By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 20th November 2019)
Three Kenyan
dancers will be performing the Christmas classic, Tchaikovsky’s The Nutcracker
on three separate continents next month. Two will be starring as the Snow Cavalier,
one In Nairobi, the other in South Carolina, USA. And the third Kenyan, though
still a student at the English National Theatre Ballet School in London, has been
picked to be the only one of his peers to dance professionally with the
National Ballet.
Lawrence
Ogina, who is currently an engineering student at University of South Carolina,
will perform as the Cavalier opposite Dance Centre Kenya’s Cooper Rust, who
will be the guest artist in the USC’s production, performing as the Sugar Plum
Fairy. Cooper, who is currently rehearsing ‘The Nutcracker’ with her own DCK
cast, will fly to the US this weekend to meet with her former student with whom
she danced last year.
“We
performed in the same roles a year ago,” recalls DCK’s artistic director who
has trained all three Kenyan dancers, including the 15-year-old George Okoth
who she began teaching dance even before DCK was formed, back when she was
working regularly in Kibera in 2012. George, who is one of a number of dancers
that Cooper kept teaching once DCK was formed, will be the Nairobi Snow
Cavalier.
The other
dancer Cooper started teaching in Kibera back when her make-shift dance
‘studio’ had no mirrors, polished floors or barrs was the ‘boy wonder’ Joel
Kioko. He was the first student that Cooper took under her wing and vowed to
prepare him to attend summer dance classes with friends in South Carolina
(where she comes from). Having seen his
immense potential for ballet, she also tutored him academically so he could
pass all the tests required for him to get into one of the most prestigious
ballet school in the UK.
“Joel isn’t
dancing in a leading role, of course,” Cooper says. “But it is wonderful for
him to have been chosen to dance the whole month of December with the National
Ballet.”
George
Okoth, together with the DCK cast will open in its annual production of the
Nutcracker December 1st at the Oshwal Centre. DCK’s Gala performance
of the ballet being performed literally all over the world before Christmas is
December 7th and 8th at Kenya National Theatre.
Sadly, I
missed last weekend’s performance of Tchaikovsky’s brilliant ballet by the
Academy of Dance and Art. But an offshoot of the Academy is the contemporary
dance group founded by the school’s choreographer Arnie Umayam. His Origins
Dance company will perform ‘Unflow’ November 30th at 7pm at Alliance
Francaise.
Tonight,
Nice Githinji directs Bilal Mwaura’s newest script, entitled ‘Radicals’ at
Kenya National Theatre. Her cast consists of students that she has been
training over the past few months. The first appearance of these newcomers to
the National stage was in Mwaura’s previous script, ‘Roll the Dice’ which Nice
also directed.
With
‘Radicals’, Mwaura has scripted a political story about a squad calling
themselves the Golden Warriors Revolutionary Front. The playwright-actor
describes his play as ‘high-adrenaline’ so we had best go see it for ourselves.
Tonight at
Brookhouse School is hosting Rainmaker Ltd’s Fifth edition of the NBO Musical
Theatre Initiative featuring portions of four of the 15 original productions
which will be staged in Kampala during its Sixth International Theatre Festival
from 28th-30th November. The four musicals are Pani Puri,
The Gospel od Apostle Dennis, Weaver Bird, and Kabeseke.
Starting
next weekend, the Nairobi Performing Arts Studio and University of Nairobi’s
Theatre of the Absurd in association with UON’s Law School are staging ‘The
Illegitimate Twin’ a Musical from 28th November to 1st
December at UON Towers’s Chandaria Centre for Performing Arts. Directed by
Stuart Nash, the musical stars Martin Githinji, Bilal Wanjau and Umi Rajab. Umi
(best known for her role in the film ‘Na Sisi’) plays a maid and mother of
seven from Kawangware whose life gets complicated once she discovers she’s
having twins. The two are played by James Mwangi and James Mwinami. Unable to
raise them both, she makes consequential decisions that you need to see for
yourself.
Finally,
John Sibi Okumu can never be far from the theatre scene. Last night he
inaugurated the theatrical side of Paul Onditi’s Kwawangwana with a performance
of his poetry as well as poems by other African poets. And Sibi Okumu’s Kaggia
is coming back to the Kenya National Theatre with Martin Kigondu in the title
role.
One last
word: Sanaa Theatre Awards are happening December 17th at KNT.
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