On the back of the TV drama’s success, Maxine Peake used her platform to speak up on behalf of the real people that inspired the play. She issued a rallying cry to address Manchester’s ‘homelessness explosion’.
The work has also been successful in finding new audiences, proved through some impressive statistics. The poets’ broadcasts and adaptations have achieved estimated engagements (listens, reads and views) totalling over 52 million since 2014.
This led to many new commissions designed to mark public anniversaries and events. Duffy’s The Wound in Time, commissioned by director Danny Boyle and 14-18 NOW, was recited on beaches across the UK on Remembrance Day 2018. Again, it generated new audiences for poetry, increasing reach with young people and lower socio-economic groups.
But it’s important to look beyond the numbers, too. Stories about real lives can so often have an effect on real lives. As Michael explains, “Some of it inevitably is anecdotal. After the film went out the producer was approached by a homeless hostel. They asked for a copy that they could show to people who came in, because so many of them identified with this cycle of not admitting it and therefore not seeking help.”
Michael continues, “You hope it makes a difference by sparking a debate.”
Setting a new course for poetry
Alongside challenging homelessness, the poets also search for equality, social justice and cultural freedom.
In a 2018 dramatisation of Paradise Lost, Michael drew parallels between Milton’s original civil war-torn world and post-Brexit Britain. Elsewhere, Mort’s re-imagining of the Medusa myth looked to increase awareness in sexual abuse, while McMillan’s work challenged sexuality and masculinity as he worked with LGBT communities.
Then there was Carol Ann Duffy’s re-telling of the 15th century play Everyman. Here, instead of trying to address questions of our own morality and mortality within religion, Duffy poses similar questions under the context of the eco-crisis currently facing the human race. A thoroughly secular definition of salvation.
By forging new collaborative work in public poetry, the Manchester Met poets show that poetry can once again be a major driver in sparking the conversations that effect change.