Author:
Bourne Jenny,Edmond-Pettitt Anya,Searle Chris
Abstract
This article retrieves the life and cultural contributions to Britain of Trinidadian Pearl Prescod, singer, campaigner and the first Black female actor at the National Theatre. She is one of a generation of artists, performers, singers and intellectuals whose contribution to the creation of a Black and anti-colonial strand in British culture in the 1950s and ‘60s has been neglected. By tracking her life from her colonial origins through her migration to Britain and struggles to find work in the 1950s, to her brief break-out professional success in the 1960s and early death in 1966, she is pulled from the historical margins. Her life story, which touches on movements of so many hues – Negritude, Pan-Africanism, Black Power, Communism, campaigns for colonial freedom, the March on Washington, the Campaign Against Racial Discrimination − reveals the strong community connections and internationalism of the time. Pearl, the piece argues, was typical of a whole overlooked ‘West Indian generation’ (of educated and politically militant artists, writers, dramatists and actors) whose anti-colonial consciousness and creative activities challenge the popular accepted narrative of an undifferentiated ‘Windrush generation’. The piece contains an account of witnessing Pearl and her fellow actors perform at the National Theatre.
Subject
General Social Sciences,Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Archeology,Anthropology,Archeology,Cultural Studies
Reference100 articles.
1. West Indian Intellectuals in Britain
2. The phrase is A. Sivanandan’s.
3. See Kennetta Hammond Perry, ‘Undoing the work of the Windrush narrative’, Historians’ Watch, History Workshop Journal 93 (September 2018) and Simon Peplow, ‘“In 1997 nobody heard of Windrush”: the rise of the “Windrush Narrative” in British newspapers’, Immigrants and Minorities 37, no 3 (2018).
4. See also https://irr.org.uk/article/the-windrush-scandal-exposes-the-dangers-of-scaremongering-about-illegal-immigrants/.
5. See https://www.gov.uk/government/news/national-windrush-monument-unveiled-at-london-waterloo-station. The fact that the statue is of parents holding hands with a child climbing over cases is somewhat ironic since so often children had to be left behind with relatives when migration began and very often heads of households were having to come on their own to look for work.
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