MEN OF AMBITION PART 1 NEEDES PARTS 2 AND 3
The new Radini DynastyBy
Margaretta wa Gacheru (published 3 September 2021)
‘From the
Journal of Orina’s production of ‘Men of Ambition Part 1’, staged last weekend
at Kenya Cultural Centre, had a lot going for it. It had some powerful acting, provocative
dialogue, and thematic issues of power, greed, and murder which tend to attract
a crowd curious to find out ‘whodunit?’ And how.
The production
also didn’t make the mistake that many companies do at KCC, which is to mess
around with colors in their lighting of the stage. We’ve seen shows that use
red lighting to signal scenes of either passion or murder or both. We’ve seen
green lights meant to indicate emotions like envy and greed. And when something
sinister is about to happen, the lights can go down low so you can barely see
the actors. There is always a spotlight to rely on, but often the spot lands
out of place.
In every one
of these cases, the lighting is not just a distraction. It renders all
photographs taken during a show useless and unacceptable for publication or
other professional use.
The big
problem with Men of Ambition Part 1 was not so much the plot, acting, or
directing of the five-person cast. The big issue is the playwright Orina’s
planning to script a three-part play, but only present us with Part 1 last
weekend. How come? Perhaps he hasn’t scripted Parts 2 and 3. But then he might
have been wiser to wait until his three-act play was complete instead of
leaving his audience mystified at the end of Part 1.
The
mystification was evident when nobody applauded at Part 1’s end. It required
the director-playwright to come out and confess, the show was over. One could
hear grumbles that the show was too short, which it was. But there were other
problems related to leaving us with an inexplicable cliffhanger.
I don’t want
to spoil audience enjoyment which will undoubtedly come once Orina completes
all three parts, and stages ‘Men of Ambition’ as simply an intriguing three-act
play. But the way Part 1 ended was incredulous and unbelievable.
The
storyline centred round the Radiri ‘dynasty’ and the issue of succession. The
founding father of the family had just died, but mourning was quickly ruled out
by Duke (Odhiambo Gadwil), the second son who claimed that he should be next in
line since the first-born son, Cliff (Orina Brian) was weak despite their
father having decided he should be his successor. The adopted daughter Vanessa
(Brenda Kinya) also aspired to be head, although her intentions were much less
clear since she was mainly fielding verbal abuses from her step-brother Duke.
Quibbling
among themselves ended as Cliff took charge to offer a toast to the new family
arrangement. Unfortunately, someone had poisoned the wine that only Cliff
drank. Now the scene cleverly switched into a murder mystery. Who would have
wanted Cliff dead? Duke’s flamboyant style of having tried to grab his
brother’s seat effectively set him up to be Suspect Number one.
Duke was
right to protest that he was being set up. But no matter. While the stage got turned
into a kind of family court, with Esquire serving as the presiding judge, Duke
challenged all three critics, exposing the flaws of his mother, step-sister,
and even the barrister. Nonetheless, the three ganged up on him. Thus, he was
‘charged’ and convicted for his brother’s murder, disowned from the family, and
banished for good.
One assumes
that the characters’ motivations will be clarified in Parts 2 and 3. But
without even subtle clues suggesting that Vanessa is the wily witch that she
would seem to be, one has to insist that Orina present us with the whole play
next time. It is only fair to his audience.
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