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Interview With The Vampire author Anne Rice dies at 80

Anne Rice passed away at 80 following complications from a stroke. She was one of the most successful novelists of her time.

After many rejections from publishers, Rice found fame with her debut novel Interview with the Vampire. She expanded her world of vampires with The Vampire Chronicles, writing hugely successful novels like The Queen of the Damned and The Vampire Lestat. She brought gothic fiction back into the mainstream, developing a devoted fanbase in the process.

Rice was one of the first mainstream authors to place LGBT+ characters at the heart of her work. Although she was straight, writing about the desires of bisexual vampires came very naturally to her. She even penned a trilogy of erotic novels under the nom de plume A. N. Roquelaure.

Her books went on to sell over 150 million copies, making her one of the most popular writers ever to put pen to paper. Sometimes literary critics called her out for her purple prose style and heavy reliance on the supernatural. But that was always the point: she wrote gothic fiction in a full bodied prose style. You either liked it or you didn’t. Judging by her bank balance, a lot of people did like her work.

Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt starred in the 1994 adaptation of Interview with the Vampire. The film was a critical and commercial triumph, bringing her work to a whole new generation.

Anne Rice

Rice was a charismatic figure who played the role of literary celebrity with panache. She would often dress in lavish gothic outfits, as if she was a character from one of her books. Despite being raised a Catholic, Rice lost her faith as an adult. She later noted that all of her novels were about her conflicted relationship with faith and morality. Like all good writers, she was a conflicted person.

In later life she had a dramatic Damascene conversion. Rice renounced her atheism, her vampire novels and began to write religious novels about the life of Jesus. I remember walking into Waterstones and seeing the first edition of her Jesus books. I thought, isn’t she the gothic lady who writes about queer vampires? It didn’t quite add up.

Rice would later reject the Catholic church once again, saying “I felt like I was in bed with the devil.” The main thing she couldn’t contend with was the church’s institutional homophobia. Rice’s son is gay and she had always championed gay rights. She returned to the vampires, writing her final instalment of her series in 2018, Blood Communion: A Tale of Prince Lestat. She continued to be an outspoken critic of the church.

Her son Christopher Rice wrote this tribute to her on Facebook:

“As my mother, her support for me was unconditional — she taught me to embrace my dreams, reject conformity and challenge the dark voices of fear and self-doubt. As a writer, she taught me to defy genre boundaries and surrender to my obsessive passions. In her final hours, I sat beside her hospital bed in awe of her accomplishments and her courage, awash in memories of a life that took us from the fog laced hills of the San Francisco Bay Area to the magical streets of New Orleans to the twinkling vistas of Southern California. As she kissed Anne goodbye, her younger sister Karen said, ‘What a ride you took us on, kid.'”

Whether you were a fan of her books or not, it’s safe to say there won’t be another Anne Rice.

Brighton Pride 2022 Guide

Brighton Pride is the biggest Pride festival in the UK. It’s sort of like the gay Glastonbury. Recent headliners have included Britney Spears, Grace Jones, Pet Shop Boys, Years and Years, Dua Lipa, Carly Rae Jepsen, Fatboy Slim, Paloma Faith and Jessie J. Mariah Carey herself was set to headline in 2020, but Miss Rona swept the world and everything was cancelled.

Brighton Pride was due to return the following year, but ongoing uncertainty surrounding social distancing led to a second cancellation. After two missed years, Brighton Pride 2022 could well be the biggest one yet. Christina Aguilera will headline on Saturday and Paloma Faith headlines on Sunday.

brighton pride
@richardjarmy – www.richardjarmy.co.uk

How many people attend Brighton Pride?

Around 500,000 attend Brighton Pride each year. The total population of Brighton and Hove is around 273,400. To put things in perspective, Brighton Pride doubles the population of the city. That’s quite impressive. It’s surprising the infrastructure of the city can cope.

As Brighton is fairly small, Pride really does take over the whole city. London Pride takes over Soho, but after the parade London Pride is basically a ton of after parties spread out all over the place. Obviously London Pride is a lot of fun, but Brighton Pride is more fun as it literally becomes Pride City.

How do I get my Brighton Pride ticket?

Brighton Pride does tend to sell out. It’s worth getting your ticket in advance. There are multiple ticket releases, the first being slightly cheaper. The second release will see the prices go up. When the headliner is announced – Britney! Mariah! etc – there tends to be a scramble for tickets. Get your Brighton Pride ticket early to avoid disappointment.

There are three separate things you can get tickets for. We’ll look at those next.

brighton pride
Fabuloso Pride in the Park

Fabuloso in the Park

There are two Fabuloso events, one on Saturday (with the main headliner) and another on Sunday. You can buy a ticket for one of the events or get a weekend pass for both.

The Saturday event tends to be busier – as in so busy you can’t move or get a phone signal. As a lot of Brighton Pride visitors will leave on Sunday the park will be less busy. The Sunday event is loads of fun – it tends to be a bit more chilled. Sunday headliners have included the likes of Chic and Grace Jones.

The Saturday gig is the main event. Leave in good time if you’re getting a train home on Saturday evening. It can take a while to get out of the park. Thousands of people were stuck in Brighton the year Britney played.

Pride Village Party

This event takes over most of Kemptown. You’ll need to buy a ticket and get a wristband to attend. Pride Village Party is basically a massive rave on the seafront. You can’t bring booze in but there are shops on St James Street where you can buy some. This is always one of the highlights of Brighton Pride. In the baking hot sun you’ll be surrounded by people dancing and drinking all day long.

One one of the best places to attend the street party is at The Actors, formerly The Marlborough Pub & Theatre. The bar directly overlooks Brighton Pavilion. It’s a great place to enjoy the street party as the sun sets over the Prince Regent’s pleasure palace. It will make your experience very… Brighton.

brighton pride

Pride Campsite

Booking a hotel for Brighton Pride can be tricky. Hotels in Brighton are tricky even outside of Pride – they really aren’t cheap! Airbnb is always an option. Prices will be inflated over Pride weekend. The population of the city more than doubles so people need somewhere to stay, obvs. If hotels are full or too expensive you could try camping.

The Brighton Pride Camp Camp is open from Friday to Monday. This is one way to solve the accommodation issue.

Brighton Pride hacks

When you go to Preston Park it’s best to stay with your mates. With around half a million people to contend with it can be very difficult to get a phone signal. If you lose people you may struggle to locate them again. Also, you cannot bring booze into Preston Park. You’ll have to buy drinks when you’re through the barrier. As it’s so busy, the queues can be long. And by long we mean really long.

We’re not suggesting you load up before entering Preston Park (drink responsibly, mm’kay?). But if you do want to be merry by the time Britney or Mariah take the stage then yeah, load up before you go in. Oh, and this one may seem obvious but drugs are a complete no no. They even have sniffer dogs at some of the gates. You wouldn’t want to get barked at by one of the pride dogs.

brighton pride
Photo: Chris Jepson

What happens to the non gay bars?

The become gay.

What happens to the gay bars?

They become even more LGBT+ than usual. Oh, and they do fill up. There will be queues outside Revenge. Even Britney Spears’ dancers took a trip to Legends after they’d left the stage. The only snag is you’ll have to pay entry to most of the gay bars over Pride weekend.

What date is Brighton Pride 2022?

It’s set to take place over 5th – 7th August 2022. Brighton & Hove Pride has announced the theme for the (delayed) 30th anniversary Brighton & Hove Pride LGBTQ+ Community Parade: ‘Love, Protest & Unity’.

As both the 2020 and 2021 events had to be cancelled, the 2022 event has to bring Brighton Pride roaring back in style. This event has a huge amount to live up to – hello, Britney! We’re sure Christina is more than capable of topping the performance of her longterm frenemy.

Italian priest jailed for using church money to host gay sex parties

Francesco Spagnesi has been sentenced to three years and eight months in jail. He was convicted for stealing £250,000 of church money to host drug fuelled gay sex parties. He will be obliged to return all of the money he stole for his extracurricular activities.

He has shown remorse for his crimes, telling an Italian newspaper: “I wanted to be the shepherd of my faithful, guide them towards the ways of the Lord, and I ended up in vice and perdition.” He had used money donated by his parishioners to fund his drug habit.

The case calls to mind the chequered career of the Reverend Flowers. Around 200 people are believed to have attended Francesco Spagnesi’s sex parties. Along with his drug dealer housemate he would use gay hookup apps to find prospective partners. Some of the parties would include 20 – 30 participants at a time.

According to a local newspaper, his parishioners “had great faith in their young, brilliant, all-involving and refined priest.” Sadly, his private life turned out to be more I, Claudius than Come All Ye Faithful. A raid on his house found crack cocaine paraphernalia. He has been branded the “pusher priest.”

Upon his arrest he said “I no longer recognise myself; the vortex of cocaine has swallowed me. The drug made me betray my parishioners, it made me tell lies, it made me do things of which I am ashamed… I am now HIV positive with AIDS… I ask everyone for forgiveness.”

He has vowed to sell all of his possessions to repay his debts. “I entered the maelstrom of drug addiction. And the money was never enough. Thus began my ordeal and that of others,” he said. Spagnesi was said to have a brilliant mind and charismatic demeanour.

This is an unfortunate end to a once promising career. The case shows how the use of hard drugs on the chemsex scene has unravelled so many people’s lives.

Shades of Gray

Alex Klineberg catches up with R&B/soul legend Macy Gray to discuss her new tracks, working with Frankie Grande and her LGBTQ+ fans Macy Gray released her first album On How Life Is in 1999. The lead single, I Try, became one of those smash-hit records almost everyone on the planet can sing along to. Very few artists have broken through with quite the same level of impact.

Undone and The Disco Song are Macy’s latest singles, and they’re as good as anything she recorded in her imperial phase. She’s currently recording with R&B/funk collective, California Jet Club. We caught up with Macy to discuss her new tracks, working with Frankie Grande, travel and more.

“I advertise being yourself, being honest and saying what you feel, no matter what anybody says. And no one embodies that more than the LGBT+ community”

What’s the inspiration behind the song Undone?

“To me it’s so appropriate for everybody’s life; it’s about stripping it down and taking the time to discover who you are. It’s also about what love can do to you, how it can bring you to nothing and make you do things you never thought you’d do.”

The video really brings that to life. It stars Frankie Grande in drag, tearing it up in his inimitable way.

You worked with Ariana Grande before, is that how you came to work with Frankie Grande?

“No, I was already following him. All through lockdown he was posting videos of him singing in the bathroom. He would always be topless and he’d have on all this makeup. He’d be doing these Broadway songs – things you do when you think you’re alone, but he’d be doing them on social media. I thought this dude is wild. When we got the idea for the video I decided to call him. He’s very expressive, very epic; he’s a fun guy with huge energy. Frankie is really passionate about everything he does so he was perfect for it.”

Was it his idea to do it in drag?

“No, that was my idea. There’s a quick shot of him with tape over his balls – that was his idea! We wanted to go quite full on with some other stuff but he said ‘no, I don’t want to do that.’ He didn’t know how the LGBTQ+ community would take it.”

Do you feel an affinity with your LGBTQ+ fans?

“I think so because through my music I advertise being yourself, being honest and saying what you feel, no matter what anybody says. And no one embodies that more than the LGBTQ+ community. To be honest about something that’s still taboo but to still come out and be who you are. Some people live in countries where it’s still illegal. I think that’s where the connection is.”

The Disco Song presents quite a contrast to Undone.

“Disco is the best music. It’s a recipe of many styles mixed into one and it puts people on the dancefloor. It’s the one genre of music that’s survived. It transformed into dance music. I’ve always loved that style of music and those old Giorgio Moroder and Donna Summer records with the big orchestration – it’s the most amazing sound. We wanted some disco on the record and we kept calling it the disco song: that’s where the name came from. We didn’t write the lyrics until the last day we were in the studio.”

Macy has one of the most distinctive voices in modern pop. How did she develop her singing style?

“The tone was always there. There’s also alcohol and lots of weed! I still have a vocal coach, Roger Burnely. And of course touring – nothing is better for your voice than touring, if you do it right. You’re practising every day for two hours. It’s like anything else, the more you do it the better you get. As I get older it’s developed more; it’s definitely more seasoned than it used to be. I can control it better than I used to.”

The music industry is notoriously tough. Is it difficult to sustain a music career longterm?

“It is because it changes almost everyday. The way we hear music has changed dramatically. There are CD buyers out there but mostly everyone streams. Radio is a lot less important than it was. People have different ways of listening to music. You can programme your own radio station and only hear what you want to hear. The styles of music have changed too: hip hop has changed, pop has changed and rock & roll has changed. To survive all that and pop up 20 years later is an accomplishment, I think.”

“The styles of music have changed too: hip hop has changed, pop has changed and rock & roll has changed. To survive all that and pop up 20 years later is an accomplishment, I think”

Were you shocked by the scale of success you had with your first album?

“Yes, I was, I wasn’t expecting that. I remember in my first week I sold 8,992 records. I was jumping on my bed; I thought I’d made it because I’d never sold records before. I was happy with my 8,992 but when it kept going no one was more surprised than me.” The album went on to sell over 10 million copies.

Who are your biggest musical influences of the past and today?

“Of the past I’d say the regulars: Aretha Franklin, Prince, Stevie Wonder, Bob Marley, Nina Simone, Billie Holiday and I’m a huge Led Zeppelin fan. I also love Biggie, Jay Z and Kanye West is a big influence. The new ones I wouldn’t say anyone is influencing me to the point that I’m changing my style, but I admire a lot of new artists.”

Do you enjoy touring?

“I love performing. Travel is different though, sitting on a plane for 14 hours to get from one place to the next I don’t enjoy. Especially now we all have to wear masks; but I love performing. I’d go anywhere to perform. I don’t think I’d have seen the world the way I have if it wasn’t for performing. Travel isn’t really in my blood. I never had a great desire to go to Italy, but now that I’ve been there I do.

“There’s no better education than seeing the world. There’s no better way to learn acceptance and learn to adapt. It’s one of the best things you can do.”

Will you be coming to the UK?

“Yes, we’re on our way. We’re doing the Playground Festival in Scotland. Next year we’ll be coming back. We start a worldwide tour in May 2022 and we go straight to the UK where we’ll be playing in a lot of cities.”

For more information on Macy Gray check out their website www.macygrayofficial.com

The Rise And Fall of Little Voice @ Theatre Royal Brighton

Jim Cartwright’s The Rise And Fall of Little Voice is a British theatre classic. The play was written in 1992 and turned into a movie in 1998 starring Jane Horrocks. It’s a classic kitchen sink drama, with an added dose of glamour from the soundtrack.

The story is centred around Laura Hoff. She lives with her mother in Scarborough. Although deeply shy, she has a love for the diva classics of Shirley Bassey and Barbra Streisand. Her powerful singing voice makes for a sharp contrast to her diffident personality and modest surroundings.

Full casting has been announced for the brand-new touring production of Jim Cartwright’s The Rise And Fall of Little Voice, produced by Katy Lipson and Glass Half Full Productions, directed by Bronagh Lagan (Cruise, West End; Little Women The Musical, Park Theatre/ Hope Mill) and starring international YouTube sensation Christina Bianco in the title role.

Jim Cartwright’s The Rise And Fall of Little Voice is a British theatre classic. The play was written in 1992 and turned into a movie in 1998 starring Jane Horrocks. It's a classic kitchen sink drama, with an added dose of glamour from the soundtrack. The story is centred around Laura Hoff. She lives with her mother in Scarborough. Although deeply shy, she has a love for the diva classics of Shirley Bassey and Barbra Streisand. Her powerful singing voice makes for a sharp contrast to her diffident personality. The contrast of her modest surroundings and musical dreams makes for great drama.  Full casting has been announced for the brand-new touring production of Jim Cartwright’s The Rise And Fall of Little Voice, produced by Katy Lipson and Glass Half Full Productions, directed by Bronagh Lagan (Cruise, West End; Little Women The Musical, Park Theatre/ Hope Mill) and starring international YouTube sensation Christina Bianco in the title role. Akshay Gulati plays Billy and with William Ilkley plays cabaret club owner Mr. Boo. The cast is completed by Fiona Mulvaney as Sadie and James Robert Moore in the role of Phone Man. James will also be Resident Director on the production. "From Judy Garland to Shirley Bassey, Marilyn Monroe to Billie Holliday, Christina Bianco will vividly bring to life performances from the great chanteuses in Cartwright’s tender and life-affirming play. The Rise and Fall of Little Voice won both the Olivier award and Evening Standard award for Best Comedy when it premiered at the National Theatre in 1992 in a production directed by Sam Mendes which transferred to the Aldwych, starring Jane Horrocks and Alison Steadman. Horrocks later reprised the role of LV in a film adaptation also starring Brenda Blethyn, Michael Caine, Ewan McGregor and Jim Broadbent." "Meet Little Voice and Mari Hoff. A mother and daughter central to the heart of this Northern fairy-tale, but as far apart in character as can be. Left to her own devices, Little Voice starts to embody the famous divas she plays on repeat, from Judy Garland to Shirley Bassey, and becomes an overnight sensation." This is a play with a big heart. The music is fabulous and the story is a kind of northern fairytale, both bittersweet and uplifting. The production will play Theatre Royal Brighton from 25-30 April 2022 as part of a UK Tour which starts in the Spring.

Akshay Gulati plays Billy and with William Ilkley plays cabaret club owner Mr. Boo. The cast is completed by Fiona Mulvaney as Sadie and James Robert Moore in the role of Phone Man. James will also be Resident Director on the production.

“From Judy Garland to Shirley Bassey, Marilyn Monroe to Billie Holliday, Christina Bianco will vividly bring to life performances from the great chanteuses in Cartwright’s tender and life-affirming play. The Rise and Fall of Little Voice won both the Olivier award and Evening Standard award for Best Comedy when it premiered at the National Theatre in 1992 in a production directed by Sam Mendes which transferred to the Aldwych, starring Jane Horrocks and Alison Steadman. Horrocks later reprised the role of LV in a film adaptation also starring Brenda Blethyn, Michael Caine, Ewan McGregor and Jim Broadbent.”

“Meet Little Voice and Mari Hoff. A mother and daughter central to the heart of this Northern fairy-tale, but as far apart in character as can be. Left to her own devices, Little Voice starts to embody the famous divas she plays on repeat, from Judy Garland to Shirley Bassey, and becomes an overnight sensation.”

This is a play with a big heart. The music is fabulous and the story is a kind of northern fairytale, both bittersweet and uplifting. The production will play Theatre Royal Brighton from 25-30 April 2022 as part of a UK Tour which starts in the Spring.

Nina Conti’s Monkey: “As he started to talk, I thought ‘woah!”

Nina Conti is a supremely talented comedian. She started out as an actress in the Royal Shakespeare Company before she turned to comedy. Theatre director Ken Campbell was responsible for her career change, inspiring her to become a ventriloquist.

It paid off. In 2008 she won the prestigious Barry Award at the Melbourne International Comedy Festival for her solo show ‘Complete and Utter Conti’. Ventriloquism may seem old fashioned, calling to mind Keith Harris’ duck Orville, who wanted to fly right up to the sky but couldn’t. Nina has taken ventriloquism to another level with her signature grumpy monkey.

On 30 November, Nina Conti brings her brand new show, The Dating Show, to Brighton Dome. We caught up with her to find out more.

What can we expect from your latest show? “To avoid it becoming this hetero-normative thing, you want to get everyone involved. In the Soho shows, I opened with Monkey interviewing a bunch of people in the audience, and whoever elicited the most warmth was the person I went with. I’m not after eccentrics, just likeability. Then we got them on stage and put a mask on them, and had a very low-key chat about their past relationships and what they were looking for next. Hopefully those we get up could be any kind of person and not just the Cilla Black demographic.”

Nina Conti

Ventriloquism seems like a lost artform. You seem to have cornered the market though. “I’m lucky to have found it, because I never thought that ventriloquism was a skill worth having. I would never have gone to a ventriloquism show, and when it was suggested to me by Ken I was so uninterested in it. I thought he was mad! I don’t know if I’ve enhanced it for nostalgia, but there was a definite lightbulb moment. I had been practising with those awful mannequins, and it was so end-of-the-pier and saucy: I didn’t like it. But then I remembered this monkey puppet that I stole off a mate, and I wondered if his mouth could move; I had to take some stuffing out and put my hand into his face, and then as soon as he started to talk, I thought ‘woah! Everything you’re saying is coming from a wider place than my own head.’ It was a really good feeling.”

Although Nina’s monkey has become a cult figure, no other comedian has been inspired to take up ventriloquism. “I’m delighted to be out on my own, though I have a feeling that there’s one coming . . . I don’t actually think the ventriloquial aspect is my show’s best selling point. It’s a side issue that needs to be overcome given it still has a bad rap. I don’t think people leave my shows thinking, ‘oh that was a good ventriloquist show’. I think you can forget it’s a ventriloquist show; I know I do, to the point where later I think, ‘oh, did I do the ventriloquist bits?’ I can get a bit carried away.”

Are you hoping to help your audiences find true love? “First and foremost, it’s a funny show; I’m not actually trying to match-make. It would be very funny if it actually worked out for anybody. The first time I did Live At The Apollo, I got a couple up and there seemed to be romance in the air, but I suspect they filed out of the theatre their separate ways. But I’m putting songs in. I did an improvathon with the Showstoppers guys, making a song up as we go. I’m really bad at singing, but it’s funny when the date breaks into song. And it turns out that a bad song is better than no song!”

Nina Conti – The Dating Show is at Brighton Dome on Tuesday 30 November at 7.30pm. Tickets available from brightondome.org or by calling 01273 709709.

Sue Tilley: Still Taboo

Sue Tilley became a celebrity in the art world when Lucian Freud painted her. Benefits Supervisor Sleeping (1995) depicts Sue nude on a sofa. The painting was later sold to Roman Abramovich for £17 million.

As well as being a muse to Freud, Sue was best mates with fashion icon Leigh Bowery. She was later depicted in Boy George’s musical Taboo. As Taboo turns twenty, we caught up with Sue to discuss her life with Leigh Bowery, partying in the 80s and becoming an artist in her own right.

What went through your mind when you first saw the musical Taboo? “I was very excited and I couldn’t believe I was in it. I saw a dress rehearsal and I was thrilled. It brought back the 80s.”

How did you meet Leigh Bowery? “At the back of Heaven there was this club called Cha Chas. You had to go down a dirty alley to get there. I was friends with Stephen Luscombe from Blancmange. He took me one evening and my eyes fell on Leigh. He wasn’t dressed freaky then. Well, I suppose some people would think he was. We started talking and that was it, we were friends for life.”

Leigh Bowery

Did you get the sense that he was destined for great things? “Not really. Maybe a little bit, but I never imagined he’d become as famous and as special as he did. He wanted world domination.”

Leigh had been working at Burger King before he met Sue. “He told me all about it. He was mortified when they tried to make him the manager. That was it, he knew he had to leave. Some people can turn their hand to anything, even working in Burger King. It wasn’t really the career path he wanted. Imagine now, he could have been the Managing Director of Burger King.”

When did he develop the look he became famous for? “A year after we met, if that. He lived near Brick Lane. There were a lot of fabric shops selling cheap stuff around there. He put together this look but he was too shy to wear it. So, he put it on his flatmate Tojan. When Trojan wore it a few times Leigh saw how much attention he got, so he started wearing it himself.”

The clothes weren’t made with much of a budget. “Some of the fabrics cost 50p a yard. He made me a lovely gauze dress, but because the fabric was so cheap it dragged along the floor. Also, it was very nasty if a cigarette got anywhere near you: up they went up in flames because they were so synthetic.”

Sue Tilley

Did he set out to be a designer? “Anything that made him world famous. He got famous for lots of things but it wasn’t really of his own accord. Like when he worked for Michael Clark’s dance company. He wasn’t in charge, you see, although he tried to be.”

How did his club night Taboo emerge? “Tony Gordon found the club in Leicester Square. I’d never been there, I don’t think anybody had. So Tony arranged it and asked Leigh if he’d like to host it with him. Obviously Leigh took over and took the credit for everything.”

Taboo developed a reputation for being very hedonistic. “Oh yes, you could do whatever you wanted. You’d go down the stairs and suddenly you were in a wild playground of misbehaviour.”

Were you working at the job centre by then? “I was. I had this bizarre life. A lot of the regulars at Taboo came and signed on with me.”


Leigh also started his own band Minty. “Their performances were always great, but something always went a bit wrong. Like the performance at The Fridge when he decided to have an enema.” Let’s just say there were scenes.

“There was a letter of complaint in a gay magazine. It was supposed to be from two lesbians who were horrified but Leigh had written it himself. Leigh was such a joker, anything he could do to entertain.”

He would have thrived with social media and Youtube. “I know, he’d be perfect. He might explode from all the attention. Just before he died I was getting my first computer, we didn’t have mobile phones or anything. He was 33 when he died.”

“He did so much with the time he had. Before Leigh found out he had AIDS he’d have some days when he was so hungover he just laid on the sofa. We’d be on the phone chatting. But after he found out he was ill he worked every day. He knew he didn’t have time to waste.”

Did he get the credit he deserved in his lifetime? “He got the attention but he never had any money. He said you shouldn’t judge life by money but through what you achieve and your experiences. He was always doing something.”

Leigh Bowery

Sue recently launched her own career as an artist. “I did train to be an art teacher. I later posed for Lucian but I forgot about drawing, really. Then there was an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery of Lucian’s works and they wanted me to model. I met a guy who did art classes in Bethnal Green. I went to one and I realised I could still draw. I’m not as dedicated as Leigh but if I turn my hand to something I can usually do it.”

Sue now lives in St Leonards-on-Sea. “I went to visit a friend in Hastings and came here, we went to Kino-Teatr on Norman Road. I thought ooh, it looks nice here. I’d never dreamt of leaving London. I saw people who looked a bit quirky and thought, I could be friends with them. I looked on Rightmove and realised I could sell my grotty flat in Bethnal Green and get a magnificent one here. So two days later I put my flat on the market. Suddenly I’m moving to a place I’ve only visited once where I only know two people. I’m not usually that kind of person but it’s the best decision I’ve made.”

Sue Tilley

You’ve made it look like an artist’s house. “I love my flat. There’s some amazing second hand furniture shops around here. I threw my Ikea stuff away and bought vintage. Things I’d always wanted but never had. And when I was 60 I got it, so don’t give up on your dreams.”

Tell us about your art classes. “My friend Wayne Shires who ran all the gay clubs in London, he moved down here as well. I do art classes at one of his pubs. I did them online during lockdown. I’m starting the art classes again at Trinity Townhouse by the pier. We’re having an exhibition in February of all the work that was done online during lockdown at the Hastings Museum.”

How would you sum up Leigh’s legacy “An inspiration to everyone of how to live your life. Don’t be scared and do what you want to do. If people don’t like it just carry on.”

Popstacular, an independent collective group of designers, artists, illustrators and artistes bringing limited-edition apparel, accessories and homewares, will be opening a shop in The Lanes, Brighton before Christmas with many of Sue’s designs.

Boy George’s award-winning musical Taboo returns for one night only on January 30, 2022 at the London Palladium to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the show’s original production. This star-studded charity concert, featuring members of the original cast, is in aid of Terrence Higgins Trust and Shelter.

House of Gucci is a sprawling camp mess

How bad is House of Gucci? Well, it’s likely to go down in the pantheon of camp classics. Susan Sontag defined camp as “failed seriousness”. You can picture Faye Dunaway hacking up the rose garden in Mommie Dearest. That’s what we’re dealing with here.

For some reason, the actors have been compelled to speak in “Italian” accents. The dialogue is closer to a maxi-challenge on Drag Race than it should be. Gaga has the pleasure of delivering lines like “I’m not a particularly ethical person”  or “It’s time to take out the trash!” when she isn’t chewing the set. It’s hard to believe that Ridley Scott directed this movie. Didn’t he direct Blade Runner? Years from now, you can imagine people having House of Gucci viewing parties, howling along as they deliver the lines in their best Panto Italiano accents.

House of Gucci is based on the true story of Patrizia Reggiani. She married Maurizio Gucci and became part of the Gucci dynasty. When he tried to leave her she had him whacked. She spent 18 years in prison for her efforts. Patrizia is still around today, often seen stalking the streets of Milan with a parrot on her shoulder. She has shown no remorse for her crime.

House of Gucci

The movie focuses mainly on the troubled finances of the Gucci empire. The murder happens towards the end of he film. It’s almost an afterthought. As the characters all seem to be moonlighting as panto villains, it’s hard to feel much empathy with them on a human level. This would work brilliantly as a Drag Race skit. For a feature length movie you need a bit more nuance, and nuance is the last thing you’ll find here. It’s hard to believe anything that’s happening on screen, even though you know it all happened in real life. With a great director, all star cast and a bloody scandal to unravel, this film could have been so much more.

Some people will find unironic pleasure in this film. There is certainly a great movie hiding in plain sight, if you really strain your eyes. As it stars Gaga, you enter the cinema wanting enjoy it. But for now I’ll be going back to the Chromatica remix album.

David Bowie’s Brilliant Adventure

When David Bowie surprise dropped Where Are We Now in 2013 he broke the internet. It was a comeback that seemed increasingly unlikely. Bowie had suffered a heart attack in 2004 on the Reality Tour. Since then he’d faded from the spotlight, releasing no new music and retiring from live performance, save for a handful of one off appearances. Those appearances ended in 2006.

His final album came out in 2016. You didn’t have to dig deep into those songs to realise he was saying goodbye. By then he was widely considered to be one of, if not the coolest person on the planet. That isn’t hyperbole, by the way.

It’s hard to imagine that he was out of fashion by the early 90s. Don’t believe me? Watch an interview he did with Paula Yates in 1991. She tentatively hints that his new material might be a bit subpar. He stomps a cigarette out and scowls in response. He could still pack out stadiums, but that was due to his illustrious legacy, not his latest musical offerings.

Let’s Dance made him a mainstream superstar in 1983. He followed that record with two clunky albums and then buried himself in Tin Machine, a sort of pub rock band. These were not Golden Years.

Bands like U2, Guns N’Roses and Nirvana were making the weather, just as Bowie had in the 70s. When he recorded Black Tie White Noise in 1992, Bowie was attempting to claw back his credibility as an artist. It was the beginning of his Brilliant Adventure, even though it wasn’t a brilliant album.

That being said, it did feature some brilliant songs, such as Jump They Say and I Know It’s Gonna Happen Someday (a Morrissey cover). These songs laid the foundations for what would come next. A series of inconsistent albums packed with brilliant moments.

Bowie

All his 90s and early 00s albums have been gathered in the Brilliant Adventures box set. The most exciting part of the collection is Toy, a never before released album from 2001. Taken together, these albums demonstrate that Bowie remained at the cutting edge of popular music throughout the 90s. He just didn’t get the credit for it at the time.

The best Bowie album from the 90s has to be Outside. It’s a wildly experimental album, even by his standards. When many of his contemporaries were becoming nostalgia acts, Bowie continued to innovate. He was never going to head to Las Vegas and do a rehash of Ziggy Stardust.

Another Brilliant Adventures highlight is Re:Call 5, featuring 39 rare tracks not included on his albums. Listening to this huge collection of songs, you’re reminded how much great material he produced in the 90s.

Bowie’s estate is currently in advanced talks to sell off his catalogue. The deal is rumoured to be in the region of $200 million. His Brilliant Adventure turned out to be quite a success in the end.

Brilliant Adventures [1992-2001] will be released on 26 November 2021.

Nigella Lawson: “I have found my métier and I have no ambition whatsoever to write a novel”

Nigella Lawson is setting out on a national tour. She comes to Brighton Dome on Wednesday 24 November to discuss her latest book, Cook, Eat, Repeat. Here she talks about writing the book in lockdown, what we can expect from the tour and how to host the perfect dinner party.

How did Nigella, domestic goddess, cope with lockdown? “I am so aware that I am incredibly fortunate. Yes, of course this has been an anxiety-provoking time for everyone, but I had a roof over my head, a bit of outdoor space, food on my table, and work that I could do safely at home. (Indeed, I wrote Cook, Eat, Repeat during the first, long lockdown). I’m also very lucky that I enjoy solitude – so even though I spent several months alone, I didn’t ever feel lonely. Of course, it was hard not to be able to hug my children, but so many people really suffered, either with their health, facing their own illness and death, or that of those they love, and struggled to make ends meet, or had to risk their well-being by going to work, so I am just inordinately grateful.”

On writing her latest cookbook: “It’s hard to say exactly how long it took, because an essential part of writing a book (for me) is spent not writing it! I’d chosen the themes of my chapters, and I did most of the recipe testing and retesting (I am an obsessive tester and retester!) in 2019, but by the beginning of 2020, most of the recipes were still scribbles in my kitchen notebook, and needed to be typed up, which is not a straightforward process, as I often find I’ve left something crucial out of my notes, and so need to start testing all over again!”

Nigella Lawson is setting out on a national tour. She comes to Brighton Dome on Wednesday 24 November to discuss her latest book, Cook, Eat, Repeat. Here she talks about writing the book in lockdown, what we can expect from the tour and answering cooking questions on Twitter. How did Nigella, domestic goddess, cope with lockdown? "I am so aware that I am incredibly fortunate. Yes, of course this has been an anxiety-provoking time for everyone, but I had a roof over my head, a bit of outdoor space, food on my table, and work that I could do safely at home. (Indeed, I wrote Cook, Eat, Repeat during the first, long lockdown). I’m also very lucky that I enjoy solitude – so even though I spent several months alone, I didn’t ever feel lonely. Of course, it was hard not to be able to hug my children, but so many people really suffered, either with their health, facing their own illness and death, or that of those they love, and struggled to make ends meet, or had to risk their well-being by going to work, so I am just inordinately grateful." On writing her latest cookbook: "It’s hard to say exactly how long it took, because an essential part of writing a book (for me) is spent not writing it! I’d chosen the themes of my chapters, and I did most of the recipe testing and retesting (I am an obsessive tester and retester!) in 2019, but by the beginning of 2020, most of the recipes were still scribbles in my kitchen notebook, and needed to be typed up, which is not a straightforward process, as I often find I’ve left something crucial out of my notes, and so need to start testing all over again!" Nigella singlehandedly improved the UK's approach to food, a country that didn't have a particularly illustrious culinary reputation in the past. Bakeoff has also forced us to up our game. How does Nigella go about choosing recipes? "I wish I could tell you that there is any process at play here, but I just go on instinct. Of course, because of the title of the book, a lot of the decision-making was obvious: I chose recipes that, in one form or another, I return to often. But within that, I feel I just know in my heart which recipes clamour the most to be included. And as I started to realise that not everything would fit in, I have – and this is a bit of a regular step in all my books – what I call a Choose It or Lose It session. I select the recipes I can’t live without, and make sure they have the right home within the book’s structure, and then I see whether the recipes that remain on the list actually still belong in the book, and where they would go in it. If I can’t find the right place, it’s bye-bye (for now)." Nigella's writing certainly has literary flair. Will she ever write a novel (it would totes be guaranteed bestseller)? "When I was young, I certainly did want to write novels, but I know now that I’m not a novelist, and I feel that in writing about food does, in fact, take in so much of life. I feel I have found my métier and I have no ambition whatsoever to write a novel." As a hero to many, not least a gay icon, how does Nigella approach feel about her considerable public profile? "I have to say the concept of a role model is an alien one to me. I just don’t operate like that. On the whole, I feel that comparing oneself to others is not a healthy habit. And as for seeing myself as any kind of role model – well, I feel it’s even more inexplicable! I know it is meant kindly, and as a compliment, so I don’t wish in any way to be ungrateful – kindness is something I always appreciate - but the idea slightly flusters me!" Nigella's guide to the perfect dinner party: "Wear flat shoes (or none at all!); don’t do starters; and make sure there is enough on the menu that can be prepared in advance so that the evening isn’t made stressful by having to get everything ready as people arrive. And if I may add a 4th: remember that not everything has to be piping hot and ready at the same time." What can we expect from the live events? "This tour is really about the part food – and certain recipes – have played in my life, and that’s as much about the emotional resonance of food as flavour. I will also cover the to me very important theme of cooking for oneself. And I will certainly be talking about why I hate the term guilty pleasures!" An Evening With Nigella Lawson is at Brighton Dome on Wednesday 24 November.

Nigella singlehandedly improved the UK’s approach to food, a country that didn’t have a particularly illustrious culinary reputation. Bakeoff has also forced us to up our game. How does Nigella go about choosing recipes? “I wish I could tell you that there is any process at play here, but I just go on instinct. Of course, because of the title of the book, a lot of the decision-making was obvious: I chose recipes that, in one form or another, I return to often. But within that, I feel I just know in my heart which recipes clamour the most to be included. And as I started to realise that not everything would fit in, I have – and this is a bit of a regular step in all my books – what I call a Choose It or Lose It session. I select the recipes I can’t live without, and make sure they have the right home within the book’s structure, and then I see whether the recipes that remain on the list actually still belong in the book, and where they would go in it. If I can’t find the right place, it’s bye-bye (for now).”

Nigella’s writing certainly has literary flair. Will she ever write a novel (it would be guaranteed bestseller)? “When I was young, I certainly did want to write novels, but I know now that I’m not a novelist, and I feel that in writing about food does, in fact, take in so much of life. I feel I have found my métier and I have no ambition whatsoever to write a novel.”

Nigella Lawson

As a hero to many, how does Nigella feel about her considerable public profile? “I have to say the concept of a role model is an alien one to me. I just don’t operate like that. On the whole, I feel that comparing oneself to others is not a healthy habit. And as for seeing myself as any kind of role model – well, I feel it’s even more inexplicable! I know it is meant kindly, and as a compliment, so I don’t wish in any way to be ungrateful – kindness is something I always appreciate – but the idea slightly flusters me!”

Nigella’s guide to the perfect dinner party: “Wear flat shoes (or none at all!); don’t do starters; and make sure there is enough on the menu that can be prepared in advance so that the evening isn’t made stressful by having to get everything ready as people arrive. And if I may add a 4th: remember that not everything has to be piping hot and ready at the same time.”

What can we expect from the live events? “This tour is really about the part food – and certain recipes – have played in my life, and that’s as much about the emotional resonance of food as flavour. I will also cover the to me very important theme of cooking for oneself. And I will certainly be talking about why I hate the term guilty pleasures!”

An Evening With Nigella Lawson is at Brighton Dome on Wednesday 24 November.

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