Dorothea Smartt & Sherlee Mitchell
Dorothea Smartt was born in London and grew up in Battersea. Her parents came to London
from Barbados in the 1950s. She writes poetry both in her ‘London voice’ (as
she calls it) and in the ‘Bajan’ (Barbadian) voice of her childhood. ”I learnt
to speak English from my parents, who speak in a very particular way. So I use
language in a very particular way, and I always say to people, poetry saved my
Bajan voice.”
It was her involvement with the Black Women’s Movement that got her into
writing. She worked for local groups and Black Women’s co-operatives in
Brixton, organising newsletters and writing book reviews and theatre reviews.
She didn’t think of publishing poetry until some of the women she worked with
got her involved in performance, and her poetry was incorporated into a live
art piece performed at Brixton Art Gallery. Not long after that, Black Women
Talk, a small publishing collective, decided to put an anthology together and
asked her to submit some work. Other invitations followed and the performances
continued as she received invitations to read at benefits and women’s events.
Her solo performance work, Medusa, a combination of poetry and visuals, began
to take on a life of its own. Cleverly using the image of hair-dressing to
merge the myth of Medusa with a Black woman’s experience (Dorothea was once
called ‘Medusa’ at school because of her hair-style), the work led to her first
commission from the Institute of Contemporary Arts. The result of this
commission was From
You to Me to You.
She conceived this illustrated solo performance with photographer and educator
Sherlee Mitchell
Dorothea’s other collaborative performances include Fo(u)r Women and Home Is Where the Heart Kicks. Her poetry has appeared in several groundbreaking anthologies, including Bittersweet (an anthology presented at last year’s City of Women Festival), The Fire People (Payback Press, 1998), Voice Memory Ashes (Mango Publishing, 1999), Mythic Women/Real Women (Faber, 2000), and IC3: The Penguin Book of New Black Writing in Britain (2000). A former visiting writer at Florida International University, Smartt runs workshops, has recently joined the poetryclass teacher-training team, and is now also a part-time lecturer on creative writing at Birkbeck College.