By Margaretta
wa Gacheru (posted 26, September 2022)
What happens
when a bully takes charge of a situation, be it a police station, a city, or a
country?
And what if
the bully is really a conman who can just as easily pass himself off as a mad
man who can be ‘forgiven’ for all his bad deeds since people generally believe
that no sane person can behave as badly as he does. Thus, he must be insane.
We have seen
bullies and conman operating a lot in the world these days. Take the former
president of the United States, for instance. We also just saw one in last
weekend’s production by the Strathmore Drama Club of Dario Fo’s brilliant
satire on crazies and bad cops in ‘The Accidental Death of an Anarchist.”
Fo’s play
grew out of a real-life incident that took place decades ago in Milan, Italy,
where there were street protests over the death of a political dissident, an
anarchist who was picked up by cops and shortly thereafter the same cops
declared the anarchist had ‘accidentally’ died.
Then when
the public was not appeased by the cops’ claim of ‘accidental’ death, the police
declared the man had committed ‘suicide’ instead. The public went wild with
outrage, and Fo scripted his controversial play. Seen as inflammatory for
taking on the topic of police impunity, Fo has subsequently been praised for
his daring use of dark comedy as a means of opening people’s eyes to the
reality of impunity and their ability to fight it.
Trevor
Munene plays the flamboyant Maniac, the flippant conman who has a knack for
swapping identities at the drop of a hat. He’s been hauled into the same police
station as the anarchist had gone and charged with a slew of misdemeanors. But
he’s not worried. Instead, he seems to relish the chance to meet Inspector
Bulinga (Justin Mwanzia) and turn this cop’s world upside down.
In this
case, the Maniac’s a vagrant, but he claims otherwise. In the course of
minutes, he morphs from being a Pastor, Lawyer, Doctor, and Ph.D to being a
Psychiatrist, Army Captain, a Teacher of Calligraphy. And when he has a chance,
he expands his covert plan of disrupting the cops’ operation.
Maniac initially
doesn’t look like there’s a method to his madness. But after picking up the
Inspector’s phone and playing his receptionist, he starts off a chain reaction
among the police that eventually leads to the play’s stunning end.
Divide and
conquer seems to be one tactic this cunningly crazy Bully employs. He proceeds
stealthily, calls in the police Superintendent (Denzel Maniple) and succeeds in bullying him and his
underlings until they all are scared of being ‘found out’. For Maniac, now
playing a retired High Court judge, intends to reopen the cold case of the
Anarchist.
The scene gets
increasingly insane as ‘the Judge’ bullies the cops into doing everything from
singing and dancing to essentially admitting they bumped off the anarchist.
Behind their
backs, the Maniac calls up the Media, represented by Ms Sophia (Venessa Gichio)
who he has quietly coached on what questions to ask, such as where are the
forensic reports the press never got to see?
All this time,
the Judge claims he is only seeking the truth, yet he doesn’t reveal that he’s
been officially ‘certified insane’. None of the cops are wiser until Inspector
Bulinge returns to his office wearing an eye patch that he got after being
punched by his fellow Inspector (Jeff Obonyo) who’d been misinformed by the
Maniac about nasty things Bulinge purportedly said about him.
Bulinge
immediately detected something fishy about the Judge. But it isn’t until Maniac
discloses that he’s been recording their conversation since he arrived as the
flagrant vagrant that the scene gets intense. Maniac gives that recording to
the journalist who quickly meets the same fate that we now see must have
happened to the anarchist as well.
The
Anarchist had been charged with dropping off bombs in train stations. But the
Maniac claims the cops, in cahoots with the Government, planted bombs to
disrupt everyday life and keep the populous unprepared to protest their country
getting turned into a police state.
Our slippery
Maniac manages to escape the fate of the Anarchist in a split second. But
before he goes, he finds one undetonated bomb and pulls the pin. Boom! That’s the
end!
I have to
say this cast did a fabulous job; Trevor Munene leading the field in capturing
Fo’s defiant spirit of anarchy and fearless freedom of expression.
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