Pam Fraser SolomonFRSA is a British producer/director of Guyanese heritage, whose work spans four decades in theatre, radio, film, television and education, winning prizes such as the Commission for Racial Equality "Race in the Media Award" in 1999. She worked for 16 years with BBC Radio, where she was a senior producer. Her career in fringe and repertory theatre includes working for venues such as the Sheffield Crucible and the Theatre Royal Stratford East, and she is currently the Head of Creative Producing at Mountview drama school.[1]
Background
Born in Guyana and raised in London, England, Pam Fraser Solomon holds a master's degree from Middlesex University.[2] Her early career included work in fringe and repertory theatre, with venues such as the Sheffield Crucible, the Theatre Royal Stratford East and the Haymarket Theatre, and as a director for theatre companies Temba and BTC (Black Theatre Co-operative) in the 1980s.[3]Bonnie Greer quoted Fraser Solomon in a 2006 Guardian article as saying: "In those days, black theatre was the new kid on the block, surviving from production to production or, if you were very lucky, season to season....The difference between black theatre and the rest was that many of us had degrees in drama or English, even physics – but we didn't dress the stage with it. You didn't have to be into theatre to make black theatre, and black theatre didn't always happen in black theatre spaces. But oddly, everyone knew exactly what they were talking about when they said 'black theatre'. Often we were expected to be 'black' and produce something alternative, preferably 'ghetto'. Funding bodies could ask you to be 'theatre' today and 'black' tomorrow. It was shifting sands."[3]
Speaking of how her Guyanese heritage and the experience of growing up in London as a Black woman has impacted her work, Fraser Solomon has said: "People like me with experiences that can inform characterisation and storytelling, subtly changing the emphasis, can lead drama away from comfort zones. This doesn't make me better than others, but it makes my contribution equally valid. I see the world through the eyes of a Black woman, so in that sense all my intuition eventually leads back to that fact."[4]
From 1991, Fraser Solomon was for 16 years a senior producer with BBC Radio, where she directed more than a hundred hours of audio dramas,[1] and she was involved in major arts events such as the Africa95 and Africa '05 festivals, as well as the 2007 Abolition commemoration season.[5] She wrote and produced for BBC Radio 4 in January 2001 the programme Stealing the Glory, about the Arctic explorer Matthew Henson, presented by Colin Salmon.[6]
Her television drama work encompasses producing several episodes of EastEnders and Holby City, and she was the development producer for the BBC short film One Night In White Satin.[1][7] She was an executive producer of the 2007 BBC2 television documentary In Search of Wilberforce, presented by Moira Stuart.[8]
Also in 2007, Fraser Solomon produced on BBC Radio 3The Lamplighter,[9] by Jackie Kay, who has written about the commissioning of the work for the season marking the bicentenary of the Slave Trade Act 1807: "After we had finished recording The Lamplighter, we sat around talking about the complex business of what we remember and what we forget. Pam Fraser Solomon said that her great grandmother, whose mother had been born enslaved, often had an enigmatic expression on her face. She'd say: 'I'm just listening to where the breeze is coming from.' I thought of all the silences - the silences from African people who do not want their children to hear about slavery, and from white people who do not want to discuss the family tree with its roots in a plantation in the Caribbean."[10]
Continuing her career as a freelance producer, director and script editor, Fraser Solomon was involved in projects including the production of the documentary film Divided by Race, United in War and Peace, about Caribbean war veterans and their struggles against colour prejudice and racism.[11] She took up the position of Head of MA Creative Producing at Mountview Academy of Theatre Arts in 2018.[12] She is also Co-Chair of Theatre Deli.[2] Addressing the "[m]ismatch between BAME stories and performances when compared to presence in the boardroom, she has written: "Organisations should examine internal structures that block gateways to leadership reflective of ethos and mission statement."[13]
2001: Stealing the Glory: the Conquest of the North Pole, presented by Colin Salmon, 30-minute feature on Arctic explorer Matthew Henson — writer and producer (BBC Radio 4)[36]
2006: One Night in White Satin — development producer (BBC TV)
2007: In Search of Wilberforce, presented by Moira Stuart, documentary examining the role of anti-slavery campaigner William Wilberforce — executive producer (BBC 2)
^"The Lamplighter (BBC Radio 3)". 1807 Commemorated. Institute for the Public Understanding of the Past and the Institute of Historical Research. 2007. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
^"Beyond a Boundary", BBC, Radio Times, Issue 3787, 22 August 1996: Abridged in five parts (25–30 August 1996) by Margaret Busby, produced by Pam Fraser Solomon.