For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When the Hue Gets Too Heavy, Garrick Theatre

Powerful and poetic: book now for For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When the Hue Gets Too Heavy on the West End

For Black Boys... Royal Court Theatre review. Photo: Ali Wright
After critically acclaimed runs at the New Diorama Theatre, the Royal Court, and in the West End, Ryan Calais Cameron's trailblazing, heart-felt For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When the Hue Gets Too Heavy returns to the West End for a 2024 run at the Garrick Theatre.

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For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When the Hue Gets Too Heavy, Royal Court Theatre review ★★★★★

Having just transferred to the Royal Court from a sold-out run at New Diorama Theatre, For Black Boys presents the multifaceted crises that plague contemporary Black men. The show upends traditional notions of Black masculinity, critiquing the beliefs surrounding what authentic Black manhood looks like, sounds like, and feels like, both from the inside and out.

Simply put, this is an exquisite show. It’s got the full emotional spectrum and then some, leaping from ecstasy to trauma and back in a millisecond. It’s peppered with side-splitting comedy routines, to moments where it’s hard not to sob into the shoulder of your neighbouring audience member. Bring tissues.


For Black Boys, Royal Court Theatre. Photo: Ali Wright

Formally, it’s an abstracted series of vignettes from a therapy session between a close-knit community of six young black male friends, illuminating their joys, pains, loves, losses and everything in between. The unifying theme is how they as young black men navigate life with the unrelenting weight of society’s pressures and prejudices on their shoulders.

This is ensemble theatre at its purest. It boasts a stunning cast where every actor is a star in their own right, yet is simultaneously balanced to create an equalising, enchanting group dynamic. It would be impossible to highlight one because they're all so strong. Each actor offers nuance and grace, which is all the more remarkable because this is actor Kaine Lawrence’s theatrical debut.

Each performer transforms into a myriad characters during the show, but they each have a core character we learn about in depth, from their highs and lows, to a specific instance of personal trauma that has led them to thoughts of suicide. It’s all presented with a joyous playfulness, due to the life-affirming direction and playwriting of Ryan Calais Cameron, co-founder and artistic director of the award-winning Nouveau Riche Theatre Company.

For Black Boys is the companion piece to its sister show Queens of Sheba, also created by Nouveau Riche, which illustrates the complexities of life as a contemporary black woman, winning a slew of awards in 2018, including The Stage Edinburgh Festival Award.


For Black Boys, Royal Court Theatre. Photo: Ali Wright

Rainbow-inspired costumes are complimented by a bold neon set from designer Anna Reid. The set’s simplicity is effective in allowing the actors to dance using Theophilus O Bailey-Godson’s hip-hop choreography, hypnotic swaying and krump dancing filtered through the show to convey the contrast between the characters’ inner peace and turmoil.

The elongated title For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When the Hue Gets Too Heavy pays homage to Ntozake Shange’s ground-breaking choreopoem from 1976 For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide / When the Rainbow is Enuf which has inspired generations of theatre-makers by its emotionally raw content and its formal mix of poetry, dance, music, and song to theatrically illustrate the intricacies of the black experience. Calais Cameron uses Shange’s work as a jumping-off point into the hyper-masculine world of Black men, using the form to express the sensitivity, vulnerability, and desperation these men feel on a daily basis. Importantly, For Black Boys is a flagship to promote love and brotherhood between Black men, so they can go on to be supported and achieve their dreams in a society that has barred them from participating for so long.

If you see one show this month, see For Black Boys. It’s hard not to be moved by this elegant and raw ensemble performance.



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What For Black Boys Who Have Considered Suicide When the Hue Gets Too Heavy, Garrick Theatre
Where Garrick Theatre, 2 Charing Cross Road, London, WC2H 0HH | MAP
Nearest tube Sloane Square (underground)
When 25 Mar 24 – 07 May 24, 7:30 PM – 10:30 PM
Price £48+
Website Click here for more information and to book




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