Homotopia: Bigger And Better Than Ever Before In 2014.

Having secured their future for another 3 years with renewed Arts Council support, Homotopia is delighted to present the 2014 festival packed with exciting national premieres (DV8), regional firsts (Andy Warhol and Catherine Opie exhibitions) unique collaborations (Fenella Fielding and Le Gateau Chocolat) and exclusive appearances (Terence Davies) that appeal to audiences gay and straight alike.

This year’s festival sees Homotopia continuing its partnership with the Walker Art Gallery (Opie) and forging new partnerships with Liverpool Playhouse (DV8) and a marketing partnership with Tate Liverpool (Warhol).

In a year dominated by the equal marriage vote here in the U.K.  Homotopia interrogate faith and sexuality with ‘In Conversation With Terence Davies, Vicky Beeching and Peter Tatchell in the Diva Debate. They also look to Africa where several nations have passed or are considering anti-gay legislation with Le Gateau Chocolat and Mojisola Adebayo.

They also look back and celebrate queer history with U.S. Company Force/Collision (Jarman) and former Bloolips performer Nick Phillips (Ecce Homo).

Full festival listings can be found at www.homotopia.net

The Gang: Photographs by Catherine Opie

4th October 2014 to 15th February 2015 at the Walker Art Gallery

The first solo U.K. exhibition for this renowned American artist outside London. Opie’s portraits of her friends from the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered and queer community subvert American archetypes. Opie’s attempt to make visible a misunderstood sector of American culture produces a body of work that is at times explicit and challenging in its content, but also playful and intimate. The exhibition has been organised with the kind support of the artist, the Stephen Friedman Gallery in London and Homotopia.

David Hoyle present David’s Place

1st – 22nd November at Fall Out Factory, Dale Street

Performer and artist David Hoyle presents a new exhibition exploring addiction, gay culture and mental health which premieres at Homotopia. In his first solo exhibition for Homotopia, Hoyle has created a stark and uncompromising series of paintings and collages reflecting his own life experiences. ‘David’s Drop In’ – on Saturday 1st, Sunday 2nd and Saturday 8th November at 2pm David will be hosting a drop-in at the gallery exploring his artistic practice and background to this new collaborative exhibition.

Rainbow Jews

Saturday 1st to Tuesday 25th Nov at the Unity Theatre foyer

Rainbow Jews is a unique oral history and archive project, exploring the intersection of Jewish and LGBT identities. Discover how the stories and experiences of LGBT Jewish people have shaped British culture from the 1950s to today. Explore the truly diverse range of Jewish voices: Ultra-Orthodox lesbians, bisexual rabbis, gay Holocaust survivors and transgender activists.

Force/collision present ‘Jarman (All this maddening Beauty)’

Tuesday 4th and Wednesday 5th November at the Unity Theatre

With text by Obie-winning U.S. playwright Caridad Svich and film and audio content featuring over 40 performers Force/Collision founder John Moletress performs this sensual meditation on beauty, love, sex and mortality attempting to capture the essence of artist, film-maker and queer cult figure Derek Jarman. Manipulating film and sound whilst performing live, Moletress unravels his own story of survival as an artist.

Le Gateau Chocolat presents Black

Thursday 6th and Friday 7th November at the Unity Theatre

A Homotopia commission last year Black returns after a successful run at the Soho Theatre, London. Classically trained opera baritone and cabaret legend Le Gateau Chocolat presents his life story from Nigeria to Brighton via the Sydney Opera House stage. With a repertoire ranging from Wagner, and Purcell to a show-stopping, heart wrenching version of Whitney Houston’s ‘I Wanna Dance With Somebody’ this production exudes warmth, humour and pathos. “Throughout the performances Le Gateau’s voice is a treat. Within a few bars we hear growling despair, softly-spoken hope and soaring joy.” Exeunt Magazine

Polari Salon featuring Jonathan Harvey

Thursday 6th November at the Unity Theatre

Winner of the 2013 Co-operative Respect LGBT Cultural Event of the Year author Paul Burston hosts an evening with V. G. Lee and Liverpool favourites Jonathan Harvey, Clare Campbell and Gerry Potter.

Transmitting Andy Warhol

7th November – 8th February 2015 Tate Liverpool

Transmitting Andy Warhol presents the first major solo exhibition in the north of England that focuses on Warhol’s expanded practice. Bringing together over 100 artworks including; the iconic Marilyn Diptych, the entire print run of his trailblazing celebrity magazine Interview, as well as the extraordinary stage-set for The Velvet Underground, discover how Warhol’s practice spanned every medium, transforming the way we consume culture today.

Fenella Fielding in My Scouse Voice

Friday 7th November at the Unity Theatre

Fenella’s career has stretched over 7 decades and encompassed Carry On films, Ibsen plays, stage musicals and the Morecambe and Wise Show. Now she returns to Homotopia to lend her instantly recognisable seductive vocal tones to poetry by Gerry Potter. A night of unique collaborations and conversations as Le Gateau Chocolat joins Fenella and Gerry on stage.

Terence Davies In Conversation

Saturday 8th November at The Black-E, George St, L1

Liverpool born Terence Davies talks about his long illustrious career as a filmmaker, growing up in post war Liverpool and the conflict between his homosexuality and faith. Davies is arguably one of the most distinct English voices in modern cinema, renowned for the meticulous care that transforms each new release into a highly anticipated cultural event. A member of the distinctive generation of BFI- nurtured directors whose ranks notably included Derek Jarman, Sally Potter, Bill Douglas and Peter Greenaway. “Regarded by many as Britain’s greatest living film director” Nick Roddick, London Evening Standard.

Scars On Sunday ‘A Honky Tonk Mass’

Sunday 9th November at Frederik’s, Hope St, L1

An irreverent night of cabaret, worship, song and dance starring David Hoyle as Noele Gordon as ‘herself’. With special guests, comedians David Mills & Debs Gatenby.

Dance Triple Bill

Tuesday 11th November at the Unity Theatre

Body of Light by Darren Pritchard – Uses the Microsoft Kinnect sensor to mix human movement with computer imagery. My Empty Closet by Connor Quill – the emotional struggles of a gay man raised by lesbian parents. O Maria by DeNada Dance Theatre – A tale of ham and bondage, where a divine apparition unleashes a torrent of unquenchable passions for an oddly paired couple in 50’s Seville.

Diva Debate ‘You Gotta Have Faith’

Wednesday 12th November at the Unity Theatre

Join Diva editor Jane Czyselska and veteran human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell to discuss faith with Christian commentator and musician Vicky Beeching, Rose Neelam, a muslim and Project Director of Safra, and lesbian Rabbi Ariel Friedlander.

 

Scars On Sunday ‘A Honky Tonk Mass’Thursday 13th November at the Unity Theatre

American comic David Mill’s sharp suited cocktail swagger and hilarious rants come to Liverpool. An hour of jokes skewering celebrity, the gays and modern life. Equal parts witty banter and salty sarcasm.

Nick Phillips in Ecce Homo

Friday 14th and Saturday 15th November at the Unity Theatre

In this intimate epic cabaret, with touches of 30’s Berlin, music hall and Broadway, Naughty Nickers dishes up tales of his time with the legendary Bloolips, his 34 year romance with Dr Jeffrey and how he left his heart and much more in San Franscisco. His personal recollections become not only a love story but a testament to the social history of the gay movement from the late 1970’s to the present.

Mojisola Adebayo Retrospective

Saturday 15th November at the Unity Theatre

Performer and playwright Mojisola presents excerpts from her work including the powerful ‘I Stand Corrected’ which was created with support of the British Council South Africa as a response to so-called ‘corrective’ rape of lesbians. “…there are very few plays that receive an almost unanimous standing ovation on a press night. It goes without saying that I Stand Corrected was my favourite production of the year.” Iman Qureshi, DIVA Magazine

Bambi (Documentary)

Thursday 20th November at Picturehouse at FACT

Directed by Sébastien Lifshitz, the film is a profile of Marie-Pierre Pruvot, an Algerian-born trans woman who had a long and prominent career as a dancer and showgirl in Paris at La Carrousel Du Paris in the 1950s and 1960s, under the stage name Bambi, (where she also met April Ashley M.B.E.) before becoming a university professor. The film won the Teddy Award for Best Documentary Film at the 2013 Berlin International Film Festival.

Debs Gatenby presents Hi Anxiety

Thursday 20th November at the Lantern Theatre

Hi, Anxiety explores one person’s (actually, two people’s…) experience of mental illness. With one in four of us estimated to experience mental illness, Debs Gatenby’s one woman show is a laugh out loud funny yet wistful look at how mental illness affected her and her mum. As Deb says, “It’s two breakdowns for the price of one, an emotional meal deal.

Truant, Homotopia and Oldham Coliseum presents Still Ill

Friday 21st and Saturday 22nd November at The Lantern Theatre

Ulster. The Troubles are over. Police stations are closing down. Sex shops are opening up. Tommy can’t believe all the changes, but then he bumps into Gary, his old friend and fellow fan of The Smiths. The two men start a dangerous affair that pulls Tommy back into a world of violence he hoped had disappeared. A tragic gay love story between ‘the jumped up pantry boy’ and ‘the boy with the thorn in his side’. Written by Billy Cowan. Directed by Joyce Branagh

Winner of Warehouse Theatre’s International Playwriting Award. Special Recommendation Verity Bargate Award.

Speaking Through Flowers

November 2014 – February 2015 at Liverpool Central Library & touring youth centres across Merseyside

Violence has no boundaries, homophobia and transphobia do not remain within national frontiers and it is found throughout all classes of society. With the sound-sculpture project Talking Through Flowers (Durch die Blume) artist Tobi Mohring has created a free-standing vase with metal blooms that can talk. The sound sculpture project aims to raise awareness, inform and to encourage people to listen to the experiences of other people.

A link to their brochure can be found herehttp://issuu.com/homotopia/docs/homotopia_2014_1.9_web