Livia Kojo Alour’s critically acclaimed & award winning solo show is coming to your living rooms this Christmas!
Black Sheep: Fusing physical theatre, spoken word and song, the story of a queer Black woman finding love, overcoming institutional racism and leaning into radical vulnerability
27.December 2022, 8pm GMT
The pre-recorded performance will be screened live on YouTube and will be available on Google for 7 days from 20.12. -27.12 22. A link to the show will be send out the day before
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Award Winner: Birds of Paradise Exceptional Theatre Award 2022
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️”A vivid and compelling memoir” (The Scotsman)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ “Livia Kojo Alour belts out a song that fizzles with energy” (Broadway Baby)
“A sassy blend of cabaret, circus and performance. Bravo! (Total Theatre)
“ A compelling performer “ (The Guardian)
“I cannot currently think of any artist more powerful and unique than Livia Kojo Alour, nor any piece of performance more resonant and poignant than Black Sheep”
(Anne Clark, UK Poet & Spoken Word Artist)
"Writing Black Sheep was a revelation to myself.” says Livia. “Now I hope to touch and inspire others with my story - maybe even open a few eyes?” (Livia Kojo Alour)
Livia Kojo Alour a poet, musician and theatre maker who in a former life regularly graced international stages as sword swallower speaks out about the challenges and repercussions facing Black women who dare to ditch stereotypes in her frank and deeply personal debut solo show Black Sheep.
After moving from Germany to London over ten years ago to live and work in a more diverse community, Livia learned that life-long feelings of self-hatred and otherness are part internalised racism and part survival techniques. With a successful career under her former stage name MisSa but tiring of playing someone else full-time, Black Sheep has been long in the making, serving as a candid autobiographical work and a euphoric reclamation of Livia’s identity and ongoing fortitude.
Black Sheep is a story about a Black woman finding love and a testament of personal strength, developed through transcending the white gaze, overcoming institutional racism and leaning into radical vulnerability. Securing her place as a pivotal UK Queer Black voice while telling her story via a heady mix of physical theatre, spoken word, song. Black Sheep is timely, unsettling and deeply personal.