COLLECTED PLAYS 2004-2014
By J.E. Sibi
Okumu (Posted in Business Daily 25 June 2021)
In John Sibi
Okumu’s play ‘Kaggia’, two filmmakers try to devise a screenplay around the
life and times of Bildad Kaggia, one of the founders of Kenya’s Land and
Freedom Army. One of the two suggests their film’s title could be “Kaggia:
Unsung Hero”. But his colleague rejects it, claiming it’s too judgmental and
doesn’t reflect everybody’s view of the man. After all, he needlessly died a
pauper when he could have enjoyed the spoils of Independence as offered him by
Jomo Kenyatta himself.
With the
publication of Sibi Okumu’s ‘Collected Plays 2004-2014’, I propose the author
be known as Kenya’s Unsung Playwright. But that title might also be rejected by
those who don’t agree or say Sibi Okumu is known for being a thespian, but more
for having been an actor on television and film than stage. He might even be
better known as a director of shows like Eric Wainaina’s off-Broadway musical
‘Mo’ Faya’. And among Kenyans, he might be best known for being the former TV
interviewer of famous men on ‘The Summit’.
But it’s the
publication of those six major plays which provide evidence that Sibi deserves
a pride of place in Kenya’s and Africa’s literary world as a writer of deep
insight into the history and everyday life of the people of Kenya.
Perhaps it’s
because there is invariably a time lapse between the premiere performances of
his plays that the public may not understand the depth, breadth, and subtle wit
of Sibi’s plays. But by reading all six, or even just one, the reader will see
the artistry, imagination and research that has gone into their creation.
The range of
the six plays is diverse, yet there are common threads that run through them
all. For one, there is the element of memory d history that features in nearly every
play. From the 1982 coup attempt in ‘Meetings’, to the pre-Independence
struggle in ‘Kaggia’ to the post-colonial assassinations in ‘Role Play’, Sibi
slips Kenyan history into his works. But he never does it in a pedantic or
didactic way. It invariably comes out in the context of ordinary people’s life
experiences.
The media
also plays a role in many of the works. In ‘Minister, Karibu!’, for instance,
the story of con-men and corrupt politicians is framed within the context of two
media men, one American, the other a Kenyan, who try to tell the news of a
supposed Coalition Conference of politicians. Meanwhile, they are missing the
real story of daylight robbery by con-men posing as pols inside a rural hotel.
And in
‘Meetings’, Sibi actually assembles sound bites from the time when the coup
plotters had seized the National radio and pronounced the country liberated
from arap Moi’s tyranny. But once toppled, the radio announcer who had
previously praised the coup’s success has to quickly pivot and praise the
return of Moi’s status quo.
Issues
associated with family are also prevalent in Sibi’s plays. ‘Meetings’ is all
about a family reunion that reveals the way big historical events like the 1982
attempted coup disrupted individuals’ lives in deeply personal ways.
The issues
of race and identity are threads that run through several of the six. In ‘Elements’
for instance, identity is a central theme of the monologue delivered by a woman
writer of mixed racial backgrounds. She tells a friend about how people always
try to place her according to her mixed race as if race was the most important
aspect of her being.
Poetry is
another element that Sibi features in his plays. For instance, in ‘Role Play’
it’s not the so-called intellectuals who are the poets. It’s the house help who
share their passion for poetry, a passion also had by Sibi.
Finally, his
most recent play, ‘Dinner at Her Excellency’s’ is all about a dinner party
arranged by a European ambassador who invites opinion makers for supper, aiming
to get a crash course in Kenyan politics. Instead, she gets an ear-full of
petty opinions which sadly reflect the mentality and personal self-interests that
Sibi seems to see as plaguing not just politicians but other sectors of Kenyan
society.
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