazi Faust @ Dandifest

A Very Queer Nazi Faust, Act One, premiers in one week, on April 25!

Celebrating 50 years since the partial decriminalisation of homosexuality, and highlighting the genocide of disabled people under the current Conservative Government, Vince Laws premieres the first act of A Very Queer Nazi Faust during the launch party in Norwich for Dandifest 2017.

The play is based on the story of Dr Faustus who sells his soul to the Devil in return for eternal life. In Vince Laws’ version Faust sells his soul in return for perfect health, with lots of awareness raising about what this government is doing to disabled people.

Fun, powerful and thought-provoking. The performance of Act One on April 25 will last about 15 mins and will help launch Dandifest 2017 at St Margaret’s Church of Art in Norwich.

♦ This looks magnificent and we would be very glad to support it fully….. Nick O’Brien, Norwich Pride

♦ I think it is going to be bloody brilliant….. John William Brown

♦ It feels vibrant, exciting and timely…..Pasco Q, Norwich Arts Centre

♦ Great read. I hope it gets published and produced!….Ann Young, Disability Arts Online

Christina Violet Sabberton, said: “Vince Laws has written a groundbreaking play. He will be performing an extract at the Dandifest opening night and the full play at this year’s Norwich Pride. He has a fantastic team working with him and needs to raise funds to keep this project going. Well worth supporting and being a part of.”

To make a donation and help Vince finishes the play, click here:


Event: A Very Queer Nazi Faust by Vince Laws

Where: St Margarets Church of Art, St Margarets St, Norwich NR2 4

When: Tuesday, April 25 at Art Launch Party for Dandifest 2017

Time: 6pm

Cost: Free

For more information, click here:

BRIGHTON FRINGE PREVIEW: Deep in The Heart of Me @ Sweet Waterfront 2

Thirty years on from Shirley Valentine, Janet takes a holiday to Greece. There she meets the woman of her dream, in a suit and tie singing Frank Sinatra songs.

To a backdrop of his greatest hits, All or Nothing at All, Strangers in the Night, I’ve Got you under my Skin their romance unfolds and Janet realises this holiday was a departure in more ways than one.

This new play comes from the writing, performing and real life partnership of Ali Child and Rosie Wakley follows the remarkable success of their debut show All The Nice Girls which was nominated for the Outstanding Local Talent Award at Brighton Fringe 2015 after beginning life at the Salisbury Fringe in 2014.

Deep in the Heart of Me picked up a nomination for Best LGBT+ Show at Brighton Fringe 2016 and was also featured in the Fringe WINDOWS Showcase.

Since May, Ali and Rosie have taken the show to the International Women’s Festival on Lesbos where they performed in an open air cinema to an audience of people from all over the world.

This modern coming out tale is peppered with songs from the rat pack repertoire and is a treat for lovers of jazz, swing and Latin, with some country and western thrown in.

It’s a comic, sensitive and touching account of a middle-aged woman’s struggle with issues of sexuality, loneliness and the empty nest. It’s a story that moves and engages audiences, with opportunities to join in with karaoke and dancing.

Selected by a panel for the Brighton Fringe Windows Showcase 2016 this show is earmarked as one not to miss and is presented in tandem with their latest show, Fall of Duty which has been selected for the Window Showcase 2017.

Ali says: “Our shows celebrates lesbian love in a witty, joyous, musical way. Audience members can expect to sing along, to laugh and be moved.”

Deep in The Heart of Me is suitable for everyone aged 12 up.


Event: Deep in The Heart of Me

Where: Sweet Waterfront 2King’s Road, Brighton, BN1 2GS

When: Sunday, May 7, 14, 21, 28

Time: 1pm

Cost: £8/£6

To book tickets online, click here:

 

BRIGHTON FRINGE PREVIEW: Fall of Duty @ Sweet Waterfront 2

Thrust together by war and escapism, pulled apart by a century.

It’s 1916. An actor falls from the sky in Northern France. A hundred years on, can Sue and her son Jack, 20, escape political turmoil and an addiction to infinite warfare?

Four people thrust together by war, song, reality, and escapism, but pulled apart by a century.

The true story of Basil Hallam and Forces’ sweetheart, lesbian, Elsie Janis, recreating Gilbert the Filbert the Knut with the ‘k’.

Nominated for Best LGBTQ+ Show Brighton Fringe 2016 for Deep in The Heart of Me,

♦ incredibly enjoyable, endearing, utterly believable….. (Arts Award Voice)

♦ The sweetest of Fringe treats….. (Fringe Guru)

Now experiencing the party life in Brighton, ten years ago Harry Child was performing as a youngster in three successive West End shows. This piece marks his return to the stage in the company of his mum. The whole project gives her an excuse to keep tabs on him and get an insight into his world!

Harry plays Jack, the school drop‐out son of Alison’s character Sue, an academic, obsessed with digging out good stories from the archive. Jack is more interested in lying in bed, going online, and playing shooting games on his VR headset.

Alison says: “It’s a massive endorsement of our work to be selected for the third year running for special WINDOW showcasing at England’s biggest arts festival. We’re proud and optimistic that this show will excite our target audiences ‐ any grown‐up who lives under the same roof as their parents or adult offspring; anyone with an interest in First World War history or theatre history, anyone seeking to be entertained and challenged by an hour‐long, comedic reflection on contemporary life and its relationship to the past.”

Fall of Duty is suitable for ages 12+.


Event: Fall of Duty by Alison Child

Where: Sweet Waterfront 2, King’s Road Brighton, East Sussex, BN1 2GS

When: May 8-14

Time: 5.10pm

Cost: £8/£6

To book online, click here:

BOOK REVIEW: Jerusalem Ablaze: Orlando Ortega-Medin

Jerusalem Ablaze:
Stories of Love and Other Obsessions
by Orlando Ortega-Medina

Jerusalem Ablaze: Stories of Love and Other Obsessions collects thirteen eclectic works of dark fiction, taking the reader from Los Angeles to the eastern townships of Quebec, and from Tokyo to Jerusalem. In Jerusalem’s Old City a young priest and a dominatrix converse in the dying light; on Oregon’s windswept coast a fragile woman discovers a body washed up on the beach after a storm; and in Post-war Japan a young protégé watches his master’s corpse burn, with bitter thoughts blazing in his mind.

Ortega-Medina’s characters are flawed, broken individuals, trying their best to make sense of their lives as they struggle with sexuality, death, obsession, and religion. His prose is brilliant vibrant, twisting in the dark like tango dancers illuminated by lightening, sometimes sensual, occasionally terrifying, always stylish. His capturing of mood and attitude in a sentence is superb and this debut offers up the delight of his mind as it cavorts around the crepuscular avenues of his imagination.

There’s a touch of humour in these stories but overall the tone is dark, aggressive, full of shadow and unexpected finds, like a beach during a storm.  He explores themes of loneliness and escape of facing demons and finding lost loves but his over aching theme is the unpredictability of death and it’s strident proclamation of the passions of the living, a tremendous dichotomy of a read and a delight of a  page turner.

Out now £8.99

Read more of this original authors work, or find more information about this book on his website here: 

Brighton Fringe to open with a bang

To celebrate its biggest ever festival, Brighton Fringe joins forces with The Warren to kick-start the festival with fireworks on the opening night.

On Thursday May 4, fireworks will be launched from the top of St Peter’s Church to mark the opening of England’s largest arts festival.

Free tickets are now available for up to 2,000 people to view the fireworks from the South Side of St Peter’s Church and enjoy entertainment courtesy of Fringe City.

Julian Caddy
Julian Caddy

Julian Caddy, Brighton Fringe’s Managing Director, said: “As England’s largest arts festival it feels only right to start with something massive and spectacular from the top of one of Brighton’s most iconic buildings in the centre of town.

“I’m really pleased to be working with the lovely people at The Warren who are helping make the start of this year’s Brighton Fringe an amazing one.”

Nicola Haydn, Artistic Director of Otherplace Productions, the company that runs The Warren, said: “We are really proud to be hosting the launch night again and we are looking forward to another fantastic festival. The Warren’s site will be even better this year and we are incredibly proud of the programme.”

Barulho samba band at Fringe venue The Warren in 2016 (c) James Bellorini

This year’s Brighton Fringe which runs from May 5 – June 4, features around 1,000 different events including smash hit family shows, international cabaret, spoken word, live music, visual art, world-class theatre and comedy.

The Warren will be hosting over 180 companies with a total of 777 performances and shows, making it the largest single promoter at Brighton Fringe.

The viewing site opens at 7.30pm with entertainment from 8.45pm. Fireworks start at 9.45pm. The event is free but advance booking is essential.

To obtain free tickets, click here:

Or telephone: 01273 917272 or visit the Brighton Fringe Box Office on New Road.

FEATURE: For Whom the Bell Tolls.

An afternoon with local artist Mackenzie Bell by Craig Hanlon-Smith

A saunter through Brighton’s magnificent Clifton Conservation Area is in many ways akin to stepping into a painting. The uninterrupted sunlight intensely throwing its reflection back into the air as it bounces off the immaculately maintained white houses. Were it not for the hotchpotch of poorly chosen vehicles scattered around its streets like misshapen beach pebbles cast ashore following a sea storm, you would be forgiven for believing you had been transported to Lyme Regis in Jane Austen’s era.

And it is this local architectural beauty Mackenzie Bell and I first discuss when he opens the door and beams at me with the same intensity as the sunlight. His house is beautiful and I tell him so “thank you” he returns “I’ve done an awful lot to it over the past thirty years” and I try not to be lured into a welcome coma by the delicate lullaby of the water feature whispering to me through the open kitchen door. Before long we are discussing hair (of course) and his ill-fated trip to the same Harley Street follicle specialist as Wayne Rooney: “He said to me do you want the bad news first or the good news, I told him to give me the bad news to which he replied ‘well the bad news is your hair’s too thin I can do nothing for you. The good news is, that bad news will save you fourteen thousand pounds”.

My afternoon with Mackenzie is actually to find out more about his upcoming exhibition as part of the Brighton Festival’s Open House season, but not before he decorates the kitchen table with pastries “you’re not one of these on a diet are you?” and then showers me with coffee as I ignore his suggestion of wine, although I am tempted. “The exhibition is all new work, paintings I’ve been working on for the past five years. I didn’t want to show you too much today…” he says before hurriedly rushing into the living room only to return with an array of canvases that he lavishes across the kitchen floor as if Jackson Pollock excitedly at work in his studio. His energy and enthusiasm is as fascinating to behold as it is infectious and I feel a sense of privilege at my private viewing as he talks and walks me through each piece, its technique and textures. “I am inspired at the most unexpected of moments” he adds as he teases and shifts his paintings around the floor as if planning the exhibition at this very moment. “This one came from being in a bubble bath and observing how the bubbles evolved and disappeared before me”. I ask if these works will be featured in the upcoming collection “Oh yes” he enthuses as he points out his use of gold leaf on the more recent works: “I like to use older, almost forgotten techniques but within a contemporary more abstract piece”. Each of the works that I see is certainly arresting and it’s fascinating to see the prolific nature of piece after piece exploring the same themes but from a different angle.

 

Mackenzie has lived through a varied series of careers including crewing aboard transatlantic liners Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth, managing the Zwimmer Gallery in London and working for an Antique dealer in San Francisco. He has taught art across the world from Los Angeles to Sydney but most notably at St Pauls College Sussex. Upon retiring from teaching in 1998, he started up a landscape garden design company in his words ‘sculpting’ with plants. He now paints full time. “I loved teaching but I gave all my creativity away to my students & at the end of term I was so drained there was nothing left for me. I never produced my own work. I never even wanted to pick up a paintbrush let alone even look at Art. It took three years after leaving teaching to feel sufficiently re-charged to start painting again.”

 

Shortly after leaving his teaching career behind, Makenzie moved to Cornwall, where with his then partner and through his love for landscape garden design, they created the Northwood Water Gardens together on the edge of Bodmin Moor. “The fun in creating Northwood was the process. We built lakes with islands and mini sculpture parks on the islands. We planted fifteen-hundred trees and shrubs but once we were open to the public, my role became one of maintenance and hosting. Eventually we closed the gardens to the public although we intend to open again in the future for charity events”.

I ask Mackenzie if his eye for landscape design makes him a nightmare guest at summer garden parties. He laughs and confesses “I do have to bite my tongue, otherwise I would end up rearranging everyone’s garden, furniture and paintings”. So not just their outside spaces then? “No! All of it. I get so frustrated when I see paintings hung so high in people’s houses that you have to look up at them as something to be revered. They should be in your eye-line, they are to be appreciated not lifted up on some imagined pedestal”.

Mackenzie lived in Cornwall for ten years but five years ago met his new partner and returned to the house in Brighton where I am now inhaling my second pastry of the afternoon.  “Leaving [Cornwall] was sad in a way but I missed the vibrancy of Brighton’s art and gay scene”.

Mackenzie’s early life began in South Devon, studying fine art at Exeter College of Art, before moving to London to study at Central St. Martins: ” and this was one of the most depressing times of my life, studying at this most prestigious establishment. I was confused & wrestling in coming to terms with my sexuality & literally moving from one bedsit to another every month.” he says as our afternoon together draws to a close and I make to leave. His eyes lock mine in such a way that not only do I believe him, I am rooted to the spot: “homosexuality was illegal, I was not free to be myself” and I am genuinely moved by not only his story, but his sharing of his explosion of creative freedom in his works which are still scattered across the floor.

And as I leave Mackenzie to the rest of his afternoon, I think of something he told me about his life immediately after his career in education: “You have to understand that when I started teaching at St. Paul’s in Sussex, the world was a very different place. Although it was an open secret, I could easily have been fired for being gay and when I left in the late 1990s, I felt as though I had carried this like an oak yoke heavy around my shoulders. From that point on, every new person I have met I have said to them ‘I am a gay man’. It wasn’t until then that I felt free to be my own person again.”

 

Mackenzie Bell’s exhibition will be part of The Brighton Festival Open House season from Saturday May 27th to Monday May 29th. Venue: 1, Victoria Place , Brighton, BN1 3FR. Times: 12:00 until 18:00 10% of all painting sales will be donated to The Rainbow Fund.

 

Website: Mackenziebellfineart.com

@craigscontinuum

 

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