ACR Cultural Group present: Dodo Modern Poets
30 November 2022 7.30pm – 9.00pm via zoom
Dodo Modern Poets was formed in 1989, its name a play on
the famous imprint, Penguin Modern Poets, which published poetry in affordable
paperbacks.
Dodo has presented emerging and established poets through London
residencies at the Poetry Cafe, Covent Garden and the King & Queen,
Fitzrovia and at festivals and events throughout the UK and Ireland.
Prior to Dodo, Pete and Patric founded Ragged Trousered Cabaret, together
with other activists from the labour and union movement. RTC was established in
1984 to support workers during the Thatcher years. It received social bookings
from Labour Party branches, left organisations and national unions, including
print workers’ union Sogat.
RTC organised benefit shows featuring poets, comedians, actors and
musicians. During the miners’ strike RTC repeatedly took performers, supporters
and supplies to Snowdown Colliery in Aylesham, Kent. One acclaimed performer
was 15-year old Ellie Bence, a miner’s daughter from the village. She wrote
songs and poems about the hardships and pride of the community.
The group took part in Pit Dragon, a day-long performance at Neasden
power station to halt the entry of coking trucks. During the Wapping dispute it
organised an Alternative Royal Wedding Show on Wapping Green opposite Murdoch’s
plant to protest the sacking of 6,000 workers. The Anti Apartheid Choir brought
their voices to the Wapping show from the 24- hour picket line outside the South
African Embassy. RTC had taken performers to the anti-apartheid picket line on
many occasions.
RTC supported seafarers, the NHS and other workers during disputes. It
performed for Arts For Labour at the Labour Party conference and for Militant
at a Royal Albert Hall conference.
Many RTC performers went on to continued success – the alumni includes
Jazz singer Barb Jungr, Jo Brand, John Hegley, Mike Myers, Denise Black, Harry
Enfield, Jenny Eclair, Marxist magician Ian Saville, Phil Jupitus, Maria Tolly,
Jenny Le Coat, Joolz, Owen O’Neil, Surfing Dave, swing group Some Like It Hot
and Skint Video.
Performing will be Patric Cunnane. Patric’s poems have
appeared in publications including The Guardian, The New European, The Morning
Star, Wapping Post, US title Atlanta Review, Poetry News and Dreich. Several
poems appear in Cornish anthology Time for Song. Work appears in Welling Up and
Can You Hear The People Sing?, two anthologies from Palewell Press and the
anthology Reflections, published by South West London Poets in October 2022.
Poems have been broadcast on Radio 4 and Croydon Radio.Patric’s latest
collection The Ghost of Franz Kafka is published by Palewell Press. Two further
collections, Looking for Eden and Baltimore are available from the author.
Patric.poet@zen.co.uk
Pete Murry. Pete has been writing and performing
poetry for many years. Once he taught in a North West London College which is
now being demolished to make way for unaffordable housing. He’s also a painter
and sculptor, with work exhibited by Free Painters and Sculptors and Brent
Artists. His writings can be found at http://quadraoptica.blogspot.com/ and in
a collection entitled The Glowing Nightsoil Of The Concealed Emu, obtainable
from him at <yrrumuk@googlemail.com
Sue Johns. Sue originates from Cornwall where she began
performing as a punk poet in the 1980s. She has published three pamphlets and
two full collections, the most recent Hush (Morgan’s Eye Press
2011) , Rented:Poems on Prostitution and Dependency (Palewell
Press, 2018) and a new pamphlet Track Record (Dempsey
& Windle, 2021). She was highly commended in the Prole competition
and the Amnesty International competition. She has an MA in Writing Poetry from
Newcastle University/ The Poetry School. Her work has appeared in anthologies including Can
You Hear the People Sing (Palewell Press, 2020), Alter
Egos (Bad Betty, 2019) Welling Up (Palewell Press,
2019) and Time for Song, Contemporary Cornish Poetry ( Morgan’s Eye
Press, 2009), Ver Prize anthology, 2022 and magazines including Poetry
News, The Morning Star, Southbank Poetry, Dreich, The Atlanta Review, Prole,
The Alchemy Spoon, Brittle Star, The Big Issue and London Grip.
Organised by ACR
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