ATTEMPTED COUP OF 1982 SHATTERS LOVE STORY IN NEW MUSICAL
Sweetheart Lukalia (Mundawarara Shaun) and Subira (Nice Githinji) costar in Subira the MusicalBy
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 10 August 2021)
Subira A New
Musical’ is a first-class heart breaker. It is also a beautiful love story
between two innocents who steal your heart from the moment you hear the
dazzling voices of Zimbabwean Mundawarara Shaun and Kenya’s own Nice Githinji,
and see the loving looks in each other’s eyes as they promise to be eternally faithful.
Award-winning
Ugandan playwright, lyricist and co-director Adong Judith definitely has a
sweet way with words, and especially with the love songs that provide the
essential theme of Subira’s story.
Adong also
must have a marvelous rapport with her fellow Ugandan
composer-multi-instrumentalist Kaz Kasozi since they are billed as having
mutually created the music for Subira. And since the lyrics and music match so
effectively in mood, rhythm, and sentiment, their collaboration is a key
element in the show’s indisputable success.
The choice
of other voices besides the lovers was also critical to ensure Subira’s story
came out clearly, both in spoken word and song. In this too, the show never
gave us one note that was off key or one character who couldn’t sing melodiously.
The two most notable vocalists were Mundawarara and Nice. (We have seen Nice in
many productions in the past, but never knew she had such a luscious singing
voice until now!) But even Gilbert and his recruits projected powerful voices. Also,
the chorus which came on several times was all pitch-perfect.
The
choreography was imaginatively staged. In particular, the training scene of
Army recruits, conducted by the strict Afande Mo (Gilbert Lukalia who
co-directed with Adong), added a surprising element of levity (enhanced by the
antics of Muthure Andrew) to an otherwise sobering experience, namely prepping
for war.
In fact, despite its length of three and a half hours, Subira held our attention easily, given the professionalism of the cast, the richness of the story, the proficiency of the band, and the diversity of musical styles that Kasozi features in the show, from the blues, rap, and reggae to mellow ballads and love songs. Nonetheless, the show was too long.
Whether the songs should have been shortened, or a few cut out, the show needed a paring down. Perhaps Adong included too many nonessential stories, like the sweeper in Lukalia’s hotel or the sudden death of one Army recruit or even the number of drills that Afande Mo put his new recruits through. Some seemed to distract from the fundamental theme of Lukalia getting back home to his sweetheart, Subira.
There are
actually two central themes to the musical, namely Lukalia’s love for Subira
and his life-long dream of joining the military. But in the story, what he hasn’t
banked on is the attempted coup in 1982 by members of the military, including
his best friend and fellow recruit, Alusa (Ouda J. Charles). What’s worse is
the way Lukalia gets blamed for being part of the coup attempt when he hadn’t
been. Jailed unjustly for several years, Lukalia never forgets his love for
Subira. But after he’s finally released from prison, he learns earth-shattering
news.
Should I
disclose it and be a spoiler? It’s such a shocker, I can’t ignore the
horrifying fact that Alusa had persuaded Subira that Lukalia is never coming
back. Betraying his one-time buddy, he lies that Lukalia is probably dead since
he’d gotten caught and deemed a kingpin in the coup attempt. He even claims
Lukalia had tried to involve him in the plot, which was the exact opposite of
the truth.
Alusa is so
persuasive, he even gets Subira to marry him and have his kid. So by the time
Lukalia gets home, he finds his Subira pregnant by his former best friend.
Discovering
Subira is ultimately a tale of sabotage and betrayal, not just love, hope, and
life’s future possibilities, is tragic for some of us, especially as we got so
deeply invested in the love story itself. But the emotional jolt is what Adong
and her co-director Gilbert Lukalia must have wanted their audiences to feel.
In this is their success since we still found Subira riveting and deeply moving.
(R-L) Mundawarara Shaun, Gilbert Lukalia (behind), Nice Githinji, and Ouda J.Charles
Without
doubt, Subira needs to be shortened. It’s a painful truth that Adong Judith may
not want to hear. But being the playwright, lyrist, and co-director means there
might not have been room for an editor, critic, or producer to tell her the
painful truth. But irrespective of the length, Subira is a beautiful and
bitter-sweet story that also conveys the way Pan-African energies can work
together to create a bright view of African artistic expression.
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