Chuk Iwuji
In recent years black actors have not only been playing parts in Shakeseare's plays but are winning major roles.
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While America is facing up to the reality of having what could be its first black President, England can already boast several black kings. By Lisa Urquhart Admittedly, so far they have only been actors playing parts in Shakespeare, meaning America still remains streets ahead of England when it comes to social change. But last month’s sell out run of Shakespeare’s Histories at London’s Roundhouse, starring Chuk Iwuji as Henry VI, shows that there is a sea of change happening in our own English theatre. This has been highlighted in recent years by several other black actors, who are not only performing in Shakespeare’s plays but taking lead roles. Iwuji, who is exhausted from the RSC’s two year run of the Histories, puts this advance down to the explosion of talent coming through the ranks. “If you look at drama schools now there are a lot more black actors – and good black actors,” he says. Iwuji himself follows in the footsteps of a host of famous black actors who have played major Shakespearean roles. They include Adrian Lester, who back in 2003 was Henry V at The National Theatre’s highly praised production, and Lennie James who played Oberon in the BBC’s modern reworking of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.
The Snatch actor is no stranger to Shakespeare; his other acting credits include parts in Hamlet, Two Gentlemen of Verona and Macbeth .And it is not just the men that are, punning aside, getting in on the act. Last year, Martina Laird played the part of Bianca in the critically acclaimed Donmar Warehouse production of Othello. That production also saw Chiwetel Ejiofor, who in the past has played Romeo in Romeo and Juliet at The National, not only outshine fellow actor Ewan McGregor, but also pick up an Olivier Award for his emotionally laden performance as Othello. But while these actors prove that there are increasing numbers of talented black actors out there more than capable of excelling in Shakespeare, making it to centre stage still depends on directors and theatre producers taking the decision to cast black actors. The person instrumental in Iwuji’s portraying Henry VI was Michael Boyd, artistic director at the RSC, who has a history of colour-blind casting. Back in 2000, he caused controversy when he cast David Oyelowo, again in Henry VI, making him the first ever black man to play an English king on stage. It was a situation he describes as “shameful”, considering how long it had taken to happen.
Much was made in the press about Oyelowo’s casting, but Boyd, like other directors who have put black actors in lead roles, is insistent that the only factor in his decision was getting the actor who was best for the role. “It didn’t feel at the time like we had done something controversial. I just picked the right person for the role,” he explains. “There was a presence about him [Oyelowo] and I thought he had to be in a big part, and soon. It wasn’t until the media reaction and some of the dodgy mail that we got, usually written on wonky typewriters, that I realised other people saw it differently.” Boyd may be puzzled about people’s reaction back then, and again at Iwuji’s casting this time round, but he puts the previous dearth of black lead actors cast in Shakespeare down to a lack of imagination on the part of directors. “I think it was the literalism in English theatre that looked at Shakespeare as documentary rather than an art form.” In turn, Dominic Dromgoole, artistic director at the Globe Theatre, believes it is the quality of the plays themselves that invite a broader interpretation.
“There are universal themes of love, loss, relationships and family that run through the works of Shakespeare. That means it does lend itself more to colour blind casting, more so than modern plays,” he says.
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