Yolanda Mercy

Yolanda Mercy

Actor & PlaywrightLondon, United Kingdom
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Agnes Samuel
Yolanda Mercy

Yolanda Mercy

Actor & PlaywrightLondon, United Kingdom
About me
Yolanda Mercy is a London based Actor and Playwright who trained at the Brit School, Laban and Central School of Speech and Drama. She was named Artist to Watch 2017 by the British Council, part of the BBC Writersroom and her writing has featured in Huffington Post. Yolanda is a Published author with Oberon Books. Her ★★★★★ productions have been described as "relatable, funny and very honest". Comedy, spoken word, music and audience participation are the key ingredients that make up her unforgettable shows.
Projects
  • What's in a name? The impact of names in writing
    What's in a name? The impact of names in writingArticle originally published by gal-dem Illustration artwork by Hannah Buckman "What’s in a name? That which we call a rose By any other word would smell as sweet" - Juliet, Act II Scene II Romeo & Juliet , William Shakespeare Those famous words have been echoed for centuries, and it’s only now that I’ve started to investigate what is in a name? My name is Yolanda Mercy and I am an Actor and playwright from London. I have been writing plays for about two  years. I love creating stories, then
  • Quarter Life Crisis Book
    Quarter Life Crisis BookWhat does it mean to be an adult and when do you become one? Alicia is a hot mess. She doesn’t know what she’s doing with her life. Swiping left, swiping right to find the perfect match. Even though she’s a Londoner, born and bred, the scent of Lagos peppers her existence in the ends. Everyone around her seems to know where they’re going in life, but she’s just trying to find ways to cheat growing up and keep her 16-25 railcard.
  • Article: How Getting In Touch With My Ancestry Helped Me Solve A Quarter Life Crisis
    Article: How Getting In Touch With My Ancestry Helped Me Solve A Quarter Life Crisis(Article originally published by HuffPost, 14/08/2017 10:05 BST | Updated 14/08/2017 10:06 BST) Last year, my cousin (who is 10 days younger than me) got married. My friend announced that she was pregnant. And all while I was trying to figure out a way to cheat the system and keep my 16-25 Railcard. In the UK, a so-called Young Person's Railcard allows people aged 16-25 to receive a third off travel. For so many years, my railcard was the way I traveled around expensive London at a very cheap price. When the realisation hit me that I had to surrender it, I literally felt like my whole world was crumbling around me. I know this may sound like a slight exaggeration, but hear me out. From a young age I always knew that I wanted to be a performer. I did everything right. By age 14 I joined the prestigious BRIT school, by 16 I completed my training at the Royal Academy of Dance and received my grade 8 ballet certificate. By 18 I started my degree at Laban and by 21, I felt ready for the world - even if the world didn't feel ready for me. I worked hard to achieve all of my qualifications by 21, but felt so unequipped for the "real world"- especially as I wanted to enter into a career in the arts. Everyone around me told me how hard it was. But I felt determined. Audition after audition, year after year I got close- but not close enough. I wasn't enough. I wasn't tall enough, slim enough, well connected enough etc. I started to feel myself getting lost, stressed and really anxious about my future- especially as a lot of the great schemes were for 'young people aged 18-25'. By this point I was 24, and felt like I had spent three years doing the best of the unpaid work. Unsure of what to do, I turned to my mum and asked her 'When you were my age what did you?' She responded, 'me and your father would split our days raising you' Hearing this I was really blown away. By the time my mum and dad were my age (24) in the 1990s, they were raising a three year old; whereas I'm having an existential crisis about what I'm doing with my life. I'd love to say talking to my mum helped- but sadly I felt even more pressure to succeed. I started asking other family and friends what their ancestors were doing by the age of 24/25, and heard stories like 'being freed from a concentration camp in Auschwitz', 'arriving to England from Jamaica on the Empire Windrush' and 'travelling the world opening churches'. So many of these stories resonated with me, because my ancestry is Nigerian and I know when my grandparents arrived in the UK their presence wasn't well received. The streets of London in the 60s were known for signs which read No Dogs No Blacks No Irish I can't imagine living in a world where shops openly categorise my existence as though I were an animal. Can you? The more I dug into my heritage, I found stories that brought me closer to Nigeria, rich stories which linked my name back to family's status in Africa. I found out that my name means 'the crowning'/'royality'. Hearing this changed my perspective on growing up, because I saw passing the threshold of 25 as a right of passage. I started to see it as a proof of my ancestors' strength. They battled so much adversity, which is well documented in history, and I have the ability to pass on that legacy to my children.
Projects credited in
  • FollowYourFit
    FollowYourFit FollowYourFit are a start-up that contacted me to help them define and create their identity for an adaptive online personal training facility. The concept for the brand came from the name and the companies aim, to simply direct people to better and safer fitness. Using directional cues and scaled type I wanted to create something that directed the viewers eyes across the content as required whilst being visually dynamic.
  • This International Women’s Day, meet the 200 Women Redefining the Creative Industry in 2018
    This International Women’s Day, meet the 200 Women Redefining the Creative Industry in 2018Discover our 2020 list here This International Women's Day, we asked influential icons to nominate 10 trailblazing women who they believe are redefining the creator landscape. The result? A unique and incredible list of 200 trailblazing women breaking barriers and inspiring change! Only 36% of jobs in the creative sector are currently filled by women. At the top of the tree there’s an even bigger problem - women make up only 11% of Creative Directors. In an attempt to change this, our month-lo