Tiata Fahodzi
Tiata Fahodzi (meaning Theatre of the Emancipated) is a British-African theatre company, founded in 1997 by actor-director Femi Elufowoju, Jr. After 13 years of distinguished service, Elufowoju left the company in April 2010. He was succeeded in November 2010 by acclaimed actor and writer Lucian Msamati.
Aimed at an all-inclusive British audience, the company aims to challenge, reflect and explore the experience of Africans in contemporary Britain and beyond through the medium of engaging, entertaining, world-class professional theatre.
Most famous recent productions include The Gods Are Not To Blame by Ola Rotimi (2005) at the Arcola Theatre, The Estate (2008) and Iya Ille - The First Wife (2009) - both co-productions with the Soho Theatre in London and both written by Oladipo Agboluaje. The latter earned Tiata Fahodzi and The Soho Theatre a nomination for "Outstanding Achievement in an Affiliate Theatre" at the 2010 Olivier Awards. In November 2010 Tiata Fahodzi staged a tenth-anniversary production of the Olivier award-winning modern classic, Blue/Orange by Joe Penhall at the Arcola Theatre. Critically lauded, the production sparked interest far and wide for its bold re-imagining of this "three-hander" with an all-female cast.
External links
- Tiata Fahodzi official website
- The archive of theTiata Fahodzi Theatre Company is held by the Victoria and Albert Museum Theatre and Performance Department.