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Archive for the ‘Theatre’ Category

Alice went to a lesbian bar…

Posted on: May 15th, 2011 by History Month
Alice didn’t fall into the Rabbit Hole; she strode into the lesbian bar following a curious female who had asked Alice the time. In this new adaptation, Alice encounters a wonderful world of women she could not have imagined and mother certainly wouldn’t have approved of! Will Alice lose...

New writer takes to stage in lesbian title role

Posted on: May 5th, 2011 by History Month
The new play opening at the Market Theatre this week, Loving Lulu, shows the theatre’s commitment to new writers. Written by Noxolo Tshabangu and Bruce Koch, the play was developed as part of the Emerging Writers Programme in association with the DOEN Foundation in Amsterdam. The Market Theatre’s fundraiser,...
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Drill Hall Hosts New Play on Being Older and LGBT

Posted on: March 26th, 2011 by History Month
>Staying Out Late is a new piece of theatre written by Clare Summerskill and directed by Philip Osment. It is the result of workshops and interviews with the older LGBT community in Camden, and reveals the hopes, fears and experiences of what being older and needing professional care may...
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Ian Rickson on the Children’s Hour

Posted on: March 19th, 2011 by History Month
>The director Ian Rickson talks to Carole Woddis about his hit West End production of Lillian Hellman’s The Children’s Hour (Comedy Theatre), which stars Keira Knightley and Elisabeth Moss in a play that was scandalous on its first outing in 1934, and continues to be relevant. Recorded at Graeae....
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Justin Fashanu in Extra Time

Posted on: July 8th, 2010 by History Month
>Born in 1961, Justin Fashanu was brought up by foster parents and by the children’s charity Barnardos. At 14 he signed schoolboy forms with Norwich City FC, where he progressed through the ranks and played for the first team when he was in his late teens. His 1980 volley...
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Canary by Jonathan Harvey

Posted on: June 7th, 2010 by History Month
>“We’re the litmus test of whether a society respects human rights. We are the canaries in the mine.” Jonathan Harvey, author of Beautiful Thing and Beautiful People, and writer on Coronation Street comes back with an ambitious new play that explores the experience of the LGBT community over the...
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Review: Bette Bourne, a Life in Three Acts

Posted on: February 18th, 2010 by History Month
> Review, by Tony Fenwick The veteran actor, campaigner and drag / cabaret artist Better Bourne is celebrating his 7oth year with a triumphal show A Life in Three Acts, which he brought from the Edinburgh Festival and now performs at The Soho Theatre. It provides an essential look...
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FAT Hits Streets in May

Posted on: April 30th, 2009 by History Month
>The premier of FAT, AN EXTRA-LARGE FANTASY, a play about being gay and disabled, written and performed by Pete Edwards, will take place n Kennington, South London in May, as the opening show of the Oval House Theatre Summer Theatre Season 2009. FAT is the multi-media journey of a...
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Why I Blame Myself for the Murder of Joe Orton

Posted on: April 5th, 2009 by History Month
>It was a Sixties cause celebre – the bludgeoning of an outrageous playwright by his gay lover. Now, with Orton’s best-known work revived in the West End, comes this startling confession from theatre and film critic Michael Thornton… Read the full article in the Daily Mail, here.
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Theatre: The Pride and Wig Out

Posted on: November 24th, 2008 by History Month
>The Pride, a play by Alexi Kaye Campbell, examines changing attitudes to sexuality over a period of 50 years, looking at intimacy, identity and the courage it takes to be who you really are. The Philip of 1958 is in love with Oliver, but married to Sylvia.The Oliver of...
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Revival of a Patriot for Me

Posted on: October 23rd, 2008 by History Month
>A groundbreaking play about gays by acclaimed write John Osborne will be performed in London later this month. A Patriot for Me caused a sensation when it was first performed in 1965. The Lord Chamberlain, who still had powers to censor the theatre, only allowed it to be performed...
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Romeo and Julien

Posted on: October 1st, 2008 by History Month
>A Leytonstone school is set to challenge homophobic bullying with a reworking of Shakespeare’s classic tale of star-crossed lovers. Intended to combat the growing use of terms such as “gay” and “batty boy” as insults, Romeo and Julien will star two male actors, who fall in love but come...
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Lord Arthur’s Bed

Posted on: May 15th, 2008 by History Month
>2008 – City slickers Donald and Jim are celebrating their civil partnership. 1868 – Lord Arthur Pelham-Clinton, 3rd son of the 5th Duke of Newcastle, married a pretty young creature, who went by the name of Miss Stella Boulton, thereafter known as Lady Arthur Clinton. But disaster struck when...
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Moj of the Antarctic Returns to South London

Posted on: May 13th, 2008 by History Month
>Following a successful run in March 2007, Moj of the Antarctic returns to Oval House Theatre for one week only to launch the production’s British Council-sponsored tour of southern Africa in June/July 2008. Moj of the Antarctic is inspired by the wonderful true life story of Ellen Craft, a...
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Losing Orton in the Archives

Posted on: May 10th, 2008 by History Month
>The tangled history of the papers of the playwright Joe Orton is unwoven by Dr. Matt Cook who reveals the extraordinary sources that survive on the writer’s life and the perhaps even more extraordinary ones that remain stubbornly missing. This recording is available here (right to save the file)...
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Curtain Rises on Gielgud’s Gay Scandal

Posted on: February 12th, 2008 by History Month
>The scandal that almost ended the career of Sir John Gielgud is to be brought to the London stage this month in a new play about the actor. Critic’s play shows how the famous actor’s arrest was part of the 1950s homosexual witch-hunts. Read the Observer’s full article here.
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New Joe Orton Website Launched

Posted on: January 18th, 2008 by History Month
>A new website dedicated to the life and times of Leicester-born playwright Joe Orton has been endorsed by the Orton Estate and has been created in partnership with Leicester City Council, the University of Leicester and Islington Council. The website includes information on Orton’s plays and diaries along with...
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LGBT History Month Offer at the National Theatre

Posted on: November 15th, 2007 by History Month
>The Royal National Theatre presents a double bill of short, sharp and provocative plays where the drama of teenagers’ lives takes centre stage. CHATROOM by Enda Walsh – A chilling and powerful tale of manipulation and the ultimate act of teenager rebellion. CITIZENSHIP by Mark Ravenhill – A bittersweet...
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GayWise Festival

Posted on: November 7th, 2007 by History Month
>GFest – gayWise LGBT Arts Festival will take place between 14th and 20th November in London. The festival showcases Queer/LGBT Arts created by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender (LGBT) artists and practitioners from diverse backgrounds. Events include screenings of short films, performances, exhibitions and workshops. For more information, visit...
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Menier Revives La Cage Aux Folles for Christmas

Posted on: October 31st, 2007 by History Month
>The Menier Chocolate Factory will continue its Christmas tradition of major revivals of classic Broadway musicals this year with Jerry Herman’s La Cage Aux Folles. West End veteran Terry Johnson will direct the new production of the 1983 musical comedy, which opens 3 December 2007 (previews from 23 November)...
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Memorial Toilet for Cruising Playwright?

Posted on: October 21st, 2007 by History Month
>Demand for new public toilets in the London Borough of Islington has been highlighted by a local trader who is suggesting they be dedicated in memory of famous resident Joe Orton. The gay playwright, who was murdered by his lover at the height of his fame in 1967, famously...
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Feminist, Queer & Trans Neo-Burlesque

Posted on: October 16th, 2007 by History Month
>Performance makers, performance thinkers in discussion. Is the resurgence of burlesque a continuation of the exploitation of women’s bodies or is it potentially part of a new feminism? Is this performance genre, originally used as a performative platform for women to comment on social and political issues, being reclaimed...
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Noel Coward Play Rediscovered

Posted on: October 11th, 2007 by History Month
>85 years after it was written, The Better Half, a one act play e by Noel Coward, has been rediscovered in the archive of the British Library. The play, despite its suggestions that women had sexual feelings, had escaped the Lord Chamberlain’s censure and had been performed in 1922,...
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Marlene Dietrich – An Affectionate Tribute

Posted on: October 4th, 2007 by History Month 2 Comments
>Marlene – movie star, cabaret artiste, war hero, atheist – and lesbian!Come and explore the many aspects of the greatest gay icon of them all. Terry Sanderson will use generous clips from Dietrich’s campest films, examine rare archive material of her medal-winning war work and then show a complete...
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Stonewall Comes to the Drill Hall

Posted on: September 28th, 2007 by History Month
>On a hot summer night in 1969 an incident took place in downtown Manhattan that would change the face of modern sexuality forever. Darkly humorous, frequently poignant, and set to a soundtrack of swinging sixties girl groups, Stonewall is the story of sexual intrigue, innocent romance and just plain...
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The Vagina Monologues in Lancashire

Posted on: September 27th, 2007 by History Month
>We are a bunch of multi talented people at LGBT History Month and we get involved a wide range of extra-curricular activities. Paul Patrick, Co-chair of History Month, for example, is directing the British mainland amateur premier of the award winning Vagina Monologues by Eve Ensler. The show is...
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LGBT HM Patron to Star in Othello

Posted on: September 15th, 2007 by History Month
>Cyril Nri is to play Othello with The Birmingham Stage Company, the resident company of The Old Rep Theatre in Birmingham. The play, directed by John Harrison, will then moved to London for a very short run. The Old Rep TheatreBirmingham18th September – 13th October, 2.30 and 7.30pmBox Office...
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Stonewall Play Gets Award Nomination

Posted on: August 31st, 2007 by History Month
>The Edinburgh fringe festival is drawing to a close. Earlier this month, the cast of Rikki Beadle-Blair’s play Stonewall was nominated in the Best Ensemble category of The Stage Awards for Acting Excellence. Beadle-Blair, who adapted the play from his 1996 screenplay of the same name, told Scottish magazine...

The Lost Boys – Epstein, Orton and Meek

Posted on: August 30th, 2007 by History Month
>Jon Savage threads together the extraordinary lives of Brian Epstein, Joe Orton and Joe Meek – three men persecuted for their homosexuality who died in 1967 – the year the stigma was supposed to be lifted. Read the full Guardian article here. BBC Four will be broadcasting documentaries on...
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GFest- GayWise LGBT Arts Festival 2007 – Call for Submissions

Posted on: July 13th, 2007 by History Month 1 Comment
>GFest – Gaywise LGBT Arts Festival aims to provide a unique platform for Queer Arts principally created by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual & Transgender (LGBT) artists from a variety of diverse backgrounds. The festival, which will take place in November, will present the work in a creatively safe, stimulating and...

The Boatswain’s Mate

Posted on: June 15th, 2007 by History Month
>Dame Ethel Smyth (1858-1944) was born to a strict military family in which she was introduced to music and composition as ladylike activities suited to her position in society. As a teenager, however, she became determined to pursue music as a career and went on a prolonged hunger-strike to...

Good Evening, Miss Dietrich

Posted on: June 13th, 2007 by History Month
>Marlene Dietrich’s bisexual exploits, her fondness for butch drag and her medal-winning heroism in the Second World War have added to the legend that has already enthralled several generations of gay men, stretching right back to Weimar Germany, where Marlene’s career began. It was in the Berlin of the...
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LGBT History Month Patrons:
John Amaechi, former international basketball player, broadcaster and psychologist, Christine Burns, Equality and diversity specialist, podcaster, campaigner, Dr Harry Cocks, social historian and writer, Angela Eagle MP Work and Pensions, Professor Viv Gardner, Martin Harris Centre for Music and Drama, Professor Martin Hall, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Salford University, Sir Ian McKellen, actor, Cyril Nri, actor, director and writer, Ian Rivers, Professor of Human Development; Subject Leader for Sports Sciences, Brunel University, Professor Sheila Rowbotham, lecturer and campaigner, Labi Siffre, poet, songwriter and singer, Professor Melanie Tebbutt, Director, Manchester Centre for Regional History, Senior Lecturer, Manchester Metropolitan University, Gareth Thomas, rugby international, Jeffrey Weeks, historian, sociologist, author and LGBT activist, Stephen Whittle OBE, Professor of Equalities Law in the School of Law at Manchester Metropolitan University