By Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted August 2020)
Nyokabi Macharia
might be best known in Nairobi for being Mary Magdelene in ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’
or for playing Giraffe in Eric Wainaina’s musical, ‘Tinga Tinga Tales’ or
possibly playing Wangu wa Makeri in Too early for birds 5th edition,
‘Brazen’.
One role we
are not familiar with her in is that of Director. But that is easily remedied
simply by going to YouTube and looking for her channel. There you will find the
premiere performance of ‘The Book and its Cover’, dramatized by two of
Nairobi’s most illustrious young actresses, Auudi Rowa and Akinyi Oluoch and
directed over Zoom by Nyokabi.
Long
distance directing was an imperative not just because of the COVID 19 lockdown
and social distancing thing. It also had to be because Nyokabi is in the UK,
performing with a theatre company there.
When and how
she got there is not the issue. What’s more important is that she was inspired
to adapt the stage version of Mary Shelley’s stunning novel ‘Frankenstein’, after
seeing another adaptation of the same on YouTube, having been staged at the
National Theatre of London for free during the pandemic. That production stars
Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller. (Ironically, both men have played
wildly different interpretations of Sherlock Holmes).
Needless to
say, Nyokabi wanted to stage a gender-bending version of the story, which she
did and which premiered last Friday, July 31st. She had Auudi play the Dr Frankenstein
character and Akinyi play the Monster.
Sadly, this
trio of dynamite female actors only staged Act 1 of the tale, at the end of
which we were told that the show’s remainder would be staged once they get a
producer who will give them both financial and professional support.
In the
meantime, Nyokabi’s zooming direction has paid off as it has proved that a
top-quality show can premiere with the Kenyan actors giving a passionate and
polished performance even though they didn’t have their director in the room
with them.
It helped
that both women are well-seasoned performing artists who have worked well together
in the past. What’s more, all three are so passionate about acting that the
energy and intensity required to make this show come alive is evident in
abundance, as one will see when you find Nyokabi’s channel and watch on
YouTube.
The opening
moments of the show are silent (apart from the magnetic mood music) since
Victoria is alone until the Monster miraculously appears. Then the complex relationship
between the Creator and her monstrous creation rapidly unfolds as we learn the
Monster has gone rogue and actually murdered Victoria’s fiancé.
The physical
fight scene that ensues between the two women is brilliantly brutal, and it
looks like it isn’t going to end well for either one. Remarkably well-choreographed,
(especially as director Nyokabi wasn’t physically present for rehearsals),
neither woman looks like a push-over. What’s more, the Director managed to draw
out the emotional depth of both characters, visible first in their knock-down
drag-out fight and then in a revealing dialogue that only goes so far, and then
stops right when we desperately want to know what will happen next!
What we do
know is that what the Monster wants is a companion. She wants Victoria to make
her a man! It’s a request that this ‘mad scientist’ initially rejects. But then
Victoria suddenly warms up to the idea of creating a ‘perfect man’, but not
necessarily for the Monster. Rather there’s a hint that she might want to
tailor-make another being for herself!
It’s a
fascinating proposition but we won’t find out what comes next until the
Director finds a worthy producer.
Nyokabi
cleverly stopped the show right when the plot thickened and we are keen to find
out answers. For instance, can this woman really make the perfect man? Does she
dare play the part of a ‘god’? After all, she has already done so once.
Nyokabi has
taken us just far enough into the story to whet our appetite for more. Now we
can only hope that the internet will serve its purpose and ‘A Book and its
Cover’ will attract the support required to bring us Act 2 of this explosively
alluring story as soon as possible.
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