SIX WOMEN STORYTELLERS TELL BOLD, BRAZEN TALES
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru
Theatre
for One: We are Here (Nairobi Edition) is a fresh, ingenious and intimate approach to theatre that
I was fortunate to experience for two nights last week. On both evenings, I
experienced three different performances, one for each of the six Kenyan women
selected to be involved in this experimental approach to theatre which
previously has been staged all over the world. The six included Sitawa
Namwalie, Mumbi Kaigwa, Aleya Kassam, Anne Moraa, Laura Ekumbo, and Mercy Mutisya.
Conceived
twenty years ago by an American thespian, Christine Jones, Theatre for One is
all about the one-on-one experience of the performer and their audience of one.
Jones apparently felt the theatre experience is something to be shared intimately.
Its performative style is interactive in that the audience of o-e is encouraged
to engage with the actor, which to me sounds a bit risky. But that element of
spontaneity is meant to be part of this experimental concept of theatre. It’s
worked so well in the past that the ‘Nairobi edition’ was coproduced by New
York University’s Art Centre in Abu Dhabi and Octopus Theatricals of New York.
In the past,
Theatre for One was a live, face-to-face experience. But the coronavirus
compelled the coproducers to take their shows online.
It worked
for me first when Aleya Kassam performed ‘The Interview’ which she also wrote.
She is in a bathroom setting since she says the room makes her feel closer to
the sea. And since she says she is a jen (a kind of mermaid), this makes sense.
She is in the process of ‘interviewing’ for a replacement of her dearest friend
whom she recently lost. Her persona is alluring, but rather spooky and
unsettling. That also makes sense since strange superstitions have been spun for
centuries by seafaring sailors who got lured by these mysterious water-women,
and then lost once they’ve fallen under their spell. Aleya’s gen has that
alluring style that can easily entice someone to believe her sweet story and follow
her back into the sea.
Three of the six: Aleya Kassam, Laura Ekumbo, Anne Moraa
‘The
Interview’, like all the performances, was only about ten minutes long. But
that was sufficient for these six professional women actors to draw you totally
into their unusual tales.
The one
story that left me wanting more was Sitawa Namwalie’s ‘Killer Cop lives fast
life’. All six storyteller had an edgy feminist flare to their performance, but
this one is quite scandalous. Sitawa plays an undercover cop who is shameless
about her having shot dead two men. To her, they deserved whatever she gave,
but the media isn’t telling her side of the story. We meet her after she’d been
reading headlines that misconstrue her actions, and she is not pleased about that.
At the same time, she’s delighted that her deeds have triggered the military to
be called up to search for her, a ‘mankiller’. She’s amused that she is seen as
a threat to national security!
Sitawa gave
us enough of her story to whet our appetites. But then, her time is up, and we
are left panting for more from this fiercely iconoclastic ex-cop.
Then a few
minutes later, Laura Ekumba casually presented a chatty script entitled
‘Aging’. She is getting set to attend her own birthday party, but she’s feeling
queasy about turning 26. She claims it’s because she hasn’t picked the perfect
song for the day. But really, we get the feeling she’s more concerned about
time passing her by. She keeps a journal in which she remembers poignant
experiences from the ages of three up until now, suggesting that time is
weighing on her thought, as if she is on the verge of getting old. Yet the
beauty of her performance is in her almost childlike innocence. At 26, she’s
still young enough to care about a song and a dress. One feels her world is
just opening up and she is ready for it.
On night
two, I experienced my first glitch and ended up missing Mercy Mutisya’s story.
It made me sad, but also determined not to miss the final two: ‘The Beanie’ by
Mumbi Kaigwa and ‘Cucu’ by Anne Moraa. Again, they portrayed women who were
startling for their strength of character, and even more startling because both
break out of conventional womanly molds and burst out with defiant force.
In Mumbi’s
case, her character is a filmmaker whose technicians mess up a critical moment
in a shoot. Her reaction is emotional, even violent in her outrage expressed
towards her crew. She is forced to confront the impact of her unchecked
emotions which come off as cruel and unkind. She has broken free from a soft,
comforting, maternal role, but landed in a mudslinging, almost macho style of
violence. Thankfully, she begins at the end to become more self-aware.
In Anne’s
case, it’s her grandmother that apparently has been happily married for 40
years. But then, when she is out chopping wood, her husband comes and kicks her
violently. Instead of absorbing the pain and keeping quiet, she takes her ax
and chops off his hand. Amazingly, the story ends as if “they lived happily
ever after’.
These are
new women whose characters we have rarely seen before. And they are awesome,
unsettling, bold, and brazen in their fearlessness. We expect to see more of
them soon.
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