On my radar: Susan Wokoma’s cultural highlights

The Crazyhead and Chewing Gum actor on a podcast about grief, some mind-blowing electronica, and the perfect pre-theatre venue

Born in Southwark, south London, Susan Wokoma made her acting debut aged 18 in Bafta-winning docudrama That Summer Day (2006), before going on to train at Rada. Wokoma has since starred in Channel 4’s Crashing, as Cynthia in E4 comedy Chewing Gum, and as the lead in E4/Netflix co-production Crazyhead; she made her film debut in 2013’s Half of a Yellow Sun. In 2016 she won the BBC audio drama award for best supporting actor for her role in the radio adaptation of Marie NDiaye’s Three Strong Women. From 25 September, Wokoma will star in James Graham’s political comedy Labour of Love at London’s Noel Coward theatre; from 20 September she will be in Dave original comedy Porters.

1 | Documentary
Step (dir Amanda Lipitz, 2017)

This is a brilliant film about a step group – step is a dance using your body as percussion, like in the Step Up films – in a high school in Baltimore, and the backdrop is the death of Freddie Gray and the riots in Baltimore. Every time I see a documentary, it’s kind of an arty pat on the back that I’m stepping out of fictional worlds, but the moment I started watching this, I burst into tears. These girls who look like me, or remind me of the girls I went to school with – we were going to stay with their stories from beginning to end. Normally those people appear for a couple of scenes and then are gone, but this was championing them in a way you’d normally see with other protagonists.

2 | Podcast
Griefcast

I absolutely love this podcast by comedian Cariad Lloyd. Losing somebody is such an important topic that will affect us all, if it hasn’t already, and talking to comedians is probably the most successful way to broach the subject. Probably my favourite episode is with actress Beth Rylance, who talks about losing her mother when she was very young, and grieving for someone you never knew. I’ll be a guest in a few months. Cariad lost her dad, and I lost my dad about five years ago. Unfortunately it’s a bit of a club – you can tell when somebody has lost someone very dear to them, and you bond over it. No one really understands it until you’ve been through it.

3 | Music
Holy Fuck

I got taken by my boyfriend to see their gig at the Jazz Cafe in Camden. I’m normally quite cautious when a boyfriend goes “You should watch this movie, or listen to this band”, because I feel like they’re trying to educate me, and I have my own tastes. But I was completely blown away. I wouldn’t normally say I was into electronica but they were incredible. I was so sceptical – I walked in thinking “I’m not going to like this”, and then I ended up loving it.

4 | TV
This Country (BBC3)

I went to drama school with Daisy May Cooper – who co-wrote This Country with her brother – and she is hands down the funniest person I know. It’s one of the cleverest comedies in a long time, and really tapped a nerve in what it’s like to be white working class in an area that’s meant to be the pinnacle of the Chipping Norton set. When you think of the Cotswolds, you think of David Cameron and all those guys, but actually the people who are surrounded by all that heritage are just bored and getting up to no good. I’ve watched it four times now.

5 | Theatre
Yerma (Young Vic)

Yerma is a Lorca play about a woman who wants to have a child and can’t – “yerma” means “barren”. Billie Piper is a phenomenal, instinctive, visceral actress, and this was one of the best performances I’ve seen in years. You just don’t know what she’s going to do next – she’s so unpredictable on stage, and it’s a thrill to see live theatre and not know where it’s going, at all. I don’t feel connected to the idea of yearning for a child, and yet she completely draws you in. For the first time, I understood what that pain must be like. It’s completely sold out but they’re doing an NT Live broadcast on 31 August. It’s a tragedy, so take a tissue.

6 | Book
Lonely Courage by Rick Stroud

I sometimes co-host the Guilty Feminist podcast and we did an episode on intrepid women. Our guest was Rick Stroud, talking about this book about women who fought to free Nazi-occupied France. The SOE [Special Operations Executive] recruiting officer Sir Selwyn Jepson went to Churchill and said, “I think women would actually be really good for this,” so he recruited 39 women from different backgrounds. Probably my favourite was Noor Inayat Khan, who came from a noble Indian Muslim family and was a complete pacifist – not what second world war officers like in our heads – who became a spy. There’s a quote I absolutely love: “Women... have a far greater capacity for a cool and lonely courage than men.”

7 | Restaurant
Cafe Monico, Shaftesbury Avenue, London

This is sandwiched in between the Gielgud theatre and the Queen’s theatre, and it’s just one of those perfect pre-theatre dining places. It has a beautiful interior that’s meant to hark back to 1878 France, the staff are lovely, and they have the most amazing bread basket and butter. That’s a good sign, that before you’ve ordered anything, the thing that’s put in front of you is incredible. I’m down there pretty much every day. I’m normally by the window, with a bread basket, oysters – because I don’t know who I think I am – a glass of prosecco, and a good book.

Contributor

Kathryn Bromwich

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
On my radar: Rosie Holt’s cultural highlights
The satirist on her favourite superhero show, her go-to gym motivation music, and why she loves Tim Key

Kathryn Bromwich

09, Jul, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
On my radar: Deborah Frances-White’s cultural highlights
The comedian and host of the Guilty Feminist podcast on her Elizabethan poet pin-up, a Syrian silversmith and some powerful protest folk

Deborah Frances-White

09, Sep, 2018 @9:00 AM

Article image
On my radar: Mandip Gill’s cultural highlights
The Doctor Who actor on her R&B obsession, the magic of Matt Haig and the Wagamama dish she has three times a week

Michael Hogan

18, Dec, 2021 @3:00 PM

Article image
On my radar: Lynette Linton’s cultural highlights
The Bush theatre’s artistic director on how Bridgerton, a hilarious internet dating show and an incredible debut novel are feeding her obsession with love

Killian Fox

23, Apr, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
On my radar: Rose Matafeo’s cultural highlights
The Starstruck ​creator and ​​star reveals her passion for ​Joan Collins,​ J-pop and all-you-can-eat vegetarian buffets

Kathryn Bromwich

05, Feb, 2022 @3:00 PM

Article image
On my radar: Will Poulter’s cultural highlights
The actor on his globe-spanning appetite, his love of Kojey Radical and his admiration for how comedian Bo Burnham dealt with the misery of lockdown

Michael Hogan

09, Apr, 2022 @2:00 PM

Article image
On my radar: Katherine Ryan’s cultural highlights
The comedian on her favourite new painter, the downfall of Diddy, and wanting to save Britney Spears

Kathryn Bromwich

13, Apr, 2024 @2:00 PM

Article image
On my radar: Jazzy Jeff’s cultural highlights
The DJ and producer on Jay-Z’s new album, the Philadelphia 76ers and the great taste of blue crab

Jade Cuttle

13, Aug, 2017 @6:00 AM

Article image
On my radar: John Simm's cultural highlights

The actor on listening to Lloyd Cole, watching Man of Steel and reading Stoner by John Williams

Ben Marshall

13, Jul, 2013 @11:01 PM

Article image
On my radar: Harry Hill’s cultural highlights
The comedian tells Kathryn Bromwich about Tim Pigott-Smith as Prince Charles, Revolutionary Road, the rock band Eels and the magic of Gogglebox

Kathryn Bromwich

16, Nov, 2014 @12:05 AM