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Charleston Festival Celebrates 25 Years

Carol Ann Duffy, Richard Dawkins, Grayson Perry and Alan Bennett are amongst a string of high-profile names speaking at the 25th Charleston Festival.

Charleston Festival

Set up to reflect the intellectual and creative ideals of Bloomsbury group artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, the original inhabitants of Charleston, the Festival retains its distinctive sense of intimacy and unique cultural context.

Today’s Festival echoes the hub of ideas which the house became in the early twentieth century, when it hosted John Maynard Keynes, Virginia Woolf, T S Eliot and E M Forster. Visitors to the Festival this year can look forward to an equally stellar line-up.

Events with availability include:

• A debate on the most significant cultural moments in the past 25 years, with a panel including Peter Bazalgette and Nicholas Kenyon

• Celebrated Northern Irish poet Paul Muldoon reading from across the range of his work and that of his friend and mentor, the late Seamus Heaney

• Award-winning American author Lorrie Moore discussing her work and writing in the short form with Lynne Truss

An array of novelists of international repute include Ian McEwan, Robert Harris and Edward St Aubyn; Alison Macleod and Maggie Gee on being inspired by Virginia Woolf; global titans of literature Karl Ove Knausgaard and Tim Winton; Michael Ondaatje on his writing life beyond The English Patient.

Discussions of history and politics range from Jung Chang in conversation with Jon Snow about China’s Iron Lady to James Naughtie and Ben Macintyre on espionage. Charleston was established as a haven for writers and artists who were conscientious objectors in WWI, and speakers looking at the war from the perspective of a century’s distance include Max Hastings, Mark Bostridge, Helen Dunmore and Michael Morpurgo.

Moving towards the late May bank holiday weekend, other highlights with a few seats left include Christopher Hampton and William Nicolson on transforming recent history into literature, film and drama, and Rachel Cooke and Ben Watt discussing our image of the 1950s.

Diana Reich, Artistic Director of the Festival, said: “Eighty years after Virginia Woolf famously discerned a seismic shift in the human condition – ‘on or about December, 1910, human character changed’ – the Festival was born with the aim of making Charleston once again a centre for exploring new ideas and a hub of artistic and intellectual life. As we celebrate a landmark anniversary, we look forward to a bonanza Festival and to continuing to set the agenda, whilst remaining in touch with our unique heritage.”

Tickets are available from Brighton Dome Ticket Office, open 10am – 6pm Monday – Saturday.

In person: 29 New Road, Brighton, BN1 1UG

By phone: 01273 709709

Online: www.brightonticketshop.com

For listings of all events including sold out sessions, CLICK HERE: 

Friday, May 16 – 1pm: Restorations and Transformations: Jamie Fobert, Charles Saumarez Smith, Jeremy Dixon, £14

Sunday, May 18 – 12pm: Vistas of History: Mark Bostridge and Helen Dunmore with Claire Armitstead, £14

Sunday, May 18 – 5pm: Breakfast with Lucian: Geordie Greig with Lynn Barber – RETURNS ONLY, £14

Sunday May 18 – 7.30pm: 25 Years On: Peter Bazalgette, Philip Hook, Nicholas Kenyon, Fiona MacCarthy and Francine Stock, £14

Wednesday, May 21 – 3.30pm: Catastrophe: Max Hastings – RETURNS ONLY, £14

Wednesday, May 21 – 6pm: Such Sweet Sorrow: Nicholas Hytner – RETURNS ONLY, £14

Wednesday, May 21 – 8pm: Last Sane Man: Tanya Harrod, £14

Thursday, May 22 – 1pm: Start the Week – Radio 4: Guest presenter TBA – RETURNS ONLY, FREE

Thursday, May 22 – 3.30pm: Their Brilliant Career: Rachel Cooke and Ben Watt with David Kynaston, £14

Thursday, May 22 – 6pm: The Way They Live Now: Sadie Jones and Edward St Aubyn with Nicolette Jones, £14

Thursday, May 22 – 8pm: Boyhood: Karl Ove Knausgaard and Tim Winton with Rachel Cusk, £14

Friday, May 23 – 1pm: Stoke and Sissinghurst: Emma Bridgewater and Sarah Raven with Nicolette Jones, £14

Friday, May 23 – 3.30pm: Pioneers: Rachel Holmes and Sigrid Rausing with Polly Toynbee, £14

Friday, May 23 – 8pm: Keynes and Our Grandchildren: Paul Mason with Robert Skidelsky – RETURNS ONLY, £14

Saturday, May 25 – 12pm: Ham Spray Triangles: Jans Ondaatje Rolls and Lucy Lethbridge with Virginia Nicholson, £14

Saturday, May 25 – 2.30pm: Sick Rooms: Michael Cunningham and Helen Garner with Susie Nicklin, £14

Saturday, May 24 – 5pm: Follow, Poet! : Paul Muldoon, £14

Sunday, May 25 – 12pm: Classical Encounters: Charlotte Higgins and Adam Nicolson with Imogen Lycett Green, £14

Sunday, May 25 – 2.30pm: Bark: Lorrie Moore with Lynne Truss, £14

Monday, May 26 – 12pm: Odes to Virginia Woolf: Alison Macleod and Maggie Gee with Frances Spalding, £14

Monday, May 26 – 2.30pm: Reckless: Christopher Hampton and William Nicholson with Rupert Christiansen, £14

Monday, May 26 – 5pm: Displacements: Linda Spalding and Michael Ondaatje, £14

For more information about Charleston, CLICK HERE:

 

Glowchoir hits Eastbourne

Glowchoir is an inclusive singing community experience – a space for LGBT folk and their straight allies to meet and sing together.

Glowchoir

Glowchoir is a monthly Natural Voice community choir, currently meeting monthly in Ipswich and London, that provides a safe space for LGBT folk and their straight allies to meet and sing songs of passion, songs of protest and celebration in glorious a cappella harmony.

Kirsty Martin
Kirsty Martin

There is NO need to be able to read music, NO experience necessary, NO judgements…and NO limits!

Glowchoir is run by Natural Voice Practitioner, Kirsty Martin, the musical director of The Hullabaloo Community Quire in Brighton and is coming to Eastbourne on Sunday, June 15.

 

What: Glow Community Choir

When: Sunday, June 15

Where: St Saviour’s Church Hall, Spencer Road, Eastbourne BN21 4PA

Time: 2.30pm – 6.30pm (arrive from 2.15pm)

Cost: In advance £17/£14 concs: On the door: £20/£17 concs

To book a place, EMAIL: 

For more information about Glowchoir, CLICK HERE:

Or telephone: 07950 232145

Final call for teams for Golden Quiz at Charles Street

Where is Brighton’s brainiest gay quiz crew?

Golden QuizGet your handbags at the ready for the Golden Handbags Big Quiz Challenge at Charles Street on Wednesday May 7 at 8pm. Grab some friends and book your team in for this years legendary Golden Quiz challenge which kicks off the voting for the Golden Handbag Awards 2014.

Lola Lasagne
Lola Lasagne

The lovely Lola Lasagne will be your Quiz Mistress for the evening and businesses, community organisations and social network groups are invited to enter teams of up to six players.

The winners receive the first Golden Handbag of the season, the award for Best Quiz Team of 2014.

The event is supported by Charles Street and Gscene Magazine, get there at 7.30pm for an 8pm start, entry is £25 per team and takes place at Charles Street, 8 Marine Parade, Brighton

What: The Golden Quiz

Where: Charles Street, Marine Parade, Brighton

When: Wednesday, May 7

Time: 7.30pm for 8pm start

Cost: £25 for team of 6

PREVIEW: Pink Lime: Brighton Fringe event at Thistle Hotel

Set to blow your literary socks off this May is Pink Lime, a Fringe Saint Lucia 2014 event highlight in the form of LGBTQI performances and readings from local and international Caribbean writers.

Dean Atta
Dean Atta

Special guest MC for the evening is the gorgeous Vincent Mc Doom who has come all the way from Paris to Brighton.

On Thursday, May 29 there will be early, late and all night literary limin’ events from 7pm in the Waterbar at Brighton’s Thistle Hotel featuring performance poet Dean Atta, one man show ECSTASIES by Adam ‘Beyonce’ Lowe followed by appearances from internationally renowned writers Thomas Glave and Dorothea Smartt.

If you are looking for a lot of flavor and fizz in your Brighton Fringe experience then check out Pink Lime and the rest of the Fringe Saint Lucia 2014 events programme.

Adam Lowe
Adam Lowe

What: Pink Lime Fringe Saint Lucia 2014 at Brighton Fringe

Where: The Water Bar, Thistle Hotel, Kings Road, Brighton, BN1 2GS

When: Thursday, May 29

Time: 7pm-10pm (£6 per event, £10 both events)

Tickets & Booking Information, CLICK HERE:

For more details about the Fringe Saint Lucia, CLICK HERE:  

 

 

Nancy Platts urges people to sign fire cuts petition

Labour’s Parliamentary candidate for Kemptown, Nancy Platts is urging people to sign a petition and speak out against cuts to the fire service in East Sussex that she says will put lives at risk.

Nancy Platts, Labour's Parliamentary for Kemptown and Peacehaven
Nancy Platts, Labour’s Parliamentary for Kemptown and Peacehaven

If cost cutting measures get the go ahead she says a fire engine will be lost from either Preston Circus or Hove fire stations

A consultation document indicates that removing an engine from Preston Circus could mean one extra person dying every 5.3 years in the area, if the appliance is cut from Hove that would mean an extra fatality every 9.1 years.

Nancy has launched the petition and is urging people to take part while there is still time.

She said: “People will be astounded to know the consultation document claims there will be no significant impact on predicted fatalities. I believe that one extra death is one too many, if these cuts go ahead it will mean the unluckiest lottery of all.

“We all need to know that if we have to call 999 we will get the help we need, this consultation document shows that won’t happen for everyone.

“There are only five fire engines for the whole of Brighton and Hove, these proposals would take one away at a time when our population is growing and more properties are being built.”

All Labour members of the fire authority have committed to voting against the extreme cuts to the fire service but Tory, Liberal Democrat, Green and UKIP councillors have either voted in favour of consultation on this plan or have expressed no view against the cuts.

The Fire Brigades Union has also put forward alternative suggestions about possible savings that would keep the fire engines in place.

To contact your councillor and ask them to save the fire service, CLICK HERE:

 

South East Greens announce Euro election campaign launch

The Green Party is to launch its South East England campaign for the European elections on the morning of Wednesday May 7, 2014 from a campaign bus in central Brighton.

Caroline Lucas, MP for Brighton Pavilion
Caroline Lucas, MP for Brighton Pavilion

Caroline Lucas, Green Party MP for Brighton Pavilion will launch the campaign at 9am and introduce Green candidates including the current Green MEP for the region, Keith Taylor, and Green candidate Alexandra Phillips who is hopeful of securing the party’s second Green regional seat.

The Green campaign bus will be parked on the Old Steine in sight of the Brighton Pavilion and will then tour the entire South East region, an area stretching from Hampshire to Kent and from Milton Keynes down to the south coast, including the Isle of Wight.

A full bus itinerary will be announced shortly and a live Bus Blog and Twitter account will be running throughout the tour.

If the weather is poor an alternative indoor will be on standby.

Bus Twitter: @GreenPartyBus

PREVIEW: Have a word – Festival special

Have A Word goes mad in May with a very diverse but totally fabulous line up of artists to help celebrate the Brighton Festival.

Have a Word - Festival special, Tuesday May 13 at Latest Bar
Have a Word – Festival special, Tuesday May 13 at Latest Bar

Artists appearing include:

Sam Chara: Performance artist, dancer, singer and diva

Annabel Pribelszki: Stand up comedian activist and legend

Gerry Potter: Poet…performance poet and icon

John McCullough: Writer poet and darling

Oli Spleen: Artist singer songwriter and political dish

Grégoire Aubert: Channeling Judy Garland and performing from her lost diaries..He is a STAR..

Music by: Josh Sharples

Hosted by: Ellis Collins.

To purchase tickets, CLICK HERE:  or £6 on the night!!

Supporting The Sussex Beacon

Have a Word

What: Have A Word (HAV) – Festival Special

Where: Latest Bar, 14-17 Manchester Street, Brighton

When: Tuesday, May 13

Time: 7pm – 10pm

Cost: £6 on the night or CLICK HERE:

 

 

 

Dave Lynn to be ‘roasted’

Dave Lynn is to be roasted by his peers at a Comedy Roast in Charles Street on May 13.

Dave Lynn

For those who have never been to a Comedy Roast before, it is an event in which an individual is subjected to a public presentation of comedic insults, praise, outlandish true and untrue stories, and heartwarming tributes as a mock counter to a toast. Hopefully the roastee takes the jokes in good humour and not as serious criticism or insult, and it is seen by some as a great honour to be roasted.

The victim is surrounded by their friends, fans, and well-wishers, who can all receive some of the same treatment as well during the course of the evening.

The party and presentation itself are both referred to as a roast. The host of the event is called the roastmaster. Anyone who is honored in such a way is said to have been roasted.

roastmaster Lola Lasagne
Roastmaster Lola Lasagne

Dave Lynn’s roast is a fundraiser for THT South, Lola Lasange will be the toastmaster and the roasters are Maisie Trollette, Rose Garden, Michael Topping and Miss Jason.

The show starts at 9.30pm SHARP! Entrance is free, but Lola will be asking for donations throughout the night. You can reserve tables at a cost of £5 per person. All money goes to THT. Telephone Charles Street on 01273 624091 to reserve your table.

There are 50% off all drinks from 5pm – 9pm (some limitations apply) and 2 for 1 cocktails from 6pm until close.

What: Comedy Roast of Dave Lynn

Where: Charles Street, Marine Parade, Brighton

When: Tuesday, May 13

Time: 9.30pm

Cost: Free entry: donations to THT

George Osborne visits Brighton’s Royal Sussex County Hospital

The Chancellor of the Exchequer paid a surprise visit to Brighton today to announce the release of £420 million funding for the redevelopment of the Royal Sussex County Hospital.

George Osborne MP

Simon Kirby MP for Kemptown & Peacehaven accompanied the Chancellor to the hospital where he met staff, local dignitaries and viewed plans for the redevelopment. Parts of the hospital predate Florence Nightingale.

The Chancellor paid tribute to Simon’s campaign saying: “Simon Kirby has proved a tireless and effective campaigner for this major re-development which will hugely benefit the people of Brighton and the surrounding area.”

Simon responded saying: “It was great to be able to show the Chancellor the existing facilities so he can see for himself what a difference this funding will make for patients and staff at the hospital.”

He continued: “Today’s announcement is great news for local people. Huge congratulations must go to the team at the Royal Sussex who worked so hard to put forward such a compelling case. It is only right that patients and staff will now have the very best facilities they deserve.

“I have been actively campaigning for a long time now for the £420 million funding to redevelop the Royal Sussex Hospital and would thank everyone who supported my campaign and took the time to sign my hospital petition, which I am sure made a real difference.”

The Chancellor said: “I am delighted that we have been able to green light the investment for the much needed redevelopment of the Royal Sussex County hospital. This is great news for Brighton and the whole local community.

“Bringing the buildings and facilities of this venerated hospital up to modern standards will enhance and improve patients’ care and experience.

“This investment once again demonstrates our commitment to protect and support the NHS. It is only possible because our long term economic plan has restored control of our public finances.”

The works at the Royal Sussex County hospital site will be fully financed from public funds as part of the Department of Health’s capital investment budget. Redevelopment works at the hospital site are expected to start later this year and complete by 2024. Plans will be finalised over the coming months, with all funding subject to final approvals as usual.

Cllr Geoffrey Theobald
Cllr Geoffrey Theobald

Cllr Geoffrey Theobald, Leader of the Conservative Group on Brighton & Hove City Council, said after thanking the Chancellor personally: “This is fantastic news for residents, not only of Brighton & Hove, but for the whole of Sussex.

“It is a real vote of confidence from the Government in the City and those doctors and nurses at the hospital who do such a wonderful job day in day out in dreadfully outdated accommodation.The £420 million will also provide a huge boost to the local economy with hundreds of new construction jobs being created over the next few years. I would like to congratulate Simon Kirby MP for his strong campaign to secure this funding.

“This large investment would not have been possible without the improvements in the national economy and it is quite right that the Treasury should be completely satisfied that the plans stack up financially. However, Simon deserves huge credit for his persistence in not letting Ministers, and particularly the Chancellor, forget just how much a new hospital means to Brighton & Hove. I would also like to place on record my thanks and congratulations to the management at the Trust for all the hard work they have put into this project over a number of years. They must be as relieved as I am that things can now get moving.”

Nancy Platts
Nancy Platts

Responding to the announcement, Nancy Platts the Labour Parliamentary candidate for Kemptown & Peacehaven said:  “I welcome the news of the funding but it raises questions about why it has taken so long. The previous Labour government laid the foundations for this work years ago but the Government is only approving the funding now.

“There have already been too many delays over recent years, what we need now are assurances that the money will be quickly released so that work can begin straight away.

“For too long we’ve had to put up with a hospital that pre-dates Florence Nightingale, this news is a victory for people power and common sense, not politicians. There has been a long running campaign to bring the hospital up to standard and I want to congratulate the staff and local people who kept on raising the issue.”

Mike Weatherley, MP
Mike Weatherley, MP

Mike Weatherley, MP for Hove & Portslade had also campaigned for the funding, said: “This funding is excellent news for NHS provision in Brighton & Hove. A new, state-of-the-art hospital has been long overdue and I am pleased that the Government has listened to the needs of local residents. While the redevelopment will take a number of years to complete, this announcement is a strong commitment from the Government to provide long-term quality healthcare suitable for the 21st century.”

 

 

Local licensee competes in desert endurance race

Christine Buckledee one of the owners of the Grosvenor Bar in Western Street raises £1,700 for charity.

Chrissie Buckledee
Chrissie Buckledee

In early April Chrissie took part in the 29th edition of The Marathon des Sables, a gruelling six day, multi-stage endurance race which requires competitors from over 44 nationalities to run, walk or crawl 250km through a formidable landscape in one of the world’s most inhospitable climates – The Sahara Desert.

The desert is an extremely harsh environment which includes Morocco’s highest sand dunes, the Erg Chebbi, dried up lakes, river beds and various mountain climbs, the highest of which is the 1,000 metre ascent of Jebel El Otfal. The terrain alternates between rock and sand in temperatures exceeding 48 degrees Celsius.

Chrissie Buckledee

Each evening all competitors are allocated a place in a Berber tent which they share with seven other people and are allocated water rations.

Chrissie said: “I completed this amazing challenge fairly unscathed and it’s an experience that will remain with me forever. I raised just over £1,700 for the Motor Neurone Disease Association in South Africa in memory of my partner’s father.”

The Marathon des Sables known simply as the MdS is ranked by the Discovery Channel as the toughest footrace on earth. The race is a gruelling multi-stage adventure through the desert and the rules require you to be self-sufficient and to carry with you on your back everything that you need to survive, except water. Any other equipment and food is carried by the runner.

The race was started in 1986 by Patrick Bauer, is open to men and women, individuals, teams of individuals, amateurs, elite runners and entry places are much sought after.

For more information about the event, CLICK HERE:

 

 

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