WEDLOCK FOR
BETTER OR WORSE
BY
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 7 February 2018)
Heartstrings
sparkled last Sunday afternoon as they staged their last day of ‘First things
First’ before a full-house crowd that was totally attuned to the singular topic
of their production.
For while Marriage
seems somewhat out of fashion these days, given all the stories of disappearing
dads and woe-begotten single moms, Heartstrings’ show proved marriage is still
a topic that resonates in the public domain.
Staged just
in time for Valentine’s Day, when courting is meant to swing into high gear and
‘romantic love’ (accompanied by roses, sweets and other luxuries) is a major
marketing tool, ‘First things First’ was apparently meant to alert both men and
women to beware!
Beware of
what could come next (after the ceremonial event) since wedlock isn’t what you
think. It’s problematic whichever way you go. That’s the reality that might
explain why so many young people practice the ‘come-we-stay’ relationship. It’s
the kind that has no strings attached and is possibly even more problematic
than wedlock, but that’s a subject for a different Heartstrings script.
This one
explores pre-marital positioning from various perspectives, all of which bring
home the point that marriage, like many institutions in Kenya currently, has
been corrupted in so many ways.
‘First
things first’ initially takes us to the Attorney General’s office where simple
civil marriages take place in minutes. The red tape bureaucratic paper work is
a bit confusing to Muui (Victor Nyaata). But it’s the message from both married
men at the AG’s (Kiiui and Muuwawa played by Nick Qwach and Cyprian Osoro
respectively) that hints at the heart of the problem.
“Be prepared,”
Kiiui cautions. “Not that marriage is ‘bad’ but be prepared for change,” he
warns. In other words, people change once they are wed.
The litany
of marital horrors shared among the two married guys is hilarious but
disheartening and deeply misogynous. But Muui is not deterred, not even when
his fiancée, Florence (Nimo Adelyne) arrives and we realize she’s had an
unsavory history with Cyprian’s character Muuwawa.
But then,
Act Two takes us to an alternative route to wedlock, the ‘proper’ Christian
one. But this one looks even worse that the AG’s since we’re given a brilliant
portrait of the classic conman (Nick Qwach again), the so-called Christian
hustler-hypocrite who’s got a smooth, money-churning church machine, all
designed to stuff the preacher’s and his colleagues’ pockets with poor people’s
hard-earned pennies.
Nick and
Cyprian both get double cast in Act 2 as they serve as the pastor and his
right-hand huckster con-man who hands out mandatory forms to be filled by the
couple with cash attached.
It’s painful
to watch the pastor’s smooth but sinister hustle since he also seems to have
his own serial sex service that enlists most female members of the church.
Fortunately, Muui and Florence get fed up and walk away.
Finally,
they try to traditional route. They go to Flo’s village where her peasant
relations have also been corrupted by a dowry (bride-price) system that, like
the church, never stops making monetary demands on the man.
What’s truly
refreshing about ‘First thing first’ is the resolution. It comes from the
couple who try to do the right thing and are virtually defeated at every
established turn that they take. Clearly, something new has to happen if
marriage is going to work in the 21st century.
One sees an
inkling of that new model in Victor and Adelyne’s characters when they stand up
together and tell off both the church conmen and the villagers, all of whom are
out not for the couple’s happiness but for their own personal gain.
So now,
what’s required, it would seem, is for couples to look seriously into their own
motivations for marriage and then go the way they feel is best.
The two
factors that Heartstrings left out were the parents and future in-laws. But
these too will serve as another script.
Numerous
friends of Heartstrings were heard requesting the group stage extra
performances of ‘First things First’ since it was sold out before they could
watch. But director Sammy Mwangi says it’s not possible since the troupe is
already deep into developing their next show.
‘Snake in
the Grass’ will run from 1-4 March at Alliance Francaise.
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