Bom-Bane's

Jane Bom-Bane's statue, with a revolving tray on her head, outside the café

Bom-Bane's is a café and performance venue founded in 2006 by Jane Bom-Bane, in George Street, Brighton. It is known for its singing staff and eccentric décor.[1] In 2012, Bom-Bane's featured on the Canadian reality television show, World's Weirdest Restaurants[2] and in 2016 on BBC Radio 3's The Verb.[3] In 2007, Bom-Bane's won the ThreeWeeks Editors award for the best venue in that year's Brighton Fringe Festival.[4]

Venue

Nick Pynn unveils the statue on 1 September 2007, the café's first birthday

The small downstairs area is the main live venue, where past performers include Nick Pynn, Kate Daisy Grant, Stewart Lee, Bridget Christie, Mike Heron, Robin Williamson, Boothby Graffoe, Lorraine Bowen, Arthur Brown, Spacedog, George Egg, Joanna Neary, Foster and Gilvan, David Bramwell, Gilli Bloodaxe and Jerry Dammers.[4] Each May, for the Brighton Fringe Festival, Jane Bom-Bane and her 'Bom-Bane Family Players' perform a musical, which often takes place throughout the building.

Each table in the upstairs dining area has a 'mechanical secret.'[5] One table top imperceptibly rises, another slowly revolves, and another contains a model of Brighton's Palace Pier, with working rides. Chimes ring out when customers lift the salt cellar on one table, and another has a screen showing 1920s black and white cartoons of Aesop's Fables. The tables were mainly built by Bom-Bane and her then partner, Nick Pynn. In 2007, she told the Guardian, "We stay up late and work together. I'll be busy painting and moulding the tiny parts, he'll be fixing a circuit."[5]

The café regularly shows films and also runs occasional courses on art, photography, cryptic crossword solving, film, baking and singing.[6] There is a children's homework club on Wednesday nights. 'One of the charms of the venue', writes Daniel Agnew, 'is how young children turn up to do their homework and are treated with the same respect as the musicians rehearsing in the Moroccan parlour downstairs. Indeed, the café possesses so many surrealist twists you would be forgiven for thinking the venue had originally been conceived in a dreamy child’s mind.'[7]

Bom-Bane's first statue was built by her brother-in-law, John Jostins, creator of the original R2D2 from Star Wars.[8] During the night of 1 December 2012, thieves stole the statue from the wall of the restaurant. Jane Bom-Bane told the Argus, 'I feel like my alter ego has been snatched. It has no use or value to anyone else, but it is a part of us.'[8] With the theft unsolved, puppeteer Isobel Smith organised a collection from café regulars to raise money for a new statue. The second one, built by the artist Paul Harrison, was unveiled on 11 January 2015. The original statue was later recovered and now sits in the dining room.

Jane Bom-Bane

Jane Bom-Bane was born Jane Bayley in Leek, Staffordshire.[9] After moving to and growing up in Coventry, she became lead singer of the Two-Tone band, the Swinging Cats, who released one single, 'Mantovani'.[10] In the 90s, she went solo, playing the harmonium and singing her own songs, while wearing a selection of mechanical hats, which 'light up and turn and move in various ways'.[11] A typical hat takes the form of an animated goldfish bowl, which appears in a youtube clip from World's Weirdest Restaurants. Presenter Bob Blumer described her hats as 'part genius and part outsider art. What I love about the hats is that they are not highly polished, finely tuned specimens. They are more like little kinetic high school art projects that sit on your head.'[2]

The idea to open a café came to Bom-Bane while running a monthly musical event in Brighton with Nick Pynn. She told Brighton's Source magazine, "I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be great to have your harmoniums and your hats in one place, and have a little venue down stairs, have a little café upstairs.’ I thought originally it’d just be me and the café, and play a few songs every now and then. It just evolved into what it is now, which is involving lots of other people playing, cinema clubs and all manner of stuff going on."[11]

The café opened on 1 September 2006. Interviewed on the opening's tenth anniversary, Bom-Bane recalled, "I'd never run an eatery before, so the first year of Bom-Bane's was a steep learning curve. It wasn't until the second year that I put the music part of the plan into action."[6]

Performances

Bom-Bane's the Musical

Jane Bom-Bane, Nick Pynn and Rosi Lalor perform 'Bom-Bane's the Musical', 30 May 2008

The tradition of employing 'singing staff'[1] began when Bom-Bane hired Rosi Lalor and Candy Hilton. Bom-Bane told Source magazine: 'Bom-Bane’s mark two, in terms of the people who worked here, involved a lovely girl called Rosi and her friend Candy. I just thought they were perfect for the place, but both turned out to have amazing voices and were really great at harmonising. I thought ‘I’ve got to harness this!’ And so, that became Bom-Bane’s The Musical. I wrote all these songs about setting up Bom-Bane’s, and the food, and everybody got involved.'[11] 'Bom-Bane's the Musical', which included songs written by Lalor and Hilton, was first performed in the Brighton Fringe Festival in May 2008, and ran over the next two years.

Lalor has said it was while working at Bom-Bane’s that she "learned how to hold her head up whilst singing her songs. Jane also taught her how to enunciate her lyrics properly so that people could understand what she was saying. ('Rosi, you’ve spent ages writing these beautiful words, people deserve to hear them!')"[12]

A Musical History of 24 George Street

For her 2011 fringe show, Bom-Bane researched the history of the building, writing songs about its previous occupants. According to the Argus review, 'Over the course of an evening – and a three-course dinner – audience members are taken on a musical journey through time. The building’s story is told simply through song, from 1795 when the house was built, through to the present day....The performers recount the stories of the many families who have lived there over the years, from musical instrument maker William Baker in the 1830s to bicycle dealer Mr Moreman in the 1950s.'[13]

Jane Bom-Bane’s House

In 2012, Bom-Bane first used the whole building as the setting for her fringe show. A small audience of four was led upstairs by Bom-Bane, singing a health and safety warning about the staircase, to the bathroom, 'where we were confronted by a beautiful tableau, accompanied with a song by the hostess. Next, the living room, where a rotating series of guest performers are made up of famous friends of Jane’s doing wonderful and curious things. Then up another flight of steps to a display of Jane’s infamous mechanical hats from previous productions, all impressively animated to a new musical number. Then up more stairs for a surprise performance in the attic, and finally to the master bedroom for a final song....Members of our party were audibly cooing and gasping at each new discovery, until we were, at last, led carefully back down the winding, narrow staircases into the restaurant for an all-you-can-eat-buffet....A magical end to a magical evening.'[14]

5 Down 20 Across

In May 2013, to celebrate the centenary of the crossword puzzle, Jane Bom-Bane created '5 Down 20 Across', which turned the building itself into a puzzle. In FringeGuru, Richard Stamp described '5 Down 20 Across' as a 'site-specific piece that lets audience members explore the whole building, poking around in the bustling kitchen and sneaking around the owner’s flat upstairs. The idea is to complete a crossword puzzle (you can choose from cryptic, quick or a kids’ version) – but the clues are hidden on the doors of the building, so the only way to find them is to take part in a treasure hunt. There’s a black and white theme to all the clue-laden doors, which have each been decorated by a different artist along the theme of ‘black and white’. When all the clues are found you can settle down to complete your puzzle, with a snack box of food that’s also black and white – even down to the pudding. The attention to detail really is the icing on the cake. It’s a simple, striking idea, brilliantly executed. And host Jane Bom-Bane – dressed in black and white – is on-hand for charming assistance if you get stuck....It’s not quite a show – but it’s entertaining, fun and distinctly off-beat, which means it’s certainly at home on the Brighton Fringe.'[15]

Merrily on High

The Silver Swans (l-r: Emma Kilbey, Eliza Skelton and Jane Bom-Bane)

In 2013, Jane Bom-Bane wrote a Christmas musical, 'Merrily on High', which was performed throughout December. This featured puppetry by Daisy Jordan or Barely Human Puppets, with singing by the madrigal folk trio The Silver Swans, comprising Bom-Bane, Emma Kilbey and Eliza Skelton, who is also the café's chef.

The Long Lost River Song

Bom-Bane's 2014 May fringe show was inspired by Brighton’s lost secret river, an intermittent stream called the Wellesbourne.[16] Five audience members were invited to follow the river, as it flowed its source in the attic to 'a sea-bound chorus in the cellar, followed by a feast of foods foraged en route.'[17] Rachel Blackman described the show in Fringe Review: 'We are invited into her bedroom for one act and her bathroom for another. We trace the river through rooms in the house, all the way down to the restaurant level, gathering cast members as the river itself gathers momentum. Finally we land in the restaurant area where we are fed a three course meal of simple, delicious fare sourced locally.'[18] For this show, the company comprised Jane Bom-Bane, Eliza Skelton, Foz Foster, Colin Uttley, Freya Bowyes, Martin Peters, Lynne Thomas, Sarah Angliss and Daisy Jordan.

Saippuakivikauppias

Bom-Bane's 2015 fringe show was called Saippuakivikauppias, which means 'The Soapstone Seller' in Finnish, and is also thought to the longest palindromic word. This was a second collaboration between Jane Bom-Bane and the puppeteer Daisy Jordan. The show dramatised a tale originally written, in verse, by Bom-Bane in 2002, the year of the Palindrome. The audience followed the Midgard Serpent down into the underbelly of the cafe, where 'the tale of a troubled craftsman driven and hampered by his compulsion to remain symmetrical was told through song, puppetry and animation.' [19] The songs were sung by Bom-Bane, Martin Peters and Eliza Skelton. The performance was followed by a Finnish meal, created by André and Anna Schmidt, including mackerel pate, Firewater (vodka and cranberry juice), meatballs (veggie meatball option included) and Mustikkapiirakka (blueberry pie).'An all-round sensory treat, this thoughtful existential fable effortlessly sucks the audience into its beautifully rendered world,' said Nick Aldwinckle in The Argus.[20]

Bom-Banimals

The lion in Bom-Banimals, the 2016 musical

'Bom-Banimals', in May 2016, was an animal themed fantasia, again taking place throughout the building. An audience of six was invited to move from room to room, encountering a series of musical animals (Eliza Skelton, Foz Foster, Kate Daisy Grant, Raven Kaliana, Jo McDonagh, Sebas Contreras, Kate Vaughan, and Tom Walker). Rachel Blackman described the experience in Fringe Review: 'We barely manage to squeeze into each of the modest spaces with the performers who gradually accumulate and eventually outnumber us. In each room we meet a different animal, all of whom must sacrifice a beloved item in order to find their authentic voice....if there is a message to be had, it is a light one, but touches on the notion that if we love someone, giving a piece of ourselves is a risk, but can pay off one hundredfold....And a plea maybe for the ongoing existence of this kind of intimate, real time, unrepeatable experience, where the value to each of us is so much more rich, raw and indescribable than the price of a ticket.'[21] The show was also reviewed in Total Theatre and received five stars from the Argus.

References

External links

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