Dictionary
cabaret
noun
Live entertainment held in a restaurant or nightclub; the genre of music associated with this form of entertainment, especially in early 20th century Europe.
Exact(60)
The gay donkey wends its way between cabaret artistes and their supporters in this crammed space, receiving affectionate pats and tickles.
What was pub cabaret has become street theatre.
Dan has booked the function room at Farage's local, the George and Dragon, for the cabaret, but told the landlord that the reservation is for a birthday party.
The Octagon Theatre, Thu to 23 May LG There's something for everyone at the Brighton fringe, from the Spiegeltent on Old Steine hosting 31 days of cabaret and circus – with talent including Camille O'Sullivan (2-13 Mand anDavid Hoylele (13 May) – to shows with pedigree such as Bucket Club's Lorraine & Alan (21 & 22 May) and Show And Tell's examination of grief, So It Goes (8-10 May).
About 70 people are gathering here before heading off to Nigel Farage's local pub in Kent – to stage a Beyond Ukip cabaret.
They're all sitting beneath a framed portrait of Charles Darwin, that lavishly bearded Victorian paterfamilias, who seems to be eyeing their cleavages during the rest of the cabaret.
The room proves far too small for the cabaret, not to mention the allied events: the Polish, Italian and Portuguese language classes, an HIV anti-stigma class, and a Gender Fluidity Fun workshop.
While the cabaret sets up, I join the UK Citizenship Quiz in the bar.
The Museum of London will be running a 1920s-inspired late-night event complete with Charleston dancing, cabaret, art nouveau craft sessions and a Bloomsbury-style salon (£7, museumoflondon.org.uk), while at the Natural History Museum you can join a night safari led by scientists who will talk about love and romance in the natural world (£28, nhm.ac.uk).ac.uk
Before Glass and the rest of his diverse cabaret descend (and let's hope they will) on David Cameron's local, they should think through what was good and bad about that strange and – but for 90 seconds – lovely Sunday in Kent, not least so they don't get outmanoeuvred again.
They called themselves "a cabaret of diversity" and were seeking to represent some of the groups Farage has offended: "Migrants, HIV activists, gay people, disabled people and breast-feeding mothers".
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