Helen Calcutt | |
Birth Date: | 1988 3, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Midlands, England |
Occupation: | poet, dancer, choreographer |
Helen Calcutt (born 27 March 1988), is a British poet, dancer, and choreographer.[1]
Calcutt is the author of three collections. Her debut, Sudden rainfall was published by British publishing house Perdika Press. It was a PBS Choice on publication and became Waterstone's best-selling pamphlet in 2016. Her second pamphlet Somehow was published by Verve Poetry Press in September 2020. It was a PBS Winter Bulletin Pamphlet, and Poetry School Book of the Year (2020, shortlist). Her full-length collection Feeling all the kills was published by Pavilion Poetry in April 2024.
Calcutt was one of the six poets selected to perform at the 2022 Commonwealth Games opening ceremony, hosted in Birmingham. Her poem "Mother, the city", written for the ceremony, was performed as part of its opening scene 'Everything to Everybody'.
Calcutt also writes for The Guardian, the HuffPost, Poetry London, and the Wales Arts Review. In 2023, she was awarded an honorary degree from Loughborough University for her outstanding contribution to the arts.[2]
Calcutt is an activist for mental health awareness, and male suicide prevention. She is the creator and editor of the poetry anthology, 'Eighty Four'[3] The title stands for the number of men who take their lives every week in the U.K. The book was published by Verve Poetry Press (2019) was shortlisted for the Saboteur Best Anthology Award, 2019, and was a Poetry Wales Book of The Year 2019.
Calcutt lost her own brother to suicide in September 2017.