DANCE CENTRE KENYA LEADING THE WAY IN THE REGION
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (written 13 June 2022)
Dance Centre
Kenya celebrated its seventh anniversary last weekend by producing portions of
two classical ballets, the proceeds from which will constitute a gift to Kenya
National Theatre which is having its own anniversary celebrations.
It's been
seventy years since the Kenya National same year the heinous Emergency was
instituted by the colonial government against the Kenyan people).
So Cooper
Rust, the artistic director of DCK and her board decided that since the Theatre
has hosted nearly all the Centre’s performances and since 70 years is just as
important to the Theatre as seven is to DCK, the greatest gift the Dance Centre
can give to KNT is a new set of lights for its main theatre stage.
“We brought
two of our own lights for these [celebratory] performances, but the theatre
still needs more lights,” Cooper said during the opening of the evening’s
performances. She had been introduced to a full-house audience by Kenya’s
leading singer-songwriter Eric Wainaina who recalled (with a touch of irony) that
seventy years ago, no African was allowed on the Kenya National Theatre stage. “And
yet here I am today,” he said proudly.
Having a
history of fundraising for worthy causes, (like scholarships for aspiring Kenyan
dancers from slums like Kibera), Cooper’s main global vehicle for raising funds
for Kenyan youth is Artists for Africa. It’s the NGO she founded and which has
enabled DCK to not only offer scholarships to worthy students from
under-privileged homes, but also send many of those students abroad for further
dance studies in the States and the UK as well.
In the
meantime, one couldn’t tell on Saturday night which dancers were from Kibera or
Kayole, and which were from Karen, Kitisuru, or Lavington. Cooper’s style of
teaching is egalitarian. It’s also strict but affectionate, demanding but
reassuring, challenging yet precise and professional.
Attending
any performance by DCK, one expects to see a high standard of performance even
when the majority of the dancers are still in their teens. Last weekend, Cooper’s
students performed two of the most challenging segments from popular classical
ballets, ‘The Kingdom of the Shades’ from La Bayadere, and Act III from ‘Sleeping
Beauty’.
Both
fanciful stories, the first is based on the story set in India in which a
temple dancer named Nikiya (Catherine Abilla) falls in love with a warrior,
Solor (George Okoth), who is unfortunately bequeathed to the Rajah’s daughter.
When Nikiya rejects the advances of a high caste Brahmin, he takes revenge on
Solor. A tragedy ensues, but finally Solor and Nikiya reunite in the Kingdom of
the Shades.
That scene
is meant to an elegant, stately and dramatically powerful performance framed by
33 ballerinas, all dressed in white, all ‘en pointe’ (on toe) and all moving in
unison.
DCK staged
the same dance seven years ago, when the Centre was practically brand new. Cooper
recalls how they didn’t have the correct costuming at the time and had to
perform out on the front lawn of Purdy Arms in Karen. It was an ambitious
choice back then. And it was equally ambitious as we saw on Saturday night when
it was performed by DCK’s beautiful dancers. The 33 did their very best to
reflect the strength, balance, and ethereal sense of oneness and grace that the
dance required.
It was in
Act III ‘Sleeping Beauty’ that the stage came alive with fairies of and
cavaliers, and even fairy tales like Little Red Riding Hood (Cheryl Lobo with
Alex Stow as the Wolf), Cinderella (Rebeca Woodward Garaza), Puss ‘n Boots
(George Okoth), and a Wedding Party Pas de Deux (Abdoulaye Diebate and Wanjiru Gitahi).
All had their moments to shine. Yet the
performance that some of us were waiting for came towards the end of the
ballet, when the American dancer Nicholas Rose became Prince Desire with Liana
Eising as Aurora. Their dance was just too short for the superb elegance,
grace, and charm that these two added to the overall performance.
There were
countless moments of witnessing brilliant dancers in the making such as George
Okoth and Lavender Orisa, Pamela Atieno and Rani Shah, Shamick Otieno and many
more rising stars that Cooper will undoubtedly shepherd to new heights that
will make Nairobi the leading classical and contemporary dance centre for the
whole of Africa.
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