NEW KENYA MUSICALS COMING SOON
Roberta Levitow with the LAM sisters, Laura, Aleya, Wanjiku, Roberta, and AnneBy Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted March 7, 2021 to DNLife)
The Nairobi
Musical Theatre Initiative came into being in 2016, promising to be one of the
most exciting, innovative, and ambitious performing arts projects in Kenya’s
cultural history.
An idea that
had been percolating for some time in the fertile mind of one of Kenya’s most
acclaimed musician-composer, Eric Wainaina, the Initiative has grown
exponentially over the past five years.
Yet just
like every other performing arts project, NBO MTI has had to adapt and adjust
its master plan in light of the corona virus pandemic. Otherwise, all 11
original musicals were meant to premiere this past year in a festival the likes
of which would have dazzled and delighted a whole new generation of
theatre-goers.
Eric had
roused wide-ranging interest in musical theatre in the past, first when he
staged ‘DJ Lwanda’ back at the turn of the millennium , followed by his
award-winning ‘Mo Faya’, and finally, his internationally acclaimed ‘Tinga
Tinga Tales.’
But what got him thinking more broadly about an NBO musical theatre initiative began in one respect at a Sundance Institute Theatre Lab that he attended with fellow East Africans back in 2005. That is where he met dramaturg Roberta Levitow. Ms. Levitow’s job was to assist all the artists in the Lab to re-strategize their particular text, be it a play, musical, extended poem or embryonic idea.
“It was the
process that she used to help the writer deepen his approach and develop his
work, that appealed to Eric,” says Karishma Bhagani, the Initiative’s Associate
Producing Director.
Eric’s first
project that he had with Roberta was re-working his DJ Lwanda. But they stayed
in touch, and he even spent some time as an artist-in-residence at the Sundance
Institute in Utah, USA.
Those days
were catalytic, no doubt. They spurred Eric and his wife Sheba Hirst to bring
together a range of local musicians, thespians, and writers, to create a
diversity of original Kenya musical theatre works.
The whole
concept was radical, as the artists were being challenged to come up with not
just original storylines but also musical scores and credible characters. What
was marvelous was seeing how 11 different ideas began to germinate. But to
propel the process forward, Eric and Sheba invited Roberta to come share her
dramaturgic process of developing a musical theatre production with them.
Subsequently,
two more senior professors from the Tisch School of the Arts at New York
University, Fred Carl and Deborah Brevoort, came to Kenya, in June 2018 to also
share their skills in the actual writing of musical theatre.
And since
then, the 11 musicals have evolved, each at its own pace, but spurred on by the
momentum and inspiration of the group. Just a few months before the pandemic
hit, NBO MTI was invited to send four of their best musicals to perform at the
Kampala International Theatre Festival.
“They were
invited for an ‘In Process’ reading of their musicals,” says Karishma, not the
full productions.
“The four
readings were from ‘Pani Puri’, ‘Kabaseke’, ‘The Gospel of Apostle Dennis’, and
‘Weaver Bird’,” she adds.
Explaining
that the feedback the Kenyans received in Kampala was most beneficial,
especially as no one had imagined a pandemic, only the production premiering
late in 2020.
Needless to
say, this past year has been rough on the Initiative, given the difficulty with
conducting rehearsals, what with the lockdowns, social distancing, and early curfews.
But the
current short-term solution has been the evolution of radio plays and a brand
new NBO MTI podcast entitled ‘Backstage’ which is being curated by Wanjiku
Mwawuganga, the team’s Associate Artistic Director. It was just launched on February
19th.
“The first
episode is by Eric and it’s entitled ‘Product vs. Process,” says Karishma. “And
the second is by [poet and storyteller] Aleya Kassam who’s developing both Pani
Puri and Weaverbird.”
Details
about how to find the podcasts, and how to learn more about NBO MTI’s radio
plays are on their new website, www.NBO MTI.org, Karishma explains.
Having been
a student at NYU at the Tisch School at the time as Eric was in New York with ‘Tinga
Tinga Tales’, she met Eric after attending his concert and workshop on his
latest version of ‘DJ Lwanda’.
“He was
performing for graduate students in a musical theatre program, and after his
concert, I went up and introduced myself in Kiswahili,” says Karishma who is
originally from Mombasa. They became fast friends and has been working with
NBOMTI ever since.
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