Facebook Pixel Alfred Fagon - A Unique Caribbean Voice | BBC History Magazine - Education - Lee esta historia en Magzter.com
Vuélvete ilimitado con Magzter GOLD

Vuélvete ilimitado con Magzter GOLD

Obtenga acceso ilimitado a más de 9000 revistas, periódicos e historias Premium por solo

$149.99
 
$74.99/Año

Intentar ORO - Gratis

Alfred Fagon - A Unique Caribbean Voice

BBC History Magazine

|

February 2022

Having migrated from Jamaica as a teenager, Alfred Fagon emerged as a powerful playwright who created African-Caribbean characters to speak truths about the challenges facing black people in Britain. Stephen Bourne introduces a writer who helped transform black British theatre in the 1970s and 80s

- By Stephen Bourne . Photographs Rachael Dickens, Alamy, Dreamstime, Getty and Hampstead Theatre

Alfred Fagon - A Unique Caribbean Voice

On 11 June 2020, a statue in Bristol was damaged. But while the media debates continued to rage about the toppling of the figure of slave trader Edward Colston during a Black Lives Matter protest the previous week, the defacement of this bronze bust in the St Pauls area attracted little comment. Arguably, though, the man depicted, the groundbreaking playwright and actor Alfred Fagon, is much more relevant to Bristol's residents today than the controversial merchant who lived three centuries earlier.

Born in southern Jamaica in 1937, one of 11 children of an orange-plantation worker, Fagon migrated to Britain in 1955 when his homeland was still a colony of the empire. Initially, the teenager worked for British Rail in Nottingham before a stint in the army - during which he became a boxing champion in the Royal Corps of Signals - and he then spent time travelling. By the time that Jamaica gained its independence in 1962, Fagon had made Bristol his home, settling in St Pauls and working as a welder. It was not long, however, before he began pursuing his dream of being an actor and writer.

In 1970, he won a role in Black Pieces by Trinidadian playwright Mustapha Matura, which opened at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London. This was a breakthrough for Fagon in more ways than one: not only did it mark his London acting debut, but Matura had broken new ground with this work in encouraging his actors to speak in patois, the dialect of the Caribbean islands. Until that point, Fagon had never seen patois written down let alone used in theatre.

His friend Roland Rees, a pioneering theatre director, later observed how Black Pieces had “persuaded (Fagon) that he could write plays with characters that could tell his stories, culled from his own experience, in a language natural to them.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE BBC History Magazine

History Extra

History Extra

Going for gold

PATRICIA FARA recommends a globetrotting, time-travelling account of the roots of chemistry

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Viking revenge

JAMES OSBORNE indulges his love of Norse history in a role-playing game that scores high on the visuals but only skates over the underlying history

time to read

1 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Siena in five places

One of Tuscany's most magical hilltop cities is a medieval marvel of civic pride.

time to read

3 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

The great survivor

When Elizabeth II ascended the throne in 1952, she could barely have conceived the currents - imperial retreat, multiculturalism, de-industrialiation – that would transform the nation during her reign. On the centenary of the Queen's birth, David Cannadine explores how she navigated seven decades of dizzying change

time to read

10 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Georgian Chocolate Tart

ELEANOR BARNETT serves up a rich chocolate tart that was once fit for a recovering king

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Capital ideas

A Kingdom and a Village: A One -Thousand-Year History of Moscow

time to read

1 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

War report

SAM WILLIS enjoys a richly detailed and entertaining account of Admiral Horatio Nelson's greatest victory and its complicated aftermath

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

The Peasants Revolt erupts

Popular anger at rising living costs shakes feudal England to its core

time to read

1 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

Tales of coexistence

HEATHER J SHARKEY is impressed by a sweeping yet nuanced book challenging the idea that Jews and Muslims have been locked in a perpetual state of war

time to read

2 mins

May 2026

History Extra

History Extra

"Narratives of victimhood, resistance and sacrifice are core to the Iranian regime's identity"

Revolution, repression and recurring crisis have shaped Iran's recent past – and continue to define its volatile present

time to read

10 mins

May 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size