On Thursday morning, my phone pinged with a screenshot from a friend of a news article that genuinely made me squeal with excitement. It was about the actor, documentary-maker, campaigner, and all-round brilliant human David Harewood – who has just been announced as the new president of the Royal Academy Of Dramatic Arts (Rada).
Joining him as vice-president is the insanely talented British actor Cynthia Erivo. She too is a big deal. For the uninitiated, Rada is one of the top drama schools in the country (and one of the oldest) to hone your craft as an actor. If you’ve got Rada on your CV, it makes people sit up and take notice.
My excitement over David is biased, though. I’ve been lucky enough to spend time in his company on numerous occasions. Only last year, we were sitting together at a dinner, spending the evening talking about our individual industries and the changes we’ve seen over the years in terms of diversity, as well as our shared love of the best corner of the globe: south-east London.
To spend time in his company is quite something. For me, he’s a giant in the game who has an ease and manner about him that makes you instantly feel comfortable.
For Rada students to have him and Cynthia on board just makes me feel hopeful about the opportunities ahead for those who have felt invisible, ignored, or unappreciated in institutions such as Rada. Those who feel as though their faces, accents, background or class left them at a disadvantage when wandering through those hallowed halls.
In its 120 years of existence, Rada has had 16 presidents. Sir Squire Bancroft, an actor-manager, was the first and the list that follows includes notable actors such as Dame Irene Vanbrugh, Dame Edith Mary Evans, and Kenneth Branagh.
All heavyweights within the acting industry (non-actor the late Diana, Princess of Wales was president at one point too), but it wasn’t until the 17th president, David Harewood, that list finally included someone who is Black.
One hundred and twenty years. The thing is, they’ve done really well on equality where sex is concerned – the list is overflowing with women who were allowed into the upper echelons of drama society. But, diversity in terms of race? Severely lacking.
David is a former Rada student, and one of the finest actors we have in this country, so he comes with a level of understanding of how to navigate those spaces, but also the reality of what the industry is like when you’re finally released from drama school into the working world as a Black actor. Especially if you want to stay in the UK, and not jump ship for better opportunities in America.
For example, Harewood was the first Black actor to play Othello on stage at the [Royal] National Theatre in 1997, so he’s well-used to breaking barriers and dealing with the racism that those in the industry are often faced with (although The National is by far not the worst offender when it comes to Othello, it took to 2015 for the Metropolitan Opera in New York to stop black-facing their performers when they took on the role).
One can only hope that David and Cynthia taking on roles with such prominence and weight in an organisation with a long and rich history within the dramatic arts will have a trickle down effect in terms of the roles that Black actors are offered within the British acting industry. I’ve had countless friends who, after years of determination not to, have ended up – as Black actors – having to jump ship to the US in order to get meatier more high-profile roles, and better exposure. If you want something bigger, there’s only so long you can keep fighting for more here when you know the fight is likely to not be as long and soul-destroying if you move your life elsewhere, across the Atlantic. David (Homeland), and Cynthia (the Broadway production of The Color Purple) are clear examples of this.
Perhaps with them both at the helm of the most British of British institutions it can encourage a change in terms of the way that we look at acting talent, both in terms of race and class.
The barriers to working-class actors – irrespective of race – is well known, and they more than deserve for those barriers to be broken down. Because apart from anything else, it does a disservice to us as consumers. We deserve to experience and watch the full range of talent that Britain has to offer. Quite frankly, the industry will be pretty boring, plain, and stale without it.