STORYTELLING
ABOUT KENYANS PROVES WE LEAD FASCINATING LIVES
By Margaretta wa Gacheru (23 October 2018)
Jackson Biko
must be feeling quite pleased with himself. He might be just slightly humbled
by the handiwork of Mbeki Mwalimu, Gilbert Lukalia and the whole cast of ‘Breathe:
stories of [you guessed it] Jackson Biko.’
How else
might a man feel when one of the best theatre ensembles in Nairobi just
breathed fresh life into characters that you had managed to draw in such vivid
and vibrant language that these gifted thespians felt compelled to act?
That cast of
nine, including director Lukalia (who was the first to become your clone at
Alliance Francaise last weekend) resurrected black and white pages of people
(whom you presumably knew) and made them into beings possibly more real,
colorful, funny and sometimes sad than the originals probably were!
They even
worked the great wonder of bringing the dead back to life. Many of the
followers of your blog, bikozulu.co.ke, are already well acquainted with
Bradley, the little boy who tragically got run over by school bus. But it was
the deeply touching performance of the boy’s grieving dad (played by Lukalia)
who brought Bradley’s memory back to life even as we felt the father’s pain
tingle through our own bones.
And as if that
was not enough, the Back to Basics cast compelled us to sit attentively for
nearly three hours as they became you! They dramatized words exclusively written
by you but carefully selected and re-assembled by Mbeki Mwalimu and then directly
brilliantly by Lukalia.
“It was
Gilbert’s idea to have everyone be Biko,” says Mbeki, who was first to see how
well Biko’s stories could play on stage. But she adds that it was a
collaborative effort on the part of the whole cast (including Bilal Mwaura,
Bokeba Mbotela, Daisy Temba, Martin Githinji, Mary Mwikali, Nick Ndeda, Wakio
Mzenge, Wanjiku Mburu and Gilbert of course) that can be held responsible for
holding us all that long. It was their blending of hilarious ensemble scenes
with solo storytelling like the soulful one of the cancer-survivor shared by
Wakio Mzenge that made B2B’s performance most memorable.
And just
when, after more than two and a half hours, our attention began to flag, B2B
brought out Biko’s wonderfully irreverent tale of two culture’s funeral
arrangements.
Now anyone
familiar with the ways of Luo and Kikuyu funerals knows they are very
different. What made Biko’s interpretation of those differences so
devastatingly funny was the way he got into the heads of both camps. The result
was a hilarious scramble of unspeakable insults that left us laughingly aghast,
but also alive to the genius and utility of truth-telling.
The truth is
people are different, but so what! We may feel that our way is the best, but by
Biko’s and B2B’s showing that’s just how people feel, that knowledge brings
tolerance, which is what the world needs a lot more of in this day and age.
Tonight we’ll
see another set of real life stories, only this time ‘Wamama wa Mathree’ will
be about a phenomenon that is both new and old in Nairobi.
What’s new
is seeing women matatu conductors. They have been around for a while, but are
still relatively rare. But they definitely have stories to tell, and that’s
what the show is all about.
What’s old
is the trials that women face when they step out into the world, especially a
world where men dominate and also see women as easy prey, not people of equal
value, intellect and entitlement to move about in this world without harassment
or assault by dogs, thieves or fellow workmates.
Scripted by
Caroline Odongo, the show is based on stories she’s been given personally by
matatu women. The women have been working closely with an NGO called the Flone
Initiative which is concerned with women’s rights.
Those same
women will be part of the cast. But the lead characters will be played tonight
and tomorrow at Alliance Francaise by four outstanding women actors. There’s the
award-winning actress Marrianne Nungo, plus Pauline Kyalo whose star just shone
in Walter Sitati’s ‘Necessary Madness’. Majuma Bahati is also in the cast along
with Michelle.
Kennedy
Ogutu is the brave man who’s the only male in ‘Wamam wa Mathree’. But he
promises to hold his own as he and the women are directed by Veronica Waceke,
an actress who also kept us spellbound recently when she costarred with
Valentine Zikki in ‘Of Cords and Discords’.
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