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BOOK REVIEW: No Fear No Shame by Alice Denny

No Fear No Shame

By Alice Denny

This new collection of poems from Alice Denny, like herself, is slim but packs a punch. There is an essential contradiction in all Denny’s poems; like all poets she’s both startlingly intimate and ruthlessness private, exposing and hiding, showing and telling, letting us feel the throb of blood in her veins, the skipped heartbeats, see the flash of metaphor as it crosses her mind, feel the tear as it slides down her cheek and the shock of uncompromising unconditional love where there should be bitterness, anger or despair.

Denny speaks of hope, O she sings the body electric! she is multitudes, shows us the quiet firm steps of doing daily struggle and although sophisticated in the untangling and unknotting of the gender binary restrictions of the English language she slyly brings her authentic British voice out into the silence caused by her bold fearless challenging.

Her humour, humility and honestly is almost as startling as her rhyming and also as simple.  These poems are orphans, clarions, warnings, guidebooks and tattoo’s of experience.  Denny who is from Hastings brings with her that combination of soft marking chalk and unyielding sparking flint that underlays and marks out the ancient Sussex landscape and port.

From her safe harbour of words we set sail across a sea of possibility, in full flood, with our nets cast wide for experience and our sails full of love.  With Captain Denny navigating we have no fear, our journey is not to be dull.

For more information or to buy the book try City Books, Western Road in Hove or visit Alice Denny’s website here: 

BOOK REVIEW: Black Wave: Michelle Tea

Black Wave

By Michelle Tea

Desperate to quell her addictions to drugs, disastrous romance, and nineties San Francisco, Michelle heads south for LA. But soon it’s officially announced that the world will end in one year, and life in the sprawling metropolis becomes increasingly weird. This new book from poet Michelle Tea explored the opportunity of dancing with the apocalypse; it’s odd and funny, dark and engaging, dangerous, dirty and seriously enlightening and packs a clear sparkling punch, time and time again.

I started this book as soon as I’d finished it, needed to read it again to enjoy Tea’s ambitious delicious prose as it slowly wrapped itself around the end…. is this how it ends? I hope so bumping and grinding from genre to genre, through time and ideas and never quite settling anywhere, while all the time staring you down from the crepuscular depths of addiction and despair, like the black wave of the title. It’s there, huge, looming, undeniable, irresistible change itself.

Teas’ prose is wonderful, Queer, lusciously Lesbo, darkly Dykey and frothy, filthy and fun. It’s a seriously gripping and evocative tale of Queer women love in all the messy hyper clarity colourful mixed up ways that Tea can tweak and twist her lady loving ideas into.  I laughed out loud a few times just as her wonderful sentences and re-reading the book was a joy.

A book with huge startling grace and a stunning examination of our need to find meaning in a world gone mad and going for good.

Out now £10

Amethyst Editions, to buy the book, click here:

BOOK REVIEW: Bitch Doctrine – Essays for Dissenting Adults: Laurie Penny

Bitch Doctrine

Essays for Dissenting Adults

By Laurie Penny

Noted British feminist Laurie Penny is a writer who tackles gender, sexism, identity, and power issues in a world being laid waste by “kamikaze capitalism.”

From her opening premise that ‘toxic masculinity is killing the world’ you’ve got a really clear idea of where this elegant, refined and ruthlessly researched, argued and targeted seriously funny set of rants are going, and they’re aiming to the heart of the matter. Penny keeps the beat of clear-headed truthful argument and keeps it strong, undermining and exposing the lies and complex deceptions meant to pit us queers, women, Trans folk, black, older and others against each other.

She is convincing on the demands and degradations of our power structures and the harm it is doing, knowingly to our lives, bodies and world and Penny is clear on what needs to be done to right these apparently endless wrongs.   Each of these articles is framed and filled with insight and empathy, Penny gets it. Her urgent convincing arguments should be on every school syllabus and younger LGBT+ people should be bought this book to arm them for the arguments that attempt to batter and dismiss their existence.

Penny gives not only hope, but ideas. Filled with power and truth this book was a blast of trumpets against the walls of privilege and in all of this she’s funny, engaging and takes a hard poke at us and our world views with a wonderfully sly smile on her face.

Seriously good reading.

Out now £12.99

For more info or to buy the book from the publisher’s website click here:

 

One funny lady – Hannah Brackenbury

“Hannah Brackenbury has been described as Victoria Wood and Tim Minchin’s lesbian love child. She’s more than that. She’s Hannah, and her songs are both bloody funny and beautifully touching.”…..Vicky Nangle (Latest 7)

Hannah Brackenbury
Hannah Brackenbury

Eric Pages catches up with local funny lass Hannah Brackenbury in a rare moment of quiet in her busy showbiz schedule.

When did you come out? At 14 I knew, I didn’t feel anxious about it. I went to Derby University at 18 and went to the LGB society meeting and there were people from my course and that was that… I shaved my head, pierced my nose, bought some combat trousers and away I went! I told my parents in the summer holidays, it was no great shock to anyone; I’d always been such a tomboy!

In 2009 after living in the Midlands, I took the plunge, handed in my notice, sold everything and moved to Brighton. It was the best decision I ever made. I was born by the seaside so being back by the sea just felt right and the LGBT+ scene added to that.

What makes you laugh? Sketch comedy, I adore Saturday Night Live, and obsessed with Kristen Wiig! Her performance in Bridesmaids makes me cry with laughter. I regret never seeing Victoria Wood perform live. She is my biggest inspiration and I always assumed that one day I’d get the chance to see her live. My favourite comedy sketch is the Two Ronnies ‘Swedish Made Simple’, they are in a  restaurant pretending to speak Swedish using english letters to sound  the words. It’s a simple idea, so clever and funny. Cracks me up every time! I love word play.

When was the last time you cried? A few days ago, listening to a Scottish folk song called ‘Caledonia’ by female country duo Ward Thomas. It’s the most beautiful, simple song, piano, acoustic guitar and two-part vocal harmonies… really tugs at the heart-strings. The lyrics talk about moving around and friends coming and going which really struck a chord.

What was the highlight of your recent tour? Oh I had so much fun! This was my first solo show on tour, a huge undertaking as I did everything myself. Norwich – the closest date to my home town of Great Yarmouth – was a room full of my family and friends! My mum hired minibuses to bring as many family members from Great Yarmouth as possible! That was a riotous night and my personal highlight.

What makes you angry? I don’t have much of a temper, I take after my dad who is the most laid-back man you could meet, I have a few pet hates, people eating with their mouth open, noisy eaters! Makes my blood boil!! KEEP YOUR MOUTH SHUT!!

What do you sing when no-one’s around and what gets you dancing? Songs from old musicals, classics like Oliver, My Fair Lady, and The Sound of Music… films I grew up watching. I am besotted with Julie Andrews. ‘Don’t Stop Me Now’ by Queen. Never fails to get me moving, and it’s always my first choice karaoke song!

Where’s your favourite place in the city? Nothing beats a spot of people-watching from a window on St James’ Street!  The sights you see! I’m a keen cyclist along the Undercliff Walk, especially early mornings in the summer months. It’s beautiful and so peaceful there at sunrise.

Bran or Brandy? Do you lead a healthy life? I try very hard to be healthy but my sweet tooth beats me! Vodka for me, not brandy.  I wrote a song that ended up as the title track of my last album – Jumbled (The Vodka Song).

What makes you proud to be LGBT+? I’m very proud to live in a city with such a liberal outlook; it’s easy to forget how difficult so many LGBT+ folks still have it. I’ve loved being involved with the Rainbow Chorus and I’ve found the gay community in Brighton to be welcoming and inclusive, and gay women naturally make up the majority of my audiences. It’s nice to give something back; I now run a monthly women’s social night called Indigo Club which offers quality entertainment for gay women. 

What’s an overrated pleasure? Having a massage. I always come away aching more than I did before or feeling that it just didn’t quite hit the spot!!

Can you whistle? Yep. But I firmly believe it’s NOT something that should be done in public! Another pet hate is when older men whistle a really ‘showy’ tune and add a little vibrato-like wobble on the notes! I always end up behind one in the supermarket, you can hear them all the way around, there’s no escape!

What’s your favourite rhyme?

There once was a man from Bengal

Who went to a fancy dress ball

He thought “Yeah I’ll risk it”

“I’ll go as a biscuit”

But a dog ate him up in the hall

Up and coming gigs? I host a women’s social night at Latest Music Bar called Indigo Club. A mix of live music, comedy and cabaret then a dance party till 2am with a different music theme each month! The 80s themes have been very popular!

Next Indigo Club nights:

Friday August 4 – Pride Special

Friday, August 25

For more information, click here: 

BOOK REVIEW: Queer City: Peter Ackroyd

Queer City

by Peter Ackroyd

Ackroyd delivers an interesting read – yet again – about London, this time our London, queer, gay lesbian and all the wondrous different types of sexuality and fluid genders that this city, which was a city from the start, has thrown up, protected, hidden, suppressed, cultured, twisted and then celebrated. With endless facts to delight, thrill and amuse Ackroyd’s book is a stupendous celebration and investigation it queer life in the British Island from Celtic times to the present day.

Although not always centred on London itself, he manages to give context and understanding along with a lot of wonderfully saucy detail into the various sub cultures, peoples, types, fashions, habits and secret groups of queers and gay men thought-out the last two thousand years. The chapters are laid out chronologically, but also with a dizzying factual dance thought politics, sex, religion, sex,  monarchy, sex, wars, and empire with enough subtext (and sex) to chew on and a seriously good habit of laying things out in the context of their times, making for a deep and thorough understanding of the why, where’s and how’s of Queer life in our glorious capital city.

There’s some familiar stuff included but where it is Ackroyd has deepened its understanding with background info on the political, social and moral ideas of the day, giving an understanding not just of how these people lived, but how they lived openly (or not) and how they were treated. He’s a bit vague on the first thousand odd years, with some very skimpy stuff before he seems to hit full steam on the 17th century and then can’t be stopped. It’s like standing in a drag queens way as they throw stuff out their walk-in closed, glitz, glamour, harness, hat and dildo go thumping down left right and centre and you need to duck and dodge to avoid getting hit.  The tempo of this book is wildly unbalanced but its interesting enough to ( mostly) not bother.

One comes away with feeling that there’s nothing new under the sun ( or on the streets of London)  and the types we see on the streets of Soho and Vauxhall have been there, in one way or another since the dawn of the metropolis, forming it, being part of it and being part of the vibrant culture of this huge mixing pot that is the capital city of the United Magic Kingdom.  I take issue with Ackroyd’s summing up of the changes in acceptance and law being akin to a great tide in social acceptance that ebbs and flows of its own volition as its bold people that grab the ship’s wheel of society when it’s afloat on such a full sea, and demand and force change to happen, but overall it’s a fun read.

Ackroyd connects us modern-day queers up with our Celtic and Roman forbearers and all the benders, faggots, dykes,  trannies, queers, inverts, perverts, queens, Ganymede’s, sappho’s, cross dressers, gender twisters, fops, dandies, genderqueers and utterly baroque non binary beauties (and run of the mill) gay boys in between. Who were all after the same things, same-sex love, identity on their own terms and sex and often going about it in surprisingly familiar ways.

A seriously good queer read.  Validating, interesting and endlessly fascinating, just like us in our infinite variety.

Out now

Hardback £16.99

For more information, click here:  

BOOK REVIEW: Ocean Vuong: Night sky with exit wounds

Ocean Vuong

Night sky with exit wounds

Ocean Vuong’s words writhe and spin the page, his usage and abuse of English is astonishing, he’s more smelter and Vulcan at his poetry forge making these words transform into something other than just letters and meaning, his poems are almost living things, they move in meaning and temperament deepening on how you view them and they squint back at you, spitting, laughing, quietly crying in the corner then looking you straight in the eye with this dark pool of experience.  His ability to re-position, juxtapose, highlight and bring words forward in a flash is astonishing and urgent and his writing gripped me from the moment I opened this book.

His own journey to becoming a poem is as fraught, curious and intense as is his writing and he has the ability to capture small silent moments that will stay with you, nagging you to read them again. To let the words expand in your mind blossoming into his curious and stark beauties. He can compress more ugly things and times too, into something hard and small enough to cope with, but their deceptive lead-like weight gives away their density.

I judge a poet (and I hear Walk Whitman & Emily Dickinson tut tut’ing at my presumption, both surely would have thrilled at Vuong’s talent) by the way the words cling to me, find me in small silent moment, flash up along the hard shoulders of the highways of my life, demand attention from me and hide under pebbles, it’s been two weeks now and still Vuong’s words stalk me. Sometimes poets and poems come to you when you are in most in need of them, they salve or cauterise, but they change you by the reading of them. I never turn my back on a poem and Vuong’s own difficult experience in life and seeking honest gay experiences and love echo me, and each and every one of us. He’s both startlingly original and universal.

He takes us across his life and experience, taking in huge themes; life, death ,war, loss, change, sexuality, queerness, outsider, lover, student, teacher, and  leaving small gifts of glowing hope, that float to the surface of these crafted works. His gay love poems are stark, beautiful and utterly unnerving in their uncompromising adoration. No fear, although often trembling, these poem contradict themselves, strong and fluid, dark but searing, honest but wrapped in untruths.

This book is a magical journey into the imagination and talents of Vuong’s mind and worth pursing for anybody interesting in poems which can change. More spells than sentences, they alter reality as we read them and leave us impressed and impressed upon by this astonishing young man’s collection of debut work.

This is a beautiful, challenging and softly stunning collection of writing and worth reading to remind ourselves of how tender, urgent and universal are our feelings.

Recommended. 

£10.00

For more info or to buy the books click here:

PICTURE DIARY: World Pride in Madrid, 2017

Madrid estamos orgullosos de ti!

Madrid World Pride 2017 opened with a ceremony that took place in the Teatro Calderon and the streets around were packed full of expectant Spanish and visitors.

This is a city that takes Pride and an excuse for a party very seriously indeed. The weather was cooler than usual (which was lovely as it’s usually 40 degrees) and this edition of World Pride in Madrid commemorated 40 years since the first LGBT+ protests in Spain; 30 years since Chueca became the centre for the gay community and Pride; 20 years since the first Pride Parade that united political protest with celebration and 10 years since EuroPride was last celebrated in the city.

Moreover, Madrid is the first Spanish-speaking capital to celebrate WorldPride and WOW did they go for it

The climax of the WorldPride Festival took place on Saturday July 1, with a huge procession of activist groups, LGBT+ groups, political parties and supporters and followed up by the longest floats ever, 52 superb trucks stuffed with dancers crawled their way through the centre of Madrid, starting at Atocha Station and ending in Plaza de Colón where a main stage welcomed all the participants with music and the reading of the manifesto of freedom, inclusion and diversity. The parade took more than four hours to slowly roll by.

There was an alternative protest Pride a few days before as there has been criticism of the commercialisation of Spanish Prides in the last few years and the sponsorship showed, with occasional uninspired rainbow-wash over commercial products.

More than two million people attended the parade, Madrid Prides floats get bigger and bigger each year, seem to defy any health and safety rules and spewed foam, glitter, bubbles, smoke, kisses, condoms and a seriously hot amount of flirting on the huge happy crowds watching. It was slightly less chaotic than previous years but you can’t beat the sight of over a hundred speedo clad Latino muscle boys writhing, bumping and grinding while clinging on a four level scaffolder lorry with some seriously cool music being blasted out.

There were as many floats representing Lesbian clubs and bars, Trans associations, as there were men’s bars and representatives of bars/clubs and spaces where everyone was welcomed.

The entire city was rainbow-hued, draped, painted or lit up to celebrate both the local and visiting LGBT+ populations. All public spaces, all main buildings; including the Spanish Parliament symbolically rainbow lit all weekend (imagine that in the UK!), street crossings gays’d up, windows decorated across the city and rainbow flags everywhere.

It’s been a long time since I’ve been anywhere that felt so safe, beautiful and queer, everywhere you went there was huge crowds of LGBT’s and happy allies enjoying the kind of free open engaging and inclusive parties, stages, music events, arts, crafts and famous galleries all joining in.

From the Prado’s special homo exhibition to incredibly huge parties in fantastic clubs topping out with Fabrik’s mega parties of 7,000 revellers going at it all night – Madrid excelled this year.

Tubes ran all night, extra busses, streets scrubbed clean each morning; Madrid was in its groove. We were up till dawn, with half of the city dancing in squares, drinking, skipping, eating and meeting old (and new) friends across the city, night after night after night.

The Spanish know how to party and Madrid is an example of how a city committed both politically and culturally to being truly inclusive can provide such a superbly diverse collection of events culminating in a superb Pride Procession and reap the substantial rewards bestowed by us, the LGBT’s of the world when we are made to feel so very, very welcome and so very, very Proud.

Vive la vida Madrid! Indeed!!

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REVIEW: Jane Eyre @Theatre Royal

Jane Eyre
Bristol Old Vic in association with the National Theatre.
Based on the novel by Charlotte Brontë

Following a critically acclaimed season at the National Theatre, Jane Eyre is touring the UK and is in Brighton until Saturday. This innovative re-imagining of Charlotte Brontë’s masterpiece is collaboration between the National Theatre and Bristol Old Vic and is directed by Sally Cookson.

The classic story of the trailblazing Jane is as inspiring as ever. This bold and dynamic production uncovers one woman’s fight for freedom and fulfilment on her own terms. Jane Eyre’s spirited heroine faces life’s obstacles head-on, surviving poverty, injustice and the discovery of bitter betrayal before taking the ultimate decision to follow her heart.

Nadia Clifford’s Eyre is superb, an active, fierce reimagining from the very first moment and her slight physical frame accentuates her struggle to be taken seriously, on her own terms, in an unjust world set against her sex and needs.  With her chorus of internal dialogues we ranged through Jane’s brutal and brutish experience and see how they fail to crush her but compress her before her final flowering at the end of hope. Tim Delap’s raging, harsh, broody Rochester is an example of a modern interpretation of all the privilege of empire and money being projected as emotional turmoil,  addiction, bad actions over bad people ( as Brontë herself claims) and not the pitiless core and keen wickedness of the man, it serves the action well and his slow softening to Jane is acted with conviction, he is accompanied by the most superb representation of a dog I’ve seen on stage in years from Paul Mundell who delighted the crowd with his convincing and fun canine action.

Cookson’s direction is tight and efficient and these are some seriously well-drilled actors, she can’t have spared the whip. Just delightful, all of them,  all thought the night, from their own stand out performances (honestly everyone on the cast shone this evening, a flawless crew) to the choreography and ethereal slow-mo actions scenes Cookson has brought out the very best of individual actors and ensemble performances.

The onstage musicians who are also part of the cast provide a constant musical backdrop to the action, sometimes as soft harmonies, other times evoking stage-coach journeys with passion and humour, shifting from school chant to chapel hymn to accompanying beautiful set pieces from singer (and Bertha) Melanie Marshall whose side-ways narrative gives her a dignity and sadness that’s often missing in productions of Eyre. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen such a delicate, careful and essentially sad representation of Bertha and the whole play felt much better balanced because of it.  Her renditions of ‘Mad about the boy’ and ‘Crazy’ were both perfect reinterpretations, which suited the narrative perfectly and added another layer devoid of Jane’s perspective. Marshall’s voice soaring with purity, deep and soft with desire and commanding with her own narrative power stalking the action was astonishing and her lurking, sensual, constantly moving presence gave Bertha real power with no ‘mad women in the attic’ cliché. Marshall gives a tender and convincing performance and her voice is utterly beguiling. I was bewitched by this Bertha, and she gave a believable foundation to Rochester’s original adoration of her and his long devoted care.

Katie Sykes’s costumes are great, evoking class, status and narrative without too much period flim-flam and her pared down essences give a real flavour of the muted colours and rough fabrics that would have been the everyday of most folk rather than the luxurious fabrics of the wealthy socialites. Bertha’s deep scarlet dress is a shocking highlight and contrast both in sensuality and style and gives Melanie Marshall a seriously physical stage presence, brooding, other-than and disconcerting whilst being impossible to ignore and melancholy, strange and whispering of faded glamour.

The set is all scrubbed oak boards and scaffolding with windows to drop down, up and out to suggest various of the spaces of the narrative, school, house, classroom, the Hall, the lane etc, it’s evocative without being in the slightest bit convincing but the superb acting more than makes up for the lack of imagination in the set and if you like folk running around (and around) and climbing up and down ladders and across floorboard you’re in for a treat, it felt like the Thornfield workout.  The lighting is as suggestive and the occasional theatrical effect; wind on the veil, a lightning storm and real flames (always a vicarious thrill in a flammable tinderbox like the Theatre Royal) work well, but again the top-notch acting transports us where the set just prods.

The plot roars, of unjust life and hope, of love and wonder, of duty and cruelly, of lost folk and lack of opportunities and of the voices of clear minds that yearn and ache for recognition and love and it’s true to Bronte in that.  I enjoyed it immensely, my companion and the rest of the theatre were thrilled and transfixed by it, it’s been a long time since I’ve heard a theatre that quiet for so long and there was a tumultuous applause for the well deserved and physically exhausted actors at the end.

It’s a long play, but the constant chopping of space, action, time and inner/outer worlds keeps the actions and narrative moving along, it’s a carnal treat. There were some lovely scene changes where Jane’s just whirls her skirts, they fill out, she turns, and we find ourselves moved on.

Simple, evocative, engaging and seriously well acted this is thoroughly modern Eyre, and as relevant today as when it was written, it’s still an unjust world for many people, so grab any young person and take them to this production and treat your friends if you can get a ticket… We need theatre like this, to remind us how important it is to live on our own terms, as Jane says..

“I am no bird; and no net ensnares me; I am a free human being, with an independent will..”

Ravishing, book now!

Runs until Saturday, July 29 at
Theatre Royal, Brighton

BOOK REVIEW: The Hopkins Conundrum by Simon Edge

The Hopkins Conundrum

By Simon Edge

Tim Cleverley inherits a failing pub in Wales. The only thing of interest is its location, where Victorian poet Gerard Manley Hopkins wrote his masterpiece – The Wreck – about a group of nuns fleeing Germany on board a doomed ship. To Tim, the opaque religious poetry is incomprehensible – almost as if it’s written in code.

This gives him an idea; he contacts an American author – famous as a purveyor of Holy Grail hokum – suggesting he write a book about the poet and entirely fabricated, ‘mystery’. The famous author is going through a period of writer’s block and latches on to his idea. But will Tim’s new relationship with a genuine Hopkins fan scupper the plan? ​

The Hopkins Conundrum blends the real stories of Hopkins and the shipwrecked nuns while casting a wry eye on The Da Vinci Code industry in a highly original mix of fiction, literary biography and satirical commentary. It’s a romantic modern love story and the story of love of life and faith and how that directed Hopkins to a wild Welsh space.  It’s chapters hop from the here and now, the then and there, we are both in the poem with the nuns, the poets thoughts, the modern day couple and the rural Welsh village life, it’s an interesting and compelling read and the ultimate death of the tragic nun’s and the poems muse themselves is treated with a stark dignity.

New gay author Simon Edge bring us this lovely story of poems, nuns, persecution, the Welsh countryside and some romantic intrigue and it’s a delicious read with some hints into Hopkins homoerotic experiences and the poetry itself washing though the book entwined in the whirls and eddies of Edges great prose. It’s one of those odd books which deliver more than you’d expect and Edge’s dedication to his partner – also in the book – brought a tear to my eye.

Paperback

£8.99

For more information or to order the book from the authors website, click here:

REVIEW: Shirley Valentine @Theatre Royal

Shirley Valentine

Theatre Royal

Brighton

Written by Willy Russell, Shirley Valentine is a superb one women story of triumph, of recognising the worth of being in the moment, the importance of living for yourself and knowing that things have a shelf life and sometimes you need to break open the walls that keep you safe, to really experience living again, and learn to love yourself.

This 30th anniversary stage production directed by Glen Walford, who commissioned and directed the original Shirley Valentine in Liverpool in 1986 is a love affair with the Theatre. It’s a touch perfect production, the set and direction tight and clear, the lights and soundscape just the right amount of suggestiveness and it all centres on this utterly beguiling, convincing and engaging performance from Jodie Prenger.

She is playing Shirley, the middle-aged housewife heroine of Willy Russell’s award-winning play who first challenges then decides to join her friend and escape her domestic drudgery in Liverpool for a Greek holiday which will open her to differences in living and ultimately change her life.

Prenger’s performance is  a masterclass in understated brilliance, her comic timing so sharp is seems effortless, her small silent pauses just enough for us to fill them with our sighs, possibly our tears and empathy before she whips it up and away from us, like her ultra animated tea towel, and throws us into laughter. From eyes welling up with the brutal honestly of her self-regard to laugh out loud finishing of sentences this is a stylish switch back performance of a women volcanically rising into her prime.

Prenger is a slightly more glamorous Shirley than the Pauline Collins version but this makes her feel more contemporary and for a 30-year-old script this holds up superbly as the observations of her family’s behaviour are not beholden to the technology they use.

Russell’s writing of female working class characters is superb, he voices them in an authentic, considerate and empowering way and there are not enough roles this powerful for women. It’s an inspiring story and Shirley’s journey is a deliberate and easy to follow map towards the unknowns. From the same and stifling life she shared with a man she’s grown familiar with, to a foreign holiday with the potential to change everything.

Shirley stays with us, conversationally giving us insight and understanding, ostensibly taking to her ‘confidant’ –the Wall- and then ‘the Rock’ when in Greece but actually talking directly to us, the audience and Prenger appears to connect to each and every member of the audience, she’s superbly there and present in a role which is all about being utterly present in the moment.

Her change of voice for neighbours, family and husband are superb and she’s physically funny, a shifted shoulder and sideways hop across the stage getting huge laughs, her body is as agile as her voice and I seriously enjoyed watching this superb animated acting, she made me laugh and laugh again with her psychical shifts of tone.

I could gush more, I will gush more, but book yourself a ticket now, this was an unexpected treat and I left feeling notably empowered by Russell’s life affirming writing, as relevant now to everyone as it was thirty years ago, but also enchanted by this tour de force performance from Prenger. With the audience on their feet giving her a tumultuous applause, well deserved, Prenger offers some of it to ‘The Rock’ sitting next to her in the second half beach set. Modest, charming and seriously funny, Prenger herself rocks!

Utterly perfect and a flawless performance of the oncoming renaissance of a woman lost to other people’s low expectations of her and her own re-founding of her pure self through the realistic realisation of a simple dream and the unconditional acceptance of the consequences.

Book now: Recommended.

Theatre Royal Brighton until Saturday, July 22

 

 

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