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Harbourfront Centre’s KUUMBA, presented by TD Bank Group through the TD Ready Commitment, is Toronto’s largest and longest-running Black Futures Month festival, embracing the rich tapestry of culture, diversity and creativity through a month-long celebration of Black cultural programming. Running from February 1–29, 2024

But Blackwood is no ordinary Jamaican. Born from British parents in Montreal in 1951, he found himself spending his formative childhood years in Jamaica between 1956 and 1970. He attended Campion College; and credits this time in his life as the most influential years on his psyche. He discovered his acting talents at 11 years old through a college play. He later took some theatre courses while at university in St-Catharines, Ontario. But Jamaica has always remained in his soul. He recounts: "All during my career as I came up here, people always ask me: What is that Jamaican thing that happened to you? They’re always interested in that.”

Jamaica Man is essentially a retelling of his life story through the eyes of an often ostracized outsider. “So I just try to make it a little show about my life story, right? … To see if I could put my life story out on stage and see if it finds any resonance. If there’s any interest in it at all. … And there seems to be. When can I get a West Indian audience? Which is hard for me to get. One white man, they don’t want to come, right?”

Indeed, Blackwood laments the fact that he often has trouble drawing a West Indian crowd. But when they "do" come, it's a party. He speaks specifically of some dub poets who came to see his show recently and immediately saw a big difference in their attitude toward him. Blackwood recounts: "A few of them came to see my show, and, of course, the attitude changed completely. Just warmed right up. They said: “Okay, you understand.” Here’s one white man who probably understands. So that does work for me. But I think that one of the effects of it is that I tend to ostracize myself. I tend to cut myself off. It is a little challenging. It's a bit of a chip on my shoulder, really. It’s difficult because I haven’t really moved to the West Indian community in Toronto. I move into the theatre community."

Blackwood has always felt uneasy about any form of oppression. But he realizes that being a white Jamaican man comes with tackling assumptions about who he is regularly. He says: "My personal story is what happened to me and what I think about. I can’t make any judgment. If anything, I can sort of judge white people. … I don’t want to have no part of no system. Just what I do personally. That’s all. It’s hard not to align yourself with any organization. It's lonely business being a white Jamaican.”

Recognizing what he calls "piracy," which underlies the system of big-money Western influence in Jamaica, Blackwood explains: "As a white man, I have a good view on the exploitation process. Okay? And my father was a businessman down there for years, trying to be just a middle-class businessman. And to make a living and how damned near impossible that is."

Blackwood remembers how his cultural identification with Jamaican culture brought opposition from his British-born parents. “Why are you talking like that? You don’t even sound like them. Stop talking like that.” And my dad would say, “This theatre lark.” They called it a lark. But after years and years in the straight business, he now has nothing to show for it, so now he can’t say nothing, right?"

Jamaica Man originally showed in 2003 at Theatre Passe Muraille to a very successful first week-end. But the big black-out of that year basically killed the play and all the other plays showing that week. Since then, he has been taking it to schools. "It’s a one-act thing, so it fits into classroom format. And I’ve been trying to take it out to high schools, what they call grade 7, 8, 9 … and it works really well out there. I find a lot of children with West Indian background … they don’t know Jamaica … they don’t. They’re interested in it," Blackwood says.

He hopes that Jamaica Man will attract a good amount of West Indians. "When I get a good West Indian audience, it’s a party. There are a lot of good jokes and live music to sing along with. It’s a celebration. I love the place. It’s like a love letter that turns into a tirade. That’s why I’m hoping to get mixed audiences in there. It’s hard to get the West Indian audience, but I’ll keep working on it. I don’t expect everybody to flock to see me. I go out and look for them. This is just one stage of my pursuing this little project.”

See Theatre Passe Muraille site or call 416.504.7529 for tickets

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