Celebrating Black History & Culture

05 Fest in Lewisham

05 Fest in Lewisham

With Lewisham being the Mayor’s London’s borough of culture this year, the award-winning playwright and performer Inua Ellams has teamed up with creative’s and producers to offer a line-up of poetry and spoken word, in collaboration with We Are Lewisham. 05Fest is to be held from 10th to 19th March in different local venues. I Am History talked to creative producer Deborah Yewande Bankole to find out more.

Inua Ellams

“Inua is a dear friend, and a creative kindred spirit,” says Deborah Yewande Bankole. “So it was a pleasure to think about collaborating again. First we wanted to celebrate the moment, finally coming out of the pandemic’s restrictions. Lewisham is where Inua lives and he has this weird obsession with the number 5, we both had a desire to work with friends again, so that’s where we started.” 

The creative producer Deborah and Inua started by sitting down to discuss the best ways to represent Lewisham, as a place and as a community. They invited artists who had experiences and memories in their neighbourhood to contribute. “There is much history here; so we first explored it,” she says. “Many of the contributors and the obvious audience have lived here their entire life and have a lot to say to celebrate their home. A lot of events are also just a reason to have a big party! We’ve missed that so much. After our poetry reading, we’ll have DJ sets, dancefloors. We want to be together again and make it special.”

05Fest offers five different events in five different spaces. Some are already recurrent, like R.A.P. Party, which consists of some poetry reading, matched with the choice of a track. They other events make their debut and Deborah, who’s also a South East Londoner of a Nigerian background, hopes they’ll be performed again some day. 

“It’s a marriage of the old and the new for us,” she adds. “We obviously want to appeal to some old allies from our communities, poets and performers, but also attract people who don’t know the borough. We want to present Lewisham as coming back big and bold after this pandemic.”

The acclaimed author of the Barber Shop Chronicles is himself bringing his new play, A Block of Flats, to Lewisham, for one night only, in the form of a rehearsed reading at The Albany theatre. “It has an incredible cast and director,” according to Deborah, “ look forward to the event as it’s a very intimate way for Inua to share his new work. It also deals with very current issues, from climate change to the need for more empathy and kindness.” All set on one night in London…

New Play: A Block of Flats

Ellams wrote: “I wrote A Block of Flats to try and understand folks who lived where I once did, in a block of flats in Brixton. I interviewed them, but the story could be set in any major city anywhere in the world, where the forces of class, capitalism, migration, gentrification and ageism work their ways into our lives, into our very bodies, and cloud us from really seeing each other. All this is framed by climate change, which poses the biggest threat to our way of life. It is a lyrical poetic study of characters with intersection stories, and there’s a huge sci-fi twist I hope audiences will appreciate.”

The programme of events also includes Search Party, a spontaneous and audience-led poetry show, which most recently was performed at the Donmar Warehouse; Poetry Film Hack, a viewing experience of a chosen film to be expanded with live poetry readings to deepen or highlight its themes. For the Film Hack, cult 80s film Babylon will be screened, then Inua Ellams will join a line-up of poets to share new work – “their words and verses responding to its social commentary and life-affirming themes”.

Twitter Poetry Workshop will be a mass participatory creative writing session to take place in real time on the social network. And R.A.P Party will be closing the festival. 

Twitter Poetry Workshop

In the press release, Ellams says: “I’m ecstatic and lucky that this inaugural 05Fest is happening in my own neighbourhood. I’ve worked with the Albany for over 10 years, and I hope the community in Deptford and across Lewisham come out to celebrate and explore themselves and local creativity at these 5 events next month.” 

“The Borough of Culture invites each year people to visit a different part of London, a city where many live an isolated existence,” Deborah adds. “So we hope that art can be an invitation, and that we’ll also manage to invite new audiences to South East London.”

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