Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 22, 2026

Andra Simons

Andra Simons is a Bermudian writer, director and actor now residing in London.

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Jun 22, 2026
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Andra Simons is a Bermudian writer, director and actor now residing in London.

Biography

Born in Bermuda, Simons graduated from George Brown Theatre School in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He was well known in the spoken-word movement in Toronto, notably for his collaboration with Sandra Alland in the performance poetry-music band Stumblin' Tongues. In 1997, Simons returned to Bermuda, where in 1999 he co-founded Waterspout Theatre company.1 He settled in the UK in 2004, and now focuses on poetry and performance.1

His first volume, The Joshua Tales, was published by Treehouse Press2 in 2009, and features collagraphs by Kendra Ezekiel. The work describes the relationship between a poet and another figure, Joshua, who can be seen as a little boy or the poet's shadow, and is set on the fictional island of Pocaroja.3 One reviewer, on Goodreads, called the book "startling, shocking and brilliant. Indeed mysterious and magical (and controversial)".4

Simons was selected to represent Bermuda in "Poetry Parnassus", an international gathering of poets at London's Southbank Centre in June 2012, featuring one poet from each of the 204 nations competing in the 2012 Summer Olympics.5

References

References

  1. "BIO: An Open Book".
  2. "Treehouse Press". Archived from the original on 3 January 2010. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  3. Hill, René (21 October 2009). "'The magic comes in the craft'". The Royal Gazette. Retrieved 13 April 2026.
  4. "Tsehay's reviews > The Joshua Tales". Goodreads. Retrieved 13 April 2026.
  5. Arandjelovic, Nadia (26 April 2012). "Simons to represent Bermuda in poetry Olympics". The Royal Gazette. Retrieved 13 April 2026.

Works

  • Turtlemen, London and Isle of Wight: Copy Press, 2021
  • The Joshua Tales, London: Treehouse Press, 2009
  • Some Poems by People I Like (editor Sandra Alland), Toronto: sandraslittlebookshop, 2007
  • Partings (with Sandra Alland), Toronto: Stumblin' Tongues, 1998
External links