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Phosphorus Theatre’s Pizza Shop Heroes is their latest production to feature refugees and asylum seekers among the cast

The hot topics of immigration and integration reaches new levels of urgency in

Pizza Shop Heroes, the third play by Phosphoros Theatre, whose cast is made up

of refugee and asylum seekers in the UK who are from a diverse range of

countries. Set in a pizza shop where the characters work, shared struggles of

perilous migration, longing for home and hopes for a better life are rendered with

unvarnished honesty, especially when the stories are re-told from first hand

experiences. The notion and importance of owning one’s narrative is fully

realised, even if its efficacy isn’t always conclusive.

While rehearsals are held at Kiln Theatre in north London, Phosphoros Theatre is a

touring company whose first play, Dear Home Office (2016), was shortlisted for

the Amnesty Freedom of Information Award. In the same year. The follow-up,

“Dear Home Office Still Pending” (2018) saw nine productions across England,

including one at the London Migration Film Festival.

The company’s current production Pizza Shop Heroes is another close

collaboration, this time, between playwright and scriptwriter Dawn Harrison

(Emmerdale, Doctors, The Dumping Ground) and the cast of five; Tewodros

Aregawe (Ethiopia), Goitom Fesshaye (Eritrea), Emirjon Hoxhaj (Albania), Syed

Haleem Najibi (Afghanistan) and Kate Duffy who is British and co-creator of

Phosphoros Theatre. A forthcoming production in June this year will be held at

Nottingham Playhouse.

“It doesn’t matter who they are or where they’re from – Africa or Asia or Europe,

immigrants or refugees – I see everyone the same. I personally look at the first

thing which is humanity”

The company was founded in 2015 when Duffy worked as a manager at a housing

project for unaccompanied minors into the UK. Dawn Harrison is her mother, and

other familial bonds have emerged among the entire team who, Duffy says,celebrate birthdays and holiday festivities together over the four years of the

company’s existence.

Najibi, who is in college and hopes to begin a bachelor’s degree in Sustainable

Engineering next year, extends this strong sense of community to other seekers of

asylum regardless of their countries of origin: “It doesn’t matter who they are or

where they’re from – Africa or Asia or Europe, immigrants or refugees – I see

everyone the same. I personally look at the first thing which is humanity. It

shouldn’t matter where a person is from, or what religion they believe in or what

skin colour they have”.

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This is echoed by Fesshaye who is in college studying to become an electrician:

“(it is fun) to do this as a company, friends and family, brothers and sisters all

together. We didn’t know each other before, but when we met we connected”.

Fesshaye is also an asmari, a praise-singer and plays the krar, a stringed

instrument common to both Ethiopia and Eritrea where he’s from. “I love

everything about it” says Fesshaye when asked what he loved the most about

being an actor. This ease with live performance has prepared him for stage acting

which has, in turn, emboldened his sets/gigs as a singer and instrumentalist.

I ask Duffy, the co-director, if she expects the cast to be judged for their acting

abilities despite having no professional training: “I expect the piece to be judged

as a piece of theatre. They’re not professional actors and that’s clear in the

information the audience has. We’re programmed as a political theatre. We’re

not billed as a kind of community piece. So, whilst we don’t have professional

actors, we have actors that have been performing to sold out audiences for three

years now”.

“The work of Phosphoros Theatre is heightened by the fact that each

performance is given by the very people affected by it; every word, laugh or cry

uttered on stage is closer to its source, and no doubt has more truth”This would be a point of pride for any theatre house and especially for one that is

fledging and is concerned with some of the most divisive issues of the day such as

immigration. Even more than any lauded political play on a big London stage, the

urgency in Pizza Shop Heroes and the work of Phosphoros Theatre is heightened

by the fact that each performance is given by the very people affected by it;

every word, laugh or cry uttered on stage is closer to its source, and no doubt has

more truth, than that of the most ventriloquist of actors, however well-rendered.

The real-life challenges the company faces take the form of absurdist socio-

realist plays. In February this year, the company travelled to Malta to perform at

the Lost In Migration conference, a cross-national effort to ensure the protection

of child migrants into Europe. It was also the theatre company’s first

international performance but they were refused entry into Malta by immigration

officials who grew suspicious of the improbable mix of Afghani, Eritrean, Albanian

and English visitors.

Three members of the team had British passports which ensured entry; three

others had refugee travel documents and the last had a certificate of travel

issued by the Home Office. Neither of the latter two documents, insisted the

officials, is a valid Schengen document and could be refused on discretionary

grounds.

“It is a painful thing to happen to people like us. At the same time we take it as

something positive. It’s why we’re doing it to challenge people like that” says

Najibi who has got “discretionary leave to remain” in the UK. He goes on to add

that “we will not give up and we will keep doing the work that we’re doing and

we will keep fighting. We’re resilient refugees. It made us strong and patient

about things”.

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