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Lemn Sissay

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Nationality
  
British

Role
  
Author · lemnsissay.com

Name
  
Lemn Sissay


Notable awards
  
MBE (2010)

Ethnicity
  
Ethiopian

Parents
  
Yemarshet Sissay

Lemn Sissay static1squarespacecomstatic5358eee0e4b004bfb61

Books
  
Rebel Without Applause, Listener, Morning breaks in the elevat, The Emperor's Watchmaker, Tender Fingers in a Clench

Similar People
  
Benjamin Zephaniah, Simon Callow, Kate Tempest, Edna O'Brien, Akala

Lemn sissay


Lemn Sissay (born 21 May 1967) is a British author and broadcaster.

Contents

Lemn Sissay Lemn Sissay wins University of Manchester chancellor vote

Lemn sissay performing his poem godsell


Early years

Lemn Sissay Let there be peace Lemn Sissay

Sissay's mother arrived in England from Ethiopia in 1966. Pregnant at the time, she was sent from Bracknell to Lancashire to give birth. Sissay was born in Billinge Hospital, near Wigan, Lancashire, in 1967. Norman Goldthorpe, a social worker assigned to his mother by Wigan Social Services, found foster parents for Sissay while his mother returned to Bracknell to finish her studies. Goldthorpe named Sissay "Norman" and gave him to foster parents, telling them to treat it as an adoption. The events are depicted in the play Something Dark and in BBC documentary Internal Flight. His strongly religious foster parents wanted to name him Mark after the Christian evangelist Mark and give him their surname, Greenwood.

Lemn Sissay Lemn Sissay Cape Farewell The cultural response to

When Sissay was 12 years old, after his foster parents had had three children of their own, they placed him into a children's home and said neither they nor any of their family would contact him again.

Lemn Sissay The week in radio Lemn Sissay39s Homecoming The

From the ages of 12 to 17, Sissay was held in a total of four children's homes. With no surrogate family or birth family upon leaving the care system, he was given his birth certificate, showing the name of his mother, Yemarshet Sissay, and his own legal name, Lemn Sissay. He was also given a letter from his files dated 1968, written by his mother to Norman Goldthorpe, pleading for his return. She wrote "How can I get Lemn back? I want him to be with his own people, his own colour. I don't want him to face discrimination". From the point of leaving care, he began the search for his mother and took back his real name.

Lemn Sissay Lemn Sissay The Guardian

When Sissay was 18 years old he moved from Atherton to the city of Manchester. At 19 he was a literature development worker at Commonword, a community publishing cooperative in Manchester.

He met his birth mother when he was 21, after a long search. She was working for the UN in the Gambia.

In 2017 Sissay staged a one-off show entitled The Report, based on a psychologist's report about Sissay's early life and how it affected him. The show details his experience with social services, foster homes, abuse and his psychiatric diagnoses: post-traumatic stress disorder, avoidant personality disorder and alcohol use disorder.

Career

Sissay released his first book of poetry in 1988 at the age of 21, and since the age of 24 he has been a full-time writer, performing internationally. In 1995, he made the BBC documentary Internal Flight about his life. His 2005 drama Something Dark deals with his search for his family, and was adapted for BBC Radio 3 in 2006, winning the RIMA award (Race in the Media award given from the UK Commission for Racial Equality).

In 2007, Sissay was appointed artist-in-residence at London's Southbank Centre. He was the official poet of the 2012 London Olympics, has worked with the British Council and is a patron of the Letterbox Club, supporting children in care. His work has featured at the Royal Academy and the British Film Institute. Sissay was made an Honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of Huddersfield in 2009 and was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2010 New Year Honours. In 2014 Sissay was appointed as a Fellow of the Foundling Museum.

Sissay's television appearances include The South Bank Show and the BBC's series Grumpy Old Men. As a radio broadcaster Sissay makes documentaries for the BBC. He is a regular contributor on BBC Radio 4's Saturday Live, which in 2008 was nominated for two Sony Awards. He also contributes to the BBC's Book Panel.

In 2015, Sissay became the Patron of All Fm 96.9 Community Radio in Manchester (www.allfm.org). He said: “I’ve always loved All Fm, partly because it’s such diverse radio (with shows in Urdu, Polish, Somali, Persian, Cantonese and more), but also because it played ‘Architecture,’ (Bertallot & Mo-Dus Remix) which I’d lost and the All Fm DJ sent me a copy.” Lemn’s poems are read frequently on All Fm and one of it’s older presenters, Li, aged 84, translated and read his poem ‘Invisible Kisses’ in Mandarin and English. She said: “I love his poetry because it is so moving and not skin-deep”.

In June 2015, Sissay was elected as Chancellor of the University of Manchester for a seven-year term by university staff, registered alumni and members of the General Assembly. He took up his new role on 1 August, with an installation ceremony held on Foundation day at the university on 14 October 2015.

Sissay said: "Reach for the top of the tree and you may get to the first branch but reach for the stars and you'll get to the top of the tree. My primary aim is to inspire and be inspired. I am proud to be Chancellor of this fantastic university and extremely grateful to everyone who voted for me."

In 2016 Sissay became the Patron of theatre company 20 Stories High who are based in Toxteth, Liverpool. 20 Stories High create diverse theatre with a range of different mediums such as beatboxing, singing, puppetry and more.

In 2017, it was announced that Sissay would appear in a revival of Jim Cartwright's play Road at the Royal Court Theatre

Books

  • Tender Fingers in a Clenched Fist. Bogle-L'Ouverture, 1988. ISBN 978-0-90452-144-3.
  • Rebel Without Applause. Bloodaxe Books, 1992 (Canongate Books, 2000). ISBN 978-1-84195-001-3.
  • Morning Breaks in the Elevator. Canongate Books, 1999. ISBN 978-1-84767-743-3.
  • The Fire People (editor). Payback Press, 1998. ISBN 9780862417390.
  • The Emperor's Watchmaker. Bloomsbury Children's Books, 2001. ISBN 978-0-74754-755-6.
  • Listener, Canongate Books, 2008. ISBN 978-1-84195-895-8.
  • Hidden Gems (Deirdre Osborne ed., Sissay contributed "Something Dark"), Oberon Books, 2008. ISBN 978-1-84002-843-0.
  • Refugee Boy, Bloomsbury stage adaptation of Benjamin Zephaniah's novel Refugee Boy, 2013. ISBN 978-1-47250-645-0
  • Plays

  • Skeletons in the Cupboard (1993), Bury Metro Arts
  • Don't Look Down (1993)
  • Chaos by Design (1994), Community Arts Workshop
  • Storm (2002), Contact Theatre
  • Something Dark (2006), Battersea Arts Centre/Contact Theatre
  • Why I Don't Hate White People (2011), Hammersmith Lyric Theatre
  • Refugee Boy (2013), West Yorkshire Playhouse
  • BBC radio plays

  • Chaos by Design (BBC Radio 1994)
  • Something Dark ( BBC Radio 2006)
  • Something Dark – Live(ABC 2012)
  • Why I Don't Hate White People (BBC Radio 2011)
  • References

    Lemn Sissay Wikipedia