By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted March 9, 2022
Takataka, one word in Swahili, stands for garbage. But taka taka, two words, takes on a totally different meaning. It’s ‘I want, I want’.
Millaz’s
Players’ production of ‘Taka taka’ which was staged this past weekend at Kenya
Cultural Centre, made clever use of this linguistic twist. It also got to the essence
of the script that Howard Lumumba wrote. Yet Lumumba himself says he didn’t do
it alone.
“We
developed the story together and then I was given the job of developing the
dialogue. I directed as well,” he told the audience who attended the show on
Sunday afternoon.
Lumumba
clearly rose to the occasion. Millaz’s full-house fan-base loved the play about
a corrupt politician named Mataka (Andrew Esirom) who receives a sack of
so-called ‘dirty laundry’ (possibly dirty money?) which has come to him inside
a large plastic garbage bag. The sack goes missing after being found by a mentally
challenged man named Sam (Brian Irungu) who’s been sent by his sister to
collect it. But he is not fit to handle such a large task in his fearful frame
of mind.
Nonetheless,
Sam finds the sack that his sister wants, but then gets stuck in Mataka’s
kitchen once everybody wakes up. From then on, the story gets frenetic since almost
everyone that shows up wants something from the sack. The most threatening one
is Clifford (Ken Aswani) who gave the laundry bag to Mataka in the first place.
As it turns out, Clifford seems to have Mafia-styled connections which put Mataka
on edge once the bag disappears.
Apparently,
it is the house help Clementine (Terry Munyeria) who disposed of the bag. But
that is one of the many confusions that bring levity to the play. In fact, it is Sam who found it, then stashed
it in his backpack, and finally had to hide, first in the fridge, then in the
oven, and finally in a cupboard.
Sam, in his
dementia, lends a marvelous feeling of suspense to the play. We never quite learn
who he is or what he’s after. But his paranoia keeps him stranded in Mataka’s
house.
The content
of the sack is never explicitly revealed. But the two garbage collectors who
claim they found the bag come home alongside the family. They’re bluffing, but
negotiations begin nonetheless. One collector, Machingli (Robinson Mudavadi)
wants to squeeze Mataka for all he’s worth, while his partner, Mathao (Ted
Munene) only wants a chance to get close to Mataka’s ‘Baby Girl’, Leila (Saum
Kombo).
Others with
desires associated with the sack are Sam’s sister Samantha (Shirleen Ishenyi)
who, towards the end of the play, finally shows herself since she has lost contact
with Sam and wants to bring him home safely. She also claims she wants what is
hers, which is left unidentified. One can guess that she and Sam are Mataka’s
kids by another ‘wife’. But before we can find out, Clifford returns.
He’s come for the sack, asking Mataka for the last time. Fortunately, he gets distracted by a ‘reality TV’ producer (Shirleen Kadilo) who inexplicably arrives at Mataka’s and Mama Leila’s (Boera Bisieri) kitchen with her photographer (Mike Ndeda) unannounced. But once Cliff realizes the bag is gone for good, he knows that he too is finished since his Mafia pals are now gunning for him. That’s what leads Cliff to his unthinkable end.
Observers
have questioned the play’s ending, asking why Cliff had to finish off everyone,
including himself. Was it to reflect on the futility of wanting material things
since nobody got what they wanted, apart from the two survivors of Cliff’s
murderous deed? The play’s ending left many unanswered questions, like what
point was there in the garbage guys being the ones to find the stash? Mathao doesn’t
want whatever wealth is stashed in the sack anyway. He just wanted to write
poetry. And Machinyli is a would-be swindler who would have taken Mataka for all
he could when he had the chance.
So was there
a message to Taka Taka? Could it be with Mathao, the poet whose poetry, (as a
symbol of Art generally) will survive when everything else turns to dust, or
rather, to garbage? Maybe that’s the point.
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