\\\ brutus gold's love train ultimate spring boogie ///
Saturday 31st March 2012 8:00PM (1 month, 2 weeks ago)
Event Details
TICKETS OFFER BUY 9 GET ONE FREE
TICKETS £14.00 adv - £1.00 donated to Abbies Love)
CONTACT
01642 317141
Back by popular demand!!!
Featuring Live on stage
the legendary
" BRUTUS GOLD'S LOVE TRAIN"
(full show Live in Concert)
Door 8pm
Show 8.30pm
Carriages 11.45pm-Midnight
Food is available at venue (if required)
www.brutusgold.com
http://www.youtube.com/user/BrutusGoldTV
Twitter BrutusGold
buy your tickets early as the event will sell out!!!
TICKETS OFFER BUY 9 GET ONE FREE
TICKETS £14.00 adv - £1.00 donated to Abbies Love)
CONTACT
01642 317 141
POLYESTER OVERLOAD GET DISCOUNT FANCY DRESS HERE!!!!
Hey Groovers in need of some threads?wigs?and official'Brutus' tastes
Please go to Mardi Gras in Middlesbrough quote Brutus or Love Train and get 10% disco discount
01642250550 01642249936
Abbies Love Charity ♥
The charity was set up to help fund research into why children like Abbie Clarke, 10, from Coulby Newham become victims of sudden death syndrome. The youngster, who suffered from epilepsy, died in her sleep from sudden unexpected death in epilepsy in December2006.
DEVASTATED dad Richard Clarke will always hug only child Abbie close to his heart.
Under his T-shirt, a favourite image of the bubbly, pigtailed 10-year-old is tattooed on his chest.
Abbie’s name is emblazoned on his arms - and written discreetly on mum Tracy’s shoulder.
Almost two years after the trauma of their precious daughter’s sudden death, loving parents Richard and Tracy confess they don’t want to move on - don’t want to forget.
The walls of their Coulby Newham home are covered with happy, smiling pictures of Abbie. They fight back tears replaying videos of Abbie still on her phone.
They show a girl full of fun and promise, keen to sing like Britney Spears on TV’s Stars in Their Eyes.
“We have to believe one day we’ll see her again and we can’t wait,” said Richard at home in Coulby Newham.
Her “Pupil of the Week” certificate from Rose Wood Primary School still hangs in the kitchen alongside the 2006 calendar she made.
Abbie’s room, with unopened Christmas presents, is exactly as it was a terrible December morning when her mum couldn’t wake her.
“She told us what she wanted in June,” said Tracy, who works at Tetley’s in Eaglescliffe.
“She was always in a hurry. Like she knew there wasn’t enough time.
“We just can’t believe she won’t walk in and be with us again. Our world has been shattered.”
The blue-eyed, blonde youngster was their life and soul - and without her, they say, nothing is the same.
Richard 44, who works at Corus, and 37-year-old Tracy can only make sense of her death by trying to help others.
Abbie, a lively picture of health, died from Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy even though she rarely suffered fits and they had never been warned her life was in danger.
Around 500 die nationwide each year from the condition and proper information is not given to the 456,000 who suffer from epilepsy.
Tracy and Richard say they were horrified to discover there is no epilepsy specialist at James Cook University Hospital in Middlesbrough.
They still feel guilty that not enough was done to keep Abbie alive. “We would have moved heaven and earth to buy a monitor for her if we’d known the risks,” said Richard.
“People know little about the condition and are not being warned of the dangers.”
Now Tracy and Richard have raised over £54,000 to help make sure no other family has to suffer the same pain.
Hundreds of family, friends, school and work mates have organised dozens of events for Abbie’s Love charity to fund research at
James Cook and help sufferers on Teesside.
“We were determined the money should stay in our area,” said Tracy. “Doing this has given us a reason to keep going.”