The Newham Plays
Just Added

The Newham Plays

Join writer James Kenworth for a special talk and Q&A on The Newham Plays – a powerful series of community-rooted performances.

By Newham Heritage Month

Date and time

Location

Stratford Library

3 The Grove London E15 1EL United Kingdom

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 15 minutes

The Newham Plays are a groundbreaking theatrical series by former long-term Newham resident and Playwright/Creative Writing Tutor James Kenworth, celebrating the stories, spaces, and people of Newham. Staged in site-responsive locations, the plays merge professional performance with community participation, particularly involving local youth. These productions aim to reconnect Newham's residents with their cultural roots, reinterpreting history and literature through a local, socially conscious lens.

Each play in the series draws inspiration from Newham’s diverse heritage. When Chaplin Met Gandhi (2012) dramatizes the unexpected meeting of Gandhi and Charlie Chaplin in Canning Town. Revolution Farm (2014) modernizes Orwell’s Animal Farm with urban grit and a youth-oriented visual style, performed at Newham City Farm. A Splotch of Red: Keir Hardie in West Ham (2016) follows Keir Hardie’s 1892 socialist campaign in West Ham, highlighting the area’s political radicalism, the play toured Newham Libraries and Community Links’ Neighbours Hall.

Alice in Canning Town (2019) reimagines Alice in Wonderland with grime, multiculturalism, and a surreal adventure playground setting in Canning Town’s Arc in the Park. Elizabeth Fry: The Angel of the Prisons (2022) explores the legacy of the famed prison reformer and humanitarian, staged in the Elizabeth Fry Room at Canning Town Library. The latest, Myrninerest: The Outside/Inside Life of Madge Gill (2024), premiered at Art in the Docks, an artist-led social enterprise in the Royal Docks, is an intimate portrait of Madge Gill, a self-taught Outsider artist and spiritual medium from Newham.

Critics have praised the plays’ emotional depth, cultural relevance, and inventive use of local spaces. Reviews highlight their blend of accessible language, community outreach, and theatrical excellence. Kenworth’s work has been recognized as a powerful model for hyper-local theatre, demonstrating how storytelling rooted in place and people can engage, educate, and inspire.

Free
Sep 18 · 6:30 PM GMT+1