By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (Posted 8 January 2020)
Mbeki Mwalimu
has been a constant presence on the Nairobi theatre scene ever since she first
arrived, fresh from Machakos and joined Mbalamwezi Players in 2004. Having been
a star in her girls’ school’s drama club, she arrived in the ‘big city’ with a well-oiled
work ethic that supposed Nairobi casts would be as disciplined as her school
productions had always been.
Sadly, that wasn’t
what she found. So she happily followed one of the Players’ founders, Eliud
Abuto once he launched Festival of Creative Arts in 2007.
“I stuck
with FCA for many years,” says Mbeki whose love of theatre was nurtured by both
Abuto and the company’s then director, Caroline Odongo.
“Carol’s
style of directing was very different from what I had found at Mbalamwezi,” she
concedes, noting that even now, she loves Carol directing her as she plays the
villain in the Maisha Magic TV production, ‘Selina’.
“I learned
that the best way to work with actors is by treating them like family,” she
adds, implying that bullying and barking during rehearsals never makes actors
happy or more creative.
Mbeki at close of Impervious, by Jackson Biko
It was with FCA that Mbeki began directing. “Carol really took me under her wing and showed me how to do it right,” she says.
It was with FCA that Mbeki began directing. “Carol really took me under her wing and showed me how to do it right,” she says.
The only
problem was that FCA’s full-house crowds began to weary of the group’s
consistently staging British comedies.
“Initially,
FCA fans were good with our indigenizing those farces, but gradually their
interest waned,” she recalls. “Before that time, FCA was able to stage two
shows simultaneously, one at Alliance Francaise, the other at Kenya National
Theatre, and both played to full houses. I was able to live on my theatre work
from the moment I went to work with FCA,” she says, noting she not only acted
but directed and also became the troupe’s production manager.
But once she
realized FCA’s audiences wanted more than Kenyanized makeovers of Western scripts,
she quit FCA. That was 2016.
Bilal Mwaura and Mary Mwikali in Impervious
Bilal Mwaura and Mary Mwikali in Impervious
“I was
miserable without theatre for a year and a half,” she says. All that time she
was feeling that if she joined another group or formed a company of her own, it
would be an act of “betrayal”.
Nonetheless,
by 2018, she had suffered enough. She had acted in several TV and radio shows,
but her first and true love was for live theatre. And that is how Back to
Basics was finally formed.
Rallying a
host of friends who were also actors, writers and potential directors, she put
on B2B’s first show, ‘Strangers by Blood” on the Michael Joseph stage.
“I was petrified,”
she admits. “I had the story idea in my head but shared it with Justin Mirichii
who wrote down. He claims it was his first real play but I thought he did a brilliant
job.”
She says it wasn’t
easy for him or her cast since she “tried something new. I had my cast talk to
the audience as if it was their therapist. It initially sounded strange, but it
actually worked.”
After that Back to Basics has been going great guns. In 2018 they staged four plays, all of which she conceived but others wrote. They included ‘Mutual Misery’, ‘Legally Insane’ which was an ingenious sequel to ‘Strangers by Blood’ and the first ‘Breeze’.
In 2019 B2B performed five shows which
followed the same format: She’d come up with the story and structure and then
share her thoughts with either Mirichii or Nick Ndeda. “But before anyone sat
down and wrote, we’d take it to the cast to get their input,” she adds. The
five were ‘Free Fall’, ‘Impervious’, ‘Breeze II’, ‘Man Moments’ and ‘Decompress’.
The three
exceptions to that style of working (with either Justin or Nick) were ‘Breeze I’,
‘Breeze II’ and ‘Impervious.’
Ian Mbugua in both Breeze II and Man Moments
Ian Mbugua in both Breeze II and Man Moments
“What I did
was call up Jackson Biko and told him I was a fan of his Biko Zulu stories and
wanted to transform several of them into plays. He laughed initially as he’d
been told that before. But he agreed to share the ones I wanted. Then later, I asked
him to write ‘Impervious’ for me, which he did.”
Mbeki already
has ideas for plays to stage this year. “We’re planning to put on five original
shows in 2020,” she says, noting the first is already in the works. She won’t
say much about it except that it is likely to be “controversial.”
“We want to
put on quality plays that spark conversations and make people think.”
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