Tag: London News

All the latest from London, the capital of the UK, home to the UK’s largest gay community.

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Magic Mike Live, Hippodrome Casino, London

    THEATRE REVIEW | Magic Mike Live, Hippodrome Casino, London

    ★★★★| Magic Mike Live, London

    Expect to be titillated, turned on, terrified (a bit) and perhaps tortured when you go see the newest, and hottest, strip show in town.

    Channing Tatum presents Magic Mike Live, on stage in London at The Hippodrome Casino. And while Channing Tatum won’t be on stage taking his clothes off for the audience’s pleasure (though he did attend last week’s opening night), you can guarantee that what you’ll get is exactly what you saw in Tatum’s Magic Mike films where Tatum, and several other hot actors, played male strippers (Magic Mike (2012) and Magic Mike XXL (2015)). Both films made lots of money – and so will this show (tickets range from £29 to £95).

    Magic Mike Live is 90 minutes of pure adult entertainment (for the ladies) where more than a dozen good-looking, sexy, hot, and did I mention sexy? men perform for the screaming crowd in a dance and acrobatic spectacular in front of, behind, and literally above their audience. But things get better when the men strip off (to their black undies) and give lap dances to the lucky audience members for performances that are unforgettable and breathtaking.

    What is forgettable is the emcee for the evening – Sophie Linder-Lee. Her task is to talk the audience through the action – but it is really necessary? The action, and the male flesh, speaks for themselves!

    The theatre at the Hippodrome Casino has been transformed into an intimate, state of the art, magical new home just for Magic Mike Live. And the show is booking all the way to October 2019 – this is how popular the show is!

    Just remember, it is strictly an over 18 only event, and sure the audience members are allowed to touch the men, but just be careful that your hands don’t wander to parts unknown!

    And after 90 minutes, your heart and blood, will be racing for what is being billed as ‘the sexiest, steamiest show in town.” And while it’s mostly for the ladies, on the night I saw it there were about 6 guys in the audience – a couple were accompanying their missus but the others were gay. So don’t be intimidated – go see the show. And hopefully one of the boys will give you a lap dance!

    Magic Mike Live plays at the Hippodrome Casino, London until Sunday 27 October 2019. Book now

     

     

     

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Dietrich Natural Duty, Wilton’s Music Hall, London

    THEATRE REVIEW | Dietrich Natural Duty, Wilton’s Music Hall, London

    ★★★★★ | Dietrich Natural Duty

    Marlene Dietrich has been called to duty – and lucky for us it’s in London.
    Dietrich, star of many a stage and film, as well as many a front line during WWII, was a legend, was a humanitarian, and was perhaps one of the most famous women of the 20th Century. Now, for a second time this year, we can bathe in her presence, and voice, in a show called Dietrich Natural Duty: A One (Wo)man Show now playing at the almost gorgeous as Dietrich venue Wilton’s Music Hall.
    In a stunning, shimmering, glittery beaded golden sequin dress, Dietrich (played to perfection by Peter Groom), takes us back to the time when she, in 1942, amidst the battlefields, turns her back at the country of her birth, Germany, and helps to rally, and excite, the troops. Through a mix of song, wit, curves, and a voice to die for, Dietrich Natural Duty is an irresistible and breathtaking show where Groom just about channels his inner and outer Dietrich to shear perfection. This show, and Groom, is mesmerising and will take your breathe away.
    Duetrich Natural Duty: A One (Wo)man Show ends its run on Saturday November 24th. To buy tickets, please click here:
  • THEATRE REVIEW | Briefs, Leicester Square Spiegeltent, London

    THEATRE REVIEW | Briefs, Leicester Square Spiegeltent, London

    ★★★★★ | Briefs

    The Briefs boys are back and they’re being extra naughty!

    You know the boys – they are the burlesque troupe from Australia who, annually, bring us fun, frolics, and huge loads – of sexiness – to the Underbelly tent in the Southbank every summer season. Well this year they’re giving us a extra dose of themselves – they are putting on their act in Leicester Square!

    Headlining two shows in the Leicester Square Spiegeltent (the first show at 7:30 and a second at 10:15), Briefs: Close Encounters take us into outer space with the sexy guys who wear all sorts of space attire (and luckily for the audience the attire comes off!) in a show that can be described as too sexy for space!

    The cast, and pretty much the show, is very similar to their show at Underbelly – but the space theme is a twist in the right direction! The Briefs boys, led by fabulous emcee Fez Fa’anana, includes one of Australia’s leading circus showmen Captain Kidd; acrobat and clownish time-hopping rabbit Dale Woodbridge-Brown; superstar aerialist Thomas Worrell, defying gravity and tying himself in knots above the crowd; and the youngest member of Briefs, the loveable rogue and boy wonder Louis Biggs, as well as performance artist Harry Clayton-Wright.

    They perform their circus skills, raucous comedy, and display their unique disrobing skills for the audience to enjoy. But stop press – the 10:15 p.m. show is even more racier, more raucous, with more genitalia on display, and isn’t that what the world needs now?

    And after the 10:15 p.m. show the tent becomes a disco where you can dance and boogie with the stars of the show! Having attended both shows last week, and then stayed on for the disco, we had an excellent time. With this, we are definitely buying tickets for their New Years Eve Extravaganza, which will be the place to be in London. It will be guaranteed trash, disco, glamour and nudity!

    Briefs: Close Encounters is an encounter I want to experience again and again!
    Book tickets for Briefs: Close Encounters click here
  • RESTAURANT REVIEW | Iron Bloom, London

    RESTAURANT REVIEW | Iron Bloom, London

    ★★★★★ | Iron Bloom, London

    Iron Bloom restaurant in Shoreditch is easy to walk right past, not knowing it’s there. Well, don’t walk past, go straight in!

    Iron Bloom, on Great Eastern Street, in one of the trendiest parts of London, is recognisable only by its beautiful chandelier in the large front window. Next to the window is an imposing iron door. Once you get into the restaurant, you will discover that it is cool and laid back and warm and friendly, just like the food and the staff.

    The brunch menu, which was on offer on the bright sunny Saturday afternoon we went, is a potpourri of food. There are typical brunch items (French Toast, Full English Breakfast, Eggs), as well as more unique lunch items (Wild Boar, Sunday Roast Yorkshire Taco, and Spinach Pancake Fritters). The menu says that the main course plates are small dishes and that two or three dishes per person are recommended, so that is what we did, we ordered two dishes each. Boy, we were in for a surprise!

    My first order was the Spinach Pancake Fritters, American style pancakes but made with spinach, with bacon and a poached egg on top, and lots of butter to substitute for syrup. They were nice and brown and delicious. While a bit pricey (£13) – I had never had pancakes made this way before. There was a hint of chilli in the fritter, but it didn’t take away from the enjoyment of the dish. My friend had the Wagyu Beef and Bone Marrow Burger with Bacon and Cheese (£15), and with the meat being Wagyu, it had to be very good, and it was, and perfectly cooked. The burger included fried onions and lettuce, with a black sesame seed bun for an extra dose of uniqueness – highly recommended. So these two dishes were main course sizes, and I was beginning to wonder if ordering second dishes was a smart move. Well, my second dish – the French Toast – was a massive portion good enough for two people! Huge Challah-style bread, with wild forest berries sprinkled all over, served with banana dairy-free ice cream & chocolate sauce – was an enormous dish. The french toast was also enormously perfect – perhaps the best looking ones I’ve ever had in London (I am American, and I know my french toast!). Chocolate Sauce is a very good substitute for syrup, though I still do prefer syrup, it was excellent and worth every pound (£14 to be exact) – highly recommended. My friend’s side dish of Crack & Cheese (the crack being a cracker of parmesan embedded into a macaroni and cheese dish consisting of brie, stilton and cheddar) was a perfect, and large, accompaniment to his burger.

    All the food we ordered was just perfect. And I have to say that we left the restaurant with very full bellies!

    The drinks were also very memorable! I had the Berrigroni – a drink that was light and fruity – with Put e Mes vermouth, and light syrup with an orange slice – which made for a delicious, and affordable (£10), drink. My friend loved his Bloom Sour – a twist on a Pisco Sour – with homemade pineapple, syrup, chilli bitter, lime, egg white and a sprinkling of homemade raspberry powder on top – all squashed into a petit cocktail glass. It definitely had a kick! Meanwhile, their Peruvian and Chilean coffee was perfect to end the meal with, and then we were treated to a shot each of Ammazzacafe´, a liquorice-tasting liqueur which is usually drunk after coffee. Highly recommended whether you have coffee or not.

    Iron Bloom has an upstairs and a downstairs. It’s a very industrial look that fits in perfectly with the neighbourhood. There are two cosy booths upstairs that would each fit a party of 5 comfortably, while the rest is stool-style eating (for about 30 people total upstairs and perhaps a bit less downstairs, which is where the kitchen is). It’s actually very stylish and cool, as is Del the bartender, the lovely hostess and waitress Elena (Hi Elena!), and Dean the chef, a born and bred Londoner who really knows a thing or two about cooking. Thanks to the entire staff we had an amazing meal and experience. And you will too, just make sure you don’t walk past the iron door!

    IRON BLOOM

    46 Great Eastern Street

    London, EC2A 3EP

    email: reservations@ironbloomshoreditch.co.uk

    phone:  02077294235 or 07896718880

    instagram:  /ironbloomshoreditch

    OPENING HOURS
    Monday: Closed
    Tuesday-Friday: 6pm-11:30pm
    Saturday: 12pm-11:30pm
    Sunday: 12pm-5pm

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Apollo Theatre, London

    THEATRE REVIEW | Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, Apollo Theatre, London

    ★★★★☆ | Everybody’s Talking About Jamie

    (C) Matt Crockett

    Jamie, Jamie, Jamie. ‘Everybody’s Talking About Jamie!’ And damn right they should be. And it’s one year old!

    Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, in case you haven’t heard by now, is the heartwarming story of Jamie – a young man from Sheffield who is different from the other kids in his class.

    When his teacher asks her students what they want to be when they grow up, one says doctor, another says lawyer, while Jamie says that he wants to be a drag queen! Supported by his mother and her best friend, along with some of his best mates, who all happen to be girls, Jamie’s dream may eventually come true! But first, he has to overcome prejudice, as well as the school bully (and also an unloving father who has practically disowned him), to be able to be who he wants to be!

    Everybody’s Talking About Jamie opened to critical acclaim at the Sheffield Crucible in 2017, and has been playing to practically sold out audiences for exactly one year at London’s Apollo Theatre in the West End.

    It’s a heartwarming and enduring story that’s actually true. It’s based on the life of Jamie New – who appeared in a 2011 BBC documentary called Jamie: Drag Queen at 16. With Music by The Feeling’s Dan Gillespie Sells, and Books and Lyrics by Tom MacRae, Everybody’s Talking About Jamie is touching, but at the same time manufactured in the way Kinky Boots is (we all know how it is going to end).

    John McCrea is brilliant as Jamie – he really works the stage in those high high heels! And he’s a dead ringer for the real Jamie! Rebecca McKinnis is great as Jamie’s mum Margaret, and she does get a show-stopper or two (‘He’s my Boy’ may bring a tear to your eye).

    In a bit of stunt casting, Michelle Visage is the teacher, but it’s Shobna Gulati who plays, and is fierce, as Margaret’s best friend, and one of Jamie’s staunchest supporters.

    It’s a feel-good show with a feel-good message, and isn’t that we all need right now!

    Book tickets to see Everybody’s Talking About Jamie!

  • Fringe! Queer Film and Arts Fest begins!

    Fringe! Queer Film and Arts Fest begins!

    Fringe! returns for its eighth year with a diverse, provocative and outrightly political programme of film screenings alongside workshops, panels and parties, transforming venues across East London over six days.

    Founded in 2011 as a community-led response to cuts to arts funding and the detrimental impact on LGBT+ art and cultural production, the festival is committed to celebrating the best in queer filmmaking, from the DIY to the high budget. Fringe! remains entirely volunteer-run and not-for-profit, whilst having become a landmark cultural event in London’s queer calendar.

    Highlights:

    Fringe! 2018 opens with powerful and effervescent documentary When the Beat Drops, which charts the development of ‘bucking’, an energetic and competitive form of dance, through the ambitions of a group of black gay men in Atlanta.

    In what can sometimes feel like dark political times, Fringe! burns bright with a focus on activism in film. Criminal Queers is an astute comedy, taking aim at the prison industrial complex in the USA with a tongue in cheek charm, complete with cameos from prison activists Angela Davis and CeCe McDonald. In Obscuro Barroco, we meet an icon of Brazil’s queer subculture, Luana Muniz, who guides us through a contrasting world of protest and beauty.

    A decidedly literary theme runs throughout this year’s programme. Closing night film Wild Nights with Emily offers a comic reimagining of Emily Dickinson’s rumoured sapphic encounters, with Molly Shannon playing the famously reclusive poet and cameos from the likes of Genevieve Turner. The UK Premiere of The Rest I Make Up revisits the life of Maria Irene Fornes, arguably one of the most influential and yet least known playwrights of the 20th century as well as being Susan Sontag’s lover.

    In a new partnership, Fringe! has worked with Hackney based LGBT+ youth support group, Project Indigo, to curate a free shorts programme which will be screened at festival hub, Hackney House. Over the course of four months, a group of 13 to 25-year-olds worked collaboratively with Fringe! to create a selection of eleven shorts from over 400 submissions.

    Other highlights include a screening of 1978’s The Wiz which takes the festival’s regular late-night singalong slot celebrating campy classics from the cinematic past. This often overlooked cult gem is at turns mesmerising and downright strange, offering a magical urban reimagining of the 1900 children’s novel The Wonderful Wizard of OzWith a notably entirely African-American cast, The Wiz stars Diana Ross, Michael Jackson and Richard Pryor among others, and is screened in partnership with BlackOut UK .

    As ever, Fringe! boasts a broad array of free events from zinemaking workshops to performance nights, live podcasts (including from female-focused film podcast Broad Appeal ) and queer pottery! All this in addition to eleven free short-film programmes ranging from the experimental to the sexy, and more! 

    For more information and schedule, please click here;
  • RESTAURANT REVIEW | Tom, Dick and Harry’s, Loughton

    RESTAURANT REVIEW | Tom, Dick and Harry’s, Loughton

    ★★★★ | Tom, Dick & Harry’s, Loughton

    Tom, Dick & Harry’s are not people you work with, or people you went to school with or who met at the local pub last year. Tom, Dick & Harry’s are actually the names of the three escape tunnels in The Great Escape. It’s also the name of a restaurant and bar located in Loughton.

    With perhaps the nicest staff this side of Mile End, Tom, Dick & Harry’s (TD&H) is perhaps the place to be, and be seen, in and around the Loughton area. Just a few minutes walk from the Central Line, it’s also perfect for those who want to get out of London to try a new dining experience in an area where you’ve not yet been to. Granted, there is not a whole lot to do in Loughton, but visiting TD&H is definitely worth a visit.

    A beautifully designed restaurant, intimate and cosy while at the same time with a metropolitan feel, TD&H offers an all-day destination dining experience. And the food is cooked and prepared by real professionals, people with a passion for food, and served by people who have a passion for their customers, who want their customers to enjoy their experience.

    On the Sunday when we paid a visit, we were told by the chef that the menu changes daily, depending on what they can source from the local butcher or whatever is freshest and available each day. We were lucky to have on the menu the Sunday Roast club menu – for this is what my friend ordered. Roast Rump of beef (Angus crossbreed) was served with, of course, a Yorkshire pudding, horseradish, gravy, with the three C’s (cabbage, carrots and cauliflower), with huge potatoes – and it was a nice size portion. My friend absolutely loved it. While he enjoyed the meat dish, I had fish, which I hardly ever order – The Grilled Tuna Steak was very good. Perfectly cooked and sized, with spring onions, almonds, and greens – the Tuna was delectable, but it was the unusual, and extremely delicious tomato and pepper paste that won my taste buds over – wow! The entire dish was a perfect combination of everything, and with my side order of large potatoes, it was a perfect meal.

    The starters, or as TD&H call them Nibbleinis, where there were quite a few choices, but we settled for three of them. My spicy chorizo, tomato and chickpea stew, was, as expected, good, but not very hot. My friend had the Fried crisp Cornish squid with togarashi pepper with lime, and on the side was a strange looking small bowl of squid ink in mayo (and sesame, lime and fish sauce), which was an average portion. Warning, the squid ink isn’t to everyone’s liking! We also sampled the nice Burrata (glob of cheese), salsa verde, with pine nuts, it was a bit heavy, but the pine nuts made it stand out. All the above were high priced at £8 each. TD&H also cater to larger parties where the price of carvery will vary according to size.

    The dessert selection was all about creams, chocolates, and dairy dairy dairy. I had the Vanilla cream pears and blackberries dish, but the cream was too much – I wish there had been more berries and pears.  However, the dark chocolate mousse, candied peanuts, with ice cream was very tasty. Both desserts were £7 each.

    Have a read through their Signature cocktails menu. Specifically designed for the restaurant by its manager and drink connoisseur Gabriele, he has assigned names to various drinks. We had the Tom Hardy – “I liked you better when you were drunk” – which almost perfectly matched the actor’s personality. It was unexpectedly sweet what with vodka, grapefruit lemon, basil and brown sugar – muddled & stirred (£12). The Sex Bomb (Tom Jones) was just superb, with honey, honey cognac, lemon, and champagne, served in a wine glass (£14) – refreshing and went just right with the meal.

    Wine must be taken with the meal, and TD&H have an amazing, but not quite overwhelming, wine list which includes whites, reds, champagnes and an amazing selection of Roses – wine that goes practically with every meal.

    The early Sunday evening we were there the restaurant remained jam-packed, with a lively piano player off to the side playing very nice mellow tunes.

    Everyone at every table looked happy – probably because the food and ambience were so good (even the man celebrating his 50th birthday party in the back looked happy!). But also credit to the staff, they were very attentive, took their time, were patient when asked questions, were always smiling, and were even concerned when the table next to us left more than half their food on their plate. It’s the kind of service that’s hard to find in other restaurants. Perhaps being in Loughton the staff are not as rushed and cold as most staff in restaurants in London are? Who knows. But TD&H may not particularly attract a London crowd, but it’s perfect and just right for the people of Loughton and it’s surrounding areas.

    https://tomdickandharrys.co.uk
    Open Saturday from 10:00 to 00:30
    Open Sunday from 12:00 to 22:00
    Book online or call 0203 327 3333 for reservations
    153 High Road
    Loughton
    IG10 4LF
    T. 0203 327 3333

  • RESTAURANT REVIEW | Old Compton Brasserie, Soho, London

    RESTAURANT REVIEW | Old Compton Brasserie, Soho, London

    ★★★★★ | Old Compton Brasserie, Soho, London

    Old Compton Brasserie, in Soho, is in a space that’s been a bit of bad luck for previous tenants. Leon, the healthy food chain, lasted only a couple of years. Next it was Muriel’s Kitchen, which was a light and lively mama’s style restaurant with comfort food – but at high prices, perhaps this is why it didn’t last. But Old Compton Brasserie will more than succeed. Why? Because it’s fabulous!

    Old Compton Street is one of the few streets in London that is constantly busy. With its plethora of bars, restaurants, shops, and a few adult retail businesses, it’s never been a place where it’s hard to find somewhere to eat.
    Old Compton Brasserie is the new kid in town, sandwiched between two Balan’s Restaurants, and right next door to Cafe Nero, where the same people linger every single night for want of nowhere else to go. Old Comptons Brasserie is the place to go, designed to a high standard, and the minute you walk in you will feel, see, and hear the excellent vibe that emits, not just from the front bar, but also from the back where people are happily eating and socializing in an environment that is cool, hip and fun.
    But, you might ask, how is the food? It’s actually fantastic! From the starters to the mains and the desserts, everything was almost perfect the night me and a friend went. It was at 8:00 pm on a Thursday night and the place was jam-packed! Every table was taken, and every customer in the place was happy happy happy. And after eating the food, we understood why.
    The Kedgeree Scotch Eggs were just to die for. It was a Scotch egg in a beautifully-breaded crust (with peas mixed in) where every bite was just delicious (and at only £5.50 – an excellent deal). This dish was recommended to us by the lovely Samantha our waitress and she was right on – we loved it. The Tempura Prawn Taco was also very good, and it was served on top of a tortilla and included shreds of carrots, celery, onion with vinegar and mayonnaise slathered over, and for £8.50 it’s a big starter. My main was the Pressed Pork Belly – a perfectly cooked long strip of pork served over colcannon mash, with a dollop of applesauce on the side. The pork was – cooked medium well, along with the mash – was on top of a sea of gravy, and every bite was delectable – it was just superb – and at a superb price of £14.00. Fabulous! My friend decided to have the Steak Frites – by far the most expensive dish on the menu (£28). We tried to figure out why it was so expensive. Could it be because the quality of the 10-ounce steak was brilliant? Or because of the huge amount of chunky chips (not frites) or the delicious bearnaise sauce? Who knows why it cost so much but my friend enjoyed every bite! We also ordered sides which were really not necessary but it was more so that we could taste more items on the menu (surely you don’t blame us)! The Roasted Field Mushrooms and the Heritage Tomato Salad were both just about perfect – with the mushrooms perfectly cooked, and the salad topped with onions and chives in a delectable creamy dressing.
    How could Old Compton Brasserie get any better? Well, the desserts we ordered were delectable and delicious. My five star Strawberry Trifle was a winner – a massive glass dish with strawberries, crushed nuts, toasted walnuts and of course the trifle layered beautifully inside – it was divine. My friend had the Lemon Posset – a pudding-esque lemon dish that he enjoyed, but it was my trifle that was the winner.
    Old Compton Brasserie cleverly offers a ‘Faces of Soho’ cocktail menu where cocktails are named after people who were/are known to be ‘denizens of Soho’. Paul Raymond, Soho Pam, Francis Bacon and Ronnie Scott, among others, have drinks named after them. My friend had the Ruby Venezuela – which was berry vodka, rhubarb & apple Juice, rhubarb tea and prosecco Le Dolci Colline, with a swig of candy floss attached to the side. It was quite subtle, unlike the drag queen, it’s named after. There is also the Regina Fong, which is served in a disco ball – one that I will have to try on my next visit. Most of these drinks are £10 and under. I had an espresso martini. At £10, the glass was a bit small, but it was refreshing and perfect.
    The establishment recommends wine with the main courses, and ours, selected by the wine waiter, went very well with our meals. The Red Le Petit Syrah (from Spain) was light and woody, while the Pinor Noir went well with the steak.
    Old Compton Brasserie has food for everyone, from plant-based mains to fish and seafood to hamburgers and sandwiches and salads – all at very affordable prices, with a wine list that any restaurant in Soho would envy.
    When we finished our meal after 10:30 pm, the place was still rocking and very buzzy, with more people coming in (the after-theatre crowd). It looks like Old Compton Brasserie is here to stay –  an excellent restaurant that’s in a perfect spot for a perfect night out. 
  • THEATRE REVIEW | Company, Gielgud Theatre, London

    ★★★★☆ | Company

    The stage legend that is Patti Lupone is gracing London’s West End with her presence in a new revival of Stephen Sondheim‘s Company.

    Lupone is not just a star, she is a STAR, having played Evita in the first New York City production in 1979 (Elaine Paige was the first Evita in London’s West End in 1978).

    In Company, Lupone is not actually the star and lead of the show, but every time she is on stage the audience seems to gasp and hold their breath.

    But Company is not at all about her character (an older wiser woman who doles out advice), it’s about Bonnie (played by Rosalie Craig, recently seen in the mega-critically acclaimed The Ferryman), who seems to live in a world full of couples (and of course in this modern society one of the couples is gay). All of her friends are in a relationship, but it’s her, who at her surprise birthday party (which is not really a surprise as someone tells her about it) at the tender age of 35), that she realises that she is single and alone in a couples world.

    Originally a musical about a single man (Robert), showcasing a single strong professional woman is just the message that is needed right now in this #metoo time.

    While Bonnie trots along, there are clever sets (by Bunny Christie) that float in and out of the stage like picture frames. And a scene-stealing moment takes place when, right before his gay wedding, Jamie (a superb Jonathan Bailey – give him his own show NOW), starts to hyperventilate and talk 100 miles a minute as to whether he will go through his wedding – it’s a brilliant turn.

    But the show stealer is none other than Patti Lupone; when she sings the classic ‘The Ladies Who Lunch’ you just want to lick your lips and savour each second. Sitting on a cocktail chair, she sings absolutely delicious, and when she says “I’ll drink to that,” you just want to melt. For me, her song is the most memorable part of the show, and it is an absolute gem.

    Marianne Elliott’s production of this 1970 show is as modern and up to date as possible, but please, more more more Lupone next. Here’s to the lady who steals the show!

    Company plays at the Gielgud Theatre until March 2019, Book tickets now (with no fees)

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Andrew Logan’s Alternative Miss World 2018, Shakespeare’s Globe

    THEATRE REVIEW | Andrew Logan’s Alternative Miss World 2018, Shakespeare’s Globe

    Andrew Logan’s Alternative Miss World 2018, Shakespeare’s Globe

    CREDIT: Holly Revell

    FREAKANGEL FURIOSAS!

    Do first impressions count? Oh yes, darlings, more so now -in the wake of Trump’s horrifying assault on anything remotely extranormal – than ever before! So how sweet, edifying and redemptive that there’s the gorgeously queer, counter-cultural energy of Andrew Logan’s simply awesome Alternative Miss World still in existence, a glittering beacon of extravagant diversity personified!

    Never heard of Mister/Missus Logan? No? If so, that’s simply shameful, on a shockingly uninformed par with an NYC queen in his 30s I met last year who’d never. heard. of. Quentin. Crisp! Understand, I’m not mocking the genuinely unenlightened or unaware, but Christ, in this current tsunami of unprecedented prejudice, queer history is a vital foundation of effective resistance!

    So – without further ado – let’s spotlight the gloriously ambisexual (in appearance, at least) Andrew Logan, a globally acclaimed queer sculptor in fragmented, rainbow-rayed glass, who’s organised. conceived and manifested his Alternative Miss World – a celebration of every possible form of imaginative deviance – since 1972.

    Now, many of you readers, of course, were not even born until decades after that pivotal date, but – to quickly illustrate the psycho-sexual climate then, on your behalf – it was the peak of glam-rock, with the omnisexual Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust album definitively shredding the social rule-book for lumbering, brain-dead cock-rock.

    Being an ancient tranny-granny, of course, I remember it well, enhanced by the shared memories of my equally non-binary creative and performing partner, Camilla. Seizing the furious, spitting lightning of Bowie’s gender-blending zeitgeist – which would later manifest more lumpenly the following year with the Rock Horror Show – Logan tore apart the Freudian gates of self-repression, and let panting, polymorphous perversity rule!

    You think the gay, non-binary and trans scenes are wild now? Well, sweethearts, we’ll gloss over the nude waiters, heaped platters of coke and dwarves employed for recreational excess at a certain Queen launch party, and just simply reiterate – quite mildly – that the 1970s was an era of stratospheric debauchery that even dear, damaged Caligula may have smirked at!

    Still, back to La Logan, and his peripatetic, occasional and irregular spurts of eroticised pageantry. If never a strictly fixed signpost on the gay, social calendar – indeed, one that often went missing inexplicably and unpredictably years at a time – Logan’s actual, physical cavalcades, when they occurred, were a wake-up call for every struggling, self-actualised sexual revolutionary on the entire planet! Frankly, through the years, Camilla and I have been greeted and treated to lusciously mind-bending pageants of any possible iteration of the LGBTQI alphabet, and tonight – at Shakespeare’s Globe, the jarringly staid bastion of theatrical respectability – is no exception.

    So let’s set the scene. Placing our cushions – mature butts do require some comforts, dear readers – on the Globe’s unyielding wooden benches, we gazed down at the raised stage in a vast courtyard wholly open to the chilling, October air, the only protection for performers from England’s unpredictable elements a jutting, over-stage roof supported by huge columns awash with glowing, ultraviolet, psychedelic hieroglyphs.

    And why not? Logan’s theme this year – quite appropriately, in a shockingly divisive political climate – was Psychedelic Peace. As a clarion call and rallying point for sympathetic spirits and resistance, it’s way overdue; who needs the frothing inanities of Brexit-crazed xenophobes and Trump’s ecstatic elevation and fawning worship of decrepit misogynists?

    Not us, but mercifully, tonight, overwhelmingly, was dedicated to the complimentary, healing spirits of boundless compassion and tolerance. Fittingly, the Peace Envoy – spearheaded by indefatigable cabaret veteran, Eve Ferret – streamed onstage in all their stalwart, sexually non-judgemental glory. Their names, of course, are instantly recognisable to anyone with even a barely tangible acquaintance with cutting-edge, queer culture; the fiercely sensual Bishi, the living work of art in progress Daniel Lismore, activists Olga Lamas, Roy Inc and Stuart Hopps. More unexpectedly – for audience members of our vintage, at least – were the impeccably queer credentials of the rangily charismatic Jenny Runacre, the iconic, Elizabeth the First in Derek Jarman’s Jubilee, and the predatory bisexual Miss Brunner in the cult, cyber-noir thriller The Final Programme, and here hugely owning her maverick, outsider glory in a clinging, sapphire dress and wickedly insouciant shades.

    And right here at Shakespeare’s Globe – and maybe nowhere else on the planet at those precise moments – a startlingly tangible wave of queer solidarity echoed the mass meditation evoked on stage by Angelika Grohamn. The point – made inescapably clear – was saying and offering a huge, plump, collective ‘yes’ to all those previously forbidden and downtrodden lifestyles, desires and yearnings, here given fabulously unrestrained wings as a scorching, definitive take on the Rocky Horror’s once courageous, but still irritatingly mimsy credo, ‘Don’t dream it; BE it!’.

    And did the contestants embody and live up to Richard O’ Brien’s timid, hardly full-bodied call to excess? Oh bleeding, gorgeously masochistic Jesus on the cross, yes! Okay, perhaps, the increasing cold, bodily discomfort and sustained, mental shell-shock of non-stop, successive peaks of ravishing outrage made objective reportage and appreciation almost impossible – curse those frequent, swollen-prostate bathroom breaks! – but many life-changing moments simply scalded themselves in our minds!

    CREDIT: Camilla K

    Some astounding specifics? The jaw-dropping, eventual winner Miss Ufo, AKA Russian performance artist Andrey Bartenev, initially onstage in a black and white, skintight diamond-patterned suit and mask, a controlled chaos of extraneous, back-looped octopus arms, like some astounding, unprecedented giant squid designed on a drug-demented bender by Salvador Dali and the vertigo-inducing surrealist M.C. Escher.

    And who – in their right or wrong minds – could fail to be conceptually pole-axed by the simply belief-confounding Miss Lysergic Acid? Entering propelled on a discrete, wheeled camera dolly, her glittering, metallic robe incandescently piped by electric-lit borders, Miss Lysergic Maximus – our preferred name for this psychedelic prodigy – unfurled vast, ethereal, violet butterfly wings while lip-synching to the transcendent yearning of Puccini’s masterly aria, ‘Nessun Dorma’.

    Unmatchable? As sheer, perfect marriage of performance art, radical, libertarian gesture and music, yes, but while nothing fully eclipsed Miss Lysergic’s transcendent aesthetics, other subversive strategies – notably, those employed by Miss Psychic Timebomb – proved equally memorable.

    Ever wanted to relish live, human sacrifice? To share – even if only vicariously – the mass homicidal, proxy orgasm craved by ancient, Roman circus punters?  Tough. Miss Psychic Timebomb – plainly dressed by contrast to others in a white gown, Venetian mask and attached to a huge, rigid disc of white chiffon – didn’t quite die for the audience, but courageously, plunged like a passive, living offering into the crowd, to be buoyed – in an astounding exhibition of trust – by his/her white-quiffed accomplices, wreathed in unexpected clouds of smoke detonated by his/her other compatriots.

    ‘Ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated?’ Johnny Rotten – the decaying, Botticelli angel of disadvantaged rage – once memorably sneered, but not here, darlings! This, indisputably, was Anarchy in the UK indeed, an overdue, furiously chaotic, punk-rock fuck-you to the staggering, staged boredom epitomised byStrictly, the X-Factor and West End theatre en masse!

    That blanket unpredictability – the heady, off-kilter thrill typifying the Stingray, kid’s TV show tag – ‘Anything can happen in the next half-hour!’ – injected the entire night with a spontaneous, pseudo-Ecstasy rush from moment one. And- unbelievably – there was more to come, the writhing, au naturel and wholly naked exuberance of the Neo Naturist dance troupe, all body paint and extravagant, decorated genitals, radiating an unapologetic miasma of human sweat and sexual musk.

    Tasteless? Only to people metaphorically sealed, bound and taped in every orifice, to minds screamingly allergic to and repelled by every aspect of the blatantly sexual human animal, and to the bigoted hatred of unevolved fanatics who, inexplicably, idolise invisible, unprovable sky-guys floating on clouds rather than unconditional human love and compassion.

    Originating in the early 1980s as an earthy riposte to Thatcher’s dehumanising ethos of ruthless, pan-social greed, the Neo Naturists – free-form dancing to Hawkwind’s joyously delirious Silver Machine  – writhed like living art in nothing but marine green and rain-forest emerald body paint, a luscious and necessarily lubricious reminder, that – beneath our often cynical and socially enforced masks – our bodies change, age and orgasm at the dictates of nature, time and sexualities beyond our control.

    Truly, one couldn’t pray for a finer, wet-dream rebuttal of the anal retentive idiocy currently killing free expression worldwide. And, representing a marvellously eclectic spectrum of taste, awareness and sensitivity, the judges tonight – including Pop Art wunderkid Duggie Fields, radical punk couturier Zandra Rhodes, ceramicist sculptor and toxic masculinity critic par excellence Grayson Perry and neo-noir singer-songwriter Jarvis Cocker, not forgetting Zoe Wanamaker, the daughter of Sam, who conceived reconstructing Shakespeare’s Globe – are only predictable in their utter eccentricity in proclaiming the night’s winner.

    Their choice? In the immortal words of Duncan McCleod’s iconic movie hero Highlander, ‘There can be only one!’, and – unsurprisingly – it’s Russian zeitgeist grandmaster Andrey Bartenev, irresistibly resplendent in a linked cloud of doll-face printed helium balloons, gathered in front of his body into a shockingly gigantic – and shockingly elegant – erect, black and white, diamond patterned penis and pendulous balls, making ravishingly demonstrative love to the entire audience!

    How, pray tell, can anything top clouds of conceptual semen sprayed indiscriminately in public? While one should never underestimate the infinite, potential shock-troop outrages brewing in the minds of future contestants, Bartenev’s imaginary fire-hose of sassy, perfectly-formed, mass sexual charity drenched us all in lingering, consensual joy. Frankly, we can’t wait for more, and the inevitable, future crowning of Andrew Logan as Queen Deviance personified!

    With grateful thanks to Goodman Anna and Abstrakt PR.  Words: Sasha Selavie & Camilla Bryant

  • THEATRE REVIEW | The Inheritance, Noël Coward Theatre, London

    ★★★★☆ | The Inheritance

    (C) MARK BRENNER

    Following a sold out and critically acclaimed run at the Young Vic theatre earlier this year, The Inheritance is back in a bigger venue with it’s still very long running time but with a cast who act their trousers off – literally.

    The Inheritance, to sum up its 6 hour and 45 minutes two-parter running time, is the story of a group of young gay men living in present-day New York City – a generation after the peak of the AIDS plague.

    These young men don’t really know what the previous generation before them went through; the suffering, the denials, the losses oh boy the losses. Seeing grown men withering away to nothing – one day at the gym and the next month dead, or disappeared and never to be seen again. Men, who were in their prime, who should’ve been living life to the fullest, all dying rapidly. The survivors buried and mourned, but mourning was a short-term process as it was time again to take care of someone else who was dying, and the cycle repeated itself. Yes, this was the reality of living as a gay man in New York City in the 1980s and early 1990s. The Inheritance overlays the gay generation of today with the gay generation of that time and weaves its story via a main central character.

    An amazing Kyle Soller (where did they find him?) is Eric Glass, happily living with his boyfriend of seven years Toby (Andrew Burnap) in a rent-controlled apartment on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. Also living in the same building is the older, and wiser Walter (Paul Hilton), who lives upstairs with his very rich but never home long-term partner Henry Wilcox (John Benjamin Hickey). Toby is a playwright who is in the middle of writing a play. One day he accidentally picks up the wrong bag at a bookstore and heads home, but is followed by the young and attractive Adam (Samuel H. Levine), the bag’s owner. After they exchange bags, Adam tells Toby that he is an actor – coincidentally. While Toby’s new script gets more and more attention (as does his new-found friendship with Adam), Eric is enjoying the time that he spends with Walter. Eric learns a lot from him, but also, and most important, is that Walter fondly, and longingly, reminisces about his house in upstate New York, a home that is very special to him and which turns out to be very special to others, which we learn more about at the very end of the first half.

    Fast forward and it is Adam who gets to play the lead role, and becomes a star, in Toby’s new play, while Eric and Toby’s relationship becomes fragile and doesn’t last; and surprisingly, after Walters passing, Eric follows his heart and marries Henry after very brief courtship that did not include sex. But Henry’s two sons strongly don’t want Eric to get any of Walter’s possessions, including the house which Walter actually bequeathed to Eric.

    The Inheritance author Matthew Lopez takes E.M. Forster’s gay novel Howard’s End and somehow blends it into this tale of gay men, a tale that, well, most gay men can relate to, whether young or old. Lopez uses a character by the name of Morgan (Hilton) – substituting him for Forster, to help with the narrative of the play. Was this really necessary? Personally, I don’t think so. The characters, all of whom when not on the raised center stage platform hang around on the edge, don’t really need this unnecessary plot device to help the story along. I wanted them just to get on with it. At times Morgan walks into the story to help it along, but I don’t think this works.

    The story of The Inheritance is strong enough (the meaning of The Inheritance is the passing of HIV from one man to another), and without the narrative 30 minutes could’ve been shaved 30 off. It’s an extremely powerful story, more powerful to some of us who actually lived in big cities in the 1980s and early 1990s and whom were affected, effected and infected by HIV and AIDS. But I actually dreaded (and looked forward to at the same time) spending a whole day at the theatre – it’s quite a long show to get through, and I could tell the friend I had invited to join me in this perhaps once in a lifetime experience didn’t want to stay for the last third of the second part (yes, there are three parts in part 1 and part 2). But the third part in part 3 pays dividends – the legend that is Vanessa Redgrave comes out in a powerful scene to help wrap up the story in an emotional, and very strong, performance.

    And this is what The Inheritance gives us – direction with ease and conviction by Stephen Daldry, very strong performances, an emotional and unforgettable experience, and a perhaps an all too real story. And would I recommend it? Yes, I would – both parts.

    The Inheritance is playing at the NOËL COWARD THEATRE until  January 19, 2019. Book Now.