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FREE 2 – 8 October 2018 Issue 899
THE CITY’S WEEKLY LIFESTYLE AND BUSINESS MAGAZINE
SIMON EVANS INTERVIEW Comedian, BOAT patron, and writer speaks PROJECT BRIGHTON Win £250 in South Downs National Park photo competition
CABARET!
Exclusive interview with artiste Camille O’Sullivan Page 4
on
01273 688448 www.h2ohomes.co.uk the agent for waterside homes
Are you home yet? At Maslen we’ll be with you every step of the way
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Celebrating the city's LGBT+ heritage
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Linux Systems Administrator – Sharpstream Ltd (Brighton & Hove) JavaScript Developer – Appitierre (Brighton and Hove) Designer – William Reed Business Media (Crawley) Digital Account Executive – Bluesky Interactive Ltd (Burgess Hill) Customer Onboarding Specialist – Create.net (Brighton & Hove) Account Manager – On Agency (Brighton and Hove) Head of Network and Infrastructure – Sharpstream Ltd (Brighton & Hove) Account Manager – Bellman Media Limited (Haywards Heath) Junior SEO Analyst – addmustard (Brighton & Hove)
Graphic designer needed – to redesign company logo. Web developer needed – to help create an interactive timeline for website. WordPress developer required – for small website refresh.
Angular Console and testing Observables – 3th Oct at The Skiff, Brighton Kick-starting your career in digital – 8th Oct at The FuseBox, Brighton The coffee's on us: Brighton self-employed meetup – 11th Oct at Redroaster, BTN.
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from the
4 | CAMILLE O’SULLIVAN INTERVIEW
@latestvicky
Cabaret artiste with a streak of mischief and performance a mile wide, Victoria Nangle catches up with Camille O’Sullivan
EDITOR
7 | DINES OUT Andrew Kay says: Aloha Rotterdam
So long, farewell...
H
ere's a biggie for me – this is my last issue. After over a dozen years working together, Latest and I shall be parting ways (on good terms) and I shall no longer be the editor, entertainment editor, production editor – or most other guises I've had along the way. I'll still be writing a few live reviews for the website, maybe a revisit to the magazine from time to time, but apart from that it's pastures news, adventures fresh, and all that malarkey. It's been a pleasure and a rollercoaster. I joined Latest as a subeditor, I pitched for a column about standup, walked the streets to find elusive comedy nights to support – and I ended up joining the new act circuit as a performer, becoming a charity gig promoter, seeing the Brighton gig circuit explode, being thrilled to be asked to be a comedy competition judge, reviewing and featurewriting at the Edinburgh Fringe, awarding the Brighton Fringe Latest Comedy Award – discovering a lifelong love for comedy and forming life long friendships. My love affair with Brighton is continuing, and I won’t be quiet about it. I’ll be tweeting about the craft fairs you’ll find me at this Winter, the shows I’m looking forward to seeing, and everything else that makes this quirky, fancy, hippy, soulful, showingoff city so remarkable and catches my eye as I do my Christmas shopping. Thank you for reading, thank you for smiling (if you did), thank you for writing (if you did), and I look forward to a wave ‘hello’ next time you see me at a gig. I’ll catch you around.
7 | HOT LIST Some of the tastiest eateries in the city
9 | STAGE John Wilson Orchestra brings At The Movies to Brighton Dome
9 | BRIGHTON LIGHTS Dane Baptisite headlines fundraiser Cardiac Comedy, The Goon Show brings veteran comedy to town, Joe Lycett brigns on the laughs, and The Space showcases live interviews with Julian Glover & Stanley Donwood
11 | SIMON EVANS INTERVIEW A favourite from television and on the radio, a patron of the Brighton Open Air Theatre, and a Hove resident – comedian and writer Simon Evans speaks
12 | PROJECT BRIGHTON Win £250 in South Downs National Park photo competition
13 | NOW & THEN Andy Garth: Paintings, prints and photos
15 | HOMES ACROSS OUR REGION A wide range of homes to rent or buy from page 14
18 | LATEST TV Complete listings of all of Latest TV’s films and original shows
Victoria Nangle editorial@thelatest.co.uk
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LATEST MAGAZINE
Managing Director Bill Smith Editor Victoria Nangle Business Director Angi Mariani Creative Director Andrew Kay Head of Sales & Marketing Lesley Lawrence
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CAMILLE O’SULLIVAN Cabaret artiste with a streak of mischief and performance a mile wide, Camille O’Sullivan has taken the songs of Nick Cave, PJ Harvey and others to tell haunting tales everywhere from the sassy stage of La Clique to Sydney Opera House. Victoria Nangle catches up with her. What made you want to reflect the international 'state of the nation' in Where Are We Now? Well, that’s a good question and there are several reasons. I think it was a personal thing. I was such a massive fan of David Bowie and Leonard Cohen because they were beacons of light and they made me believe in myself when I was younger. They made me want to sing. They died and at the same time the world was off kilter. Everything they stood for was anti Brexit and Trump so the whole world felt a bit scary once they were gone.
heightened place of fear and seem to have normalised all the terrible things that have happened in places like America, France and England recently. For me I’m a spiritual person and the songs I sing in Where Are We Now? are giving me spirituality, in the same way that they have many people. And how do you do this – I'm fascinated, as I've seen you occupy and inhabit each song as a story, as to what your song choice might be and how your performance of each connects to contemplation of the "crazilychanging world".
“ There’s a song called ‘The Crack of Doom
by The Tiger Lilies where I don’t say Trump by name, but you know it’s him ”
My decision to do the show was a reaction to what was happening around us all at a time. It came from a need for humanity and spirituality in a world where everything isn’t what it was. The show is a love letter to them both and a way of showing us all that we can care for each other and look after each other in the darkest of times. Darkness exists in this world and most of the big classical plays don’t end well, but it’s the journey that the writers go through that’s the important thing, and then how the people reading the story take what’s being said. Writers have always held a mirror up to society and people like Bowie and Cohen made me interested in the world when I was growing up. I want this show to look at the world and where we are in it. The last album was called Where Are We Now? and that’s the question I’m asking. I think we’re used to living in a 4 | LATEST
I suppose this time I feel like it’s a bit different. Before, it was about me becoming many different personalities and characters and my shows usually rely on me being something else. As Bowie said; “some people are too scared to show it, but we all have different aspects”. The songs relate to the fact that you may think that at this point in your life you’re just one type of person but the show is about knocking things on the head and seeing who you can really be. Just like my favourite song lyric from Leonard Cohen” “there’s a crack in everything and that’s how the light gets in”. To me that means that the world is beautiful but the other things that aren’t beautiful can be incredible also in their own way. This show is more Camille than ever. There’s less changing clothes and more of me saying – look, things are a bit messed up, but we’re all in it
together. Also, I’m getting older and there’s an honesty in me as a performer now that maybe wasn’t there before and I can’t get into some of the outfits that I used to get into or do the things I used to do, so this show relies more on me being me. People like PJ Harvey, who I never went to hear before, now interest me and her song I perform is about England being in a state at the moment, but it’s done in a brave and fearless way that describes the country as it is just now. Then songs like ‘Darker Than The Day’ by Nick Cave are more like a hymn. There’s a song called ‘The Crack of Doom’ by The Tiger Lilies where I don’t say Trump by name, but you know it’s him because of the way he keeps saying billions and billions and billions, so I say it too in that song. People laugh. The song is funny but it’s true, the crack of doom is coming. I do believe in having empathy in other people’s lives and if people are struggling then it’s one for them to listen to and take inspiration from. And then there’s ‘The Future’ by Cohen. I love it. It’s tough to perform but I do it in my own way – it’s gentle at the start but it ends up as a hurricane. A lot of people say that they never saw it performed that way before and I like that. Were there any tracks/songs that you wanted to include but just couldn't be due to time restrictions, legal wranglings, or they just didn't fit with the tone of the rest of the show? There always are songs that I’d like to include but just can’t for a variety of reasons. I’m a big Radiohead fan but usually stay away from the favourite ones. I don’t include things like ‘Hurt’ because I think that
people have heard it too many times, but then after shows people ask why I didn’t do it because they were looking forward to it, so I should probably add it back in again. When you’re in Edinburgh (for the Fringe) you only have a certain time allowance but hopefully now I will be able to fit in total songs because I can have more time. I was distraught after Bowie and Cohen passed because they were everything to me. I do a love letter to them with this show and I now feel closer to them through doing the shows, and people that come to see the show feel that too. I’m still very connected to Bowie in my decisions every
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and you can cry then there’s hope. Feelings are okay. It’s when you shut down that there’s a problem. Hope makes us want to dance around the room. But I like shows that provoke you and unlock different kinds of feelings in you. Life is a celebration and music does help me show people that. I first saw you in La Clique, many moons ago. Would you ever return to a cabaret ensemble – perhaps of your own curating – in the future? Perhaps a Caravan of Camaraderie? Well, it was such a special and incredible show to be a part of. I do go back to perform again from time to time with them and am still friends with everyone. I don’t know if I’d do something like that myself though. I did an evening of poets and dancers with some of my favourite artists and that was a great thing to do. I never say never though, and think it’s always brilliant to work with other artists. I think the wonderful magic formula to a good show is when the audience is there not knowing what’s happening next. I might test something out in the future but it would be different to what La Clique was. When we were doing it, I knew I’d never do anything like that in my life again. My mother said I was the most normal thing in it and I love that.
day. He made me want to sing and I find it still very moving to hear him. I’m still very fortunate that I can sing his songs on stage, which is different to when I was singing at home in the bedroom mirror as a child. With Where Are We Now? being a mirror on the now, what music would you hope to use to reflect a hope in a hypothetical future show? I suppose part of it is that the show has a nod to the future, because the likes of Cohen always make me think that there’s hope. That’s why I like those artists. They make you see possibilities even when you’re on your knees. I’m
working on a Nick Cave show just now and I’ve never done just one person’s music, but I’ve loved him for a long time. I feel the loss he went through himself and it’s wonderful to hear his music reach so many people. This show is because I enjoyed listening to his music. It’s about what he went through and seeing that he turned it into something beautiful. The artists I choose for the show help me take the show down dark and sad, but I make sure we have fun too. By the end of each show I want to make sure something has happened. There’s no rule book but I’m not afraid to laugh on stage and not afraid to cry either. If you can laugh
How was that different from being in a musical's cast, as you were in Sweeney Todd? It’s very different doing something like La Clique to doing a stage show or musical. Even though Sweeny Todd was singing more than really performing. When I was in La Clique, and I was spotted in Brighton by them – and that is what started my real love affair with the city by the way – I was doing ‘In These Shoes’ and he picked us because of what each person could bring to the show. We all came with our performances and eight of us were just equal performers – and then it was like ‘you’re go is next’ but we just looked after our own performances.
But with Sweeny Todd and other plays, the weight is taken off your shoulders. It’s about the show and how you make the show better. You can make your own role better but it’s about the show. I was the bald cap beggar woman with no make up in Sweeney and had a small part but it was pivotal to my career. I usually do my own shows and do a two hour show and in Sweeney I had to make my own scene better, but as part of the bigger show as a whole. Strangely, The Edge from U2 saw me in that and auditioned me over in America for the SpiderMan theatre show with me as Spider Woman. They went with someone else but they used my recording to show the cast about performance, which I’m flattered by. I love not being the main thing on stage and to become someone else for a while. Is there a favourite specific role in a theatrical show you would join another cast for? Well I suppose, the typical things such as getting a role in Cabaret or Chicago. They’re amazing shows but it’s hard to think which role I’d play. David Bowie’s Lazarus would have been something I’d love to do. And anything Shakespeare too, as I love that. I don’t think I’d do anything big in the West End, but as I say – never say never. When audiences come to see Where Are We Now? at Theatre Royal Brighton, which song from your book will be on their lips as they leave the theatre, and which one will be haunting their minds days later? Hopefully they’d be haunted for the right reasons. I think that ‘Ship Song’ I have to include, as it’s very special to me and everyone loves it. ‘Darker Than The Day’ is one people seem to like too. And also ‘Galaleo’ is one that is very popular and I love to perform. ‘Marieke’ is about vulnerability, so I feel fragile when I sing it but I turn into a lion at the end. Camille O’Sullivan: Where Are We Now?, Theatre Royal Brighton, Monday 26 November, 8pm, £25.15, www.atgtickets.com
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ANDREW KAY Aloha Rotterdam
I
’m staying with my mood of reflecting on the work of the Brighton & Hove Food & Drink Festival this week. This time another venture for International Chef Exchange, the project we started over five years ago and that became a TV series that can now be seen on Amazon Prime. It is perhaps the work I am most proud of, and the principal of introducing chefs from around the world to other chefs and seeing them share their ideas and talents has been so rewarding. This week we were joined by Michael van Belle and his sous chef Barry from Aloha Rotterdam, and this was the first leg of an exchange which in the new year will see Isaac BartlettCopeland travel to Rotterdam and cook there. The dinner here was spectacular and once again we saw chefs sharing, and as I always describe it “playing nicely together”. We started with Michael’s incredible asian style dumplings in a kimchi stock and filled with kohlrabi. I love dumplings and these were amongst the very best I have ever tasted. This was followed by a celebration of pumpkin, lifting the pretty gourd to new heights of both taste and textures. Isaac’s hyper local ethics never fail to use ingredients close to hand to the very best effect, and again I was blown away by the incredible bread that they make in their tiny kitchen. Michael was next with some amazing home smoked haddock served with a sea buckthorn sauce and pumpkin gnocchi. Yes more pumpkin, but in a guise that was unlike the previous dish and equally as exciting. This was a wonderfully balanced combination of cured fish, softy gnocchi and a vibrant sauce – both in colour and flavour. Isaac and team parries with roasted pollock served on a puree of caramelised artichoke and dressed with parsley oil and sea aster. Each element of this elegant dish deserved to be on that plate, nothing there for no good reason, everything working in harmony – a lesson a lot of chefs should learn! The next dish was the most extraordinary, scallops of celeriac, brown bean miso, celeriac toffee, potato espuma, fermented pear and sorrel leaf. Are you sure Michael? Oh yes – not just sure but assured. This was magic, quite brilliant. To finish: Isaac’s walnut icecream with sloe puree and local honey. Now that’s what I call a dessert and the whole evening matched with fine wines by the very bouncy Alex. Power cuts throughout didn’t throw these talented people and I went home glowing from the whole experience.
“ A wonderfully balanced combination ”
isaacat.com alohabar.nl
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Dines Out
THE
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Chaula’s, Brighton
A second venue for this brilliant Indian restaurant is now open here in Brighton. Chaula and her team breathe fresh air into the idea of Indian food with authentic recipes served in stylish surroundings. The cooking has an altogether healthier approach – but not at the cost of flavour. Thali Deals available 12pm3pm; Meal Deal £9.99. Brighton, BN1 1HT, 01273 771661, www.chaulas.co.uk
Chaula’s, Lewes
Chaula’s is renowned for its signature dishes, distinctive décor and friendly staff. All meals are made fresh to order and every curry has its own distinctively flavoured sauce. There is also a wide variety of vegetarian and vegan, as well as gluten and wheatfree dishes. Buffet available 12pm–3pm, Monday to Saturday. Lewes, BN7 2LP, 01273 476707 | www.chaulas.co.uk
Boho Gelato, Brighton
24 everchanging Italian Ice Cream flavours ranging from Vanilla to Violet, Mango to Mojito and Apple to Avocado taken from an ever growing list of now over 400! Handmade on site daily at 6 Pool Valley Brighton – Off East Street near the Palace Pier and also available at their new shop in Ship Street. www.bohogelato.co.uk | 6 Pool Valley, Brighton New Shop – 31 Ship Street, Brighton | 01273 727205
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BRIGHTON LIGHTS W H AT TO D O I N T H E C I T Y
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STAGE John Wilson Orchestra
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he Proms has been, for 123 years, the home of classical music – a festival of international repute presenting the very best of music that ranges far beyond the much misused term ‘classical’. And in recent years that has included the celebration of the best of musical theatre under the baton of superstar movie and Broadway musicals maestro John Wilson. Wilson is passionate if not obsessed with the music of musical theatre, not simply performing modern arrangements of the classics but slavishly recreating the full orchestral sound of the originals. Last year at the Proms they gave a spellbinding perfomance of Oklahoma, this year Bernstein’s On The Town. Now he comes to Brighton with his new show At The Movies. The annual John Wilson Orchestra UK tour is always the highlight of the orchestra’s calendar and this year the orchestra is joined by the legendary, indefatigable, Broadway diva Kim Criswell to perform some of the most enduring popular songs and
movie scores from the golden age of Hollywood. The orchestra has been seen by millions across the world on TV and has established an international reputation
“ A celebration of the very best of musicals ”
performing repertoire from Broadway musicals and music for the big screen. For the 2018 tour the sumptuous sounds of the golden age of Hollywood will be revived by the John Wilson Orchestra featuring music from some of Hollywood’s best loved music and songs, including The Philadelphia Story, Diamonds Are A Girl’s Best Friend, ET, South Pacific, The Sound of Music, Now Voyager, There’s No Business Like Show Business and much more. I for one plan to be there to luxuriate in the full sound of his brilliant orchestra and orchestrations. Friday 7 December, Concert Hall, Brighton Dome brightondome.org 01273 709709
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Now in its sixth year, Cardiac .Comedy has fast become one of Brighton’s best charity mixed bills not to be missed. This year the British Heart Foundation fundraiser boasts a lineup that includes Dane Baptiste, Laura Lexx, Simon Evans, Steve Best – plus your resident MC Dave Blood.
Komedia, Wednesday 3 October, 7pm, £29/17.50
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Apollo Theatre Company and Spike .Milligan Productions are proud to team up to bring this timeless comedy classic – The Goon Show – to the stage for the first major theatrical production in the show’s illustrious 65year history. From “He’s fallen in the water!” to the adventures of Neddy Seagoon.
Theatre Royal, Sunday 7 October, 7.30pm, £19.40 £30.90
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Come along to The Space, which .this time sees host Wayne Imms put the most interesting questions to his guests interviews with actor Julian Glover (Indiana Jones & The Last Crusade, Doctor Who) and artist Stanley Donwood (covers for Radiohead albums, JB Ballard novels). Latest MusicBar, Wednesday 3 October, 7.30pm, £16
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Put your name down for return .tickets, as the Brighton leg of Joe Lycett’s latest show – I’m About To Lose Control And I Think Joe Lycett – has sold out! Chronicling more of his own internet trolling, sharing jokes and paintings, the 8 Out Of 10 Cat Does Countdown favourite has a packed show. Concert Hall, Brighton Dome, Friday 5 October, 8pm, £21
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SIMON EVANS A favourite from television work and on the radio, a patron of the Brighton Open Air Theatre, and a Hove resident – comedian and writer Simon Evans speaks to Brian Donaldson ahead of touring his new show ‘Genius’.
T
he exact nature of Genius has always been elusive. But according to comedian Simon Evans, it seems that the bar has been lowered somewhat of late. “Everyone and everything from a modestly talented centre forward to a bluetooth enabled juice extractor gets called ‘genius’ these days,” he complains. “I remember when proper geniuses walked among us. I remember when mad geniuses with hair sprouting out of their head at weird angles and mad glinting eyes boggling at you from under
my recent experience at the local GP. But I’m more worried about the bigger picture. “I mean, Theresa May seems like a decent sort of woman – as you might say of someone running the jam stall at the WI market. But to look at her academic achievements – she has a 2:2 in Geography. Be honest, you’d be disappointed if your Geography teacher had a 2.2 in Geography… And Jeremy Corbyn, who I originally took to be a suicide note in human form but is now gearing up to take over at No.10 – two E’s at A level then
“ Theresa May seems like a decent sort
of woman – as you might say of someone running the jam stall at the WI market ” eyebrows like feral hedgehogs used to present children’s TV, let alone the adult stuff. Nowadays, they all have perfect hairstyles and neat painted on eyebrows and considerably less mental TNT.” Well aware that this sort of thing has been the Cry of the Middle Aged Man for generations, Evans points to hard evidence of a collapse in standards. Unsurprisingly perhaps, he starts with the intellectual heft of our rulers. “Which is to say, p***poor. Are they a sign of the dangers of egalitarian society? The great wet blanket of democracy? The suspicions we now have about anyone who shows signs of being a bit too smart for their own good? I am afraid they are.” “The show is about many things. Not least my own failing mental capacity to cope with the modern world, to distinguish between the bleeps of the dishwasher and the tumble dryer or to feel confident in my threestage text message assessment of
failed to complete his degree course at North London Polytechnic. These are momentous times and I just don’t think we’re getting the brightest and the best.” So, where does he think all the clever people are winding up? “My suspicion is that they’re all going to what is now called ‘STEM’ – not gardening, I’m not saying Alan Titchmarsh for PM, but Science, Technology and Engineering and Maths. That seems to be the thing now. I’m hoping my children will learn to code. My wife still insists on them having oboe lessons and doing modern dance. I’m just saying ‘forget it, there will be robots playing oboe soon. Learn to code the oboe robots’.” As a means of contrasting how times have changed, he points to an iconic publication which has swapped knowledge and depth for trivia and gloss. “I compare the Guinness Book of World Records from when I was ten years old to my son’s latest edition. His one is this smorgasbord of
garish fullcolour photos of people like Neymar and Adele and the world’s most tattooed man. Whereas in my day it was this dense compendium of facts, about things like the ‘successive records for most distant observed heavenly bodies’ and ‘most predominant mineral deposits on the surface of the planet’. That was the sort of ammo you needed as a boy in 1974. Maybe things have just got more… enjoyable?” What has certainly been enjoyable over the past couple of decades is witnessing the rise of Simon Evans as one of the most reliable and thought provoking standup talents in the country. Critical acclaim and audience admiration have never been too hard for him to find through live shows such as Fringe Magnet, Leashed and In The Money, while radio listeners have been treated to several series of Simon Evans Goes To Market, his comedy lectures on economic matters. And those clever TV people have got him on the box through shows such as Mock The Week, Live At The Apollo and Dara Ó Briain: School Of Hard Sums. And yet despite all this exposure, Simon still harbours reservations about his own abilities. “The fact is, while the show is a howl of despair at the decay and collapse of
western civilisation, it’s also a recognition of my failure to live up to my own intellectual ambitions, and that moment when you suddenly realise your chances of a Nobel Prize are slipping over the horizon. And yet rather than simply adapt to my naturally waning capacity for learning I’ve entered a strange mania phase where I’m buying more books than I will ever be able to read. I’ve obviously developed a subconscious belief that I can simply absorb books by osmosis. I’m determined to be able to wield this information, which started partly with writing this show, Genius. I thought, if I’m going to talk about genius, then I need to demonstrate that I’ve mastered a few things myself, and it’s become this worrying addiction now. I’m surrounded by piles of books: there’s stuff about everything from arcane theories about human intelligence – all incorporated into the show obviously – to books about the Byzantine Empire and German idealism and the nine brains of the octopus and so on. It started as a research but it’s fast becoming a fire hazard. And it’s kind of a nonsense that people will be impressed by this. Certainly my wife remains dubious.” Simon Evans: Genius, Komedia, Thursday 26 November, 8pm, £26.50/15/13, komedia.co.uk
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PROJECT BRIGHTON Win £250 in South Downs National Park photo competition The South Downs National Park photo competition is now open, with a first prize of £250 on offer to the amateur or professional photographer who best captures this year’s theme of ‘Perfectly Seasoned’. Steve Watkins, editor of Outdoor Photography magazine; and awardwinning photographers Rachael Talibart and Finn Hopson are returning to judge the 2018 competition. A second prize of £150 and a third prize of £50 are also on offer. For the past three years the standard has been so high that the judges have opened up the shortlist for a ‘people’s choice’ vote – won by Tom Hard in 2017. Steve Watkins, competition judge and editor of Outdoor Photography magazine, said: “The South Downs National Park has a distinctly different feel in each of the four seasons, so I will be on the lookout for images that manage to capture those unique characteristics in a way that connects instantly with the emotions those changing scenes generate in me as I wander, ride and travel through the park.” Finn Hopson, competition judge, photographer, and owner of the Brighton Photography Gallery, said: “I’m hoping to see photographs that reflect the amazing diversity of weather, wildlife and work that goes on throughout the National
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Park during the year. Given the extremes of temperatures we’ve seen over the last 12 months in particular it will be interesting to see what has captured the imagination of photographers this year.”
“ Photographs that reflect the amazing
diversity of weather, wildlife and work that goes on throughout the National Park during the year ” Rachael Talibart, competition judge and winner of awards including Black and White Photographer of the Year 2018, said: “I’ll be looking for imaginative and creative interpretations of the theme that highlight the many aspects of our beautiful National Park.”
Entries close on Friday 19 October. Find out more and download the entry form at www.southdowns.gov.uk/enterthesouthdownsphotocompetition/
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NOW & THEN Andy Garth: Paintings, Prints and Photos
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his week I have bought, sold and failed to sell lots of items at various auctions in the city, and am perplexed about the trends that exist in my chosen field of all stuff Brighton & Hove.
“ They are always full of excellent information from the past ” So the first item is very personal to me as it is the Palace Pier by Matt Bruce, who as well as being a great local and nationally renowned artist taught me and thousands of others art at the old Varndean Grammar School for boys. I paid £65 for it at an auction in deepest darkest Surrey – in my view a great deal –
which adorns a wall at home, which is unusual as I don’t tend to mix home with work (or that’s what I’m told by my partner!). The second picture is one of the hundreds of framed old postcard photos you see all over the city in shops and restaurants, and also probably in a large amount of homes. The problem with these is they are just not popular at auctions anymore, and if sold are very cheap – which is such a shame as they are always full of excellent information from the past. The third photo is an example of a local Brighton print, of which there are several thousand dating from the late 18th century through Victorian times. They were ultimately replaced by photos, and again the interest level in these has dropped. Maybe, like pine furniture and open fireplaces they may come back into fashion,
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so look after any you have (and there are some expensive ones out there!). Any questions Brightonandhovestuff@gmail.com
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NEW price
Holtview Road
Gladstone Place
Hawkhurst Road
£450,000 Freehold • Flexible Accommodation Throughout • Potential to create an annex (stnc) • 4 Double Bedrooms • No Onward Chain. EPC D57 Call Woodingdean office 01273 278866
Offers over £250,000 Share of Freehold • Raised ground floor 1 DB flat • Sash windows, enclosed garden • Modern kitchen & bathroom • Long lease. EPC D62 Call Lewes Road office 01273 677001
Offers over £280,000 Freehold • 2 bed semi det house • West facing gdn • Lounge & kitchen breakfast room • GCH & DG windows. Chain free. EPC C70 Call Lewes Road office 01273 677001
NEW price
Whitehawk Crescent £300,000 Freehold • Two Bedrooms • Modern Kitchen • Good Size Accommodation • Close to RSCH & Brighton Marina. EPC E54 Call Woodingdean office 01273 278866
NEW price
Stanmer Park Road
Wilmington Way £500,000 Freehold • 3/4 bedroom 3 storey s/d family house • Immaculately presented • Bathroom & en suite shower room • Garage, off street parking. EPC C73 Call Fiveways office 01273 566777
£495,000 Freehold A 4 bedroom FAMILY HOME in this POPULAR RESIDENTIAL AREA with a short walk of Fiveways. The house is considered to be in EXCELLENT DECORATIVE ORDER with SPACIOUS ACCOMMODATION over 4 floors. Lounge/dining/ kitchen area which is IDEAL FOR ENTERTAINING, FAMILY ROOM leading to garden with 2 decked terraces and VIEWS, MASTER SUITE on the 2nd floor with modern EN SUITE, plus a CELLAR offering storage space. Energy Rating: D68 Exclusive to Maslen Estate Agents Call Fiveways office 01273 566777
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LANDLORDS WITH KHALIL I have NO agency fees, and Khalil payout the rent even if the property is empty (no void period).
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LANDLORDS WITHOUT KHALIL I have agency fees, and get no payment if the property is empty.
I pay for maintenance for the upkeep of the property. I don’t have guaranteed payment each month.
I have to deal with rent arrears and worry if the tenant paid or not. I have to pay the property running cost when it’s empty.
Speak to Khalil today on 01273 573960
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on
MOVIES ON LATEST TV All day & late night
Tuesday 2 October
6.00am Waterloo Road 1944. Drama. Director: Sidney Gilliat. Stars Stewart Granger, John Mills, Alastair Sim & Joy Shelton. After Jim reports for military duty, he suspects that his bride has been seeing another man. 8.05 Salute the Toff 1952. Drama. Director: Maclean Rogers. Stars John Bentley and Carol Marsh. Based on the 1941 Novel. The sixth in the series featuring upper-class sleuth, Richard Rollison. 9.55 Meet Me Tonight 1952. Comedy. Directed by Anthony Pelissier. Stars Valerie Hobson, Nigel Patrick, Kay Walsh & Stanley Holloway. Three short stories by Noel Coward: 'Red Peppers', 'Fumed Oak' & 'Ways and Means'. 11.35 The Square Ring 1953. Drama. Director: Basil Dearden. Stars Jack Warner, Robert Beatty, Bill Owen, Maxwell Reed & Joan Collins. Follow the lives of five boxers and their reasons for getting to where they are now. 1.15pm Man In The Moon FILM OF THE DAY 1960. Comedy. Directed by Basil Dearden and starring Kenneth More, Shirley Anne Field and Michael Hordern. Scientists are looking for the perfect man to send to the moon. 3.15 Interlude 1968. Drama. Directed by Kevin Billington. Stars Alan Webb, Oskar Werner & Barbara Ferris. A world famous Symphony conductor is attracted to a young journalist, despite the fact he is married. 11.10 See No Evil 1971. Thriller. Directed by Richard Fleischer. Stars Mia Farrow, Dorothy Alison, Robin Bailey & Diane Grayson. A young blind woman, residing in the countryside with her family, is perused by a killer.
Wednesday 3 October
6.00am It's a Wonderful World 1956. Comedy directed by Val Guest and starring Terence Morgan, George Cole, Kathleen Harrison. Two struggling composers hit on a novel way of producing music backwards!
Friday 5 October
6.00am Cat & Mouse 1958. Crime Thriller. Directed by Paul Rotha with Lee Patterson. The daughter of a convicted and executed killer believes she has murdered blackmailer Hilton Edwards. FILM OF THE DAY 8.00 The Return of Frank James 1940. Western. Director: Fritz Lang. Stars Henry Fonda, Gene Tierney & Jackie Cooper. When Jesse James's murderers are set free, his brother Frank vows revenge. 9.50 The Golden Salamander 1950. Drama. Directed by Ronald Neame. Stars Trevor Howard, Anouk Aimee & Herbert Lom. A British archaeologist is torn between tackling a sinister crime syndicate or turning a blind eye. 11.45 The Magnificent Two 1967. Comedy. Director: Cliff Owen. Stars Eric Morecambe, Ernie Wise, Margit Saad & Isobel Black. Two salesmen travel to a small South American Country to peddle their wares. 1.35pm Cheaper By The Dozen 1950. Comedy. Director: Walter Lang. Stars Clifton Webb, Myrna Loy, Jeanne Crain & Betty Lynn. Based on a true story. Follow Frank Gilbreth and his wife Lillian, as they raise their 12 children. 3.20 A Cry From The Streets 1958. Drama starring Max Bygraves, Barbara Murray and Colin Petersen. A welfare worker becomes emotionally involved with a group of homeless children. Music by Larry Adler. 11.10 The Camp On Blood Island 1958. Drama. Directed Val Guest. Stars Andre Morell, Carl Mohner & Walter Fitzgerald. Deep in Malaya, as WW2 comes to an end, men, women and children as still trapped by the Japanese invasion.
8.15 Two on the Tiles 1951. Comedy. Director: John Guillermin. Stars Herbert Lom, Hugh McDermott & Brenda Bruce. A husband and wife are blackmailed by the butler on evidence of nights out until they combine to prevent him.
Peyton Place
Sunday 7 October
6.00am Time Is My Enemy 1954. Drama. Stars Dennis Price, Renee Asherson, Susan Shaw, William Franklyn & Patrick Barr. A re-married woman is blackmailed by her first husband, who she believed was dead. 7.15 The Good Die Young 1954. Thriller. Director: Lewis Gilbert. Stars Robert Morley, Joan Collins, Laurence Harvey & Margaret Leighton. A group of down-andouts are holding up a post office van when things start to go wrong. 9.15 Piccadilly Incident FILM OF THE DAY 1946. War. Director: Herbert Wilcox. Stars Anna Neagle, Michael Wilding, Coral Browne & Edward Rigby. A missing Wren returns from a desert isle and finds her husband has a new wife and son. 11.15 Cash on Demand 1961. Drama. Directed by Quentin Lawrence. Stars Peter Cushing, André Morell & Richard Vernon. A crook abducts the wife and child of a bank manager & then schemes to rob the institution.
9.45 Helpmates 1932. Comedy. Directed by James Parrott. Stars Stan Laurel, Oliver Hardy & Blanche Payson. Oliver's house is in a shambles after a wild party, and his wife is due home at noon.
12.55pm Spare the Rod 1961. Drama. Director: Leslie Norman. Stars Max Bygraves, Geoffrey Keen & Donald Pleasence. A new teacher arrives at an East London school to find that his modern education methods are not welcome.
10.10 Love Me Tender 1956. Drama. Director: Robert D Webb. Stars Richard Egan, Debra Paget & introducing Elvis Presley. At the end of the Civil War, a Confederate team is ordered to rob a Union payroll train. 11.55 Gasbags 1941. Comedy. Directed by Walter Forde and Marcel Varnel. Starring The Crazy Gang, Moore Marriott and Wally Patch. A mobile fish and chip shop is accidentally dragged to Nazi Germany.
2.45 Lost in the Desert 1970. Drama. Directed by Jamie Uys. Stars Wynand Uys (credited as Dirkie Hayes), Jamie Uys (credited as Jamie Hayes). A boy and his dog brave the deserts of Africa as they head back home.
1.30 Esther Waters 1948. Drama. Director: Ian Dalrymple & Peter Proud. Stars Dirk Bogarde, Kathleen Ryan & Cyril Cusack & Ivor Barnard. Esther goes into service in Victorian England, only to be seduced by a footman.
10.10 The Swimmer 1968. Drama. Directed by Frank Perry & Sydney Pollack. Stars Burt Lancaster, Janet Landgard, Janice Rule & Marge Champion. Ned attempts to swim every swimming pool in a quiet suburb.
3.40 Three Men In A Boat FILM OF THE DAY 1956. Comedy. Stars Laurence Harvey, Jimmy Edwards & David Tomlinson. Based on the Jerome K Jerome novel. The story follows three men who decide to go on holiday on the Thames. 10.45 The Running Man 1963. Drama. Directed by Carol Reed. Stars Laurence Harvey, Lee Remick, Alan Bates & Felix Aylmer. An insurance investigator is called when a plane goes down a day after his insurance policy expires.
Thursday 4 October
6.00am Cloak Without Dagger 1956. Thriller. Director: Joseph Sterling. Stars Philip Friend, Mary Mackenzie & Leslie Dwyer. During WW2, a Major misses out on the capture of a spy. Years later, the truth is revealed. 8.00 The Reluctant Bride 1955. Comedy directed by Henry Cass and starring John Carroll and Virginia Bruce. A group of children whose parents are missing are looked after by a womanising oil man and a dignified entomologist. 9.30 Death Drums Along the River 1963. Adventure. Stars Richard Todd, Marianne Koch & Albert Lieven. Inspector Sanders is investigating a murder in an African hospital when he is led to a silver mine. 11.10 Jassy FILM OF THE DAY 1947. Drama. Stars Margaret Lockwood, Patricia Roc & Dennis Price. During the 17th century, Jassy is believed to be a witch after receiving visions of approaching disasters. 1.10pm Sky West & Crooked 1966. Drama. Directed by John Mills and starring Hayley Mills, Ian MacShane, Annette Crosbie and Geoffrey Bayldon. A young, lonely teenage girl is traumatised after the death of a childhood friend. 3.15 The Green Man 1956. Comedy. Stars Alastair Sim, Raymond Huntley, George Cole & Terry-Thomas. A watchmaker turns out to be an assassin whose target is a leading politician but his plans are stalled. 11.20 Belle Star 1941. Western. Directed by Irvin Cummings. Starring Randolph Scott, Gene Tierney and Dana Andrews. A southern beauty, indignant at her treatment by the Yankees, marries a confederate guerrilla.
The Return of Frank James
Monday 8 October Saturday 6 October
6.00am The Secret Man 1958. Thriller. Director: Ronald Kinnoch. Stars Marshall Thompson, John Loder & Henry Oscar. A physicist finds himself drawn into an investigation to track down a spy at his research station. 7.30 Convict 99 1938. Comedy. Directed by Marcel Varnel. Stars Will Hay, Moore Marriott, Graham Moffat & Googie Withers. A school master is mistaken for a prison governor and assigned the charge of a prison. 9.15 Windbag The Sailor 1936. Comedy. Directed by William Beaudine. Stars Will Hay, Moore Marriott, Graham Moffatt & Norma Varden. A sea captain's tall tales are tested when he is coerced into commanding an unseaworthy ship.
6.00am Born Of The Sea 1949. A mysterious baby is found in a boat at sea. Where is he from? A charming portrait of a small coastal community in Coverack. Stars Dorothea Paul. Directed by Anthony Mavrogordato. 7.30 Nell Gwyn 1934. Period drama. Nell (Anna Neagle) captivates King Charles (Cedric Hardwicke) and fights off the royal insiders. 8.55 The Cariboo Trail 1950. Western. Director: Edwin L. Marin. Stars Randolph Scott, George 'Gabby' Hayes, Bill Williams. Jim & Mike head into Canada via the Cariboo Trail to raise cattle and dig for gold but find trouble. 10.35 Shadow of A Man 1954. Crime drama. A town drunk is found dead and the police suspect murder. Starring Paul Carpenter.
11.00 The Flying Scot 1957. Crime. Director: Compton Bennett. Stars Lee Patterson, Kay Callard & Alan Gifford. After learning what’s being transported on the Flying Scot, Ronnie Cowan plans the biggest robbery of all time.
11.55 The Sicilians 1964. Crime. Stars Robert Hutton, Reginald Marsh & Ursula Howells. An aide at the U.S. Embassy finds himself involved with Scotland Yard and the French police after a mafia boss’ son is kidnapped.
12.30pm The League of Gentlemen 1960. Crime Drama. Director: Basil Dearden. Stars Jack Hawkins, Richard Attenborough, Nigel Patrick & Roger Livesey. Ex-army men are recruited for a bank robbery plan that requires military precision.
FILM OF THE DAY 1.10pm The Wicked Lady 1945. Drama. Directed by Leslie Arliss. Stars Margaret Lockwood, Griffith Jones & James Mason. 17th Century beauty Barbara Worth leads a double life to relieve her boredom.
2.45 Jazz Boat 1960. Musical. Director Ken Hughes. Stars Anthony Newley, Bernie Winters, James Booth, Lionel Jeffries & Anne Aubrey. An electrician is summoned to assist a gang in a big robbery.
3.15 The Winslow Boy 1948. Drama. Stars Robert Donat, Cedric Hardwicke & Basil Radford. Pre-WW1 England, a youngster is expelled from a naval academy over a theft. His parents demand a trial.
10.50 Peyton Place FILM OF THE DAY 1957. Drama. Director: Mark Robson. Stars Lana Turner, Hope Lange, Lee Philips, Diane Varsi & Lloyd Nolan. An adaptation of Grace Metalious' popular novel. A New England town hides secrets & scandals.
10.15 Bespoke Overcoat 1955. Drama. Director: Jack Clayton. Stars David Kossoff & Alfie Bass. A man's only desire is to have an overcoat, but dies of hypothermia and so returns as a ghost demanding his friend steal him one.
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TV LISTINGS
on
Tuesday 2
Wednesday 3
Thursday 4
6.00am FILM: Waterloo Road 1944. Drama. 7.35 Hawkeye & the Last of the Mohicans Mike is returning home to marry but his fiance and family have been murdered. 8.05 FILM: Salute the Toff 1952. Drama. 9.40 Come Back To Erin Made in the early 1930s. A travel log of Ireland and its history and cultures, including a short interview with President William T Cosgrave. 9.55 FILM: Meet Me Tonight 1952. Comedy. 11.35 FILM: The Square Ring 1953. Drama. 1.15pm FILM: Man In The Moon 1960. Comedy. 3.15 FILM: Interlude 1968. Drama. 5.30 Turn of Fate Dramatizations that depict the plight of people who are suddenly involved in unexpected and perilous situations. 6.00 Latest News 6.30 The Vote Guests from the world of politics discuss local and national issues. 7.00 Millionaires' Row From penthouse to pool, take an exclusive tour of exceptional, outstanding, and unique dream houses. 7.30 Live From The Roadee Showcasing the best in local Brighton music, all recorded in the Roadee - a mobile recording studio. 8.00 Latest News 8.30 Digital Nation The best of Local TV from across the UK. Featuring the stories you may not normally see, whether quirky, comic or hard-hitting, prepare to learn more from our local TV channels. 9.00 AK Souffle Andrew Kay introduces special guests in this LGBT-focused chat show. 9.30 Queer Say Andrew Kay's look at LGBT news and media from around the world with the help of his studio guest. 10.00 Barnstormer 1649 live in Brighton! Attila the Stockbroker and his unique band Barnstormer 1649 present their new album, Restoration Tragedy. Early music meets punk, meets local history - music for Levellers, Diggers and Ranters. 11.10 FILM: See No Evil 1971. Thriller. 1.00am FILM: Cosh Boy 1953. Drama.
6.00am FILM: It's a Wonderful World 1956. Comedy. 7.45 Hawkeye & the Last of the Mohicans Tolliver and his outlaw gang of former pirates has kidnapped two women & demanded a ransom of £1,000. 8.15 FILM: Two on the Tiles 1951. Comedy. 9.45 FILM: Helpmates 1932. Comedy. 10.10 FILM: Love Me Tender 1956. Drama. 11.55 FILM: Gasbags 1941. Comedy. 1.30pm FILM: Esther Waters 1948. Drama. 3.40 FILM: Three Men In A Boat 1956. Comedy. 5.30 Turn of Fate 1957. Stars David Niven, Robert Ryan & Charles Boyer. Dramatizations that depict the plight of people who are suddenly involved in unexpected and perilous situations. 6.00 Latest News 6.30 Democracy Now! Politics and discussion from the USA. 7.00 Best of Brighton Lights Richard Shayler takes a cheeky look back at Latest TV's magazine programme Brighton Lights. 7.30 Our Town Local history quiz testing contestants on their Brighton knowledge. 8.00 Latest News 8.30 The Easy Riders Danny John-Jules and Steve Keys in a motorcycle travelogue with a difference. This time around the boys take on five countries in five days, with the challenge of climbing a mountain in each. 9.00 AK Souffle Andrew Kay introduces special guests in this LGBT-focused chat show. 9.30 Queer Say Andrew Kay's look at LGBT news and media from around the world with the help of his studio guest. 10.00 Bowlegs Live tracks from Frànçois and The Atlas Mountains, Gazelle Twins, Courtney Barnett, His Clancyness, Islet, and Abi Wade. 10.30 Nostalgia 77 Short film in which Tru Thoughts recording artist Nostalgia 77, aka Ben Lamdin, looks back on 15 years of making music. 10.45 FILM: The Running Man 1963. Drama. 12.50am FILM: I Am A Camera 1955. Drama.
6.00am FILM: Cloak Without Dagger 1956. 7.20 Hawkeye & the Last of the Mohicans Chief Black Wolf is accused of breaking the treaty. It is up to Hawkeye to clear them. 7.50 Glimpses: The Finale 1968 Documentary by Wilf Watters. 8.00 FILM: The Reluctant Bride 1955. Comedy. 9.30 FILM: Death Drums Along the River 1963. Adventure. 11.10 FILM: Jassy 1947. Drama. 1.10pm FILM: Sky West & Crooked 1966. Drama. 3.15 FILM: The Green Man 1956. Comedy. 4,55 BFI: Terminus 1961. Iconic short of a day in the life of a London Railway Station. 5.30 Turn of Fate Dramatizations that depict the plight of people who are suddenly involved in unexpected and situations. 6.00 Latest News 6.30 The Vote The People's Republic of Brighton and Hove Takeover. An isle of sanity in a sea of blue. 7.00 Walks Around Britain Series featuring inspirational walks between 2-8 miles from around Britain. Andrew walks part of the Isle of Wight Coastal Path & between Huggate & Thixendale on the Yorkshire Wolds Way. 7.30 Millionaires' Row From penthouse to pool, take an exclusive tour of exceptional, outstanding, and unique dream houses. 8.00 Latest News 8.30 Digital Nation The best of Local TV from across the UK. Featuring the stories you may not normally see, whether quirky, comic or hard-hitting, prepare to learn more from our local TV channels. 9.00 Shorts Out Deborah Espect introduces short films about the LGBT world. 10.00 Brodian's Basement Independent short films, music videos and interviews with a host of interesting characters. 11.00 The Arun Valley Postcard Trail Burpham. Tony Pratt travels along the Arun Valley discovering the fascinating local history of the area. 11.15 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 11.20 FILM: Belle Star 1941. Western. 1.05am FILM: Rattle Of A Simple Man 1964.
Friday 5
Saturday 6
Sunday 7
Monday 8
6.00am FILM: Cat & Mouse 1958. Crime thriller. 7.30 Hawkeye & the Last of the Mohicans Surveyor George Washington aids a young woman whose land grant is threatened by a wicked innkeeper. 8.00 FILM: The Return of Frank James 1940. Western. 9.50 FILM: The Golden Salamander 1950. Drama. 11.45 FILM: The Magnificent Two 1967. Comedy. 1.35pm FILM: Cheaper By The Dozen 1950. Comedy. 3.20 FILM: A Cry From The Streets 1958. Drama. 5.15 BFI: The Hospital Nurse 1941. Factual. 5.30 Turn of Fate Dramatizations. 6.00 Latest News 6.25 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 6.30 Democracy Now! Politics and discussion from the USA. 7.00 Under The Radar Paul and Jeff introduce archive footage from Architects, Alan Vega, Gong, and Edwyn Collins. 7.30 Brighton Album Chart Show Probably the coolest music video chart on telly. Nelson Navarro introduces a top 10 countdown of the best selling albums in Brighton. 8.00 Latest News 8.25 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 8.30 Live From The Roadee Showcasing the best in local Brighton music, all recorded in the Roadee - a mobile recording studio. 9.00 Tales From The Margins Different Kinds of Bodies: Three Shorts About LGBTQ and Dis/ability. Professor Rainer Schulze presents three films about dis/ability in the LGBTQ community. 10.00 Barnstormer 1649 live in Brighton! Attila the Stockbroker and his unique band Barnstormer 1649 present their new album, Restoration Tragedy. Early music meets punk, meets local history - music for Levellers, Diggers and Ranters. 11.10 FILM: The Camp On Blood Island 1958. Drama. 12.50am FILM: Bitter Harvest 1963. Drama.
6.00am FILM: The Secret Man 1958. Thriller. 7.30 FILM: Convict 99 1938. Comedy. 9.15 FILM: Windbag The Sailor 1936. Comedy. 11.00 FILM: The Flying Scot 1957. Crime. 12.30pm FILM: The League of Gentlemen 1960. Crime drama. 2.45 FILM: Jazz Boat 1960. Musical. 4.45 The Arun Valley Postcard Trail Houghton. Tony Pratt travels along the Arun Valley discovering the fascinating local history of the area. 5.00 Globetrotting Factual series exploring exotic locations around the world, looking at the culture and most exciting attractions of a different destination each week. 5.30 Globetrotting Factual series exploring exotic locations around the world.
6.00am FILM: Time Is My Enemy 1954. Drama. 7.15 FILM: The Good Die Young 1954. Thriller. 9.15 FILM: Piccadilly Incident 1946. War. 11.15 FILM: Cash on Demand 1961. Drama. 12.55pm FILM: Spare the Rod 1961. Drama. 2.45 FILM: Lost in the Desert 1970. Drama. 4.25 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 4.30 Globetrotting Factual series exploring exotic locations around the world, looking at the culture and most exciting attractions of a different destination each week. 5.00 Globetrotting Factual series exploring exotic locations around the world, looking at the culture and most exciting attractions of a different destination each week. 5.30 Globetrotting Factual series exploring exotic locations around the world, looking at the culture and most exciting attractions. 6.00 Latest News 6.25 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 6.30 Family, Faith and Fun Sarah Hopwood presents the happiness debate, a show looking at a different emotion every week and how it relates to family life, the Christian faith, and a sense of fun. 7.00 British Wrestling Weekly All the latest happenings from the British Wrestling Coalition, keeping you up to date with all the high impact action from the UK's premier wrestling brand, New Generation Wrestling. 8.00 Latest News 8.25 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 8.30 Brighton Album Chart Show Probably the coolest music video chart on telly. Nelson Navarro introduces a top 10 countdown of the best selling albums in Brighton. 9.00 Shorts Out Deborah Espect introduces short films about the LGBT world. 10.00 Useless Cities A Little Too Obtuse from London-based indie band Useless Cities. Filmed by Deborah Espect. 10.05 The Gentle Good Winner of the Welsh Music Prize 2017, The Gentle Good and his rendition of the traditional Welsh song 'Cariad Cyntaf'. Filmed by Wanphrang Diengdoh. 10.10 FILM: The Swimmer 1968. Drama. 12.00am Women of Twilight 1952. Drama.
FILM: Man In The Moon Our Town
6.00 Latest News 6.25 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 6.30 Football Fanatics More nostalgic football stories looking at the absolute legends of the game. 7.00 Players Biographical insights into the biggest names in sport, whether on two wheels or on four, with a ball or racquet. 7.30 Football Heroes A chance to relive the careers of some of the biggest icons of football from the last 15 years. 8.00 Latest News 8.25 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 8.30 Under The Radar Paul and Jeff introduce archive footage from Architects, Alan Vega, Gong, and Edwyn Collins. 9.00 Queer Say Andrew Kay's look at LGBT news and media from around the world with the help of his studio guest. 9.30 Queer Say Andrew Kay's look at LGBT news and media from around the world with the help of his studio guest. 10.00 Bowlegs Live tracks from Frànçois and The Atlas Mountains, Gazelle Twins, Courtney Barnett, His Clancyness, Islet, and Abi Wade. 10.30 The Arun Valley Postcard Trail Burpham. 10.45 Guy Lloyd's 2-Minute Telly Show 10.50 FILM: Peyton Place 1957. Drama. 1.55am FILM: The Party's Over 1965. Drama.
6.00am FILM: Born Of The Sea 1949. 7.00 Hawkeye & the Last of the Mohicans Frontier wives hope to join their husbands in time for Christmas. 7.30 FILM: Nell Gwyn 1934. Period drama. 8.55 FILM: The Cariboo Trail 1950. Western. 10.35 FILM: Shadow of A Man 1954. Crime drama. 11.55 FILM: The Sicilians 1964. Crime. 1.10pm FILM: The Wicked Lady 1945. Drama. 3.15 FILM: The Winslow Boy 1948. Drama. 5.30 Turn of Fate 1957. Stars David Niven, Robert Ryan & Charles Boyer. Dramatizations that depict the plight of people who are suddenly involved in unexpected and perilous situations. 6.00 Latest News 6.30 The Vote Guests from the world of politics discuss local and national issues. 7.00 Best of Brighton Lights Richard Shayler takes a cheeky look back at Latest TV's magazine programme Brighton Lights. 7.30 Our Town Local history quiz testing contestants on their Brighton knowledge. 8.00 Latest News 8.30 The Easy Riders The Easy Riders, Danny John-Jules and Steve Keys, are back as they take on the challenge of biking from London to Brighton but... they've decided to do it the wrong way round! 9.00 Tales From The Margins Professor Rainer Schulze presents a series of films looking at issues affecting LGBT+ people around the world. 10.00 Pizz Off Young people from all over Brighton compete in a pizza making competition judged by Mayor Mo Marsh. 10.15 FILM: Bespoke Overcoat 1955. Drama. 11.00 The Gentle Touch Killers. 1980. Directed by Tony Wharmby. Stars Jill Gascoine, Leslie Schofield & Nigel Rathbone. Maggie Forbes, recently promoted to Detective Inspector, reaches a crossroads in her life. 12.00am FILM: The Rough and the Smooth 1959. Drama.
LMB-Poster_FP Ad 27/09/2018 12:40 Page 7
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