Everything’s Coming Up Pinkies: A Musical Theatre Spectacular

Concert: Saturday 20 July 2024, Cadogan Hall, Sloane Square.

Concert: Saturday 20 July 2024, Cadogan Hall, Sloane Square.

Join the Pink Singers, Europe’s longest-running LGBT+ choir, at Cadogan Hall for a celebration of all things musical theatre!

Everything’s Coming Up Pinkies will feature songs from a range of musicals, including A Chorus Line, Company, Les Misérables, and Cabaret as well as a celebration of queer musical theatre stories with songs from Rent, Fun Home, Kinky Boots, The Color Purple, and many more.

This concert will be conducted by Olivia Doust, the Pink Singers’ newly appointed Musical Director and will feature a guest performance from Ballet in the Park

You won’t want to miss this singing and dancing spectacular so get your tickets now! VIP tickets include a free programme, glass of bubble and slice of rainbow cake!

Duration: approx. 2 hours (including a 20 minute interval) 

Hometown Concerts – Liverpool

As part of our 40th year celebrations we are running a series of ‘Hometown Concerts’. The idea behind the series is that choir members take The Pinkies home to towns and cities that we have not visited before but have a special place in the hearts of our members. Kicking off the country-wide tour, our scouse duo Rachel and Darren took us to Liverpool for an amazing weekend. Over to Rachel…

Rachel, Soprano

Growing up in Liverpool definitely gave me a strong sense of social justice and an appreciation of good music, so it’s no wonder that, since living in London, I’ve found a home in this choir. Recently I had the joy of bringing these two things I love together, taking the Pink Singers to visit my home city. 

The idea of a hometown visit came about when planning celebrations for the 40th anniversary of our choir. Members of the Pink Singers have come from all kinds of different places across the world and across the UK. The idea was to take our choir’s message, music and vision of an LGBTQ+ community back to the hometown of one of our members. We would connect with local LGBTQ+ choirs, foster solidarity and reach communities and audiences that we wouldn’t otherwise encounter. So over the last year, I’ve been working with Darren, another scouse Pink Singer, hatching plans to visit Liverpool. 

On the march with our 40th Anniversary banner

After months of planning with two local LGBTQ+ choirs, the Liverpool Rainbow Chorus and the Proud Marys in Chester, and Liverpool Pride, our weekend in Liverpool began on a Friday evening where we brought the three choirs together to get to know each other and rehearse ahead of our performances on Saturday. As we welcomed and introduced members of the choirs, and finally met our fellow organisers from the other choirs in person after months of planning as a team spread across three cities, Darren and I couldn’t quite believe we had really made all of this happen. But it was when we began singing together that the magic really started. I don’t think there’s anything more uplifting and bonding than singing together in harmony, knowing we all have this experience in common – and by the end of the evening we had made new friends. The atmosphere was amazing, and it sounded great. 

On the march!

On Saturday we had the honour of kicking off Liverpool’s Pride March together on the steps of the iconic St George’s Hall. This year Liverpool was also hosting Kyiv Pride, a poignant reminder of how we must not take for granted the safety and security that allows us to celebrate and protest together as a community, and sending a message of solidarity across borders. It was an emotional moment being joined by our friends from the other two choirs in our Pink Singers’ rendition of You’ll Never Walk Alone to send off a record-breaking colourful crowd of 20,000 people on Liverpool’s Pride march. 

The energy was high as we sang and danced our way along the parade through Liverpool’s city centre and down to the waterfront. In the afternoon, we had our second performance, in the beautiful venue of the Museum of Liverpool, where we shared some of our Pink Singers favourite songs, cheered and danced along to brilliant performances from our friends in the Liverpool Rainbow Chorus and the Proud Marys, and sang together as a joint choir. Having my family and friends in the audience made this a particularly special moment for me, and it was while singing Chosen Family that I reflected on how grateful and proud I felt to have this opportunity to bring together so many of the people I love in one of my favourite places and share this music. 

Performing in the Museum of Liverpoool

The rest of the weekend was spent enjoying all that Liverpool has to offer and soaking up the party atmosphere of Pride. I loved making these memories with my fellow Pinkies and enjoying my home city together. This hometown visit was a wonderful experience to bring the music of the Pink Singers to a new audience, come together with two fantastic LGBTQ+ choirs and spread our message and positive vision of a joyful LGBTQ+ community connecting through music. A powerful reminder that You’ll Never Walk Alone. 

Rachel, Soprano

Pink Singers awarded funding to celebrate their heritage

PRESS RELEASE: Pink Singers awarded a £94,625 grant by The National Lottery Heritage Fund to archive and celebrate the 40-year history of the choir through their project Sing it Loud, Sing it Queer.

The Pink Singers have received a National Lottery Heritage Fund grant of £94,625 for an exciting heritage project, Sing it Loud, Sing it Queer. Made possible by money raised by National Lottery players, over the next year the project will unlock the incredible history of the London-based organisation from its origins in gay liberation to its identity today as the UK’s longest-running LGBTQ+ community choir, turning 40 this year. The project will make the choir’s archive collections more easily accessible and will enable new ways to engage with the Pink Singers’ archive digitally.

Supported through The National Lottery Heritage Fund’s Dynamic Collections campaign, the project will enable people to discover LGBTQ+ history from the 1980s to now. It will unlock the many diverse stories of the choir through a new podcast series made in collaboration with Aunt Nell and a short documentary film made with Happenstance Films showcasing a brand new composition to celebrate the anniversary year. Volunteers will also learn new skills in archiving, research and oral history as the choir’s significant archives are prepared for donation to the Bishopsgate Institute, one of the UK’s most prominent archives on LGBTQ+ history.

Formed in 1983, The Pink Singers are Europe’s oldest mixed LGBTQ+ choir, internationally renowned for their music, activism, and close-knit community. Their membership is diverse; with ages ranging from 18 to 70, and representing many sections and experiences of LGBTQ+ life and intersecting identities, with members who come from all walks of life, representing a range of sexualities, gender identities, who are disabled, of colour, and who are parents. 

This project will enable the choir to understand and share its LGBTQ+ community histories now and into the future. The Pink Singers’ history reflects 40 years of change and growth for queer communities in the UK; its choir members have performed on the backbone of Gay Liberation and Women’s Liberation, through the HIV-AIDS crisis, the introduction and eventual repeal of Section 28, the repeal of the ban on serving in the armed forces, the Gender Recognition Act, civil partnership and gay marriage, as well as the ongoing struggle to maintain equality in the modern age and protect the rights of trans people and people of colour. Most recently they have encountered the challenges of supporting each other and bringing the choir successfully through the Covid-19 pandemic. As well as their work in the UK they have also travelled extensively abroad, joining and supporting their LGBTQ+ choral friends in places like India, marching for the repeal of Section 377, and Poland, protesting the LGBTQ+ free zones and war in Ukraine.

Commenting on the award, Chris Scales, the choir’s Archive Manager and Project Chair said: “We are thrilled to have received this support thanks to National Lottery players and are excited that the project will open up LGBTQ+ stories and the significant history of the Pink Singers to a new generation. Despite always being an ‘out and proud’ collective, as a grassroots LGBTQ+ community choir our journey of progress has often taken place under the radar. We are excited to unlock the many hidden stories of the choir and reflect on our place in society and legacy after four decades of activism and queer joy through singing”. 

Notes to editors

About The Pink Singers

The Pink Singers is an LGBT+ community choir based in London. Formed in 1983 for the Lesbian and Gay Pride march, they have grown to become a 100-strong group of amateur singers who come together to sing, perform and campaign for their community. They are made up of talented people representing a diverse range of sexual orientations and gender identities from all walks of life, who are united by a passion for singing great choral music.

About The National Lottery Heritage Fund

Using money raised by the National Lottery, we inspire, lead and resource the UK’s heritage to create positive and lasting change for people and communities, now and in the future. www.heritagefund.org.uk

Follow @HeritageFundUK on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram and use #NationalLotteryHeritageFund  

Since The National Lottery began in 1994, National Lottery players have raised over £43 billion for projects and more than 635,000 grants have been awarded across the UK.

Further information

For further information, images and interviews please contact Laura Owen, Project Manager of ‘Sing it Loud, Sing it Queer’ at laura.owen@pinksingers.co.uk or 07982044679.

Statement on the Right to Protest

The Pink Singers was founded 40 years ago as an inclusive community choir, a space for marginalised people to come together joined by our love of singing and our solidarity. The music we perform has always been a mixture of popular, classical, and political pieces, and our membership has a diverse range of views. We are however united by the continual struggle for LGBTQ+ civil rights. Our first ever performance was at the 1983 London Lesbian and Gay Pride march and we have been marching, singing and protesting at Pride ever since. Despite the many gains in rights and freedoms achieved  for LGBTQ+ people in the UK over the four decades we have existed, parts of our community continue to be persecuted, harassed, and legislated against. The fight is not over, and our presence at Pride – which is protest – is more necessary than ever. 

It is with dismay therefore that we witnessed last weekend the arrest of peaceful protesters in London during the Coronation, with some people being arrested merely on the suspicion that they were intending to protest. While this was happening a group of Pinkies were representing us at the Coronation Concert at Windsor Castle, performing as part of its ‘people’s choir’ to represent the diversity of the nation. We were asked to represent LGBTQ+ identities at this international event, and accepted as our founding principles are to be visible, out and proud, and if there is a choir that represents inclusive LGBTQ+ community in the UK, then it is the Pink Singers. But we cannot stand idly by while anti-protest legislation is forced upon us. 

Protest has played, and continues to play, an integral part in the LGBTQ+ community’s fight for our rights. From Stonewall in the US to Section 28 here in the UK, protest has formed the cornerstone of activism and has done much to progress the rights of LGBTQ+ people across the world. The arrests during the coronation weekend set a dangerous precedent regarding the right to protest in the UK that is incompatible with the needs of the LGBTQ+ community.

While these changes affect us all, trans, migrant and racialised communities are disproportionately affected by hostile anti-protest legislation. Any withdrawal of the right to protest follows reasoning that increased state power keeps us safe, even as we know that this is not the case for LGBTQ+ people of colour, LGBTQ+ migrants, and most trans people. The Coronation Choir sang the song ‘Brighter Days’ to reflect rising hope in the UK after the recovery from COVID-19, but with the recent and growing threat of legislative changes against trans people proposed by the UK’s own Equality and Human Rights Commission – widely condemned by UK LGBTQ+ charities, by a representative of the United Nations and reflected in the UK’s ongoing fall in the ILGA Europe LGBTQ+ rights rankings – we may yet see even darker days, and protesting these threats against our community is more important than ever.

In 2021 we took the decision to pause our participation in the Pride in London march while they addressed issues of systemic racism within the organisation. However this pause did not mean we stopped marching, and we have been taking our message of joy, inclusion, solidarity and protest to many other marches including London Trans Pride as well as Kyiv-Warsaw Pride in Poland. Since the events of last weekend the police have expressed ‘regret’ over the protesters’ arrests, but we cannot rest on our laurels. Making music is what we love and what brings us together, but we are also a family – a chosen family – and we need to take care of each other. This year we will be out together marching proud and singing in London, Liverpool, Northampton, Bologna and elsewhere standing up for our family and for what we believe in. We hope to see you there.

See us live in Hammersmith!

Join us for our concert “Sing! A Jamboree for all the family”:

3pm Sunday 24th October at 245 Hammersmith Road, London, W6 8PW

We enjoyed our first formal concert in 18 months so much that we’ve decided to do it all over again! Following hot on the heels of our successful and emotional performances in South and East London in September, we’re spreading the Pinkies magic out West.

We’ll be performing old favourites as well as beautiful new arrangements of songs that resonate with the LGBT+ community and living authentically.

Repertoire in this performance will include Together in Electric Dreams, Run, Strong, Brave, Proud and Chosen Family.

Tickets: Adults £10 (+ £1.37 booking fee);  Under 26s FREE!*

Tickets are available in advance via Eventbrite. Tickets will also be available on the day (again via Eventbrite), but we would encourage you to buy in advance to help with the smooth running of the event.

*For free tickets for under 26s email info@maxmusicianandartistexchange.com to get added to the guest list.  

After so long apart we are really excited to get to perform again and would like to thank Max Productions for inviting us to take part in their October programme of events.

“MAX Productions are delighted to work in partnership with Legal & General and Mitsubishi Estate London to present its ‘First Edition’ of events in the unique space of 245 Hammersmith Road. As the UK comes out of the pandemic, it is vital that great music making plays its part in the recovery of the community, and the nation as a whole. I am thrilled to present some of the finest UK based performers across our MAX events, and look forward to enjoying with our audiences. There is something for everyone, and everyone is invited.”

Andrew Watts, Artistic Director of MAX – Musician and Artist Exchange Productions Limited