Type and hit ENTER

Commonly used tags...

Brighton Festival Brighton Fringe Brighton Pride British Sea Power Cinecity Lewes Psychedelic Festival Locally Sourced Lost & Found Love Supreme Festival Mutations Festival Nick Cave Poets Vs MCs Politics Rag'n'Bone Man Record Store Day Save Our Venues Six Of The Best Source Virgins Streets Of Brighton Street Source Tattoos The Great Escape Tru Thoughts Unsung Heroes
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Advertise
  • Home
  • News
  • Previews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Food
  • Tickets
  • Contact
    • Contact
    • Contribute
    • Advertise
Previews

Culture: October

Sep 22, 2011
-
Posted by SOURCE Writers

Melancholia in Brighton SOURCE at www.brightonsource.co.uk Brighton’s best listings, music and culture magazine

FILM: Melancholia
Duke of York’s until Weds 5th
As well as being the Urban Dictionary definition of where most Brightonians spend their Sundays and the sort of title destined to be bestowed upon some ultra-hip future café in the North Laine, Planet Melancholia is the name of an ominous sphere heading towards the earth in this “beautiful movie about the end of the world”. Written by Palme d’Or winner Lars von Tier, it features a Cannes Best Actress-grabbing performance from demon-battling bride Kirsten Dunst, supported by Charlotte Gainsbourg and Kiefer Sutherland. (BM)

TALK: The Space
Komedia Thurs 6th
Singlehandedly risking a superlative drought among writers agog at the big name line-up it announces every month, arts chit-chat panel The Space pulls yet another blockbuster pair of rabbits out of its headliner hat this time around. Skin – she of the otherworldly beauty and acidic lyrics that gave vocal and visual venom to Skunk Anansie – is joined by Brian Tufano, the cinematographer behind Trainspotting, Billy Elliot, Shallow Grave and Quadrophenia for a Briggy Smale interview. It really is about time we went again. (BM)

EVENT: City Reads 2011
The Old Market until Sun 9th
City Reads is an excellent campaign promoting books across the city for a month, culminating in a weekend of fun from Thursday 6th. Speakers include definitive rum guide author Dave Broom, insights into Bob Marley and The Wailers’ Rastafarianism from cultural historian Colin Grant, dub reggae poet Linton Kwesi Johnson and workshops where you can have the perfect book prescribed for you. Andrea Levy, whose book ‘The Long Song’ is this year’s chosen City Read book, also leads a closing discussion. (BM)

COMEDY: Foster’s Funny Live
Coalition Thurs 13th
Bloody bargain comedy night, sponsored by the champagne-like Aussie beer (any dissenters will be ruthlessly heckled) with an excellent midweek line-up. If you don’t know what Chris Martin and Rob Heeney are like from their regular appearances on TV and radio then it’s probably about time you found out, topping a bill completed by award-winning Middlesbrough magician Pete Firman and Stephen Grant, who you usually have to pay three times as much to see at the Komedia’s Krater Comedy Club. (BM)

BIG LEBOWSKI PARTY •
Northern Lights Sat 15th
With typical Scandinavian idiosyncrasy, Northern Lights, one of The Lanes’ best-hidden gems, hosts the fourth annual celebration of everyone’s favourite dressing gown-wearing stoner loser. After a screening of the film you can see what condition your condition is in by entering the bowling competition, sampling In and Out burgers, Lingonberry pancakes and White Russians, and showing your dudeism in The Lebowski quiz (not for amateurs). Fancy dress is actively encouraged, pissing on rugs is not. (LMM)

COMEDY: Jo Neary and Simon Donald
Upstairs at Three And Ten Weds 19th
If the main comedy fest is the glitzy but high-maintenance live-in spouse, then the Three And Ten’s fringe is the filthy action-packed romp of the sort Simon Donald, of Viz fame, would certainly approve. The writer for everyone’s favourite high-brow comic has brought his beef curtains down as part of a double-bill with the ever-stupendous Jo Neary, who’s bravely recounting her teenage years in a 1980s backwater certain to provide rich weaponry for her brilliantly cringeworthy style. (BM)

CABARET: Lorraine Bowen’s Polyester Fiesta •
Komedia Sun 16th
From self-made instruments and ukulele axe-wielding to Casio organ-pounding and albums with names like ‘Clean Sheets’ and ‘Manhole’, there’s almost nothing local goddess Lorraine Bowen can’t (or possibly won’t) do. In this one, the self-proclaimed queen of kitsch’n’sync (boom boom) branches off into fashion – specifically, a celebration of her passion for a certain fabric that has been maliciously maligned for the past 70 years. A pair of dancers, a comedy scientist and some charity shop vinyl assist. (BM)

THEATRE: Love Letters
New Venture Theatre Sat 22nd – 29th
Ever wondered how the people you fancied but never quite got drunk enough to ask out reacted when you sent them all those clumsy texts? Two Americans read the awkward letters they exchanged during 50 years of frustrated canoodling in this celebration of coyness/cowardice, revealing their reactions as they go. It might sound like a dream for lazy actors, but it’s actually been extremely popular (Elizabeth Taylor once took it on) and won writer AR Gurney a Pulitzer Prize nomination. (BM)

EVENT: LE TIGRE HALLOWEEN PARTY
West Hill Hall Sat 29th
Following on from March’s Ladies And Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains screening, Riots Not Diets present a second evening of grrrl-powered films and music. Le Tigre tour documentary Who Took The Bomp? gets its first British showing outside London, and after the chairs are pushed aside there are sets from Covergirl, Skinny Girl Diet and Candy Panic Attack. The last party was glorious, so throw in Halloween fancy dress and some White Night stragglers and this should be better still. (SH)

ART: Erotica
Naked Eye Gallery until Mon 31st|
Take a look at the website of Cornish “illuminating erotica” artists Swallow and Bone and you’ll find penises protruding from a swan and, in the award-winning work on display here, a shimmering chandelier from which several throbbing members arc in glowing neon red. Elsewhere in this show, James Hunting explores sensuality and desire through embroidery and Peter Jarrette presents naughty cartoons alongside works in acrylic, oil and chalk pastel by Lucy Porter. Hot under the collar exhibition of the month. (BM)

WORDS BY STUART HUGGETT, BEN MILLER, LISA MARIE MUNDY

Sep 22, 2011
Email
SOURCE Writers
Sometimes an article is a bit of a team effort, and those are tagged SOURCE Writers. If you’d like to be part of that team, hit the Contact link at the top and get your work on this website.
← PREVIOUS POST
Art: No Walls Gallery
NEXT POST →
Club Review: Blind Tiger
Mailing List

Recent Posts
  • Death Comes to Pemberley Review
    Sep 3, 2025

    Set six years after the marriage of Elizabeth to Mr Darcy, a murder on their estate takes this story into thriller territory.

  • Betty Boo, Sunday 23rd November
    Sep 1, 2025

    The legendary Betty Boo is going on her first ever solo UK tour and you can catch her at The Green Door Store in November.

  • Mutations Festival 2025 Line Up Announcement
    Aug 28, 2025

    FORM are treating us to a Bonfire Weekend full of warm goodness, bangers and fireworks!

  • Pride And Prejudice Review
    Aug 27, 2025

    A beautifully realised adaptation of one of Jane Austen’s best loved books: giving us a grounded, real and hilarious retelling in perfect balance.

  • Suddenly Last Summer Preview
    Aug 26, 2025

    A stunning version of a lesser known Tennessee Williams play, by the brilliant Conor Baum Company. Don’t miss it.

  • Band Of Holy Joy, Sunday 26th October
    Aug 14, 2025

    The mighty Band Of Holy Joy return to Brighton for a rare matinee show. With support from Asbo Derek.

  • Short Plays 2025 at New Venture Theatre Review
    Aug 1, 2025

    An intriguing evening of short plays as different from each other as apples, text books, motorways, a haircut and moonrock.

  • Matthew Bourne’s The Midnight Bell Review
    Jul 30, 2025

    A stunning, must see show, where the most talented dancers convey the most fascinating and gripping stories of love, connections and betrayals in and around London in the 1930s.

Website developed in Brighton by Infobo
Copyright © Brighton Source 2009-2023
Culture: October - Brighton Source