Congratulations to the "sex kitten" of TV chefs Nigella Lawson, who steps into the shoes of previous hosts Dame Mary Berry and Dame Prue Leith as the new presenter of The Great British Bake-Off.
It's another snippets post, dear reader:
- Calling all higher voices news: There is apparently a worldwide shortage... of tenor singers! Will the next Pavarotti please stand up?
- Hoorah for heritage fanatics news: Thanks to a fundraising campaign that brought them support from trusts, benefactors and the public alike, a gorgeous heart-shaped gold pendant linked to the ill-fated marriage of Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon, found by a metal detectorist in Warwickshire, has been secured by the British Museum for permanent display for the nation. I want to see this...
- Old people need music radio too news: Boom Radio, the independent radio station established by, and specifically aimed at, the so-called "baby-boomer" post-war generation will celebrate its fifth anniversary on 14 February. Three cheers for the plucky older generation!
- Brutal(ist), indeed news: The hideous concrete monstrosity that is London's Southbank Centre [the 1950s adjunct to the otherwise OK Festival of Britain survivor the Royal Festival Hall, it encompasses the Queen Elizabeth Hall, Purcell Room and the Hayward Gallery, and was later joined by the National Theatre next door, and the British Film Institute (BFI) after that] has become a Grade II listed building. It's still depressingly ugly.
- Muddled history news: It is once again LGBT History Month in the UK and, unlike in its heyday when Camden & Islington LGBT+ Forum actively facilitated loads of events that appealed to all sorts of groups whot vaguely sat under this stupid "alphabet soup" banner, and we always found at least one or two events to go to, there's not a lot that appeals. Not for several years, more's the pity. It's all "trans" this, "queer" {{shudders}} that and "lesbian" the other; at least in our locale.
One event did indeed catch my eye, however - a touring dramatisation of a long-forgotten radio script from the BBC all about homosexuality in an age when it was completely illegal: Stephen M Hornby’s play The BBC’s First Homosexual. Unfortunately, and possibly inevitably since its London run is a) cheap (£5) and b) hosted at the teeny-tiny Cinema Museum in Kennington [which I have been dying to visit], it's sold out! As is the centenary celebration of the irrepressible Kenneth Williams at the British Library. Dammit. - And finally: Sad news arrives of the death of Mr Des de Moor. Latterly known for his passion for real ale and his writings about the subject, he seems an unlikely candidate for a tribute here - but his name rang a bell when I saw it in the obituaries. With very good reason - for, way back in 2003, I happened to purchase a copy of a real oddity: his tribute CD to David Bowie, in cabaret style, with the late Russell Churney [of Fascinating Aida and Julian Clary fame] Darkness and Disgrace! And here, for your delectation, are two tracks from it:
And the weather? Shit.

That concrete "hideosity" that is Southbank's "Shining Tower" is a blight on the City. (just my humble opinion!)
ReplyDeleteThe whole Southbank complex is incredibly ugly - yet it hosts some magnificent entertainment. Tip - go there, and take in the view from one of its balconies - it's the only vantage point from where you can't actually see it blighting the view of London!! Jx
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