Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché

Wed 02/02/22
7:00PM
All Ages
film
$8 ADV // $12 DOS

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1:1 Square 9:16 Portrait

Poly Styrene was the first woman of colour in the UK to front a successful rock band. She
introduced the world to a new sound of rebellion, using her unconventional voice to sing about identity, consumerism, postmodernism, and everything she saw unfolding in late 1970s
Britain, with a rare prescience. As the frontwoman of X-Ray Spex, the Anglo-Somali punk
musician was also a key inspiration for the riot grrrl and Afropunk movements.
But the late punk maverick didn’t just leave behind an immense cultural footprint. She was
survived by a daughter, Celeste Bell, who became the unwitting guardian of her mother’s
legacy and her mother’s demons. Misogyny, racism, and mental illness plagued Poly’s life,
while their lasting trauma scarred Celeste’s childhood and the pair’s relationship.
Featuring unseen archive material and rare diary entries narrated by Oscar-nominee Ruth
Negga, this documentary follows Celeste as she examines her mother’s unopened artistic
archive and traverses three continents to better understand Poly the icon and Poly the mother.

Show Lineup

Celeste Bell

Celeste Bell spent her earliest years living on a Hare Krishna commune in the Hertfordshire countryside with her mother, Poly Styrene. After completing her degree from Queen Mary University of London, Celeste settled in Madrid where she worked as a teacher and formed ska-punk band Debutant Disco. After finishing a Master’s degree in
Barcelona, Celeste returned to London to work alongside Zoë Howe on Day Glo! The Poly Styrene Story, published by Omnibus Press in 2019. They then joined forces with Paul Sng to make Poly Styrene: I Am a Cliché, a film to accompany
the book. Celeste currently manages her mother’s artistic estate, co-curating an exhibition alongside Mattie Loyce at the 198 Contemporary Arts and Learning Centre in Brixton. She plans to tour the exhibition internationally after the pandemic and is currently working on her project, with the working title of Mr. Gorbachev and the Krishna Kids.

Paul Sng

Paul Sng is a bi-racial British Chinese filmmaker and writer whose work is driven by methodical research, creative storytelling, and a collaborative approach that strives for inclusivity and diversity. Underpinning all of his films is an
eye for strong characters and compelling narratives, all the while working to establish and maintain trustful
relationships both in front of and behind the camera. His documentaries have been broadcast on national television
and screened internationally and include Sleaford Mods – Invisible Britain (2015), Dispossession (2017) and Year of the
Dog (2021). He is the editor of two narrative photography books, Invisible Britain: Portraits of Hope and Resilience
(2018) and This Separated Isle (2021).