Welsh Storyteller’s Chance Discovery of Letters Leads To Tour of One-Man Show: The Gods Are All Here

Welsh Storyteller Phil Okwedy is to share an incredible story about a chance discovery of past and family history. The Gods Are All Here will tour across Wales this May and June, and later again in autumn 2022.

The Gods Are All Here explores equality, freedom, racism, family and growing up without your birth parents, making the production both timeless and very much a story of now.

Sparked by the discovery of a series of letters from his father in Nigeria to his mother in Wales, Phil’s captivating performance skilfully weaves myth, song, folktales, and legends of the African diaspora with an astonishing personal story that uncovers his experiences of growing up as a child of dual heritage in 1960s &70s Wales.

Phil Okwedy’s one-man show The Gods Are All Here was inspired by letters his father wrote from Nigeria to his mother in Wales.

Born in Cardiff, Phil never lived with either of his parents but was raised in Pembrokeshire by his long-term foster mother. Charting the time of life when children are said to view their parents as gods, but never having lived with them, in this show, Phil considers if his parents were, in fact, the gods he had imagined them to be…

Phil said: “As I developed as storyteller, there came a time when I felt ready to tell myth but could find none that resonated with me. So, I began to weave personal and family stories with folktales as a kind of myth-making exercise. When I found the letters in my mother’s flat after her death, I felt a need to do more with them than just read them, but I was not yet a storyteller and so had no idea what that might be.

Now, in sharing this show my intention is that it resonates with other people, with their individual family stories but also with the audience, because it is by working together that we ensure that equality, justice and freedom are experienced by all.”

Phil Okwedy is a storyteller and writer, who has performed at many storytelling events and festivals across the UK. He has recently been commissioned as part of Literature Wales’ Representing Wales, Developing Writers of Colour programme and as a major contributor to National Theatre Wales Go Tell the Bees project.

Funded by Arts Council of Wales, The Gods Are All Here has been made possible by money raised by National Lottery players.  Carmarthenshire’s  Theatrau Sir Gâr is supporting production development, with director Michael Harvey and a team of production professionals, including designer, shadow producer and technical team.

Leading UK storytelling production company, Adverse Camber (Dreaming the Night Field / Hunting the Giant’s Daughter) is delighted to be touring this production.

Executive Director of Adverse Camber, Naomi Wilds, said: “We are so delighted to have the chance to bring Phil Okwedy’s The Gods Are All Here to Welsh audiences in 2022. Phil is such an engaging storyteller and his story lifts audiences from wherever they are to 1960s Wales, and onto an amazing voyage of discovery, with glorious stories from the African continent, all in one captivating evening. Now is the right time to be hearing these stories and giving this talented storyteller the platform, he deserves!”

Where To See Phil Okwedy’s The Gods Are All Here

The show is suitable for ages 12+.  Phil who is also an engaging workshop leader will be running workshops and talks along with the show, plus an opportunity for groups and schools to develop their own creative writing skills and revealing more about the show.

The Gods Are All Here will open at Ffwrnes (26 May), followed Blackwood Miners Institute (10 June) and The Riverfront, Newport (11 June).

In autumn, the show will visit Chapter Arts Centre, Aberystwyth Arts Centre, Galeri, and The Borough, Abergavenny. For further information about the tour please visit Adverse Camber’s website.

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