Inua Ellams | |
Birth Date: | 1984 10, df=y |
Birth Place: | Jos, Plateau State, Nigeria |
Citizenship: | Nigeria |
Education: | Firhouse Community College, Dublin, Ireland |
Occupation: | Poet, playwright |
Known For: | Barber Shop Chronicles |
Inua Marc Mohammed Onore de Ellams II[1] [2] (born 23 October 1984[1]) is a Nigerian-born British poet, playwright and performer. He was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2023 Birthday Honours for services to the arts.
Ellams has written for the Royal Shakespeare Company,[3] Royal National Theatre and the BBC. In June 2018, Ellams was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature as part of its 40 Under 40 initiative. He took part in The Complete Works mentoring programme for poets of colour.
The Salt Book of Younger Poets (Salt, 2010)[4]
Ellams's one-man show The 14th Tale was awarded an Edinburgh Fringe First at the Edinburgh International Festival in 2009, and later transferred to the Royal National Theatre, London.[5]
A one-man show staged at the Soho Theatre in 2010,[6] telling the story of twins born on Nigeria's independence day.
Barber Shop Chronicles is a play set in black barber shops in six cities on one day, against the backdrop of a football match between Chelsea and Barcelona. The play explores the African diaspora in the UK,[7] masculinity, homosexuality and religion. The play was produced by the National Theatre, Fuel Theatre and Leeds Playhouse and was shortlisted for the Alfred Fagon Award in 2017.[8] Following a period of touring, the play was also performed at the Roundhouse in 2019, and a recording of the National Theatre production was streamed in May 2020 as part of the National Theatre at Home season. For the production, Ellams recorded 60 hours of "male banter"[9] in barbershops all over Africa and in London at his barber Peter's shop Emmanuel's in Clapham Junction.[9] This project originally did not secure funding.
In April 2019, his new play, The Half God of Rainfall, was presented at the Birmingham Repertory Theatre,[10] in advance of its run at London's Kiln Theatre, as well as its publication as a book.
In December 2019–February 2020, a reworking by Ellams of Chekhov's play Three Sisters was performed at the Royal National Theatre, London. The play restaged the story in the 1960s in the midst of the Biafran war in Nigeria.[11]
In 2020, Ellams performed a live stage programme with anecdotes of his childhood and his experiences as a refugee. An excerpt was shown at the Hay Festival on 24 May 2020.[5]