Review: Eric Page
The Coast Is Queer, Brighton & Hove’s celebration of LGBTQ+ writing, returned for its third year in October. The festival brought together writers, poets, performers, academics, activists and, of course, readers, for three superb days of accessible, lively in-conversation events, workshops, films and discussions celebrating queer lives and literature.
Wrapped up in the stark brick built beauty of the Attenborough Centre at Sussex University – with its brutalist charm, embracing curves and verdant Manhattan loft plants – the sun shone, warming the audience and flooding the space with light, and the festival had a real feel of swish and swank about it. From headliners to modest first timers, the line-up covered a diverse group of creative writers from across the social spectrum.
Coast Is Queer excels in ensuring it is representative of not just the LGBTQ+ and queer communities but also gives care and consideration to platforming voices from older, disabled and migrant communities. What we end up with is a range of writers who offer a vivid rich seam of lived experience, sharing their creative narratives and ideas about writing, offering widely different insights into life, living and death and showcasing the very best of LGBTQ+ / queer writing in Britain today.
David Sheppeard introduced the delightful trio of Stacy Makishi, Ursula Martinez and Oluwaseun Olayiwola for a wonderfully funny discussion on the transformative power of art and storytelling in all its forms which gave the audience insight into narrative construction, the ideas that transform into amazing stories and the things which keep the writers up at their keyboard.
Dawson’s Salons are always a treat and Alabanza served up candid clarity on a range of queer topics, discussing doubt, joy and finding ways to hold both, which delighted an attentive audience and brought a lot of warm laughter into the theatre. It was probably my favourite event of the festival! We learned why they no longer write poetry and the talk about ‘pandemic self sexting’ was wonderfully funny.
Dawson received a round of applause, quite rightly, for achieving number one on the Sunday Times bestseller list, which they waspishly observed forced the paper to ‘actually write something good about a trans person’. Alabanza had also delivered a workshop on developing the process of making LGBTQ+ autobiographical work.
An evening of music and poetry on the Saturday night, which felt like the coolest club in town, featured legendary DJ Ritu who brought the eclectic and classically fabulous Club Kali to the coast, with their unique mix of soul, disco, Motown and world music.
The festival was on all weekend and featured Salon faves, international guests, local writers and a host of literary queers, who shared their stories, discussed the importance of LGBTQ+ narratives by and from our own communities, read from their works and took part in many entertaining panel discussions.
Overall, a superb weekend – New Writing South and Marlborough Productions are to be congratulated on this world class literary festival which continues to elevate the Brighton and Sussex cultural scene into national prominence and brings a hungry local audience into contact with some dazzling queer minds.
More info and the full programmes can be found here