Black Boys - by Stephen Jackman-Torkoff & Tawiah M'Carthy & Thomas Antony Olajide & Saga Collectif (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Black Boys by Saga Collectif (Virgilia Griffith, Stephen Jackman-Torkoff, Tawiah M'Carthy, Thomas Antony Olajide, and Jonathan Seinen) uncovers the complex dynamics of the queer Black experience.
- About the Author: Saga Collectif, founded in 2012, is a theatre company that brings to the stage under-represented bodies and voices in a fashion that is risky, honest, and new.
- 144 Pages
- Drama, American
Description
About the Book
Theatrical and intimate, Black Boys weaves together the ensemble's own personal stories in search of an integrated self and a radical imagination while shining a light on new possibilities for young Black queer people.Book Synopsis
Black Boys by Saga Collectif (Virgilia Griffith, Stephen Jackman-Torkoff, Tawiah M'Carthy, Thomas Antony Olajide, and Jonathan Seinen) uncovers the complex dynamics of the queer Black experience. Text, movement, and design portray the rhythm and vulnerability of three very different Black individuals who seek a deeper understanding of themselves, each other, and of how they encounter the world. As they explore their unique identities, their performances rigorously interrogate and playfully subvert the ways in which gender, sexuality, and race are read and performed.
Theatrical and intimate, Black Boys weaves together the ensemble's own personal stories in search of an integrated self and a radical imagination while shining a light on new possibilities for young Black queer people.
Review Quotes
This is an exceptional, powerful, and quite delightful piece of work.
--S. Bear Bergman, Mooney on Theatre
Black Boys suggests that conflicts don't have to be smoothed over, but can be the beginning of creativity.
--J. Kelly Nestruck, The Globe and Mail
Theatre at its very best.
--Willow White, alt.theatre
About the Author
Saga Collectif, founded in 2012, is a theatre company that brings to the stage under-represented bodies and voices in a fashion that is risky, honest, and new. They dissect and dismantle, pose questions to unravel identity, ancestry, and place in society. They bravely challenge themselves to move into the unknown to discover personal truths, and hope to offer themselves as examples for those who see limits and choose to transcend them.
Stephen Jackman-Torkoff is a lover, a wandering poet, and a disco dancer. They were born in Toronto and raised in foster care in Richmond Hill. Stephen has acted in several productions across Canada, including Angels in America, Botticelli in the Fire & Sunday in Sodom, and The Glass Menagerie. Stephen is the resident poet with the Queer Songbook Orchestra and toured with them in October 2018 to ten cities across Canada. This year they will be working on a multidisciplinary solo piece called Die Phantasie. After spending a lot of time in institutions, Stephen is now immersing themself in creation and collaboration beyond institutional walls.
Tawiah M'Carthy is a Ghanaian-born theatre artist. His playwright/creator/performer credits include Blue Bird, Body 13, Obaaberima, and The Kente Cloth. Tawiah has worked with theatre companies such as the National Arts Centre of Canada, the Cultch, Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, Obsidian Theatre, MT Space, the Globe, and InterArts Matrix as an actor, playwright, and/or director. Tawiah is a co-founder of Blue Bird Theatre Collective and Saga Collectif.
Thomas Antony Olajide is a Dora Mavor Moore Award-nominated, Toronto-based actor from Vancouver, British Columbia, and a graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada. His film credits include Inhuman Condition and Mariner. Some of Olajide's theatre credits include Hamlet, King Lear, and A Midsummer Night's Dream for the Stratford Festival; Macbeth and The Winter's Tale for Canadian Stage; and The Whipping Man and Ruined for Obsidian Theatre. In 2014, he received the Stratford Festival's Peter Donaldson Award for Great Promise in Shakespeare and the Classics. Thomas is a recent graduate of the Canadian Film Centre's CBC Actors Conservatory.