Are you a performer with a personal passion for mental health? Do you want to be an advocate for mental health through your performing art? Invisible Cabaret wants to see you!
Tag: performers
LGBTQ BPD Advocate, Lucy Dickson, on The Invisible Cabaret Podcast (S2:E4)
Performer/producer & Crazy Ex-Girlfriend superfan, Lucy Dickson, joins us to chat about her experiences as a queer artist and activist with BPD/ Emotional Dysregulation Disorder.
Burlesque Performer, Demi Noire on The Invisible Cabaret Podcast (S2:E3)
The Soul Sista Showgirl, Demi Noire, joins us on our latest episode, out now! A bad-ass, generous and authentic performer, Demi talks to Ferrero Rochelle & Rosie Verbose about her visions for life after #lockdown, the effects of a performance-less year on a performer’s #MentalHealth, and how she deals with the competitive nature of the entertainment industry, plus much more.
Mateo Oxley on The Invisible Cabaret Podcast (S2:E2)
Such a joy to talk to lovely actor/singer/writer Mateo Oxley about the ‘highlights reel’ nature of working as a performer. Have a listen to Ferrero Rochelle and Rosie Verbose as they chat with Mateo about anxiety, procrastination, gratitude, confronting theatre gremlins, and being a proud cat Dad.
Rubyyy Jones on The Invisible Cabaret Podcast (S2:E1)
Rubyyy Jones gives us perspective, wisdom and life as they expand on all things creativity and mental health. How do we create sustainable performance rooted in real feeling? How do we keep seeing the beauty in the world when it’s also cruel and gross? How will London ever recover from Rubyyy moving back to Canada?!?
Time To Talk Day – Recorded Live! (S1:E18)
As we round up Season 1 and embark on Season 2 of The Invisible Cabaret Podcast, we thought it was time to push the boat out and try something new… Thank you to everyone who joined us for our first ever LIVE podcast recording, which took place on our Instagram! What better way to celebrate Time To Talk Day than by having a good old chat about mental health? This year’s theme was ‘The Power of Small’, which Ferrero Rochelle and Rosie Verbose enjoyed exploring alongside interjections from our lovely Insta-audience.
Podcast Episode 17 – Theatre Maker, Guy Woolf
The Invisible Cabaret Podcast about is all about mental health and creativity. This week, we are joined by a stalwart friend of Invisible Cabaret: the multi-gifted, sickeningly talented Guy Woolf. Guy is an actor-director-composer-singer-advocate; you can see why he tends to go by ‘theatre maker’, just to save on hyphens. We chat with Guy about feeling his way through a career in the arts, checking and redressing privilege, and how his dog benefits his mental health.
Guy Woolf, Theatre Maker, on The Invisible Cabaret Podcast (S1:E17)
The Invisible Cabaret Podcast about is all about mental health and creativity. This week, we are joined by a stalwart friend of Invisible Cabaret: the multi-gifted, sickeningly talented Guy Woolf. Guy is an actor-director-composer-singer-advocate; you can see why he tends to go by ‘theatre maker’, just to save on hyphens. We chat with Guy about feeling his way through a career in the arts, checking and redressing privilege, and how his dog benefits his mental health.
Podcast Episode 16 – Opera Singer, Bria Lovegrove
The Invisible Cabaret Podcast about mental health and creativity is delighted to start off the New Year by chatting to opera soprano, Bria Lovegrove (née Kelly). She shares her experience of how training as a professional classical singer affected her mental health, visiting areas such as OCD, perfectionism, self-medicating, the impact on her bank balance and the “grin and bear it” culture she experienced at conservatoire. Do the classical arts glamorise tragedy?
Bria Lovegrove, Soprano, on The Invisible Cabaret Podcast (S1:E16)
The Invisible Cabaret Podcast about mental health and creativity is delighted to start off the New Year by chatting to opera soprano, Bria Lovegrove (née Kelly). She shares her experience of how training as a professional classical singer affected her mental health, visiting areas such as OCD, perfectionism, self-medicating, the impact on her bank balance and the “grin and bear it” culture she experienced at conservatoire. Do the classical arts glamorise tragedy?