The stage show ‘Follow the Signs’ has been nominated for a Scope Award
Chris Fonseca grew up believing he was ‘deaf first,and then Black’,and his outlook on life has inspired him to write a stage show about his experiences.
When he was two,Chris contracted meningitis,which led to him losing his hearing.
Life after that became ‘just about being deaf’,but in his teenage years,music and dance entered his life,and he became fully immersed in the performing arts.
Chris,born and raised in South London,told Metro: ‘My cultural understanding of being Black came much later because I was raised to focus on being deaf.
‘Because of this,I suppressed racism and my understanding of it until I started to experience it more as I got older.
‘I started to reidentify myself when I realised that the world viewed me as a Black man first,
‘Everyone’s experiences are different,but I also wanted to show that a deaf and Black person’s experience is much different from that of a Black hearing person.’
The show is based on co-creator Chris Fonesca’s life as a man who grew up being ‘deaf first,and then Black’ (Picture: Charlie Swinbourne)
He is now inspiring others to tell their stories about hearing loss alongside being a person of colour,all on the stage in the show ‘Follow the Signs’.
Chris wrote the show in lockdown along with Harry Jardine,a fellow choreographer,dancer and rapper.
The pair met in 2019,when they were performing together in a touring production of The Wind in the Willows.
Performed in BSL,rap,and spoken English along with movement,Follow the Signs brings together all types of audience communication and opens up the worlds of those who are watching their own experiences for the first time.
And the reception to their performances has been quite simply ‘overwhelming’.
Audience members came up to them,saying ‘they had felt seen for the first time’.
The Follow the Signs team (Picture: Charlie Swinbourne)
‘I felt really exposed because I was sharing my story. It is easy as a performer to just play a part – but this time I was playing myself.’
Co-creator Harry was unable to use sign language when they first met more than five years ago.
But the pair’s ‘almost telepathic connection’ made it easy for him to learn.
Harry said: ‘I feel like I was a BSL user in a past life. We have this weird connection,and weirdly we were both born in the same hospital,in the same year,and I also contracted meningitis around the same time Chris did.’
It is performed in BSL,and spoken English (Picture: Charlie Swinbourne)
United News - unews.co.za