By Margaretta wa Gacheru (June 6, 2024)
Kenyan
audiences have been enchanted by the award-winning musicals of Andrew Lloyd
Webber ever since the 1980’s when ‘Jesus Christ Superstar’ first hit the boards
at the Donovan Maule Theatre.
Since then,
the JCS classic has been staged everywhere from secondary schools and
churches to the Kenya National Theatre and Braeburn Theatre, Gitanga where we
most recently saw another Lloyd Webber Classic, “Joseph and the Amazing
Technicolor Dreamcoat’ was staged by Braeburn school just a few months ago.
BD Life
first saw Jesus Christ Superstar at the now defunct Donovan Maule
Theatre in the 1980s. It was also the premiere production of the Nairobi
Performing Arts Studio in 2018.
But nobody’s
been ambitious enough, until now, to present us with the musical production
inspired by T.S. Eliot’s poetry book entitled ‘Old Possum’s Book of
Practical Cats’. It’s called ‘Cats’ and it was a smash hit on Broadway and
The West End of London.
The Nobel
Prize-winning poet had originally written his cats poetry especially for his
God-children. But children are not the only cat-lovers who have contributed to
the show’s popularity. There are adults all over the world (be they cat owners
or not) who have watched the show and read Eliot’s illustrated poetry, often in
translation.
The book
came out in 1939 and was made famous after Lloyd Webber came out with his
musical interpretation of it, calling it Cats in 1981. It quickly made
its way to Broadway and the West End of London where it was a smash hit more
popular than nearly all 31 of Lloyd Webber’s other musicals (apart from Joseph,
Jesus Christ Superstar, Evita and Phantom of the Opera).
Now it’s finally opening in Nairobi out at Brookhouse School in Karen from
today, June 7th through Sunday, June 9th.
Cooper Rust
and her team at Dance Centre Kenya have been working for months to prepare a
production that not only features non-stop dancing by the DCK troupe, including
63 dancers ranging in age from 6 to 50. They will also be dressed up as cats,
from their heads and their faces to their tails and their toes.
“All of our
costumes have been painted by local artists,” says Cooper Rust, Cats’ artistic
director, producer, and co-founder of Dance Centre Kenya back in 2015. She was
speaking in an exclusive interview to BD Life a few days before the musical’s
opening day. She added that cats’ head-gear, including the whiskers and
upright ears were all made locally. And
even the cat caps that the little ones will wear are hand-crafted. The same is
true of the cat masks. And even the cat caps which the little ones will wear
were created by friends of DCK. But it’s the catsy face paintings of
everyone in the cast, that will add 100 per cent cat credibility to the
performers and their performance over this weekend.
Having such
a large cast, Cooper has gotten tremendous support from her assistant directors
Caroline Slot who has been with DCK practically from its inception in 2015 and
May Ombara who initially came to DCK as a voice coach for Oliver but will now
also play Grizabella this weekend.
Cats the second major musical that DCK
has produced. “We’ll be producing one musical every year,” promised
Cooper. “We feel it’s important for our
students to expand their versatility and range of artistic expression,” she added.
DCK already has classes in musical theatre, but Oliver was its first
application of the learning that some students in the show have already
received. And ballet itself is filled with theatrical expression, but it’s not
the same since ballet, which is DCK’s specialty, focuses more specifically on
the dance. Musical theatre pays greater attention to the story, adding both
songs and dance aimed at taking the storyline forward. It’s a subtle
difference, but it makes a lot of sense for DCK graduates to have a broad
repertoire of dance when they complete the DCK course. But that doesn’t come
until after students are examined and pass rigorous tests administered by
judges from the Royal Academy of Dance in UK.
A year ago
when DCK staged their first musical, Oliver, they received awards at the
Kenya Theatre Awards for performances by John Sibi Okumu as Fagin and Abdoulaye
Diabete as Oliver.
The musical
generally met with wide ranging approval, especially as all the music was live,
as it will be this weekend when the DCK Orchestra takes on Lloyd Webber’s
musical score and is professionally conducted under the baton of Levi Wataka.
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