• About
    • Ethics policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Ownership, funding and corrections
    • Complaints procedure
    • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
Brighton and Hove News
29 April, 2026
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Opinion
    • Community
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
    • Food and Drink
  • Sport
    • Brighton and Hove Albion
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
Brighton and Hove News
No Result
View All Result
Home Arts and Culture

Tickets for 50th Brighton Festival go on sale tomorrow

by Frank le Duc
Wednesday 17 Feb, 2016 at 10:22AM
A A
0
Festival guest director tells how Brighton can make anything – and anywhere – seem possible

Tickets for the 50th Brighton Festival go on sale tomorrow (Thursday 18 February) to members.

Guest director Laurie Anderson was unable to be at the launch event as she is working in Brazil but recorded a message praising England’s biggest arts festival.

The experimental performance artist said: “We’ll be doing a concert for dogs.” She said she’d be intrigued to see who would turn up.

The British premiere of Music for Dogs has been described as a concert specially designed for the canine ear.

She will also be screening her new film Heart of a Dog which she described as “full of stories about how you make a story … nominally a film about me and my dog but really it’s not. It’s about love and language”. A short preview of the film generated plenty of laughs. It will be a must for dog lovers.

The theme of the festival this year is not dogs but home and Laurie Anderson also plans an exclusive new performance monologue about place and places called Slideshow.

She said that there would also be “a freewheeling walk through sonic spaces” with two fellow musician-composers – pianist Nik Bärtsch and guitarist Eivind Aarset.

The press launch opened with a spoof retro-style look at the first festival in 1967.

Home-grown artists and companies are celebrated in a series of special commissions that include two works marking the 400th anniversary of William Shakespeare’s death.

Tim Crouch “cycled down from Hanover” to share details of the Complete Deaths, a re-enactment of every onstage death in Shakespeare’s plays.

Digging for Shakespeare by Marc Rees is a homage to 19th century Brighton eccentric and world-renowned Shakespearean scholar James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps.

Brighton playwright Neil Bartlett spoke about Stella, a theatrical love letter to one half of the infamous Victorian cross-dressing duo Fanny and Stella.

Other locally inspired highlights include a specially commissioned film Brighton: Symphony of a City, screened to a new score performed by Orchestra of Sound and Light.

And the entire Royal Pavilion estate will play host to Dr Blighty – “an ambitious, large-scale, immersive outdoor experience which highlights the untold story of wounded Indian soldiers hospitalised in Brighton during World War One”.

The festival starts as usual with the Children’s Parade – the largest of its kind in Europe – on Saturday 7 May with the theme “Brighton celebrates”.

Brighton Festival chief executive Andrew Comben said that the 50th festival would also see a record number of community-focused events.

These included the annual City Reads and Young City Reads produced in partnership with Collected Works and Future Gazers which asks school pupils to imagine the world in 50 years’ time.

Festival tickets go on sale to members tomorrow (Thursday 18 February) and to the public next week on Friday 26 February. For more information, click here. For ticket information, click here.

Support quality, independent, local journalism that matters. Donate here.
ShareTweetShareSendSendShare

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Most read

McDonald’s could be off the menu in Hove

City centre pub set to get its garden back

Fire service warns avoid area as crews tackle wheelie bin blaze

Tickets for 50th Brighton Festival go on sale tomorrow

Pub applies for 2.30am closing time

Tribunal orders doctor to be chaperoned when seeing female patients

Fewer homeless people being moved from Brighton to Eastbourne

Women’s stadium to be built next to the Amex

Hove home owner seeks consent for shared house revamp

What’s happening at the back of the houses and why

Newsletter

Arts and Culture

  • All
  • Music
  • Theatre
  • Food and Drink

Three Score Dance Previews Betwixt at Brighton Festival

29 April 2026
Time Keeps the Drummer

Time Keeps the Drummer

28 April 2026
Brighton Festival features corruption and revenge in world premiere

Brighton Festival features corruption and revenge in world premiere

28 April 2026
Chiaroscuro Quartet and Consone Quartet, Glyndebourne, 3rd May 2026

Classical Quartets At Glyndebourne

28 April 2026
Load More

Sport

  • All
  • Brighton and Hove Albion
  • Cricket
Simpson steers Sussex into strong position on day two v Hampshire

Sussex draw with Yorkshire at Headingley

by Graham Hardcastle - ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay
27 April 2026
0

Yorkshire 511 (139.2 overs) Sussex 502 (131.4 overs) and 324-8 (86 overs) Match drawn Yorkshire 13 points, Sussex 13 points...

Simpson steers Sussex into strong position on day two v Hampshire

Runs galore but Sussex look set for draw with Yorkshire at Headingley

by Graham Hardcastle - ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay
26 April 2026
0

Yorkshire 511 (139.2 overs) Sussex 502 (131.4 overs) and 31-2 (14 overs) Sussex (5 points) lead Yorkshire (5 points) by...

Simpson steers Sussex into strong position on day two v Hampshire

Runs keep coming on day two as Yorkshire host Sussex

by Graham Hardcastle - ECB Reporters Network supported by Rothesay
25 April 2026
0

Yorkshire 192-1 (60 overs) Sussex 502 all out (131.4 overs) Yorkshire (2 points) trail Sussex (4 points) by 310 runs...

Former Brighton and Hove Albion manager speaks about prostate cancer diagnosis

Former Brighton and Hove Albion manager speaks about prostate cancer diagnosis

by Frank le Duc
24 April 2026
0

Former Brighton and Hove Albion and Newcastle United manager Chris Hughton has revealed that he had prostate cancer diagnosed last...

Load More
February 2016
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29  
« Jan   Mar »

RSS From Sussex News

  • County historian to share tales of silly Sussex 20 April 2026
  • Two flee from flat as arsonist sets fire to barber shop below 18 April 2026
  • Four people convicted of plot to throw drugs and phones into prison 17 April 2026
  • July trial date set for boy, 16, charged with murdering teen 17 April 2026
  • Serious crash closes A23 just north of Brighton 17 April 2026
ADVERTISEMENT
  • About
  • Contact
  • Support
  • Newsletter
  • Privacy
  • Complaints
  • Ownership, funding and corrections
  • Ethics
  • T&C

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Opinion
  • Arts and Culture
    • Music
    • Theatre
  • Sport
    • Cricket
  • Newsletter
  • Public notices
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Contact

© 2023 Brighton and Hove News