Monday 16 August 2021

NEWS: Full programme announced for Mansfield's ONEFEST 2021.


OneConversation and Ingenious Fools present

OneFest

Various venues across Mansfield, 13th – 19th September 2021

 @OneFestNotts | #OneFestMansfield | onefest.oneconversation.co.uk

 

The inaugural OneFest launches in Mansfield this September with a buzzing programme of performance and discussions celebrating learning disabilities and neurodiversity. Stemming from a collaboration between OneConversation, an activist group campaigning for the rights of learning disabled and autistic people, and Ingenious Fools, a Nottingham-based production company, the week-long event includes headline comedy acts, lively panel discussions, live music and workshops. The innovative festival positions itself as an opportunity for learning disabled and autistic individuals to experience culture like anyone else, take part in workshops that are usually not on offer to them, create new friendship networks through raucous parties and social opportunities, and generally access society in an equitable way.

OneConversation co-founder Tracy Radford said “We want to ask the question of why society seems to place little value on the rights and lives of learning disabled and autistic members of our world: we are not satisfied, and neither should you be! Try your hand at life drawing (yes, actual naked people!), record a pop song, learn how to have a voice and become an activist, make new friends and generally start to feel more satisfied.”

On Monday 13th September, the annual OneWalk will launch the festivities. Attendees to the accessible march are encouraged to respond to the theme #AreYouSatisfied?! and make banners and visual materials which highlight their frustration with how they are still stigmatised and segregated from the world. The march will help foster a sense of inclusive community spirit and solidarity among people who both are and are not learning disabled or autistic.

Alongside Monday’s march, an outdoor stage will be set up in Mansfield’s Market Square for live performances. Inspired to get those feet moving or arms in the air by pop anthems and beats from Back Chat Brass, attendees will witness rousing speeches from influential speakers and enjoy live music and an ‘after party’ at Capo Lounge.

The festival’s first comedy event takes place on Tuesday evening at Capo Lounge with performances from the learning disabled and autistic people who have taken part in a stand-up comedy training programme. Meanwhile, throughout the week there are free accessible workshops and events, which are co-curated with the learning disabled and autistic community.

Friday night offers the chance to see Unanima Theatre’s State of Independence. Join Unanima’s company of storytellers as they take us through the tensions and messiness of being learning disabled and autistic. How this is experienced, how this is ignored, and how this affects aspects of identity and cultural capacity in society today. Unanima is a Mansfield based, disabled led theatre company.

Saturday and Sunday see a weekend of comedy headlined by Britain’s Got Talent winner Lee Ridley (aka Lost Voice Guy) come to Mansfield. The individually ticketed programme of one-hour long comedy and theatre shows opens on Saturday afternoon with Jonny Awsum’s The Kids Show, a music-filled family show suitable for everyone aged five and over. Jonny is followed by Juliette Burton: ReDefined, a solo show that evolved out of her earlier piece, Defined, which – along with the rest of her life – was dramatically disrupted when the COVID-19 pandemic occurred. Saturday closes with a performance by Lost Voice Guy, which comes after the runaway success of his sold-out debut tour in 2019.

Sunday’s events open with panel discussion Are You Satisfied? A panel discussion in which some of the stars of OneFest and the OneConversation activists debate why society seems to find it so difficult to value learning disabled and autistic people. Get involved and help us maintain our movement for change.

Comedy comes from Cerys Bradley at 3.30pm, who is performing Sportsperson, a show about playing sport, fitting in and being bad at both. Aaron Simmonds then brings Hot Wheels to OneFest, a raucous comedy show that includes commentary on the positive aspects to being disabled. Finally, comedian and mental health advocate Harriet Dyer who closes the evening with a performance of new material.

OneFest is also offering five learning disabled and autistic people the chance to have arts industry mentoring and become OneFest creative leaders. The scheme will help the five people build their careers and help mould the future cultural landscape of Mansfield.

More details can be found at: onefest.oneconversation.co.uk


OneFest, Mansfield, 13th – 19th September 2021

 

The Old Library Theatre, Leeming Street, Mansfield, NG18 1NG, 07713 498 708
 

OneWalk and outdoor stage
                                                                                            ACCESSIBLE MARCH
Market Square                                                                                                        Monday 13 September, 11am

Opening this year’s festival is the annual OneWalk. The accessible march invites everyone to join together with the learning disabled and neurodiverse communities and campaign in solidarity. For 2021, marchers are given the opportunity to create banners connecting to the theme #AreYouSatisfed?! which highlight their personal dissatisfaction with how society treats them. Throughout the day, live music will be performed on an open-air stage in Market Square.

OneWalk after party                                                                                                                  AFTER PARTY
CAPO LOUNGE                                                                           Monday 13 September [from 4PM. FREE]  

The opening day’s festivities conclude with a welcoming after party for people to chat, share a beer and enjoy the ‘Guilty Pleasures’ disco hour

Comedy night                                                                                                                                COMEDY
CAPO LOUNGE                                                                                           Tuesday 14 September [8pm, £5]

Showcasing the learning disabled and neurodiverse talent that OneFest has been developing through a 6 week stand up comedy course, this night will see new comics take to the stage for the very first time and show us what they are made of. Who will be crowned as OneFest’s New Comedian of the Year?

Jonny Awsum: The Kids Show                                                                                                       COMEDY THE OLD LIBRARY THEATRE                                                                          Saturday 18 September [2pm, £5]

Family favourite, Jonny Awsum opens the weekend comedy line-up with a warm and welcoming interactive show suitable for those aged five years and over. Featuring music, jokes and lots of chances to singalong – or even take part in the show – this bubbly peice from a Britain’s Got Talent contestant is sure to put a smile on everyone’s face. Recommend age 5+. BSL interpreted.

Juliette Burton: ReDefined                                                                                                            COMEDY
THE OLD LIBRARY THEATRE                                                               Saturday 18 September [4pm, £7/£6]

In March 2020, Juliette Burton was on tour with her show Defined. Then, everything changed. Like many of us, Juliette saw her life and work radically restructured due to the coronavirus pandemic. So why not change everything a little bit more? Juliette’s back with a show about re-defining all areas of your life, from the small and personal to the large and political. Recommended age: 14+. BSL interpreted.

Lost Voice Guy: Work in Progress                                                                                                 COMEDY

THE OLD LIBRARY THEATRE                                                      Saturday 18 September [7:30pm, £10/£9]

 

Drawing on his success as a Britain’s Got Talent winner and his first-hand experiences as a disabled person, Lost Voice Guy (Lee Ridley) is here to get everyone laughing again after a tough 18 months. He still doesn’t have a Georgie accent, but he does have some brilliant brand-new material which will have the audience in stitches. Recommend age: 16+. BSL interpreted.

 

Are You Satisfied?                                                                                                       PANEL DISCUSSION
THE OLD LIBRARY THEATRE                                                                Sunday 19 September [2pm, FREE]

A selection of comedy stars from the OneFest join up on stage with some of the activists who masterminded the festival, as well as local leaders to get down and dirty discussing why society finds it so easy to treat learning disabled and autistic people like they are worth so much less than everyone else. A provocative examination of who or what is to blame, and most importantly what we can all do to end this vicious cycle. Not to be missed. Recommended age: 14+. BSL interpreted.

Cerys Bradley  ‘Sportsperson’                                                                                                      COMEDY
THE OLD LIBRARY THEATRE                                                               Sunday 19 September [3.30[m, £7]

A show about playing sport, fitting in and being bad at both. Also about being non-binary, embarrassed about wearing lycra and how spending your childhood in a car whilst your parents watch your brother play football definitely doesn’t leave you with a chip on your shoulder.
Recommended age 16+ BSL interpreted

Aaron Simmonds: Hot Wheels (Work in Progress)                                                                         COMEDY
THE OLD LIBRARY THEATRE                                                           Sunday 19 September [5:45pm, £7/£6]

Aaron Simmonds was given a nickname. And he thinks he hates it because it reduces him to just being a man in a wheelchair. But he also kind of loves it because it’s a great nickname. Join Aaron as he discusses the untold positives to being disabled, whether that’s blue badges or having sex in disabled toilets. Recommend age: 18+. BSL interpreted.

Harriet Dyer (Work in Progress)                                                                                                      COMEDY
THE OLD LIBRARY THEATRE                                                            Sunday 19 September [7:30pm, £7/£6]

Award-winning comedian and mental health advocate Harriet Dyer takes to the stage with a work-in-progress show based around her unique ability to find humour in tricky situations. Silly and serious all at once, Harriet’s new memoir Bipolar Comedian was released during lockdown. BSL interpreted.

Supported by Arts Council England


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