Review: Ode to Leeds, West Yorkshire Playhouse
Born in Zimbabwe, Nyoni grew up in Chapeltown and found her voice through the Leeds Young Authors and performance poetry. It’s an experience which forms the basis of Ode to Leeds which proudly puts centre stage a side of the city routinely ignored and only brought to the fore in easy Benefit Street stereotypes.
Nyoni’s portrayal of five teenagers growing up in the suburbs is a much more nuanced affair. Yes, there are chaotic family lives, dads in prison, abuse and mental health problems, but Queenie, Theo, Mac, Devika and Darcy are much more than symbols of Broken Britain.
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Hide AdThey are at times funny, knowing and ambitious as well as being occasionally maddeningly self-obsessed and angst ridden. They are in short, teenagers.
The play weaves straight dialogue with slam poetry as the group try to find a way to get to New York and the finals of a major competition and it’s in the latter scenes where Ode to Leeds comes into its own. It’s political, heartfelt and at times heart-breaking.
The cast here deserve much praise, particularly Genesis Lynea as young matriarch Queenie, desperate to lead her troops to better things while her own life has hit a dead end and Archie Rush as Mack who sees a new life on the horizon, but seems at times fated to follow in the same dismal footsteps as his brother.
In truth, Ode to Leeds is a piece which may have worked better in the more intimate surroundings of a studio theatre and struggles occasionally to fill the space of the Courtyard.
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Hide AdSadly, The Playhouse doesn’t have a studio, but next year’s redevelopment will right the wrong and audiences can hopefully look forward to a glut of new writing from new voices.
That aside, with Nyoni’s writing and Brining’s direction, Ode to Leeds is an unapologetic red brick, working class slice of a city and one which should help create an appetite for more of the same.
To July 1.