PHILLIS WHEATLEY’S LONDON ADVENTURE

An exciting year-long, transatlantic programme of drama, events, and talks celebrating the 250th anniversary of Wheatley’s Reflections on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral – the first book of poetry in English by an African writer.

Featured Events

Ade Joins Phillis Performance At Boston Landmark Orchestra Juneteenth Celebration 

Celebrating Juneteenth, Landmarks Orchestra starts the summer season with a debut…...

Ade Joins Old South Church’s Annual Phillis Wheatley Sunday 

MOTHER’S DAY CELEBRATION Phillis Wheatley is one of Old South’s most…...

WE’RE OFF TO THE US!

Ade is a Fulbright 22/23 Distinguished Scholar! Ade has won a…...

Keynote Address At Literary London Society, Lost Voice Conference, 2021

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/lost-voices-literary-london-society-symposium-tickets-159400875309# About this event Wednesday 7 July: Lost and Misremembered Voices…...

Readings Of The Play in Ghana

We’ve Done Exciting Readings Of The Play At Several Events, Including…...

A Blue Plaque for Phillis Erected in London in her Honour

Phillis Is One Of The Few Black Women To Have A…...

Rehearsed Reading At Global Morrison Conference, University Of Greenwich, June 2017

We’re developing arts and education programmes with several partners including the…...

Phillis in London is a project to mark the 250th anniversary of the first book in english by an African. Phillis Wheatley’s book, Reflections on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral, was published in London in 1773.

From acclaimed playwright Ade Solanke comes a new play about an extraordinary writer – Phillis Wheatley, the first African-American to publish a book of poetry, and the second American woman to do so.

Her volume was published in London when she was still a teenager. It marks a watershed moment in literary history and made her ‘the Oprah Winfrey of her day’, both in Europe and America. On her trip to London in 1773, she toured the city, visited Greenwich with its myriad connections to the Navy, the Slave Trade and British-African history, and mixed with the elite of London society.

But while she was being celebrated, she was enslaved.