A new series of short films – More Than One Story – exploring why people become homeless has been made by Cardboard Citizens, a charity that uses drama to transform the lives of those with lived experience of homelessness, in association with Black Apron Entertainment. Each film is written and performed by people who have experienced homelessness.
This week’s film is The Surviving Room, written by Neetu Singh, a director and writer from Hackney, East London. Recently, she assistant directed The Cherry Orchard at the Donmar Warehouse in Central London. Here, she explains the story behind the story.
‘I suddenly realised the reality of my entire life’
Overcrowding is a crucial reminder that we are expected not to take up space in this country. We are constantly expected to accept and adjust to unacceptable living situations. Under the last government, rent and the cost of living have skyrocketed and there is more housing – but not for people like us. Overcrowding is becoming the natural outcome.
When Chris Sonnex, the artistic director of Cardboard Citizens, commissioned me for this short film I had no idea that overcrowding is a form of homelessness. I suddenly realised the reality of my entire life and the first thing I felt was shame, quickly followed by rage.
For the majority of my childhood, I lived in an overcrowded home, and nobody did anything about it.
I live in an East London borough that has been drastically gentrified and I couldn’t help but start the film with this. How could my living situation persist in a borough that has become oversaturated with new homes and luxury living? How have I spent my entire life living in an overcrowded home in a borough that is one of the most sought-after places to live? This irony struck me.