By Margaretta wa Gacheru posted February 25, 2022)
The quiet,
behind-the-scenes dynamism that assembled the First Performing Arts Conference held
this past week at Kenya National Theatre also happens to be the new Principle
Creative Production Officer (PCPO) at the Kenya Cultural Centre.
Kevin Kimani
Kahuro has a number of other claims to fame under his theatre belt which he
also doesn’t boast about. He founded the Kenya International Theatre Festival (KITFEST)
in 2016 when few people could figure out how he was single-handedly going to set
up an ‘international’ festival when he seemed to have no big bundle of funds
backing him and few believers in his international ambitions. But he has
managed to pull it off annually ever since. He has operated on a shoestring,
but has managed to bring global theatre groups from as far Scandinavia, the
USA, and Senegal and as near as Uganda, Egypt, and South Africa.
KITFEST has
grown and prospered gradually up until November 2021 when he and his team held
the most successful festival yet. The intrepid Kimani didn’t even miss a
festival during the darkest days of COVID-19 when in 2020, a portion of it went
online and another part was staged in five regional counties. He was even able
to produce the first edition of the Journal of East African Theatre
containing scholarly papers from a KITFEST Conference that was held in 2018.
Then, right
after KITFEST 2021, the Kenya Theatre Awards were announced and the public was
invited to participate in the awards-selection process. Kimani had already
brought together a team of theatre-minded Kenyans to serve as members of the
KTA jury. But for the sake of democracy, transparency, and interactivity, the
process of voting was digitalized with the public gaining 40 percent of the
decision-making power.
The awards were
also the brain-child of Kimani, assisted by his team. So one can now see that
this man has had a vision from the beginning. His obtaining a senior position
at the Kenya Cultural Centre may have come as a surprise, especially as he is
still a doctoral candidate, writing his Ph.D dissertation at Kenyatta
University where he got his Bachelor of Arts in 2013 and Masters in Theatre
Arts in 2019.
But his
desire to build a thriving theatre culture in Kenya has its own history.
Starting with his performing in Church productions from age 10, Kimani, as
Chairman of the Drama Club, went on to act in the Kenya Schools Drama Festival during
his days at Komothai Boys School in Githurai.
By then, his
destiny was pretty well set as he joined Jicho 4 Players following secondary
where he went all over the country staging set texts and performing in plays
like Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice, Kifo Kisimani, Utengano, and
Ngugi’s River Between.
By the time
he joined Kenyatta University, the Department of Film Technology and Theatre Arts
had been established, but he had to set up the Drama Club in order to take
shows to the Schools and Colleges Drama Festival. Surprisingly, that hadn’t happened
before. “I wasn’t just chair of the Drama Club,” he tells BDLife. “I did
everything from logistics to ticketing to acting,” he adds.
Kimani can’t
identify exactly when he developed the vision of building a thriving theatre
scene in Kenya. “I’ve always had a passion for theatre, since I was very young,”
he says.
But by the
time he entered the Masters program in theatre at KU, he already saw the way
forward. “I had two career paths ahead of me. I could have opted for film, as most
of my classmates were doing. Or I could go into theatre which is where I could
see there were limitless possibilities,” he says
It has been
a long road to finally hosting the first Performing Arts Conference at the
Kenya National Theatre. The three-day conference featured mainly scholars like Professors
Christopher Odhiambo, Frederick Ngala and Emily Akuno as well as Drs Mshai
Mwangola-Githongo, Fred Mbogo, Mbugua Njoroge, Zippy Okoth, Emmanuel Shikuku,
Kahithe Kiiru, and Mukasa Situma Wafula. All of them addressed the
three-pronged theme of ‘Decolonization, Intercultural Collaboration, and Social
Disruption’ from one angle or other.
One of the
major issues that various scholars addressed, especially Dr Mshai and Dr Mbogo,
was the site of the conference, Kenya National Theatre itself. Established in
1952 by the British colonial power, it was a no-go zone for Africans for more
than a decade. But has it been fully decolonized today? The same issue applies
to the School Drama Festival since it was also launched during colonial times.
These and
many other topics were discussed during the conference. But the most inspiring
presentation was given, not by a scholar but by the renowned singer-songwriter
Eric Wainaina who encouraged young artists to be courageous, adventurous, and
fearless in pursuit of their passion. It was a message that resonated widely
among the academics and artists alike, including Kimani who is already at work
on his next theatre project, the KTA 2022.
No comments:
Post a Comment