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Inua goes to Glasgow

2009-05-07 Travel Diaries.No1 // 23 April.

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In typical freelance fashion, I get an email inviting me to Glagow to share new work, anything, they just wish to have me there. And in typical freelancer fashion of grabbing any opportunity with both hands, arms and thigh death-clutch (see James Bond's Goldeneye) I jump on the opportunity, pack an overnight bag and speed towards the highlands, harr!

I loved Brave Heart, anyone Scottish reading this will want to decapitate and stuff my skull with haggis, don't get me wrong, I don't expect to see kilt clad barbarians charging around with swords, but I am exited about the land of macho skirts who throw trees for fun. As the train pulls outta London's Euston St at 8:30 and I settle into Coach B, seat 34a for the five hour journey, London's concrete mountains and tarmac hills slowly turns green and this elusive place called 'Outside London' breathes me in.

The coach is loud and full, I sit opposite a man named 'Phil' who complains of a headache but I tease from him: a job with BT and his loyalty to apple macs before the noise from the guys further down the isle in matching pink shirts, cackling loudly and air-kissing each other between sips of champagne gets to him. I smile at the stereotype, Phil puts his head in his hands and holds it there for the next 45 mins until he gets off.

Shunt.

It starts again, stops at another station, much in the way of trains, fills, empties, swallows, swells till the monotony sends me to sleep. I wake up in Carlisle. The coach is empty except for two raised heated voices I try not to listen until I pluck the word 'Arches' from their tirade. The Arches is the name of the venue in Glasgow I am to read at so I tidy myself up, approach them cautiously, Hi, my name is Inua...

Five mins later we are talking to the dozen, she wonders how on earth I slept through their much louder first argument, -isn't it a coincidence we are on the same train, you are playing the Arches too? you know Angie? - They are Nigel Barrett and Louise Mari. As Louise talks, Nigel chomps on Sushi. Lou reaches out, plucks a fallen piece of fish from his jumper, parts her lips, chews slowly and I know, before they tell me, that they've worked together for years and arguments are muck-common.

Arrival.

It clocks two when we pull into Glasgow Central. I want to explore the city so leave my new homies, load up Google maps on my mobile phone and trace through the city. Glasgow, like New York, is built in a strict grid system and the streets could easily be name4th Avenue, 5th Ave etc... Thankfully the Scotts guard their culture with brave hearts (sorry) and opted for actual street names. My goal is the Glasgow School of Art, to get there I pass 'Sauchiehall St', pronounced, I kid you not 'Sucky-hole' street. The child in me giggles to the surface and I walk into Sainsburys, TK Max and Superdrug asking each checkout girl, straight faced, 'erm.. sorry, what is the name of this street?' I turn right then left unto Renfrew Street, walk up the hill and I am the school of Art. It is a bustling place, resplendent in student chic, tight jeans and bleached hair, but I want to see their creations even though I know I can't ask for a guided tour.

I was once told by a creative consultant, “If you've got it, flaunt it, if you don't flaunt it more”, so I waltz through like a third year student, taking random lefts, rights, double-backs and walk through the first set of doors. It a studio where half born paintings struggle through canvas, sculptures freeze mid-forme. The darkly beautiful, green eyed girl behind a laptop tells me the good stuff is across the street near the café. I leave, cross the road into a white walled room stuffed with installations and sculptures... but find I prefer the half finished works.

Strong enough?

I end up in the student bar. It is red walled, well lit and half filled. I grab a tray and join the food queue. The guy behind the counter whose smiles like a welcome mat names himself Douglas. He says of his long list of rubbish jobs, this is the least rubbish and asks we where I am from. I tell him I am a writer from London, come to tell a story at the Arches, can he recommend something to eat? Like an MC calling out his crew, he points to steaming pots, listing off virtues, finally chooses the 'Mushroom Stroganoff' on a bed of noodles. I add chilli till its strong enough to take out most men, Douglas' jaw actually drops and I reply 'It's okay, I'm African'. I exit the bar and sprint towards The Arches.

The show.

'The Arches' does what it says on the tin. Very similar to London's Shunt, the venue is a series of well lit wide spaces under railways arches. There are 4 acts tonight, 2 per half. One comprises of four performers, the other, roughly twelve. Both experimental, brave performances.

2nd half. I am first up. I choose to read 'Knightwatch' a 15 minute story about gun/gang culture, friendship, loyalty and violence set in a stylised South London Estate. I perform slowly and deliberately, flitting between the three characters till the end. The moment after is interesting...

The brief between the narrative and the audience's response, where you wonder if they GOT you, is the real-est place to be. It lasts a few seconds, but in it you question... why am I here? why did I tell this story? have I just alienated these guys? does that even matter? These questions flood till the lights change. When I surface, there are whoops, boisterous hollers and the Arches echoes with such thunderous applause till I bow a second time, a third.

The guys from shunt get on to perform a hilarious 7 minute epic with video, sound effects, smoke, talcum powder and nudity that totally rocks the show. In Glasgow, the Londoners hold our own.

Home.

After the show, we go to the closest club which plays techno and bad dance. Too loyal to hip hop head, I won't rise to the occasion but chat happy till closing time. Outside, Glasgow's calm and the dark streets feel like London to me. Slightly tipsy, I tooter till the hotel, climb into bed and drift. The sun creeps in. I shower, eat a huge breakfast of croissants, fruit salad, mushrooms, sausages, hash browns, grilled tomatoes, eggs, muesli/cornfalkes and Oj on tap, rush through Glasgow Central's 9.30 train, part read, part sleep till London's Euston welcomes me home 5 hours later. A days passes where the swift of London life sweeps me up again, but through my website, an email comes:

“I felt compelled to leave you a message after seeing you perform in the Arches in Glasgow yesterday and even though I was lucky enough to thank you briefly afterwards, it just didn't seem enough for the amount of time and energy you crammed into your 10 minute masterpiece.

Maybe it was the way you spoke about city life - so emphatic and beautifully that I'm sure even the most estranged country bumpkin would have no trouble transposing your lucid metaphors into urban imagery. Or perhaps it was the fact that I felt I could relate to a lot of what you were talking about - growing up in South London can be pretty grim when you have no interest in social hierarchy and only use knives for buttering toast and sharpening pencils - but by the end of your performance I had tears in my eyes and dreams in my head.

Please keep doing what you're doing.”

This is battery enough to last me a month. It is all worthwhile. Till next time. Inua Ellams x

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Satanic Verses

Finally, I am reading Salam Rushide's master piece, the Satanic Verses. Gotta say I ma loving it, the dude is certainly gifted with the gab and am looking forward to Midnight's Children which apparently effortless shadows this. Such sculpture, such fine! He is wild with it. The section where he describes Saladin Camcha's face is titanic, and before that, where he talks of Gibreel's copulatory escapades, ending with “their forgiveness made possible the deepest and sweetest corruption of all... that he was doing nothing wrong” left me breathless. Anyway, swaying in the world of the book, I was jolted back to reality last night on the Northern Line by a lady who interrupted saying “Sorry to interrupt you, but that book is offensive and should never have been written, should not be read, it is offensive to the Muslim faith, to Prophet Muhammad, Peace Be Upon Him... that's all I wanted to say.”

I was shocked on a number of fronts. This was not a Muslim speaking, she was a white, early to mid 30s woman, blonde streaked brown haired, lil' too much make up if you ask me, red lipstick drawn over the cusp of her top lip, rich cockney accented lady, seething with righteous indignation. After confirming that she wasn't a Muslim, and telling her that I used to be one and did find is too offensive book, I ask her if she had read it...

No. So how do you know it is offensive. Because of what I'v read about it, it offends Islam and the prophet, Peace be upon him. But you have not read the book? ... No Well erm... art is subjective, I watched an interview of Salman Rushdie's and all he wanted to do was write a novel, a work of fiction about two men reincarnated as symbols of heaven and hell, infused with his heritage. People read it, took sections out and loaded it with their own ideas and interpretations of his intentions. Yeah but it should not have been written.

At this point I got a little peeved thinking about Ken Saro Wiwa, Wole Soyinka and the freedom to write. We kept arguing till her stop came, she got off. I wished her a good eve but as the doors closed and the train slipped into the darkness, I got un-peeved...

because of the irony... she was defending Islam, of which the same extremist factions that declared the Fatwa on his head, looks on western women with utter contempt and disgust, and secondly, that a book, a Magical Realist Novel written over 20 years ago still provokes debate.

That's wassup!

Here is the interview:

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News April 09

2009-04-09 News from Inua Ellams. 09/04/09 I get up at 6.30 every weekday. In the winter months I hold take with urban foxes. These days the sun wakes up before I do. It is definitely spring now, nature bursts back to life, to growth, to its basics. So, inspired, this month's mail is about themed: The Basics.

The Formula: 4 News Items / Smthn frm YouTube: THANKs // ARTICLE // DAYDREAM // BIC BIRO & INTER PEN // YoutTube: I MET THE WALRUS//

THANKs: THE 14th TALE// You'd think a show with just a torch & chair for props wouldn't have any hiccups? Well, you are right! Everything ran smoothly, even the late comers; the dude who walked through the stage three minutes after it started, the hospital light blowing up on the last night, it all worked, the 'vague order to things' rose. A relentless thank you to Michael, Thierry, Tom, Fuel, The Arts Council and all who came to The 14th Tale. Your warmth & willingness to 'go there with me' contributed to the show. I work well when the crowd and I breath together, enough to be teased with pause and poetry... All the nights were sold out. There is a lot of talk about the show, it'll be touring and stuff... I'll speak more when the time is right. But... thanks, I could not have asked for a better run. I am infinite with gratitude. Check out these 3 reviews:

http://moourl.com/ovxuo http://moourl.com/0ihsk http://moourl.com/fr1iu

ARTICLE// Very briefly. I battle constantly against the trend to pigeonhole poets, to label 'em as 'stage poets' or 'page poets', tis not good. As a result of this split, I know of so labelled 'stage poets' who refuse to read page works and 'page poets' who turn up their noses at those who work the stage. I am lucky; my work seems to cross the divide, but it is partly because I do not believe such a divide actually exists. Attempting to address this, I wrote an article for Culture Wars. Please follow link, read, add to the debate, lets talk about it: http://moourl.com/e6ls9

DAY DREAM DD06 // Under my editorship, 'DD06', The 6th Edition of Daydream Magazine, theme: 'Back to Basics' (I kid you not) is out. It hits the digital shelves on Monday 13th and tonight is the Launch Party. We have been busy preparing the brand new studio/gallery titled  'The  Carnaby Project' at 33 Marshall Street, London. It is a fantastic space with two floors of orginal artwork, photography, prints, books and lots more. It'll be open till the 25th of April. On the 23rd, we will hold a little Live Lit Show. Drop in. Literature contributors include Gemma Weekes, Naomi Woodis, Warsan Shire, Miriam Nash and Joe Kriss. It is 4 quid worth of words and gorgeous visuals. Get a copy from Monday. See Link. http://moourl.com/apiix

Liv Lit Show: 23rd April, 7.30 'Daydreaming at 33' Cost £3 Quid 33 Marshall Street, London W1.

BIC BIRO & A SHOW: INTER PEN FEST// In light of basics, I'm tryna make these fashionable. I mean, it is ubiquitous already. As sample of great industrial design, it cannot be improved on, its globally iconic, but its not yet a THING to use a BIC. So I am stripping back all the fancy fountain and ink gels and will BIC it till further notice. Who's wit me? In fact, I'm writing a poem that touches on it, with a Bic!

Now, I haven't stood still and read poetry to an audience in quite a while, but dates are coming in. The first is a late night event called 'Insulting Cabaret', part of the International (Bic?)PEN Festival 'FREE THE WORD'. International PEN empowers, societies and communities across cultures and languages through reading and writing. Also on the bill Catherine Millet, Christian Jungersen, Luke Wright and more.

InterPen: http://moourl.com/ma2cb

Insulting Cabaret: 17 April, 10pm.  Cost: £6 Place: Southwark Playhouse, Shipwright Yard London, SE1 2TF, UK

YOUTUBE: I MET THE WALRUS // Things that stand the test of time are simple, basic ideas. Like a message of 'HOPE' or a Bic Biro. Equally simple was John Lennon's timeless message of peace. So check this... in 1969, Jerry Leviatan, a 14-year-old Beatle fan, armed with a basic reel-to-reel tape deck, snuck into John's hotel room and interviewed him. 38 years later, Jerry produced a film about it. Using the original recording as the soundtrack, director Josh Raskin wove a visual narrative mixing Lennon’s words with multipronged animation. Raskin marries the genius (BIC?) pen work of James Braithwaite with digital illustration by Alex Kurina, resulting in this vessel for Lennon’s wit, and timeless message. Sit back, chillax a little, watch...

Stay Cool, Keep Warm. Inua Ellams x Out.

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News Mrch 09

I was about to begin with the 'can't believe we are in March, three months into 2009, ohmygod it is December already and Obama's radical conservatism hasn't cancelled itself out' introductory type talk.... but I can actually. I know exactly how time flew, why it did, that I wished it wouldn't, that you can find bits of it behind your sofa, bits of it if you kiss properly, and bits in a small dog called Sammy. But lets look to the future shall we?

The Formula: News Items / Something from YouTube LONDON WORD FESTIVAL // DUNDEE LIT // THE 14th TALE / THE 14th VERB // YOUTUBE: INUA ELLAMS

LONDON WORD FESTIVAL // Following '08's roaring success headlined by Saul Williams, Anthony Joseph, Joshua Ferris and Josie Long, the London Word Festival returns with an even more cacophonous, obscure, brave, boundary pushing line-up of the tragically cool London's East End Shoerditch chic ilk. (I've been practising that.) Tonight, comedian Phil Jupitus and poet Tim Wells discuss vinyl rarities and poems. Wed 11th sees 'Shakespeare in Shoreditch' five writers reinvent some of the bard's best works (e.g. King Lear becomes a Vain Hoxton Rockstar ). Sun 22nd - 'Webstock' is geek tailored, focusing on things 'bloggy, webby and whatnot' with comedians and poets fiddling with their digitalia and on the 24th, Ox Tales is strictly not for vegetarians. That is all I am saying. BUT THERE IS SO MUCH MORE. Stop by the website, find out and come, for the love of word, come. LINK: http://www.londonwordfestival.com/

DUNDEE LIT // My literary new year resolution was to send out more work to magz, anthologies and not fear rejection. Have to say it has worked. 80 percent of my submissions have been accepted online & print. This is one of the most recent... New Writing Dundee is a magazine published by the University of Dundee for the Scottish Population. I sent in a few poems and prose pieces and 'Leather Comets', a narrative about playing basketball in Dublin, was accepted yay!

In June I will be going up to Scotland for the Dundee Literary Festival, for the major launch party, but before then, after the 26th of March, NWD can be purchased for £5 at the Dundee Borders and Waterstones as well as online. LINK: http://www.dup.dundee.ac.uk/order.html Get it!

THE 14th TALE! / THE 14th VERB // TWO WEEKS AWAY! My first full length show, The 14th Tale on the 18/19/20th of March will be a part of the London Word Fest. Major rehearsals begin today and for the next 9 days I will be in the thick of things, a good few days of 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. rehearsals, repositioning, redrafting, the show must go oning and all sorts. I am looking forward to the challenge. Now, the world will try to distract me, that is its job, I accept that, but I'll stay steadfast and try to tie everything into the show.

The first distraction is a welcomed one. The show was born of two things: pressure from Roger Robinson and a writing assignment set by Roddy Lumsden who taught me in poetry at City University in London. On Wednesday the 11th, I will be discussing the play and reading bits of it for BBC Radio 3's The Verb. The other featured writer is, unbelievably... Roddy Lumsden! I tell you, there is a vague order to things... The show goes out on Friday and will be available on BBC Radio 3's website for 7 days. Make sure to listen, Roddy is quite a dude.

DETAILS for THE 14th VERB 9.15 // Friday 13th March BBC Radio 3 // www.bbc.co.uk/radio3

DETAILS for THE 14th TALE*** The 14th Tale // 8.15 // 18th, 19th, 20th March. Arcola Theatre // 27 Arcola Street E8 2DJ £9/£7 // Bx office No: 020 7503 1646 Bx office Web: http://moourl.com/end3y Facebook: http://moourl.com/4w1om

YOUTUBE: INUA ELLAMS // YEAH! About time I show one of mine... In 07 I met Jason Brooks, a film maker. I worked on a project for him lending my vocal chords to voiceover a short doc about cultural destabilisation caused by NGOs in Jomo, Kenya. We worked well together and wanted to do so again. Two years pass, The 14th Tale comes and after an hour of rehearsals, an hour of filming and three hours of rushed, pressured editing, (Jason travels a lot now) we teased out this excerpt , this taste of The 14th Tale. Sit back relax and watch. See you at the show x

Inua Ellams x Out.

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News Feb 09b

News from Inua EllamsReminder about The 14th Tale, my show at the Arcola Theatre in London, 18, 19, 20th March. The photos above were taken by Ed Collier of Fuel Theatre.

SPIEL // “Breath in.... Breath out...” This has become my mantra over the last few weeks. Tis funny how everything seems to happen all at once. Lupe Fiasco, one of my all time fave Hip Hop artists rhymes thus: “struggle! another sign that God loves you” Tis the constant want to make meaning out of meaningless, to explain away all the rough stuff that happens and see light at the tunnel's end.

Now, how does this affect the play? Well, amidst the hordes of darkness life chucks at us, check this... the space The 14th Tale will be shown in is completely different to the Battersea Arts Centre's (BAC) where the scratch was held last year. I was looking forward to relaxing into rehearsals, but no no.... at the BAC the audience sat in rows directly facing the stage. I'd look straight ahead and there they were, simple. Next month at the Arcola, the audience will be sat in 'U' formation, straight ahead as well as on my left and right. Drastic.

This means that instead of directing voice, drama, song etc in one direction, in front of me, I have to do this to three different sides. This means a lot of the show will change. From character placement to my psychogeography, what we can show, to whom, when and how through the story's journey. Essentially, the play takes place in a hospital. We are now considering setting this diagonally across the stage, using imaginary walls for the fight scene, placing the tree stage right instead, and other mammoth bits and pieces. Arghhh...

But if I do my job right (and I will) it'll be smooooth.

THE DETAILS // Again, here is what you need to know: The 14th Tale // 18th, 19th, 20th March. 8.15pm // Cost £9/£7 // Bx Offc: 020 7503 1646 The Arcola Theatre // 27 Arcola Street E8 2DJ Bx Offc: http://moourl.com/end3y

FUTURE + DESKTOP*// Lots of bits are in the pipeline. We are working on publishing the play, you should be able to purchase the book at the event, I will be reading parts of the show on BBC Radio 3's 'The Verb' literature show (more info coming in the next two weeks). We filmed the first 10 minutes, very soon to be edited and Youtubed, stay tuned. In the mean time, I created this for you lovely folks, it is a Desktop Bgk featuring the poster for the show. Download in Standard and Widescreen.

Go to or Click: The14thTale.zip

Stay Cool. Love and Light.

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News Feb 09

NewsI didn't mailout in Jan so this is me belatedly Happy-New-Yearing you, wishing you had a good break, lots of cheese, port (discovered I like this) and guilty mistletoe love. The year started with a bang in love, life and finance, I discovered a euphemism: “creative banking” to describe miniscule money management, everything is changing... but such is life's dynamism, its only promise, is not to. Its constant is inconsistency. We inhale, exhale and trust tomorrow to better today...

The Formula: News Items / something from YouTube The 14th Tale // Calling Maywell // Sara Shamsavari // YOUTUBE: GUINNESS

THE 14th TALE // Save the dates, March 18th, 19th, 20th. Yes yes y'all. To ye who saw it last year, the story is finshed. To ye who missed it completely, The 14th tale, my first full length narrative is round the corner. After last year's scratch run at the Battersea Arts Centre, Tom Chivers had whisperings with me of showing the finished story at The London Word Festival. Later that month, I had whisperings with Fuel, theatre company. We have now combined forces and are unstoppable. Captain Planet can't touch us.

Publicity says: “The 14th Tale is a free flowing mellifluous narrative that tells the hilarious exploits of a natural born mischief growing from the clay streets of Nigeria to the roof tops in Dublin, and finally to London. Inua vividly recreates the characters that punctuate his upbringing in deft and beautiful poetry, while challenging the audience’s expectations of what it is to be a young, black male in London today.”

It begins... “I'm from a long line of trouble makers, of ash skinned Africans, born with clenched fists and a natural thirst for battle, only quenched by breast milk.”

Come see! Look for it on Facebook. Details: The 14th Tale. // 18th, 19th, 20th March. 8.15pm // Cost £9/£7 // Bx Offc: 020 7503 1646 The Arcola Theatre // 27 Arcola Street E8 2DJ England.

CALLING MAYWELL // Last year, I started a 10 week course on play writing, just to experiment, try other written art forms. There were 16 others on the course run by the Soho Theatre, and it was real. I mean 'real' in the street speak sense. Hard core, fast paced, demanding, deadlines, the thick of things. I eventually churned out a 2 character, 20 minute script about a poet and his friend/nemesis/antithesis. I thought it was.... okay, so was completely shocked when it was one of the six chosen to be staged. A 'rehearsed reading' (pretty much exactly what you think it means) of the play happened at the Soho Theatre on the 26th of Jan and it was quite an experience.

Usually, when I write, I work out rhythm, intonation, breath control etc as I go, knowing I will read the created work. I tried not to do so on this occasion, to leave it all to the actors to sort out themselves. I had two brilliant award winning actors, but the gentleman playing the poet had by far the greater challenge and unfortunately could not quite get to grips with poems he had to 'perform'. I have never felt so naked on stage, and I wasn't even on it. It was revealing, I never saw the tightly structured, yet strangely loose way I write poetry until I heard it from the lips of another. There is a possibility of the play being developed, in any case the director of the project advised me to stick another feather in my hat. I am now a playwright. I want to do it again. Commission? Anyone?

LOVE IS CHANGE // I wish I could romance a camera, its ideals parallels poetry: both are concerned with capturing a moment, celebrating it and what is captured can only be of the present... they footnote and journal us. I subscribe to photography blogs as I can't keep up with real exhibitions, but one photographer I've followed is Sara Shamsavari. Last year, the lensed lady flew to Chicago to shoot just after Obama's victory and exhibited her findings in TopShop, Oxford St. London. The work was GOOD, colourful, vibrant, inclusive, real and her next exhibition begins today, Monday 9th, titled 'LOVE IS CHANGE'

Press release: “This exhibition of photography reveals love manifested in physical form. It provokes viewers to reflect on the particular conception of love expressed, and to consider how this relates to their own experience of love. In contemplating a photograph, our mundane perception is challenged: we see the world through the eyes of another and our understanding is transformed in the process. Love is Change!”

So at tonight's launch, I have been invited to read a poem or two on the theme of Love. Sara invites visitors to write down their thoughts on the power of love and these will be added to show, so go down over the next two weeks, check it out.

Details: Love is Change! // 9th-22nd Feb // 63 Broadwick Street // London, W1 // England

YOUTUBE: GUINNESS //Limerick:

There once was a black man in Dublin Who'd bet on horses stumbling. He died his hair blonde When a bet went wrong Now Guinness is what they call him!

I am a Guinness man. Extra cold. It sits in the belly like a meal. Musa Okwanga, Joshua Idehen and I have spent many a time over a pint of Guinness pint discussing pints of Guinness. The limerick above was written for a song during my ill fated attempt at rapping as part of Musa and Josh's band 'Benin City'... My father was a food technologist in Nigeria who worked to develop home grown ingredients for Guinness. They support a lot of Africa-related events, worked with the legendary Roger Robinson to release a cd of poems... anyway, it was my wish to be the first poet to do one of those cool Guinness adverts but a fellow poet beat me to it. But he is a friend, we have the same publisher, he did a great job, I bear no bitterness. This month's offering comes from Ainsely Burrows, Sit back and enjoy.

Stay Cool x

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News Nov 08

24. 23. Future? Hope. Election. Pencil. Nald. Southbank. Obama. McCain. Winter. My Birthday. Love. Life. New Apple Macs? Opera. The Last Genie. Rushdie. Fatwa. Seraphin. Winchester. KnightWatch. News. Lilly and the Ladybird. Things Lined with silver... snap shots of my October, what are yours? The formula: three news items and something good from YouTube: My FUNNY VALENTINE// THE LAST GENIE // BATTLE OF IDEAS // BARACK OBAMA.

My FUNNY VALENTINE // So. (I like beginning messages with 'So', it denotes a straight-to-business approach don't you think?). So, the Terrance Higgings Trust is the leading, largest HIV and sexual health charity in the UK. It has been running for 26 years, reaches out to 50,000 people year and does truly inspiring work. As a charity, the organisation runs on donations from nice, kind rich people, or everyday salt of the earth types wanting to do some good... In this light, lemme introduce Nick Bailey, a cheerful, charming, chap who has organised two fund-raising events for the trust; two Back to Back evenings of Classic Jazz, Great Music, Singers, Food, and I'll be there to drop a poem or two. ALL Proceeds go to the trust, there is a multi-prized raffle you qualify for when you buy a ticket, and you will get that warm fuzzy feeling we crave this time of year. Here is what you need to know:

Show: My Funny Valentine. Date: 29th & 30th November. Tickets: £10 - (for charity) Doors: 7.30 pm, Show: 8pm Contact: nick_bailey@hotmail.co.uk Phone: 07921 550 820 Venue: Pizza On The Park Add: 111 Knightsbridge, London, SW1 Tube: Hyde Park Corner.

BATTLE OF IDEAS. On Sunday, I read at an event called the Battle Of Ideas at the Royal College of Art in London. It is an annual festival where intellectuals, leaders, students and all in between meet to argue about topical issues. Debates raged on America's election tonight, to the 'Credit Crunch', Malthu's ideas of over population and birth rate reduction, Education, Youth Crime etc... I read at the Poetry debate chaired by David Bowden, with Tom Chivers, Glyn Maxwell and Shirely Dent. There were five other poets reading who I was familiar with except a lady from Chicago, she read a short beautiful poem, I got to speak with her very briefly afterwards and found out she is currently a professor at the University of Chicago, her name is Leela Gandhi, she is Mahatma Gandhi's granddaughter. Yeah.

I mean, that in itself doesn't mean anything, and I am not so low as to name drop for the hell of it, I just thought it surreal that in a festival of freedom of speech, two days before THIS year's USA Presidential Election where Obama echoes Martin Luther King whose politics was heavily influenced by Gandhi, in this current 'Credit Crunch' which is at its cruxa debt crisis, a variant of third world debt spawned from colonialism, against which Gandhi fought, I read with his granddaughter.

All the debates were filmed and will be uploaded to the website, I encourage you to browse, listen and get angry about things. http://www.battleofideas.org.uk/

THE LAST GENIE at ROH // Remember the Libretto I mentioned writing last month? Well, I met the deadline of the 20th of Oct and for the last fortnight, I have watched it become an Opera. During the half term holidays, there was a week long intensive of rehearsals and development. The main characters now have motifs and melodies that float them into mind wherever I am... the songs are coming together, the choreography, the actors are taking to their roles... It's been fascinating seeing essentially a long poem set to music by the terrific team and the forty brilliant younglings starring in it... but here is the real news: The tickets are on sale, there are four shows over its three day run, come see, buy one.

Name: The Last Genie Dates: Dec 18th- 4pm, 19th- 4pm, 21- 2&5pm. Tickets: £8 / £4 concessions Buy at: http://www.roh.org.uk/ Venue: The Linbury Theatre, Royal Opera House Address: Covent Garden, London WC2E 9DD Tube: Covent Garden.

YOUTUBE: BARAK OBAMA. Yes. I want him to win. I won't sit you through my reasons. At the Battle Of Ideas, I heard opinions for and against him, spoke with a poet friend based in Chicago for an hour discussing her choice, read a little, but watched a lot on the net, this is one such video. These artists got together of their own vocation, set his speech to song and pumped this across the net... It is perfect, simple, effective use of virals. One aspect of Obama's campaign was his embrace of new media, an attempt to reach young people on their own grounds. The fact that this was a central campaign strategy shows a willingness to listen, to try new things, to be radical and if that doesn't speak of progress, I dunno what does? Anyway, you may have seen this before... this months youtube offering has been viewed by more than 11 million people across the world. On the eve of the election, sit back and watch: Yes We Can:

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News Oct 08

News from Inua Ellams. 05/10/08I love slightly palindromic sentences like, “At the start of the human problem, is the problem of the human heart.” or ones that need only slight changes. In summer I said something like: “What the hell happened, summer left in 2 weeks” and I can tweak it to: “What the hell happened? winter came in 2 days!” - I think I dwell on the weather too much as introductions to newsletters. For the next two months, I will think up spiffy comments on America's Presidential Election. Promise.

The formula: three news items and something good from YouTube: FREE GiG: NPG // THE LAST GENIE // BARBERSHOP CHRONICLES // ROAD RAGE.

FREE GiG: National Portrait Gallery// Sooo, the 1354 Collective's installation I curated in July and my Ltd. Edition book (view here - http://piurl.com/SPY, buy here - http://piurl.com/Oi2) were the first projects where I got to play with the visual and literal sides of me... this is the next one. On the 9th of October, on National Poetry Day, I will be exploring personal portraiture in a Painting Tour / Poetry Performance through the 16th - 19th Century Rooms at the National Portrait Gallery in London. Sounds nice doesn't it?

For an hour I will lead a group through the gallery, speak briefly about certain paintings, elaborate on themes, settings, history and read a poem that is linked. It is open to the public and it is FREE, but ticketed on a first come first serve basis, so after work or before dinner on Thursday, spend an hour with me for poetry and paintings.

Thurs 9th Oct. // 7pm // Free, 1st Come, 1st Serve. at: N.Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place  London WC2H OHE

BARBERSHOP CHRONICLES // The moment I first decided to get up and read a poem in public came after I saw late on Channel5 (2003) a poet called Mahogany Browne reading. Behind her, a woman danced nude, erotically, in a bathtub. I logged online faster than you can say something fast, found and frequented an event in St Martins Place (opposite the NPG) called Aromapoetry. 2 months later, I was given my first ever headline spot shared with... Mahogany Browne. 5 years have passed and we still be cool, she's doing many beautiful things in New York, hosts the biggest night at the legendary Nuyorican Poets café, and has just published a new anthology called 'The Barbershop Chronicles'.

I was published in this anthology with Jacob Sam La Rose and Nicholas Makoha, but I also designed the cover of the book, it is online and buyable, see - http://piurl.com/aLs for details.

THE LAST GENIE // Thief of Baghdad Last month, I mentioned the Thief of Baghdad project - East London Dance in partnership with the Royal Opera House. (Damn, I feel ostentatious, I'll refere to them as ELD and ROH, cool?) Last night, deep in the bowels of the ROH, I sat with K.G. the director, J.B. the music guru, and N.K. Choreographer debating the title of the piece. In poetry, trying to find a word that is loose enough to mean everything or specific enough to mean one thing, is what the burning-of-the-midnight-candle is about.

The title was whittled down to: The Feather Guardian, Feathers and Dust, Children of Dust, The Last Genie, and The Genie's last Disciple. Some were instantly ruled out, including my suggestion of - 'How Zabby got her groove back.' (brilliant right!? - the genie's name in the piece is Zebarack). Feathers and Dust was ruled out; though we liked its musicality, it conjured too much the house keeping implement. The Feather Guardian was taken out as well. I spoke against Children of Dust, felt it gave an idea that was too allegorical of death, it was hotly contested, but K.G. sealed the deal saying 'The Last Genie' was definite, snappy, more 'Christmasy' than the others and it sounded well with the main feature: The Last Genie & The Thief of Baghdad.

I am on schedule to deliver the libretto, my deadline is on the 20th of October, after which the fun begins, seeing it come to life. Show is on 18th, 19 and 21st of December. Tickets on sale soon, watch this space.

YOUTUBE: ROAD RAGE // Lately I have be journeying in cars. My lady drives and has revealed some darkness that further textures her personality - I like it. but even she would be cowered by this. Tonight's youtube offering shows the mastery of age, the knowledge of one's humble weapons against an ever impatient world and what happens when grannies go bad. Sit back, click, watch and guffaw with me. - -http://piurl.com/aLr

That's all folks. Stay cool, keep warm. Inua x

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News Sep 08

News from Inua Ellams. 10/09/08So sorry! I apologise for the distance; I posted nothing nothing last month because I was taking a breather, a lot of you were on holiday and I had spammed you through July about 'The 14th Tale'... but I am back and in my absence, hope you remembered the formula... (with a slight amendment.)

The formula: three news items and something good from YouTube: THANKS // LIMITED PRINT // THIEF OF BAGHDAD // WOMEN ARE HEROES //

THANKS // The 14th Tale Thanks to all who made the 3 night run of the show at the BAC, seems so long ago now! The 1st night went stupendously well, the narrative, all the little jokes and characters, all received warmly. I was warned of the curse of the 2nd night but I laughed it off claiming to be exceptioned from the rule, but... yes it did not go as planned. I received positive feedback again, but for me, something was off. But on the last night my family came and the show went very well. For y'all who missed it, I am in talks and planning, next year, it will be finished and shown again. Stay tuned.

LIMITED EDiTION PRiNT // This has been a LONG time coming. I wanted to do 3 things with the 1st book. 1) Record some of its poems for a Limited Edition CD, 2) Illustrate the poems & exhibit (which I did in July) and the finally, 3) republish the book with the Illustrations. And here it is... in black and white, matt-finished, soft back print.

The New Book has 13 illustrations (12 new) that are so inspired by the poems that to be fully enjoyed, you gotta flick between as you read. I am doubly exited because I laid out and designed the book. For the first time, my words and images are together in a collection. But there is a twist...

We printed 313 copies. Nothing more. They have all been signed, dated and numbered by me and I hope in a decade or so, when poetry rules the world, snot nosed geeks and enthusiasts will bid-war for them on Amazon/Ebay... They each sell for £6.13p (the 13p is of prime importance, more so than the 6) and are available from - Flipped Eye, click here - http://piurl.com/Oi2 -

OR you can get them from me. Please, if nothing at all, stop to look at the book, here is a link to what it looks like, & the first few illustrations. - http://piurl.com/SPY - enjoy.

THIEF OF BAGHDAD // East London Dance in association with the Royal Opera House, once a year run a project called 'Street Stories' where they devise a show to be staged at the ROH in London, during the Christmas period. This December will see the retelling of The Thief of Baghdad by Opera Maestro Will Tuckett, and ELD have to produce something inspired by that piece. There's an impressive team of choreographers, composers and vocalists on the project, but to eek out, write and structure a story, they needed someone and yours truly is on the case. I have to teach poetry, guide and tease out text from the young cast, take it home and sculpt it, but essentially, I am writing a Libretto for the Royal Opera House. I am actually gonna write an 'Aria', ME, amazing. As I did with the SLAM project earlier in the year, I'll keep you posted as it develops and let you know about tickets for the show. x

YOUTUBE: WOMEN ARE HEROES // I am often asked the question, 'Where do you see yourself in the future?' and I answer detailing how I'd like to travel the world on behalf of the British Council / NGOs / UN / Charities / to interact with communities, teach poetry, learn from & experience as much as I can and report back having created illustrations & written poems/prose about my experiences to be published. I'd try to leave copies and exhibit the work I create in each place as a small token and legacy to its people.... But this video best shows what I mean, its is simple, powerful and beautiful. (I'd really like to travel with them). This month's Youtube offering moved my lady to tears, 'Women Are Heroes'. Sit back and watch -

Thanks.

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News July 08

News from Inua Ellams. 07/07/08AHh, just when it seemed summer was underway, last Wednesday began with clear skies, temperature highs, moved to rain, then ACTUAL HAILSTONES... curiously, it mirrors work patterns, clear direction, things heat up, suddenly a downfall and madness. But enough of that shizz... down to bizz...

The formula, four news items and something good from YouTube: TALKING IN TONGUES / LONDON LIMING / FRESH OFF THE WALL / LYNK REACH (prt3) / STOP ME /

TALKING IN TONGUES // Show - 13th July. The London Literature Festival got underway last Friday at the Southbank and I am taking part in a couple of events. I have been talking non-stop about the scratch performance of my show, The 14th TALE, at the BAC on the 31 July / 1 & 2 of August. BUT the first time I perform it will see a 10 min segment on the 13th of July at 'TALKING IN TONGUES', an event this Sunday hosted by Sifundo Msebele, curator of Africa Beyond. At the Southbank, I shall stage-share with Ebele, Charlie Dark, and Bries who have also cooked up new pieces for the date. Come see. //

Date: 13th July, 6pm // Purcell Rooms, Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank Centre // Tickets £9 // http://tinyurl.com/4be7oww

LONDON LIMING // After my performance, at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, Southbank Artist-In-Residence Lemn Sissay and Tilt present brilliance, 'London Liming', a show I will attend, featuring Ursula Rucker, Brian Patten, Shlomo, Patience Agbabi, Stacy Makishi and Louis Antwi, Curated by Melanie Abrahams. //

Date: 13th of July, 7.45pm // Queen Elizabeth Hall. Southbank Centre // Tickets £12 // Concessions 50% In The Front Room at Queen Elizabeth Hall, 5pm, you can catch Broadcaster Kevin Le Gendre talking to Ursula Rucker about her career and influences. This one is before my show and FREE.

FRESH OFF THE WALL // Something completely different... I am graphic designer / visual artist as well as a writer. Constantly, I strive to merge the disciplines. The first realisation of this is the Limited Edition reprint, just 313 copies of my collection featuring graphic interpretations of the poems. (More info to come) But the 2econd is the Visual Art Installation at the Queen Elizabeth Hall Foyer. This is the first Visual Art Event I have curated! I invited 10 artists and colleagues to exhibit with me. Over the next two weeks, evolving from a blank canvas, the space will become a visual documentary of the Festival, an exciting mix of textiles, graffiti, photographs, video and performance as artists create the work in real time. The space is the Queen Elizabeth Hall's Foyer, free to enter and open till 10.30 / 11 most nights. Please stop by and check it out if you are in the centre over the next two weeks. Cheers.

LYNK REACH (prt3) // WE WON! I've been reporting on the SLAM 08 team of poet kids I have been coaching with Nick Makoha. Talked about seeing the students develop as their attitudes to friends, family and teachers changed, I've talked about the small victories, difficulties and emotionally charged writing sessions. I did not mention the students storming out, mothers threatening to pull kids out for arriving home too late or the star student suspended from school. The sessions were to culminate in a SLAM, where the kids from different schools go head to head an have their poems scored and judged. We were still changing the poem till the last minute! Moving lines in the changing rooms, the suspended student stepped back in and learnt both 3 minute poems in one week! Incredible! We were still working out how to end the poem as we were called on stage...

And we won. Simply. It all paid of, tears, sweat, determination, drama, all that good stuff. The Kids get to travel to Chicago in August to meet other poetry teams. Nick will be going with them. As a shadow, I do not get to travel, but they have promised to rock that city and remember poetry for as long as they live and honestly, this, the flashbacks of this process and what I have learnt, is reward enough.

Besides, I am working on a similar something starting in that month, for the Royal Opera House. :-) Stay tuned.

STOP ME // Earlier this year, I held a live recording of 6 poems from my first book. Unbelievably, the footage has gone missing, meaning I will have to do the show all over again. I worked hard to put the show together, so am seething with fury and thinking daggers into the heart of the camera man (sorry dude, but it hurts). So much so that I should have nothing but hatred and unrestrained jealousy for Joshua Idehen, fellow PIP, who, without breaking a sweat tripped and fell into a production company who made this film for him. But I cannot, because it is so well executed. This month's YOUTUBE offering is a poem called STOP ME. Sit back relax and enjoy.

cheers.

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News June 08

News from Inua Ellams. 09/06/08Excerpt from new work: “I am from a long line of trouble makers, of ash skinned Africans born with clenched fists and a natural thirst for battle, only quenched by breast milk, they'd suckle as if the white silk sliding between gums, were liquid peace treaties, written from mums...” Yeah :)

The formula, four news items and something good from YouTube: THE 14th TALE / SOUNDBLAST / NORTH WALSHAM / M&C SAATCHI / ONETASTE /

THE 14TH TALE - PLease Pleas Please, keep the 31st of July, 1st or 2nd of August free. For the last few months, I have been working on a show, a one person narrative called 'THE 14th TALE' loosely inspired by the book. It is easily the most challenging and personal thing I have ever done. I will be speaking of this more over the coming weeks, but the scratch performances are on those three dates.

Date: 31 July, 1 & 2 August Time: 8pm Cost £5/£3 Venue: The BAC // Lavender Hill, Battersea, London, SW11 5TN Box Office : 02072232223 http://www.bac.org.uk.

SOUNDBLAST - There are two limited edition projects under way. This is the first. Couple of month ago I read at the launch of SOUNDBLAST, the poetry books society's project to sell recordings of poetry. I selected Six of the notorious Fairy Negro Tales, spent a while in a studio perfecting the poems, creating something worthy of purchase. I sent them to and they loved them, agreed to sell it. Now, the original idea was simply to make them on demand but I got to thinking, my fingers got to itching and I opted to hand make everything. Monetary wise, it is a bit more than I budgeted and I'll just about break even, but damn it, they look beautiful! The cases are hand made of soft, recycled foliage lined paper and the poems are on gloss black Cds. I am making only 50 of these, so get 'em while they last.

You can see how they are made here : http://tinyurl.com/3jeuhh You can reserve and collect from me at a show or something or... Purchase from Soundsblast, they'll post it : http://tinyurl.com/5rpg2p

If you don't get to purchase a physical copy, but still want the poems, fear not: available (via pay pal) from my myspace page and website.

NORTH WALSHAM - On 2nd of May, I was invited back to teach creative writing at a school in Norfolk, North Walsham as part of the week of internationalism and diversity. I devised a prose writing exercise where students would have to flick through a series of photographs specific to one of eight countries, eg Cambodia, China, Nigeria, note images, sounds and smells from the country and retell an incident, something that happened specific to the student, but place it in the chosen country... I taught the whole school except year eight students, as they were studying for exams, but the results were incredible. From break dancing on a barge made of flowers in a rice field, to a skateboarding in the Sahra. A girl named Rose O'Connor pushed the boat further and created her own world, beginning, “Once upon a time in Connorsville, on a quiet street called Rose...”

The most touching though was from a student who took the day she discovered she was pregnant, placed it in India's monsoon season and wrote to her future son of her tears stolen by the rain. I love what I do.

M&C SAATCHI - Sooo.... I am a member of the Daydream Crew, a collective that put out a graphic arts magazine. Last year, the collective took over the foyer of the M&S SAATCHI (infamous art collectors) offices in Golden Square near Carnaby Street, London. They brought a host of artists into the space who graffitied the walls creating Urban art in the mist unlikely of places. They were invited back to launch the 4th issue of their magazine and I went along to see the new works being created and graffitied onto the walls. I helped a couple of the artist until I was tasked to create something... I sat in a corner for a few minutes, penned a verse and stayed till the small hours of the morning, grafting the poem to the walls! The exhibition is open to the public 12pm - 8 pm, so if you are in the area, stop by, walk in, see and READ.

Address - M&C SAATCHI // 36 Golden Square London / W1F 9E

YOUTUBE: ONETASTE COLLECTIVE 12 June // Jazz cafe - Going from strength, this is about the Oneaste Collective. Members of the collective are scattered across the entertainment industry, in all categories, fields and levels. Last year the collective played the Jazz Cafe and this year we return with a tighter more inclusive show. We have been working hard to bring something truly brilliant to the stage and on the 12 of June, we take the Jazz Cafe by storm. To add fuel to the fire, that Night I will be flying from one event to another and should get on the venue when the show is to begin as a short verse of mine set to Samba drums opens the show. Also a bristling tour of summer festivals is underway and to get the vibe and news rolling, we created a short intro to the collective. Look out for yours truly....

underway and to get the vibe and news rolling, we created a short intro to the collective. Look out for yours truly....

More soon. Inua x

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Mini News...

14th Tale Special - Scratch 1 Person Narrative Performance for The BAC. THE 14TH TALE - Hey folks, 'tis been bout three weeks since we spoke, but a hell of a month already. Every moment I get away from the computer, I spend it committing the 40 minute script of the 14th Tale to memory...

The script itself has been written, re written and thrown away exactly five time. The first narrative was to be based on the Thirteen Fairy Negro Tales and I created the character of a magical African story teller to deliver the story on stage. If this was a MARVEL film, the storyteller / narrator would be the HULK and I'd be the man who becomes the beast, Bruce Banner. But just as the American Military forces found, the beast is untameable and must be left alone.

Okay I exaggerate. I love the character and will definitely use him for future works, but I found no way to sustain an engaging, hour long narrative with his voice so though it hurt, desperately, I put him to the side and tried a different approach... to write about the man behind the beast, about Bruce Banner.... about myself.

For me, there has been nothing more difficult than this. I sat for long whiles staring at Virginia (my laptop), Virginia staring back with sympathy as I thought about my experiences, what could tie things together, searching for a beginning and end, moments poignant enough for poetry and for a story. By the 5th script, I considered throwing the towel in. My mentor swore at me saying 'you ain't throwing shit, get back to it...' so I faced the Virginia again thinking 'how did I get myself in this', and a seed was sown...

I thought about all the times that phrase had passed my lips 'how did I get myself in this?', about all the trouble I caused as boy. From the four year old who short-circuited the house with a silver spoon and a Betamax Video player, to throwing tantrums in Nigeria, halting an entire 700 student strong assembly, because I did not win an award and my twin sister did, to being chased through a jungle by a crazed French teacher called, I kid you not, Monsieur Bat Cock! I became obsessed with this, spent stupid hours laughing to myself till I began to take it seriously as a concept.

One evening, I sat with my father and asked him questions about myself growing up, and realised that he had been just as troublesome in his youth, and his father had been before him... I saw a pattern, saw a first line, scribbled it and the story begins thus:

“I'm from a long line of trouble makers, of ash skinned Africans, born with clenched fists and a natural thirst for battle, only quenched by breast milk. They’d suckle as if the white silk sliding between gums were liquid peace treaties written from mums. Their small thumbs would dimple the soft mounds of brown flesh, goose-pimple chests till the ceasefire of sleep would creep into eyes, they’d keep till the moon sets...”

At the BAC, I will be showing the first 35 - 40 minutes of the script. I hope it will be as entertaining for you as it has been for me to write. Please, Keep the 31st of July, 1st or 2nd of August free, come and check out where I'm from.

Date: 31 July, 1 & 2 August Time: 8pm Cost £5/£3 Venue: The BAC // Lavender Hill, Battersea, London, SW11 5TN Box Office : 02072232223 http://www.bac.org.uk

LONDON LITERATURE FEST P.s. I will be performing about 10 minutes of the story at the London Literature Festival at the Southbank Centre. I will share a stage with Charlie Dark and Bries, legends of poetry. Date: 13th of July, 6pm, Purcell Rooms, Queen Elizabeth Hall. Talking Tongues

P.P.s Thanks so much for those who have bought the Limited Edition CDs. Out of the 50 handmade copies, 31 have been sold, 19 are left and they are going fast. To see how they are made, please go to http://tinyurl.com/3jeuhh. Thanks.

See you soon.

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