By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 8 January 2020)
The new year
is already shaping up to be one in which theatre will come alive in ways we
haven’t seen before.
Heartstrings
Entertainment will kick off the year’s shows with ‘Good for Nothing’ from
February 6th-9th, back at Alliance Francaise.
Heartstrings in 2019 in Forget me not
Heartstrings in 2019 in Forget me not
But that is
just the beginning of what’s in store. The most ambitious production by Hearts
of Art to date will be Walter Sitati’s latest original script entitled ‘Wangari
Maathai: The Musical’. Auditions are about to begin to find the female actor
who can best play the title role.
But HOA isn’t the only theatre company with a mad ambition to put on a musical that should win local and even regional acclaim. Nairobi Performing Arts Studio is getting set to announce a nationwide ‘call out’ to Kenyan dancers (who can also act and sing) to play none other than Michael Jackson!
“We’ll be
doing a countrywide TV search to find Kenya’s own Michael Jackson,” says Stuart
Nash who is likely to elicit an avalanche of local dancers who would love to be
in ‘The Michael Jackson Story’.
In the
meantime, NPAS opens auditions this Sunday at Kenya National Theatre from 3pm.
These will be specifically for intakes to Studio classes in everything from
acting (with Nice Githinju and Bilal Wanjau), voice training and performance (Mkamwezi Mtawale), script writing (with Davina Leonard) and production (with Stuart Nash).
Auditions
will be required since NPAS students get opportunities straight away to be in
musicals to be staged in both Nairobi and Nakuru where Nash is working with the
County Governor to produce shows throughout 2020.
In the past
NPAS musicals such as Sarafina, Jesus Christ Superstar and Grease were all full
of students learning the theatre ropes by doing the actual work under Nash’s
direction.
Sheila and Fanual play Sarafina and Crocodile
Sheila and Fanual play Sarafina and Crocodile
Besides The
Michael Jackson Story, NPAS plans to produce Lion King and Blood Brothers as
well as one more performance in Nakuru of Sarafina this year.
Since Nash
first came to Kenya in 2015 to stage shows like Annie, Oliver and Joseph and
the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat for one private Nairobi school, he has also
put on all those NPAS musicals as well as plays like Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth,
Merchant of Venice, Caucasian Chalk Circle and Kigogo.
Speaking of ‘Romeo
and Juliet’, the other consistently professional performing artist who has an
arts centre of her own in Cooper Rust who plans on doing the same Shakespeare
classic in the near future with her students from Dance Centre Kenya.
Cooper Rust wih her Kenyan dancing family
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