Tag: UK

  • THEATRE REVIEW | Shadowlands

    THEATRE REVIEW | Shadowlands

    ★★★★★ – So emotional, I couldn’t help but cry.

    Amanda Ryan as Joy Davidman and Stephen Boxer as C.S. Lewis in Shadowlands. Credit Jack Ladenburg

    Credit: Jack Ladenburg

    Last night was one of those nights where you sit there, and for the whole of the two hours you felt so lucky to be a theatre reviewer. I didn’t think theatre could touch a person that deep, in the way that William Nicholson’s Shadowlands undoubtedly did.

    “Shadowlands is based on events that occurred in the lives of two real people – C.S Lewis and Joy (Davidman) Gresham (…) I have used parts of their story, not used other parts, and imagined the rest.” – William Nicholson.

    ‘Jack’ Lewis and Joy Davidman were played by Stephen Boxer and Amanda Ryan respectively, and I will never see the two actors as themselves again. C.S Lewis and Joy were resurrected and put on stage for the audience of the 21st Century to see the marvel that his world was, and the imagination he had, through William Nicholson’s own genius take on Chronicles of Narnia legend’s life. The portrayal was too surreal to be called acting. For a week only, the two lives come alive and let us in to see the lives that lived in and around C.S Lewis’.

     

    Credit: Jack LadenburgCredit: Jack Ladenburg     

    The formidable writing of Nicholson astonishingly captivates C.S Lewis and you were reminded of Narnia, as the story was told. I particularly adored the moment in which Lewis sparked the notion of magic with young Douglas, who wanted to believe in it so bad. Having seen The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe at Christmas at the Birmingham Rep, I was gleefully pleased to see some features used for this. It made the experience so much more magical.

    It is rare not to be able to control your lacrimal glands in public, but this story pushed them out of you whether you liked it or not. And I wasn’t the only one, with sniffles and other crying-like noises surrounding me, the whole theatre could not help but give in to the emotions of the heart-breaking story. One couple were so engrossed that were constantly saying: “Oh dear” as the action darkened.

    The subliminal acting, combined with almost too-good-to-be-true storytelling by William Nicholson evoked emotions that could not help but escape the depths of the human soul. “The happiness now, is part of the pain then.” Said Joy when she was on holiday with Jack, as the dreaded end was near, which touched so many people.

    Other acting, from Denis Lill (Warnie), Simon Shackleton (Prf Christopher Riley) and all the others contributed to the fullness of the play, and created exquisite drama which helped bring to life the man who made so many of our childhoods magical and filled with wonder.

     

    Shadowlands plays at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre until 4 June.

    Follow Alex Da Silva on Twitter

  • NHS “Washed Its Hands” On Providing PrEP For Gay And Bisexual Community

    NHS England has come under intense criticism after it announced it was removing the anti-HIV drug known as PrEP from the official commissioning process.

    CREDIT: tashatuvango-bigstock

     CREDIT: tashatuvango-bigstock

    NHS England is facing a backlash from sexual health groups and HIV charities after it confirmed its decision to remove PrEP from the official NHS commissioning process, meaning that the anti-HIV drug will be inaccessible to people at risk of HIV.

    Both the National AIDS Trust (NAT) and the Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) blasted the decision. With the NAT saying it was considering further legal action against NHS England.

    PrEP is an HIV prevention drug, proven to be effective in stopping HIV transmission in almost every case if taken properly. The decision by NHS England not even to consider commissioning PrEP came after 18 months of hard work from an NHS working group (comprising clinicians and experts from across the HIV sector) which demonstrated the need, efficacy and cost-effectiveness of PrEP.

    Deborah Gold, Chief Executive, NAT, said,

    “NHS England is sitting on something that could be the beginning of the end for the HIV epidemic – if only it were made available.  The refusal to commission it for all those at significant risk is astonishing.   Seventeen people are being diagnosed with HIV every day. Weare extremely disappointed and we will now be looking at our options, including further legal action.”

    Terrence Higgins Trust called the decision “shameful” and said that NHS England had “washed its hands” of one of the most stunning breakthroughs in HIV prevention which disproportionately affects the gay and bisexual community in the UK.

    Ian Green, Chief Executive of Terrence Higgins Trust, said,

    “Today is a shameful day for HIV prevention. This country used to lead the way in the fight against the HIV epidemic, but today, our national health service has washed its hands of one of the most stunning breakthroughs we’ve seen; a pill which, if taken correctly, is almost 100% effective in preventing HIV.  A pill which is already available in America, Canada, France, Kenya and soon to be Australia.

    “How did it come to this? It defies belief that, after 18 months of false hope, delays and u-turns in the battle to see PrEP made available on the NHS to people at high risk of HIV, today we are in a worse position than when we started.

    “It is a mess, and the people who will feel the effects are the 2,500 men who have sex with men who will be needlessly infected with HIV each year in the UK. This figure has not changed in a decade. Who will claim responsibility for the life-long impact this will have on people’s lives?

    “It’s not right that people who know themselves to be at high risk of HIV have to buy PrEP themselves from the internet at considerable personal expense. Many high risk people are living in poverty and they simply cannot afford to protect themselves against HIV. Currently, only those who can afford it are able to access this life-changing treatment, further widening the inequality gap by those most affected by HIV.

    “The battle for PrEP must continue until the day that people at highest risk have access to this groundbreaking pill that will protect them from HIV.”

  • BREAKING: Lesbian Couple Are Found Guilty Of The Murder Of Two-Year-Old Son

    BREAKING: Lesbian Couple Are Found Guilty Of The Murder Of Two-Year-Old Son

    A same-sex couple have been found guilty of two-year-old Liam Fee’s murder in Fife.

    Two women from Ryton in Tyne And Wear, have been found guilty of the murder of Liam Fee, Rachel Fee’s two-year-old son who was found dead at their home in Glenrothes in Fife March 2014.

    The toddler died from blunt force trauma which caused his heart to rupture. The court heard that he also suffered numerous injuries including bone fractures.

    Rachel Fee, 31 and Nyomi Fee, 29 denied that they had murdered Liam, but were found guilty after a seven week trial at the High Court in Livingston.

    They were convicted of all eight charges that were brought against them by the Crown Prosecution Service in Scotland.

    They were also convicted of assaults against two other boys in their care.

    The couple maintained that Liam had received the injuries from another child – one of the boys they falsely accused of Liam’s murder.  He cannot be named for legal reasons.

    A jury found the two women guilty after 10 hours of deliberations.

    Detective Inspector Rory Hamilton, MIT East,  who led the investigation said,

    “This was a complex, challenging and sensitive investigation which involved interviewing two young children to establish the level of abuse and neglect both they and Liam Fee had been subjected to.

    “It was because of their courage that detectives were able to identify Rachel and Nyomi Fee as being responsible for a wide range of serious offences against three children.”

    Assistant Chief Constable Malcolm Graham, lead officer for Major Crime and Public Protection, said,

    “Liam’s murder has had a profound effect on everyone involved in the investigation and our thoughts are with his wider family.

    “The death of a child is always traumatic but the murder of a child has a terrible and lasting impact on the family, on the wider community and on the carers and professionals involved.

    “Police Scotland places the highest priority on protecting the most vulnerable, most at risk people in our communities and in investigating criminality when it does take place.

     

  • RESTAURANT REVIEW | Top Dog Diner Soho (CLOSED)

    One could easily meander past Top Dog (TD) on Frith Street Soho without a second squint.

    UPDATED: 26th Sept 2016 – now closed

    First of all, the name doesn’t grab you like Herman Ze German or House of Ho – but equally, it’s not as off-putting as La Polenteria – really, polenta-smolenta. And secondly, the dark exterior doesn’t wink at you – one has to sport a bright button-hole on one’s lapel to make an impression in this neck of the smog-laden metropolis.

    But you’re not to be put off, TD has recently undergone a bit of a refurb and has utilised the space upstairs by transforming it into a speakeasy bar. What they don’t exude in a colourful shopfront they make up for in cool.  A minimalist bar with ’70’s leaf-shaped and made-out-of-scaffolding tables, grey walls with a hand painted mural: think a merman Eddie Izzard in a spacesuit, sporting an orange umbrella, serving drinks – it just works.

    We arrived to the Going Live of all receptions; the staff are animated and personable – move over Ant and Dec.  We were whisked straight up to the speakeasy drinking room where two cocktails were suggested.

    Dill or No Dill: Gin, elderflower cordial, lemon, cucumber, dill and smoked sea salt at £8.  A martini-style imbibe, aromatic and citrusy. The cucumber tones down the salt – slightly bitter.  Not bad, but not top hound.

    El Chaplulin:  Olmeca Altos Reposado, Tio Pepe, Briottet Cacao and Briottet Menthe Blanc at £9. A touch of the My Fair Lady’s, a decent enough tequila softened by the dryness of the sherry – a fruity kick from both Briottets enhances tobacco flavours. The world was a better place once the glass was empty – Top Dog.

    After our sharpeners we were led downstairs to the restaurant. You’ll feel as though you’re sitting in an industrial staff canteen, but with a touch of the Hoxton Square’s.  More of the scaffold, simplistic bare wood chairs, tables and work counter all lit with factory-style caged bulbs.

    We shared all the nosh.

    To arrive first: Kentucky fried cauliflower served with home-made BBQ sauce at £4. If you like cauliflower, and you like tempura – you’ll find this finger-lickin’-good.  We then tucked into truffle mac and cheese at £6.50: al dente pasta – the truffle oil didn’t overpower the mild cheese. My dining chum vacuumed up the lot.

    Before choosing the food we were informed all ingredients are straight off the farm wagon and all the burgers and hot dogs are made on the premises. We think they secretly have a little abattoir and greenhouse out the back – f-f-fresh.

    Next up: chilli cheese hot dog, cheese sauce, lettuce, coriander, pickled chillies and red onions at £9. A sophisticated hot dog – quality meat, porky and beefy notes elevated by lemon and nutty undertones from the coriander. Chilli and pickle is like adding hollandaise to a poached egg and muffin – the ruler of dogs.

    And: pulled pork ’n’ slaw, slow-cooked pulled pork, apple slaw, lettuce, pickles and Kansas City BBQ sauce at £10. My dining compadre wasn’t keen, which made me very happy indeed – not a crumb was left. An addictive beef patty oozing beefiness covered with succulent pork all merged with sweet apple and tomato – hints of garlic and chilli and a tease of paprika – makes a Big Mac seem like a shrivelled up chipolata – we’ve all been there.

    Along with: sweet potato fries at £4 – overdone and dry.  The house white, El Muro Macabeco 2014, had a similar bouquet to carpet stain remover.

    Bung Top Dog to the top of your Soho easy stops to line stomachs before snogging hotties in the Shadow Lounge, for an easy-on-the-Gucci-purse-strings buzzy din-dins with chums or if you just need to fill ya chops with a decent, fresh, meaty flavoursome sausage.

    Review By: Thabian Sutherland
    Address: Top Dog
    48 Frith Street
    London, W1D 4SF
    Telephone: 020 3019 2380
    Star Rating: ★★★★ (explained)
    Cost Rating: ££ (explained)
    Tipping Policy: A discretionary 12.5% gratutity is added to all bills.

  • Three Of The Coolest Cars From The London Motor Show

    2016 bought back some history for the motoring world. For the first time in eight years, London hosted a motor show, although on a small scale it was very important.

    With the ever increasing sales of British cars of all brands, it was only fitting to bring some publicity to such a city. Not only has the United Kingdom created some of the best handling, luxurious and iconic cars, but are also going to help raise the bar on the land speed record.

    Matthew Porter gives us his top three highlights of the London Motor Show

    MG GS

    Over the years MG has been trying to claw its way back into the market with the three and the six. Both are very reasonably priced but lacked quality, however, what they lacked in quality they made up for in standard equipment. Both cars sold at a steady pace considering MG only re-entered the market back in 2011. After the fall of the brand back in 2008, it was down to the new Chinese owners to pull it back up to the top. With almost all current car companies having at least one SUV in their range it was much needed by MG to bring out the GS. This compact crossover SUV will sit to rival the Nissan Qashqai. What this car excels at will be value for money, set to undercut the rivals on price and equipment, making this a strong contender in the very growing and crowded market.

    The stunning new GS brings stylish looks, practicality and technology at a very reasonable price. The sporty yet rugged looks of the GS bring new design language to the brand, with the face-lift of the 6 there is a clear path they are following, a very fruitful and prosperous path.

    Set to come after this is a smaller, Nissan Juke rival. What will make this car even more desirable is that it will be built in Wales, truly putting the British engineering into a British car.

     

    TVR.

    This is all TVR would reveal to press.

    2016 bought the return of renowned car manufacturer TVR. The iconic British car brand was credited for their speed, handling and dramatic styling. After the last cars were made in 2006 it was thought to be the end of an era. However this has all changed. On the third of June 2015, car designer Gordon Murray and Cosworth partnered up for the relaunch of the brand. The plan is to bring the new car to the market in 2017 which will be the first step in a ten year plan for the company. The new car is rumored to host a front mounted Cosworth V8 powering the rear wheels and transmitted through a manual gearbox. The design has not been officially released get but some teasers have been released. It is said that the car will heavily rely on ground effect aerodynamics incorporated into the body work. The official unveiling will go ahead to all 400 deposit paid customers before the public debut.

     

    Bloodhound project.

    Bloodhound project hoping to break the land speed record with 1000MPH with this new development. CAD Image: BLOODHOUND SSC originated by Flock and Siemens

    This is an interesting showcase of a vehicle if it can be called that. The Bloodhound project is aiming to break the land speed record they previously set with their last creation the Thrust SSC with a top speed of over 760MPH. Speaking with a representative of the company it was understood this is a very complex and powerful feat of engineering.

    To start with the vehicle will be fitted with a Typhoon EJ200 jet engine manufactured by Rolls-Royce. Second to that are three Nammo hybrid Rockets. All of these will help propel the vehicle to 1000MPH. However, with an engine to large and thirsty it must be fueled constantly and at a fast rate. Which is why, with no other purpose than a fuel pump, they will be using a Supercharged V8 Jaguar engine. As the previous driver of the last two record holding vehicles, Andy Green will be behind the wheel to bring another victory home.

     

    Follow Matthew Porter on Twitter

  • RESTAURANT REVIEW | 155 Bar & Kitchen at Clerkenwell London

    Absolutely apt in eagerness for the release of Absolutely Fabulous The Movie 1st July, The Gay UK were PR-ed an equally fabulous brunch invite. We, emanating fabulousness were only too joyed to Lacroix-up, sweety, and head to Clerkenwell London’s (CL), 155 Bar & Kitchen in – you guessed it – scenester-site and trendy-wendy haunt Clerkenwell.

    Moi’s dining chum was running a smidge late – he said: “fell back to sleep”, we say: “Bolli Stolli” – which gave ample opportunity to saunter round the labyrinth that is CL’s 13,000 square metre concept store. The tour started in the nordic-loft-apartment-esque CL’s 155 Bar & Kitchen, a long rectangular room with taupe painted brick walls, dark wood floors and newfangled saloon bar with rich-teak tables methodically spaced. Chairs accessorised with sheepskin throws, Finnish wooden funnel-shaped birch-slat lighting shades and hints of a botanical garden. Clean lines, simplistic – cool and laid-back. Edina and Patsy wouldn’t grumble.

    From the restaurant you walk into the first section of the store which feels like a Mike Leigh filmset, only missing Alison Steadman, a 1970s Vinyl Lounge with custom-built decks facing a round Starship-Enterprise/Emirates-first-class style martini bar. The next room is a boutique selling hand-picked objets d’art and “gorgeous, tasteful, little stylish little gorgeous things – sweety darlings” as well as housing a glass and iron cube art gallery displaying works from local artisans. Each corner of the boutique leads to either a men’s or ladies’ tailors.

    You walk downstairs and you arrive at the Dior of furniture showrooms exhibiting the handcrafted haute couture works of Tree Couture – the Henry Moore of furniture. On with the exploration: behind a mahogany-coloured leather-tiled partition hides a men’s casual department offering On Tour t-shirts, Bethnals jeans and Stutterheim raincoats – we likie.

    Turn left and you’ll arrive at what looks like Nigella Lawson’s post-modernistic kitchen with a huge oak work-island for spreading avocados and racking up lines of coconut-chicken skewers. In fact it’s the mother of all wine-tasting rooms, walls lined with jewels such as Sophia Loren’s favourite fizz: Tendil & Lombardi Cuvée Rosé Champagne NV, and organic plonks from Chateau La Coste by one of the most gifted winemakers of his generation, Matthieu Cosse.

    CL hosts educational wine-tasting events – with Master of Wines Sarah Abbott and, wine brand developer and founder of Above Sea Level wine and culture magazine, Aimee Hartley – for £15 per head. We at The Gay UK are always keen to improve our already well-trained palettes – we’ll be booking in.

    And finally the piano room: another sizeable space that has a touch of the King’s-Road-avant-garde-lounge-bars, complete with private dining room and baby grand. Contempo ostentatiousness simplified.

    Appetite primed, back to the bar and kitchen.

    On recommendation I ordered savoury waffles: house-made waffles, maple-glazed streaky bacon and scrambled eggs at £11. Creamy waffles with a vanilla undertone worked swimmingly with the fluffy eggs and strong woody flavours from the crispy bacon – all elevated by mapley sweetness. My comrade went for avocado and eggs: smashed avocado with créme fraîche on toasted sourdough and two poached eggs at £9. The eggs were runny, and the créme fraîche gave our green calorific friend a lighter texture, colour and taste without the sensual gestures and voluptuous curves.

    The staff are slick and standoffish. Brunch is from 10am to 4pm – you can pay £15 per person for bottomless fizz, available for two hours from your booking time – we were game. They’ll serve you an award-winning Paladin Prosecco DOC Tappo Spago NV, flowery, light and aromatic with citrus notes. Not too dry or acidic – a bloomin decent prosecco. Dangerous with so much tempting merchandise on display.

    The Gay UK are looking at relocating to 156 Farringdon Road; failing that, we’ll just set up camp in the piano room.

    Reviewed by: Thabian Sutherland

    Address: 155 Bar & Kitchen
    155 Farringdon Road
    EC1R 3AD
    London, UK
    Telephone +44 (0)20 3675 8847
    Star Rating: ★★★★★ (explained)
    Price Rating: ££££ (explained)
    Tipping Policy: An optional service charge of 12.5% will be added to your bill

  • INTERVIEW | Neil Bartlett

    Alone in a silent room, a man waits for a knock on his door. As the minutes tick by, he remembers a life filled with daring and laughter, with parties and heartbreak – a life spent searching for the courage to be himself.

    Inspired by the true story of the strange life and lonely death of Mr. Ernest Boulton – one half of the infamous Victorian cross-dressing duo Fanny and Stella – Stella is an intimate meditation on the fine art of keeping one’s nerve as the lights go out. Performed amidst the newly restored splendours of one of London’s oldest surviving music-hall interiors, it is a theatrical love-letter to a truly remarkable person.

    Neil Bartlett has been one of Britain’s most individual writers and theatre-makers for over thirty years. His early work included the now-legendary Sarrasine and A Vision of Love Revealed in Sleep; from 1994 to 2005 he was Artistic Director of the Lyric Hammersmith. Since leaving the Lyric he has made controversial new work for the National, the Manchester International Festival, the Edinburgh Festival – and the Royal Vauxhall Tavern. Stella is his first original theatre piece in London for over three years.

    I first became aware of Stella (Ernest Boulton) when I read Neil McKenna’s 2013 book Fanny and Stella. The story is both titillating, hilariously funny and devastatingly sad and I was instantly fascinated to learn more. I was excited to hear that Neil Bartlett has written a play based on the life of Stella and that this is being shown as part of the London International Theatre Festival in the beautiful setting of Hoxton hall in London’s East End.

    CHRIS BRIDGES: For those who don’t know anything about Ernest Boulton can you tell us a little more about him?
    NEIL BARTLETT: The real Stella was called Ernest Boulton, and he was born in Tottenham in 1848. His parents tried to get him to settle down to a career as a bank clerk, but by the age of twenty he was living a very different kind of life than the one they had planned for him. When he wasn’t trolling the West End in tight trousers and full slap , he was working as a drag performer under the name of Stella. On stage he was billed as a female impersonator, but offstage he could also pass as a woman. His lover – an aristocrat Tory MP, no less, one Lord Arthur Pelham-Clinton – rented Stella a flat just off the Strand, and there the two of them slept in a double bed and told the servants that they were  man and wife. As if that wasn’t enough of an outrage, Stella also went out on the town without Arthur, trolling the pavements of the Strand for trade while dressed as a far less respectable kind of lady.

    In the spring of 1870, this glamorous lifestyle all went disastrously wrong; Stella was arrested in full drag after having been spotted using the ladies’ toilet in a West End theatre. Remarkably, she got off. The charge was conspiracy to commit a felony – i.e, sodomy – and though there was ample evidence that Stella was an outrage, there was no evidence of actual buggery on the night in question. What is even more remarkable is what happened next. Instead of hanging her head in shame, Stella immediately went back out on tour with her drag act; less than a year later, indeed, she had changed her name, dyed her hair blonde and was playing in New York, just off Broadway. So much for the idea that all Victorian homosexuals were unhappy victims! The work in New York dried up as she lost her looks, and Stella eventually came back to Britain to tour in the lower rungs of the provincial variety circuit, sticking it out until shortly before her death in London in 1904.

    Ernest had some hideous experiences and his story is a sad indictment on how the Victorians treated gay and transgender men. Would you describe ‘Stella’ as a tragedy?
    When I first discovered Stella’s story – which was way back in the dark ages of the 1980s, when I was researching my first book, Who Was That Man? about queer life in Victorian London – it was the young Stella who I identified with – the young fearless queen, sticking two fingers up at the world with her frocks and shamelessness. I was, after all, a young queen myself, and knew quite a bit about the pleasures and perils of trolling the West End in drag. Now I’m the same age that Stella was when she died, it is her courage as an older queen that intrigues me most. What kind of nerve did it take to play all those games with gender and identity in a century where no vocabulary existed to describe what you dreamt of being?

    What kind of nerve did it take to tour for all of those years, way past the time when her looks had started to go? Most of all, what kind of nerve did it take to make her final journey – we know that Stella died in the National Hospital, on Queen Square in Holborn, so having lived all her life in frocks, her final identity must have been that of an anonymous patient in a man’s jacket and trousers.

    I think Stella has a lot to teach us about courage, about keeping your nerve – so I suppose by bringing her back to life in this show I’m trying to give her a chance to pass on some of the lessons her life taught her. The show is dark, and funny – and uplifting.

    Picture shows: Richard Cant

    You’ve previously written about life for gay men in 1890 and compared this with your own life in 1980 in your novel Who Was That Man? Do you think there are parallels between the time of Ernest’s trial in 1871 and life in 2016?
    Now is a great time to be telling Stella’s story. Sometimes she was a drag queen, sometimes a flaming fairy, sometimes she was a passing “lady”, sometimes she looked and behaved exactly like a pre-surgery, pre-hormones cross-dressed MTF (Male to Female) sex-worker. She challenges all ideas that “identity” is a destination; she was on a journey until the day she died. I think that’s an idea we’re very open to right now, now that trans and non-binary people are doing all this amazing work to open our eyes and hearts and minds. Stella really asks to think about what matters more; who you are, or how you are. For me, Stella’s true “identity” was her courage.

    How did you approach researching and writing the play?
    I read everything that has survived – all of the letters and bits and pieces that were preserved in the trial transcripts – and I also spent a lot of time in the British Library tracking down the scripts of the plays that Stella acted in when she was on tour (there are some lines from some of them tucked away in my script)– and I looked at all the photos of her that have survived. That girl did like a photographer’s studio! Just as importantly, I talked to the friends of mine who – like Stella – live and/or work in bodies and gender identities different to the one they were assigned at birth. Fabulous people – Justin V Bond , Scottee, Rebecca Root, Jo Clifford….and some of the things they told have found their way into my Stella’s mouth.

    Picture shows: Oscar Batterham

    One of the things I loved reading about was Fanny and Stella’s language. The Victorian phrases slang terms were colourful in the extreme. Do we get hear much of this in the play?
    There are fragments of Stella’s original voice in the play – but it’s not a history lesson. I’m really trying to put the audience in the same room as her and just let her talk… though I must say, she does have a sharp turn of phrase at times, like every queen I’ve ever known.

    Hoxton hall is a stunning place. Quite a coup to show the play in such a pertinent place. Can you tell us more about the venue?
    Hoxton Hall one of London’s best kept secrets – a jewel, hidden away half way up Hoxton High Street. Stella is a very intimate show, all about being in the same room as this extraordinary creature, and so it felt right to find somewhere small and secret – also, of course, Hoxton Hall is very much the kind of place that Stella would have played – it’s an actual Victorian musical hall, complete with cast iron balconies and red velvet curtains.

    For this piece I wanted to go back to the way of making queer theatre that I used when I first started back in the 1980s, with shows like A Vision Of Love or Sarrasine – find somewhere fabulous and then lure the audience there after dark with the promise of a touch of naked flesh, a bit of cheap costume jewellery and a truly haunting story from our queer past. Since the 19080s my career has taken me to big theatres, the National and the RSC and all that, but I think I’m happiest  in the dark with an audience of queers and a truly magical space.

    Finally, if Ernest were alive today what do you think he’d be doing?
    Misbehaving at the Shadow Lounge wearing a fabulous outfit that somebody else had paid for.

    Stella plays at Hoxton Hall from 1 – 18 June 2016, 2.30pm and 7.30pm

    Post show events:
    Panel discussion post-show on the 7th of June with Neil Bartlett, Jonny Woo, Jo Clifford and more
    Dialogue Theatre Club on the 9th of June hosted by Maddy Costa and Jake Orr

    Follow Chris Bridges on Twitter

  • Prince Harry Tops The List Of Celebs Brits Want To Get Away With

    Prince Harry Tops The List Of Celebs Brits Want To Get Away With

    Prince Harry & David Beckham top the men most people would like to spend a long weekend away with, according to new research.

    CREDIT: H&M
    The prince topped the poll of famous people Brits would most like to join them for a short break.

    In second place is Friends favourite, Jennifer Aniston, followed by footballing megastar, David Beckham.

    Commissioned by Best Western Great Britain hotels, 2,000 UK adults were surveyed to see who they would like to spend a quick getaway with.

    Andrew Denton, Director of Communications at Best Western Great Britain hotels, which commissioned the study, said,

    “The British public have spoken and crowned Prince Harry their King.

    “He was a popular break date choice in the poll but you don’t need to be royalty to enjoy a perfect break.”

    Aussie pop queen Kylie Minogue also featured in top 10, along with soap star, Michelle Keegan.

    Some of the notable entries in the women’s list included veteran heart-throb Johnny Depp, X-Men star Hugh Jackman and singing sensation Adele.

    While Luther actor Idris Elba and The Night Manager‘s Tom Hiddleston appeared too.

    The findings follow a survey of 2,000 people which identified the signs you need are in need of break.

    It found that if you repeatedly hit snooze on the alarm, forget a loved one’s birthday, or put milk in the cupboard and cereal in the fridge then the chances are you need a break.

    Swearing more often, entering a room but forgetting why, and finding grey hairs also featured.

    Having a messy house but not wanting want to tidy it, getting into a mild rage when queuing in the supermarket or eating more and more comfort food are also signs a break is needed.

    While no longer having the energy to make small talk at work and over reacting when your work computer crashes are more reasons for some time away.

    On average, people will put up with five different signs a break is needed before they will actually commit to going somewhere nice.

    Other signs a rest might be a good idea include shouting at the telly more often and secretly wanting to dislike photos on Facebook when friends share their holiday snaps.

    Realising you’ve consumed your weekly quota of wine when it’s only Wednesday also featured, along with accidentally leaving the house with your slippers still on.

    Andrew Denton, Director of Communications at Best Western Great Britain hotels, said:

     

    “The results show it’s time the great British public stopped struggling and gave themselves a proper break.

    “We all know how easy it is to put up with everyday stresses, but it doesn’t need to be like that. Britain deserves a break and Best Western is here to help.”

    To be in with a chance of winning some great breaks visit: https://www.facebook.com/BestWesternGB/

    TOP 10 UK CELEBRITY BREAK DATES

    1. Prince Harry
    2. Jennifer Aniston
    3. David Beckham
    4. Hugh Jackman
    5. Adele
    6. Idris Elba
    7. Johnny Depp
    8. Emma Watson
    9. Kylie Minogue
    10. Scarlett Johansson
  • REVIEW | Lindsay Kemp: My Life and Work with David Bowie

    REVIEW | Lindsay Kemp: My Life and Work with David Bowie

    ★★★★★ | Lindsay Kemp: My Life and Work with David Bowie Interviewed By Marc Almond

    by Miss Shockingly Precise.

    CAMILA ALMEIDA @ THE ACE HOTEL

    British theatre, too often, is like the Catholic Church – full of fawning reverence for one-note deadbeats. Take Laurence Olivier. Sure, the guy’s voice was beautifully modulated, but his delivery, always, was so ridiculously clipped, precise and cold it sounded phoned in from the morgue. Olivier, somehow, always rigorously excluded emotion from his roles, which, if technically brilliant, never prompted tears or tore at listening heartstrings.

    That’s hardly the case with the stunningly emotive Lindsay Kemp, arguably British theatre’s most criminally under-appreciated genius. Taking English reserve by the throat and making gorgeously perverse, tenacious love to its’ dreary expectations, Kemp’s a singular and unlikely Messiah of the marvellous.

    Never heard of him? Of course you have; as David Bowie’s crucial, formative mentor, Lindsay inspired and helped create Bowie’s era-defining, still hugely influential Ziggy Stardust shows. However, that barely addresses Lindsay’s hugely innovative, still non-stop artistry, and fittingly, the Ace Hotel, the epitome of Shoreditch’s nouveau-hipster Renaissance, is celebrating Lindsay’s legacy.

    Outside, the pavements are crammed with adoring disciples eager for Lindsay’s first, London appearance since 2002, a celebration hosted by Marc Almond and Nicholas Peg. It’s completely deserved. For readers unaware of his legacy, Lindsay completely bulldozed theatrical tedium worldwide with a raw, radiant sexuality more relentlessly beautiful than a gay Sistine Chapel.

    The shows – Salome, Flowers, The Big Parade and many more – are landmark theatrical legends, but Lindsay, oddly, is overlooked by today’s crushingly ordinary theatre industry. That’s their loss, and probably, prompted by envy and the inability to market Lindsay’s fabulous, unrestrained genius as a guaranteed cash-cow. Still, tonight, the Ace Hotel is bursting at the seams with stellar talents frantic to lionise Lindsay on his own terms, discussing his own life and Bowie anecdotes.

    Firstly, there’s the enigmatic, irrepressible and outrageously entertaining Ernesto Tomasini, who – in a nod to tonight’s Bowie reminiscences, delivers soaring, falsetto takes of ‘Starman’ and ‘Threepenny Pierrot’. Then, there’s a huge, spontaneous rush of mass goodwill as Lindsay himself holds court, informally urged by a hugely appreciative Marc Almond and Bowie expert Nicholas Peg. If one measure of judging an artist is his influence on others – as Dali, arguably, inaugurated everyday surrealism – then Lindsay’s pivotal influence on Bowie, Marc Almond and countless others speaks volumes.

    Single-handed, coming from the most improbable circumstances – a working-class, pre-World War Two baby from Yorkshire – Lindsay’s maverick, sexual brilliance would, eventually, totally invalidate unimaginative theatre. Yes, Lindsay’s only possible, if less influential, British rival – the fiercely iconoclastic Steven Berkoff – also assaulted British restraint, but only Lindsay relentlessly elevated gay sexuality as a subject of breath-taking wonder.

    So no wonder David Bowie came running to study at Lindsay’s bewitching feet. Inevitably, they became involved, with Bowie co-starring in ‘Pierrot In Turquoise’, an early Kemp production, but Bowie’s ferocious ambition and libido proved too volatile for sustained collaboration. Ziggy Stardust, of course, stands as a permanent, world-changing monument to their later, final teamwork, but the focus, tonight, is on Lindsay’s beautifully idiosyncratic memoirs.

    He’s shocked, visibly, at how London’s changed, and even his hugely typical generosity of spirit can’t mask that regret. “I ventured into Soho, but it’s changed a lot, they’ve ripped out the wickedness. The bohemians are gone and there’s no danger, it’s very dull’. His own recollections, however – effortlessly summoned from a seemingly bottomless well – are gold-standard outré, a train-wreck, incest child of Picasso and Fellini. “I especially miss…  Miss Martinez (an exotic princess who danced in Soho, to the music of Ketelby’s) who always danced with a stuffed peacock on the streets…”

    Never remotely deflected from embracing his inner misfit – even by a vicious matron nicknamed ‘Frostbite’ at school, who scrubbed his face free of amateurish make-up with Vim(!) – Lindsay adored early 60s London. “Back then the city was glorious, liberating, and we definitely thought we would change the world – and we did, for about ten minutes!”

    Unsurprisingly – as a seriously conspicuous, de facto head of London’s rainbow demimonde – Lindsay was swamped with intriguing, if paradoxically low-profile offers. His small, cameo part is delightful in seminal, British horror flick The Wicker Man, but he didn’t warm to co-star Britt Ekland. “She was such a bitch,” he recalls, “I accidentally poured a glass of Guinness over her!” However, things improved with the arrival of a ‘fabulous looking girl’ on set. “She was Britt’s on-screen arse and knockers” Lindsay continues. “Britt was rather flattered…”

    In incomparable, mellifluous form, effortlessly charming at the bat of an eyelash or droop of a brow, Lindsay barely slows for queries from either host. But he pauses, smilingly, as co-host Nicholas Peg announces an exclusive extract from event planner Nendie Pinto-Duschinsky’s upcoming, major documentary on Lindsay and his world.

    Enthralling from the outset, it’s a bold, impressionistic portrait of a 21st Century pierrot – Lindsay himself – surfing the fabulous storm-surge of his own brilliance. Buoyed on an utterly uncharted, artistic tsunami, Lindsay’s drawn – and continues to draw – furiously devoted kindred souls in his wake. And, no matter how brief the contact, the fallout, often, is life-changing. ‘Timid Kate Bush’ for example, ‘became savage onstage’ and he taught Bowie “how to touch and reach and use stillness to communicate”. Difficult, you’d think, when Lindsay, partner Jack Birkett, Angie and David Bowie were all sharing the same bathroom, but brilliant, first impressions sanctify any downsides. As Lindsay so memorably describes his initial encounter with Bowie, ‘The door opened and it was the Arch-angel Gabriel!’

    Now, exit lines don’t get better than that, but the night’s not quite finished yet. With guitarist Neal X, host Marc Almond – himself a consummate lyricist and globally eminent torch singer of the bewitching, beguiling and bizarre – unforgettably serenades Lindsay. There’s a pin-drop hush as Marc, quite exquisitely, renders Jacques Brel’s ‘Port Of Amsterdam’ and Bowie’s ‘Starman’ as ravishing hymns of exultation. And then, ratcheting the feel-good delirium even higher, singer Holly Johnson presents Lindsay with a glorious, floral bouquet.

    Immediately, there’s an ecstatic, standing ovation from the host of gay celebrities present, as those of us lucky enough to attend remember one, unforgettable fact. There is true magic in this often dreary world, and it exists in two, simply enchanting words; Lindsay Kemp. Now and forever, the reigning Queen of gorgeous excess.

  • 40 Gay And Bisexual Men Will Be Offered HPV Vaccine In England And Wales

    Up to 40,000 gay and bisexual men attending genitourinary medicine (GUM) clinics will be offered the HPV vaccine as part of a new pilot programme, the Public Health Minister Jane Ellison has announced yesterday.

    The new pilot scheme – to start in June 2016 – will enable the vaccine to be offered to up to 40,000 men via GUM and HIV clinics and the results will inform decisions about a potential national roll out of the programme in the future.

    The Government’s independent vaccine experts – the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation – advised that the three dose vaccine should be offered through GUM and HIV clinics to gay and bisexual men who are at high risk of contracting the virus provided that the service can be delivered at a cost effective price.

    What Is HPV?

    HPV is the name for a group of viruses that affect the skin and moist membranes lining the body such as the cervix, anus, mouth and throat.  HPV infections are highly contagious when transmitted sexually.

    Some strains of the HPV virus can cause genital warts, and cancers of the anus, penis, mouth and throat. In some cases, it can also cause head and neck cancer.

    The HPV vaccine, which has been given to more than three million teenage girls since 2008 to prevent cervical cancer, will be offered to eligible men already attending participating sexual health clinics in England. The pilot is the first step in offering protection to gay and bisexual men.

    Gay and Bisexual to Benefit from the Trial

    Public Health England is finalising which areas will take part in the pilot scheme. GUM and HIV clinics in locations known to have large gay and bisexual male populations will be among the first to take part in the scheme.

    Public Health Minister, Jane Ellison, said,

    “We want to make sure that those most at risk are protected from potentially deadly cancers and genital warts and piloting this new programme is a step in the right direction.”

    “This pilot builds on the success of the current vaccination programme”

    Details about which sexual health clinics will offer the vaccine are being finalised, with some participating clinics aiming to start offering the vaccine to men from June this year.

     

    Minister for Women and Equalities, Nicky Morgan, said:

    “This Government is determined to ensure we address the specific health needs of LGBT people. Giving more people deemed at highest risk access to the vaccine will have a real impact on preventing the spread of HPV. The results of the vaccine roll out among girls has been extremely positive and so I’m delighted that we will now see a pilot roll out of the vaccine to gay and bisexual men.”

  • What Time Does Birmingham Pride Start

    What Time Does Birmingham Pride Start

    Thousands of people are expected to take part in this year’s Birmingham Pride. Here’s all the latest information to help you make the most of your day.

    What Time Does Birmingham Pride Start

    The parade for Birmingham Pride starts at 12.00pm (noon) on Saturday 28th May and will be setting off from Victoria Square. It is expected that from start to finish the walking time of the parade is 45 minutes. However the parade itself will take much longer than that because of the number of people involved with this year’s festivities.

    What’s the Birmingham Pride Parade Route.

    After setting off from Victoria Square the parade will then venture down New Street and left onto High street. It will then turn right at Carrs Lane and right again on to Smallbrook Queensway. The parade will then turn left onto Hurst Street until it reaches the Pride festival site.

    Motorists should expect road closures and longer waiting times than usual in the city centre  and it is best to avoid the areas around Hurst Street and Victoria Square.

    The Festival

    The Pride festival kicks off from 12:45PM until 12:00AM and then from 1PM till midnight on Sunday. Entry to the festival is by wristband only. After 8pm only attendees over the age of 18 will be permitted to enter the festival area. Under 18s already within the site are permitted to stay, but if they leave they will not be allowed reentry.

    You can still watch the parade if you don’t have a wristband.

    To buy a wristband click here.

    Tickets cost £40.00 for a weekend pass or £25.00 for Saturday or £25.00for Sunday.

    Concessions are priced at £20.00

    Who’s Performing At Birmingham Pride?

    Fleur East, Katy B, Lawson, Liberty X and Lucy Spraggan are just some of the names confirmed to perform on the Saturday. Sunday’s performers are confirmed to include Andy Bell, DJ Fresh, Lisa Stansfield, MNEK, Blonde, Vengaboys, Karen Harding and Stooshe

    Where to stay?

    TheGayUK recommends both the Hotel Du Vin and La Tour Hotel.