Jeeves & Wooster … Black History Month … National Coming Out Day

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Jeeves and Wooster

Bolton is less than twenty minutes away from Manchester by train, and Bolton Interchange links up the train station with the bus station. When you come out of the Interchange the first building you see is the Olympus Fish & Chip Bar, where we had a very enjoyable lunch.

Despite the rain, golly gosh we couldn’t wait to be welcomed by the Octagon Theatre for an afternoon of very silly nonsense in Jeeves and Wooster In Perfect Nonsense!

Yes, the iconic duo, Jeeves & Wooster have arrived in Bolton to put on a splendid afternoon of theatre.

A brilliantly talented cast of just three perform Jeeves and Wooster in Perfect Nonsense, an absolutely glorious masterpiece in farcical storytelling.

From the character names to the absurd plot (which it was impossible to keep up with), the audience cannot help but laugh out loud at this perfectly silly but hugely enjoyable comedy, in which the audience show their huge appreciation for the actors as they change character, become two characters in one ­- yes bizarre but brilliant.

The plot centres around the charming Bertie Wooster, who has a tale to tell from playing matchmaker between his newt-fancying acquaintance and the girl of his dreams. Bertie must also secure an elusive silver cow-creamer for his formidable Aunt Dahlia.

Yes, absolutely perfect nonsense but superbly performed by Luke Barton as Bertie, Alistair Cope as Seppings and Patrick Warner as Jeeves.

Warner’s portrayal of reliable and ever so patient Jeeves is perfect and his hilarious performance as Victor and Victoria – at the same time – is a show stealer and earns him a round of applause from the audience.

The trio’s comic timing is spot on and the character depictions were a riot – It was a fast paced and dazzlingly inventive comedy with so many twists, turns and mishaps.

It was incredibly silly but hugely entertaining.

Black History Month

Black History Month is an annual observance originating in the United States, where it is also known as African-American History Month. It has received official recognition from governments in the United States and Canada, and more recently has been observed in Ireland and the United Kingdom.

The theme this year is Saluting our Sisters. Black History Month 2023 is a landmark occasion to recognise and applaud the invaluable contributions of black women to British society, inspire future generations, and empower them.

Here are some stories about a black lesbian, black bisexual woman and a black gay man, that are possibly lesser known:

Ruth Ellis

Ruth Ellis (1899 – 2000)

“I was always out of the closet. I didn’t have to come out.”

– Ruth Ellis

Ruth Ellis was born in Springfield, Illinois to parents who were conceived in the last years of slavery. Her life spanned through moments of great turmoil and upheaval – from the Springfield Riot of 1908 to the Detroit Riots of 1967 – an endless backdrop of conflict from which Ellis managed to extract an exuberance for life that was incandescent.

She came out as a lesbian at the age of 16, and got a high school diploma at a time when fewer than seven percent of African Americans graduated from secondary school. In 1936 she met her partner of 34 years, Ceciline “Babe” Franklin, with whom she moved to Detroit, Michigan in 1937.

Ellis became the first African American woman to own an off-set printing business in that city. Her success as an entrepreneur from 1946 to 1971 inspired the couple to turn the home they shared into the “Gay Spot” – a place where young gays and lesbians, who were denied access to both white gay clubs and black straight clubs – could congregate and enjoy a welcoming night club atmosphere decades before the Black Civil Rights Movement and the Stonewall Riot would begin to alter their outlook and options.

Ellis became a fierce advocate for African Americans, senior citizens and the gay and lesbian communities. She offered assistance to lesbians of colour researching their history and their roots; she proposed a variation on Big Brothers / Big Sisters, where younger gays and lesbians would be matched as social companions with gay and lesbian seniors according to similar interests; and the Ruth Ellis Centre, founded in 1999, continues to provide shelter and aid for LGBTQ youth in Detroit.

Her extraordinary life was chronicled in the acclaimed documentary Living With Pride: Ruth Ellis @ 100 (1999) and the city of Detroit recognises her contributions every February, during Black History Month (in US), by celebrating Ruth Ellis Day. She died in her sleep at her home on 5 October 2000, at the age of 101.

Bessie Smith

Bessie Smith (1894 – 1937)

“No time to marry, no time to settle down; I’m a young woman, and I ain’t done runnin’ around.”

– Bessie Smith

Born into poverty in Tennessee, Elizabeth Smith lost both her parents at an early age. At 8 she began performing, earning money by singing on the streets of Chattanooga. By 1912 she had joined a travelling vaudeville troupe and was taken under the wing of blues legend (and possible lover) Gertrude Ma Rainey.

With her powerful voice and audience rapport, Smith rapidly became a huge tent show star. In the early 1920s she starred in the musical “How Come?” which went to Broadway. Soon she was known as The Empress of The Blues, the biggest headliner of the black Theatre Owners Booking Association, and the nation’s highest paid black entertainer.

Smith was already widowed from her first husband when she married her second, Jack Gee, but her open bisexuality prompted him to leave her. In 1923 she started recording for Columbia Records, the first of her 160 tracks for the label was “Downhearted Blues.” By then she was touring in her own double-decker train carriage which also provided housing when she and her chorus line could not find hotels that would accommodate black people.

She appeared in the film “St Louis Blues” (1929) and when her Columbia contract ended two years later, she recorded briefly with John Hammond. In 1937 Smith was seriously injured in an automobile accident and had to wait 7 hours before an ambulance would take her to the hospital, where she died of her injuries. Her estranged husband refused to pay for a headstone. 30 years later bisexual Rock and Roll singer Janis Joplin finally bought Smith the memorial she deserved.

Wallace Thurman

Wallace Thurman (1902 – 1934)

“Being a Negro writer these days is a racket and I’m going to make the most of it while it lasts. About twice a year I sell a story. It is acclaimed. I am a genius in the making. Thank God for this Negro literary renaissance. Long may it flourish.”

– Wallace Thurman

Wallace Thurman was born in Salt Lake City. During his troubled and unstable childhood, he found solace in reading and wrote his first novel at 10.

He began as a pre-med student at the University of Utah, but transferred to USC in Los Angeles. Instead of earning his degree, he left academia to become a reporter and columnist for a black owned newspaper. He began the magazine “Outlet,” which was intended to be the West Coast equivalent of the NAACP’s “Crisis” periodical.

In 1925 Thurman moved to New York and became an integral part of the Harlem Renaissance – a broad cultural movement of African American artists, singers, writers and performers who had migrated to New York. There he worked as an editor and publisher, while writing plays, novels, and essays as well.

In 1926 he became editor of “The Messenger,” a socialist journal for black people, where he was the first to publish the adult-themed stories of Langston Hughes. That same year he collaborated in founding the literary magazine “Fire!” which challenged the notion that black art should be a form of propaganda for white approval, claiming instead that black art should reveal the reality of African American life.

Thurman’s apartment at 267 West 136th Street, its walls adorned with Richard Bruce Nugent’s homoerotic murals, became the cultural meeting place of this new black artistic movement. In 1928 Thurman edited the magazine “Harlem: A Forum of Negro Life.”

That same year he married Louise Thompson, who soon sought a divorce claiming Thurman was a closeted homosexual and their union incompatible. Thurman, the first African-American reader for a major publishing house, is best known for his work The Blacker the Berry: A Novel of Negro Life (1929) which explored discrimination based on skin tone within the black community. Later that year his play, “Harlem,” debuted on Broadway. Thurman died in 1934 from tuberculosis exacerbated by alcoholism.

National Coming Out Day

It was National Coming Out Day on 11 October.

Spirit of Manchester Awards 2023 … RNCM Piano Ensemble … National Coming Out Day! … The Flintstones

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Spirit of Manchester Awards 2023!

The Spirit of Manchester 2023 Awards ceremony took place on Thursday 5 October, and was also livestreamed on YouTube! 

Under various categories Manchester’s voluntary, community and social enterprise sector were shortlisted and a film showed the brilliant work they did.

On our smart phones we voted for the organisation we would like to win an award. The votes were counted straight away and the award presented by the Lord Mayor of Manchester.

The Derek Jarman Pocket Park with Pride in Ageing and the LGBT Foundation were one of the shortlisted projects. Tables were named after LGBT+ Mancunians to honour the LGBT+ communities in Manchester.

RNCM Piano Ensemble

The Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) is a conservatoire located in Manchester, and is one of the UK’s busiest and most diverse public performance venues.

Out In The City members attended a Thursday lunch time concert – a riveting performance of John Psathas’ Voices at the End with six pianos.

It was a spectacular live performance fusing video, and recorded sound for a musical exploration about human civilisation and our relationship with the natural world. Pianist Dawn Hardwick performed side-by-side with staff and student pianists to bring this incredible work to life.

National Coming Out Day

Wednesday, 11 October is National Coming Out Day. Be proud of who you are and your support for LGBT+ equality.

Sharing our authentic selves with others is not always safe or easy, and is not a one-day event – but when possible, it can be an extraordinarily powerful key to breaking down the barriers we face as LGBT+ people.

History of National Coming Out Day

National Coming Out Day was founded on 11 October 1988, by Robert Eichberg, a psychologist, and Jean O’Leary, an LGBT+ rights activist. It commemorates the anniversary of the National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights, which took place in 1987.

The day was established to promote visibility and acceptance for LGBT+ individuals and to encourage a more inclusive society.

Since its inception, National Coming Out Day has become an internationally recognised event, fostering a culture of acceptance and support for LGBT+ individuals.

In a world that often marginalises and excludes the LGBT+ community, attempting to diminish our worth and undermine our fabulousness, this Day feels more important now than ever. 

It serves as a powerful reminder that we have always been here and we will continue to exist proudly and unapologetically no matter the voices that try and silence us. We are here to stay. 

Right now, queer identities are being policed, politicised, debated and in the most extreme cases even murdered. 

We need justice for Brianna Ghey, a 16-year-old transgender girl who was stabbed to death in Culcheth, near Warrington. Her entire life was taken away from her through hate.

At a time where people believe our existence to be a threat, to live your life authentically no matter the consequences, is the most courageous act you can do.

We won’t allow closets, repression and discrimination to be the norms in our life. Our community continues to stay resilient. We are still coming together, celebrating ourselves and advocating for our rights. We are not going anywhere.

Yabba Dabba Doo …

We’ll have a gay old time
The Flintstones
Flintstones, meet the Flintstones
They’re the modern stone age family
From the town of Bedrock
They’re a page right out of history …

Pride in Ageing … Collages and Teapots … Saints Sergius and Bacchus … LGBT+ Elders Report … Sweeney Todd

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Pride in Ageing

Since 2019 the Pride in Ageing programme at LGBT Foundation has been delivering a range of initiatives and opportunities for our LGBTQ+ communities who are over 50 and are living in Greater Manchester.

Watch the video here:

The Pride in Ageing Programme has been nominated for the Spirit of Manchester Award based on the fantastic work it has been doing with the Derek Jarman Pocket Park at Manchester Art Gallery.

Join us online for the Spirit of Manchester 2023 Awards!

The Spirit of Manchester 2023 Awards ceremony is taking place on Thursday 5 October. So even if you won’t be at the face to face event you can get involved and vote for the winners by joining in on the livestream on YouTube! 

You can watch live all the shortlisted films showing the brilliant work in Manchester’s voluntary, community and social enterprise sector and vote for who you would like to win an Award. The votes will be counted straight away and the Award presented by the Lord Mayor of Manchester.

We will be streaming live on YouTube at 7.00pm – so come and watch us online!

Collages and Teapots

Tying in with the International Day of Older Persons, which recognises and celebrates the positive contributions of older people in society, we spent an afternoon making collages:

Time for Tea

The work displayed in this exhibition was the result of an Arts for Good Health course celebrating LGBT+ history and inclusivity.

Participants involved in the project  used image, shape, colour and texture to design their own individual teapot, inspired by stories, memories and LGBT+ heroes, culture and history from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. Each teapot exhibited tells its own unique story. As well as the amazing work the exhibition is also an example of the power of connecting through creativity and sharing our stories and memories with a good helping of sparkle and glitter.

Saints Sergius and Bacchus (martyred circa 303)

Saints Sergius and Bacchus are ancient Christian martyrs who were tortured to death in Syria because they refused to attend sacrifices in honour of Jupiter.

Recent attention to early Greek manuscripts has also revealed that they were openly gay men and that they were lovers. These manuscripts are found in various libraries and indicate an earlier Christian attitude toward homosexuality.

After their arrest, the two saints were paraded through city streets in women’s clothing, treatment that was meant to humiliate them as officers in the Roman army. They were then separated and each was tortured. Bacchus died first and appeared that night to Sergius, who was beginning to lose heart. According to the early manuscripts, Bacchus told Sergius to preserve, that the delights of heaven were greater than any suffering, and that part of their reward would be to be re-united in heaven as lovers.

The feast of these saints is 7 October. The inscription at the bottom of the icon is their names in Arabic. The saints are particularly popular throughout the Mediterranean lands, in Latin America, and among the Slavs. For nearly a thousand years they were the official patrons of the Byzantine armies, and Arab nomads continue to revere them as their special patron saints.

LGBT+ Elders Advancing Project Interim Report Highlights Needs of LGBT+ Older Adults Worldwide

Around the world, LGBT+ older adults experience rampant human rights violations based on sexual orientation and/or gender identity and the stigma of ageism. 

While the specifics of LGBT+ ageing vary from country to country and region to region, older members of the LGBT+ community commonly face widespread discrimination in care, services, and housing and are at acute risk for severe social isolation and economic insecurity.

Created in partnership with SAGE (US), OutRight International (US), Mitini (Nepal), EnGendeRights (the Philippines), CIPAC (Costa Rica) and Aspidh (El Salvador) the LGBTI Elders Advancing Initiative (LEAP) is a cross-regional initiative designed to strengthen the human rights protections of LGBT+ older adults and build a more robust and well-connected global LGBT+ ageing movement.

The initiative is informed by three main objectives:

  • Build awareness of LGBT+ older adults and their needs through country-based data collection, documentation and dissemination of information to targeted audiences.
  • Improve the ability of LGBT+ organisations to work in support of LGBT+ older adults and position LGBT+ older adults as self-advocates.
  • Support discrimination protections and health equity for LGBT+ older adults through national policy reform agendas.

“Our LGBTQ+ elders have shared that being part of this initiative has encouraged them to build more social support networks and start speaking openly about their shared experiences of ageing,” said representatives from CIPAC. “Not only are our older adults growing in their ability to advocate for their own needs, but they are also building friendship, solidarity, and trust among their peers. For a population that faces extreme isolation and loneliness, this kinship has been lifesaving.”

Download the interim report summary here.

Get ready for a hair-raising experience like no other as the infamous Sweeney Todd comes to the stage at the Waterside Theatre! This gripping and darkly humorous musical, directed by a renowned team, promises to captivate audiences from start to finish.

Step into the shadowy streets of 19th-century London, where the vengeful Sweeney Todd, a once-respected barber, seeks retribution for the wrongs done to him and his family. With his trusty razor in hand, he embarks on a chilling spree of slicing throats and baking the victims into meat pies, alongside his cunning accomplice, Mrs Lovett.

Prepare to be enthralled by the powerful performances, spine-tingling music, and evocative set designs that bring Victorian London to life. Stephen Sondheim’s haunting melodies, including classics like “The Ballad of Sweeney Todd” and “A Little Priest,” will send shivers down your spine and linger in your mind long after the curtains close.

This must-see production boasts a talented cast of seasoned actors, who will transport you into the twisted world of Sweeney Todd and his quest for justice. With its mix of macabre humour, suspenseful storytelling, and unforgettable tunes, this musical is a theatrical experience that will leave you on the edge of your seat.

Running from 17 to 21 October 2023. Book your tickets today and immerse yourself in the dark allure of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street!

Amsterdam has almost eradicated HIV transmission … International Day of Older Persons … Bridgewater Hall concerts … LGBTQ+ Coffee Morning

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Amsterdam has almost eradicated HIV transmission

Only 9 new cases of HIV were reported in the city last year.

Amsterdam, the capital city of the Netherlands seems well on its way to accomplishing its goal of zero HIV transmissions by 2026. Only nine cases of HIV were reported in Amsterdam last year, thanks to heavy investment in pre-exposure prophylactics (PrEP), a drug protocol that prevents HIV transmission, and other HIV-prevention efforts.

While scientists have announced that a half dozen people may have been cured of HIV worldwide, the process is painful and expensive. It generally requires a bone marrow transplant after a cancer diagnosis.

Dutch health authorities have found a way to circumvent the curing process that prioritises prevention rather than treatment.

The Dutch AIDS Fund’s report of only nine new cases proves that the city’s investment in PrEP and other prevention strategies, which started in 2019, has had an impact. 128 people in Amsterdam were infected in 2019. PrEP can be used by people who don’t have HIV to prevent the virus from gaining hold of their immune system. When taken by people with the virus, it lowers the viral load to undetectable levels and makes it untransmissible.

Health authorities worldwide have particularly recommended the drug for gay men, sex workers and other people who are at risk for transmission.

In addition to PrEP, health officials have collaborated with politicians and HIV-care workers to create and promote easily accessible services and programmes for key at-risk populations, including men who have sex with men (MSM), people with a migration background and people who inject drugs. Many clinics and hospitals in the city offer HIV testing and immediately provide anyone who tests positive with medication to lower viral loads to undetectable (and thus, untransmittable) levels.

According to Aidsfonds-Soa Aids Nederland, the number of new HIV infections in the city had decreased by 95% since 2010.

Approximately 98% of city residents living with HIV have been diagnosed, 95% of those have received medication treatment and 96% of those on treatment have suppressed the virus to untransmittable levels.

“After more than 40 years of working together to stop the spread of HIV, this is great news,” said Mark Vermeulen, the executive director of Aidsfonds-Soa Aids Nederland. “It really is possible to end HIV and AIDS. Amsterdam is proving to everyone that it can be done.”

So far, only three people worldwide have been cured of HIV. Three others have been in remission and potentially cured.

Sunday, 1 October was International Day of Older Persons. Tony loves being part of the Out In The City group for older LGBT+ people.

Bridgewater Hall

We’re delighted to advise that The Bridgewater Hall has offered us 12 FREE tickets to various performances from the International Concert Series, BBC Philharmonic and Manchester Mid-day Concerts Society at The Bridgewater Hall.

Monday, 6 November – 7.30pm – International Concert Series – Bridgewater Hall (12 FREE tickets)

Tenebrae – A Prayer for Deliverance

One of the world’s finest choirs returns to Manchester with a beautifully crafted collection of musical farewells:

Holst The Evening Watch
Cecilia McDowall Standing as I do before God
Francis Pott The Souls of the Righteous
Caroline Shaw And the Swallow
Bennett A Good-Night
Vaughan Williams Rest; Valiant-for-Truth
Joel Thompson A Prayer for Deliverance
Tavener Song for Athene
Pearsall Lay a Garland
Arthur Sullivan The Long Day Closes
Howells Requiem
Harris Bring us, O Lord

Monday, 13 November – 1.10pm – Manchester Mid-day Concerts Society – Bridgewater Hall – 12 FREE tickets

Scott Brothers Duo

Tchaikovsky arr. Scott Sleeping Beauty Waltz
Richard Addinsell Warsaw Concerto
Saint-Saëns arr. Scott Danse Macabre
Mozart arr. Scott Andante from Piano Concerto No. 21 K.467 ‘Elvira Madigan’
Liszt arr. Scott Hungarian Rhapsody No.2

Saturday, 25 November – 7.30pm – BBC Philharmonic – Bridgewater Hall – 12 FREE tickets

The Spirit of Life

John Storgårds conductor/violin
Alexandra Dariescu piano

Copland Fanfare for the Common Man
James Lee III ‘Shades of Unbroken Dreams’ (BBC commission: UK Premiere)
Sebastian Fagerlund Helena’s Song (BBC commission: UK Premiere)
Nielsen Symphony No. 4, ‘The Inextinguishable’

Saturday, 2 December – 7.30pm – BBC Philharmonic – Bridgewater Hall – 12 FREE tickets

Beethoven

Sir Andrew Davis conductor

Tippett The Rose Lake
Humperdinck Hansel and Gretel – selection
Beethoven Symphony No. 8 in F major

Tuesday, 5 December – 1.10pm – Manchester Mid-day Concerts Society – Bridgewater Hall – 12 FREE tickets

Manchester Chamber Choir

Manchester Chamber Choir return to the Middays with a programme to celebrate the arrival of Advent, featuring music by William Byrd, Peter Philips, James MacMillan, Gabriel Jackson and Jan Sandström, amongst others. 

Friday, 12 January – 1.10pm – Manchester Mid-day Concerts Society – Bridgewater Hall – 12 FREE tickets

Elisabet Franch Flute
Jonathan Fisher Piano

Manuel Infante Chanson Gitane
Jules Mouquet La flûte de Pan
Nicolai Rimsky-Korsakov Chanson Arabe from Scheherazade
Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky Lensky’s Aria from Eugene Onegin
Pablo de Sarasate Carmen Fantasy

Friday, 12 January 2024 – 7.30pm – International Concert Series Bridgewater Hall – 12 FREE tickets

Benjamin Grosvenor

Chopin Barcarolle
Schumann Fantasie
Liszt Berceuse; Sonata in B minor

If you are interested in attending any of the concerts, please contact us here.