'HOME, SWEET HARLESDEN is the first film entered in the 2012 REGGAE FILM FESTIVAL, a documentary recording the oral histories of some of the earliest Caribbean immigrants to Britain.
The film's producer ANTON PHILLIPS is a Jamaican actor who was born in Kingston and attended Manchester High before his family moved to Washington DC, where he graduated high school. He then moved to England in the 1960s and attended the famous Rose Bruford College Drama School, whose Jamaican students also included Trevor Rhone and Yvonne Brewster.
After drama school Anton Phillips began an acting career in Britain that broke many racial barriers, appearing as the first Black actor in many TV series including General Hospital, The Saint, The Bill, and becoming best known as a cast member of the popular TV series Space 1999. As a pioneer in his field, his professional life has been dedicated to the promotion of Black theater and to that end Phillips started a number of projects that significantly changed the profile of Black and Asian theater in Britain. Those included the Carib Theater Company, the Black Theater Season, and the Black Theater Forum, companies that were responsible for giving opportunities to many Black and Asian writers, actors and technical theater workers
Under his direction, Carib Theater’s production of 'The Amen Corner', by James Baldwin, was the first Black produced and directed play to transfer to the West End of London. In addition to other major productions such as 'Remembrance' by Derek Walcott, and 'Sitting in Limbo' – a play written by his wife, actress Judy Hepburn, about the Grenada revolution which played in London and toured to Jamaica. Carib Theater also specialized in Theater in Education and toured schools across London for several years, playing to some 30,000 children.
The Black Theater Season significantly changed the profile of Black and Asian theater in Britain. Before the first Season, which started in 1983 at the Arts Theater in London’s West End, Black theater was largely relegated to drafty church halls and rooms in community centers on the outskirts of cities. However, for the first time, Black and Asian plays were presented in legitimate theaters with all their facilities of sound, light and comfort. As Season followed Season for seven years, companies, writers and actors were accorded prominence and respect within the profession and the wider society.
Anton Phillips has also worked for the British Council in Ghana, where he directed Trevor Rhone's 'Old Story Time” as the first major production at the newly built National Theater. He also lectured at the School of Performing Arts, University of Ghana and for three years was a consultant for the British Council on a special project in Tanzania to create a company of performers and teach them the principals and practice of Theater in Education. He has directed theater in Germany, Holland and France and, attended performances in Mexico, Cuba, the USA, Trinidad, Jamaica and Tunisia. He has also managed a 60-strong company of singers, dancers, and musicians from South Africa on a touring tribute to Oliver Tambo that was presented at the Barbican Center and Salisbury Cathedral, England.
Inspired by the Area Youth Foundation of Kingston, Jamaica, Anton Phillips founded the Stonebridge Area Youth Project (SAY), a performance-based project for disaffected young people between the ages of 14 and 24 based in the Stonebridge, London, Housing Estate. Through performing arts workshops, SAY encouraged youths to re-engage with society by going back into education and learning life-skills to help them into employment. This project lasted for four years. He also directed Oliver Samuels, the Jamaican comic actor, in London’s Blue Mountain Theater for three years of plays that drew massive black audiences of up to 3,000 at the Hammersmith Apollo Theater.
As well as being an actor, director and producer, Anton Phillips has also contributed to magazines and newspapers, usually writing about the state of Black arts in the UK. He has an extensive collection of paintings, carvings and pottery produced by Black artists and craftsmen. In his spare time he attends plays, dance, opera, carnival, diwali celebrations, films, read books and travels as much as he can.