Andy Hamilton, Brighton Festival 2019 review - gently amusing night of reminiscence

Comedy writing perennial spends an evening answering audience questions

Taking place at the Theatre Royal, Andy Hamilton’s show is entitled An Evening with… rather than a straight stand-up and mainly consists of the comedy writer/performer and gameshow regular answering audience questions. During the first half this is done via raising a hand and shouting out questions; during the second half by leaving pieces of paper on the stage front during the interval.

Chilly Gonzales, Brighton Festival 2019 review - an intimate and exhilarating evening

★★★★ CHILLY GONZALES, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL Intimate and exhilarating evening

The perfect evening of piano for sheer pleasure

Chilly Gonzales sits for so long at the piano, in his smoking jacket and slippers, before commencing his first song that I wonder if this is a John Cage moment. It’s a stark contrast to his energy at the end of the gig, where Chilly (real name, Jason Beck) is stamping both feet in marching motion, his whole body hunched and rocking, hair flicking as he pounds the low keys with virtuosic intensity.

Dead Dog in a Suitcase (and other love songs), Brighton Festival 2019 review - a feverishly foul-mouthed musical comedy

★★★ DEAD DOG IN A SUITCASE, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL 2019 Feverishly foul-mouthed musical comedy in Kneehigh's frantic Beggar's Opera reimagining

Timely revival for Kneehigh Theatre's frantic Beggar's Opera reimagining

Five years ago this Kneehigh Theatre production caused a stir with its vibrant modern retelling of John Gay’s 18th century satirical classic, The Beggar’s Opera. It’s currently on tour again and it’s easy to see why a revival was greenlit.

Ben Okri, Brighton Festival 2019 review - adventures in writing

BEN OKRI, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL A conversation with the novelist, playwright, poet and essayist

A conversation with the novelist, playwright, poet and essayist on why we all need to question everything more

If there’s one thing to learn from Ben Okri in this evening of conversation at Brighton Festival between the Famished Road writer and author Colin Grant it’s how to “upwake”.

British Paraorchestra: The Nature of Why, Brighton Festival 2019 review - it's a happening!

★★★★ BRITISH PARAORCHESTRA, BRIGHTON FESTIVAL It's a happening!

Onstage melee of players and audience that is as much about human experience as music

The Nature of Why is not so much a concert as a multi-discipline happening. To assess it is to relate a human experience rather than just an aesthetic appreciation of the new orchestral work by Goldfrapp’s Will Gregory which is at its heart. On the surface, it’s an hour-long piece in nine short movements, interspersed with old BBC recordings of the Nobel Prize-winning American physicist Richard Feynman explaining how magnetism is unexplainable in layman’s terms.

Rokia Traoré: Né So, Brighton Festival review - an Afro-psychedelic head-fry

Focusing mainly on her last two albums the Malian musician hypnotizes her audience

The last thing many were expecting from Rokia Traoré’s opening appearance at this year’s Brighton Festival was an Afro-psychedelic head-fry, yet she and her four-piece band prove thoroughly capable of swirling our minds right off out of it. When she returns at the end of the concert and announces she’s going to play one last song. A voice shouts out, “Make it a long one!” Happily, it is.

Vox Motus: Flight, Brighton Festival 2019 review - a novel and moving experience

Astounding combination of theatre and installation tells the wrenching story of two Afghan child refugees

Flight is a show by experimental Scottish theatre company Vox Motus, adapted from the novel Hinterland by Caroline Brothers. It’s about two Afghan child refugees making their way across Europe to the fabled land of “London” and is based very directly on her own interviews with asylum seekers as a journalist. So far, so narrartively straightforward but Flight is unlike anything most people will have seen.

10 Questions for Musician Will Gregory

10 QUESTIONS Goldfrapp's Will Gregory talks physics, Moogs, Morricone and the British Paraorchestra

The Goldfrapp mainstay talks physics, Moogs, Morricone and his work with the British Paraorchestra

Will Gregory (b.1959) is best known as one half of the alt-pop duo Goldfrapp but has a long career in music that dips into many areas. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s he was a working musician who toured with multiple bands, notably, Tears for Fears, as well as playing on sessions for albums by artists ranging from The Cure to Portishead. He is a multi-instrumentalist valued for his saxophone and woodwind playing (from Moondog and Michael Nyman to Peter Gabriel and it’s him on Spiritualized’s Lazer Guided Melodies), but as much for his general studio and arrangement abilities.

10 Questions for Musician Soumik Datta

10 QUESTIONS FOR SOUMIK DATTA The British-Indian sarod player on jazz, colonialism and film

The British-Indian sarod player talks jazz, colonialism, film and more

“I think we need to get rid of labels, certainly World Music,” insists Soumik Datta, who is both composer and musician, and has lived in the UK since the age of 11. “It is possible to be a musician in the Indian tradition, as well as an electronic musician, as well as a contemporary musician...

10 Questions for actress and playwright Nicôle Lecky

10 QUESTIONS Rising star of stage and screen Nicôle Lecky talks grime, feminism, sex work and more

The rising star of stage and screen talks grime, feminism, sex work, Nicki Minaj and SENSE8

Nicôle Lecky’s one woman show Superhoe has added fire to the reputation of an already fast-rising actress and writer. Based around Sasha, a Plaistow girl who aspires to pop stardom, it’s a clear-eyed, very modern play, filled with its central character’s motor-mouthed bravado and examining the Instagram generation’s relationship with sexual objectification. It comes to the Brighton Festival in May.