BARBER SHOP CHRONICLES Will Make its New York and BAM Debut

By: Nov. 22, 2019
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BARBER SHOP CHRONICLES Will Make its New York and BAM Debut

Following two sold out runs at The National Theatre in London, a successful run at London's Roundhouse, and a world tour, Nigerian-born playwright Inua Ellams' acclaimed Barber Shop Chronicles makes its New York and BAM debut December 3-8. The sold-out sensation explores the diversity of Black male identity via the intimate community of the barber shop, where men across the African diaspora have gathered for 2 generations to discuss the world and their lives. Filled with passion, humor, and honesty, the celebrated work is inspired by Ellams' own experiences as an immigrant.

Directed by Bijan Sheibani, Barber Shop Chronicles follows the conversations and concerns of a group of African men as they interact in six different barber shops in London, Lagos, Johannesburg, Accra, Kampala, and Harare. The all-male, 12-person cast riffs on topics both personal and political-from sports to race relations to views about fatherhood, identity, immigration, and masculinity. Music and dance knit together the individual episodes in this fastpaced production. A mastery of humor, pace, and wit, the story takes place over a single day as characters, jokes, and plotlines traverse continents and cultures. Barber Shop Chronicles is presented in its New York premiere at Next Wave 2019-the first season under Artistic Director David Binder, in which all artists are making BAM debuts. The season runs through December 2019 and includes theater, dance, music, film, site-specific, and multi-genre work across BAM's venues and off-site, as well as Holiday programming.

www.bam.org/barbershopchronicles

Additional Event

A Ballad for Harlem Conversation: Making Community Co-presented by the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture In conjunction with Barber Shop Chronicles At the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (515 Malcolm X Blvd.) Dec 2 at 6:30pm A conversation about the convening power of the barber shop and beauty salons in Black communities around the world. Panelists include Kamal Nuru (Levels Barbershop and Barber World TV), Quincy Mills (Cutting Along the Color Line: Black Barbers and Barber Shops in America), Polo Greene (Harlem Masters), and more. For more information visit www.nypl.org/events/programs/2019/12/02/ballad-harlemconversation-making-community

Born in Nigeria in 1984, Inua Ellams is an internationally touring poet, playwright, performer, graphic artist, and designer. He is an ambassador for the Ministry of Stories and has published four books of poetry: Candy Coated Unicorns and Converse All Stars, Thirteen Fairy Negro Tales, The Wire-Headed Heathen, and #Afterhours. His first play, The 14th Tale, was awarded a Fringe First at the Edinburgh International Theatre Festival and his fourth, Barber Shop Chronicles, sold out its run at England's National Theatre. He is currently touring An Evening with an Immigrant and recently premiered The Half God of Rainfall, a new play in verse at Birmingham Repertory Theatre and Kiln Theatre, London. In graphic art and design, online, and in print, he tries to mix the old with the new, juxtaposing texture and pigment with flat shades of color and vector images. Ellams lives and works from London, where he founded the Midnight Run, a nocturnal urban excursion. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

Bijan Sheibani was artistic director of the Actors Touring Company (2007-10) and associate director of The National Theatre (2010-15), where he directed A Taste of Honey, Emil and the Detectives, Romeo and Juliet, Damned by Despair, The Kitchen, War Horse (US tour), Greenland, and Our Class. His other theater credits include: Dance Nation (Almeida); Circle Mirror Transformation (Home, Manchester); The Brothers Size and Eurydice (Young Vic/Actors Touring Company); Barber Shop Chronicles (National Theatre/Fuel/West Yorkshire Playhouse); and Romeo and Juliet (National Theatre). Opera credits include Nothing (Glyndebourne) and Tell Me the Truth About Love (Streetwise Opera). 3 Fuel produces an adventurous, playful, and significant program of work-live, digital, and across art forms-for a large and representative audience across the UK and beyond.

Director Kate McGrath met playwright Inua Ellams in 2008, after McGrath saw the beginnings of his first play, The 14th Tale, at BAC. Fuel helped Ellams develop and produce the production, premiering it at the Edinburgh Festival, winning a Fringe First, touring it in the UK and internationally, and presenting it at The National Theatre. Since that first meeting Fuel has worked closely with Ellams, producing Untitled, Knight Watch, The Long Song Goodbye, Black T-shirt Collection, The Spalding Suite, and Barber Shop Chronicles since its inception. Fuel is also currently touring Ellams' An Evening with an Immigrant, using poems, stories, and extracts from his plays to tell his life story and immigration experience. Other Fuel works include: David Greig's adaptation of Touching the Void, Inua Ellams' The Half God of Rainfall and the ambitious human rights project, Fly the Flag with Ai Weiwei.

For ticket information, call BAM Ticket Services at 718.636.4100, or visit BAM.org

Photo Credit: Marc Brenner



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