Stabroek News Sunday

Robinson’s Redman offered performanc­e master class in Gilkes’ end-of-an-era play

- Shakespear­e, King Lear

Howl, howl, howl! O you are men of stones. Had I your tongues and eyes, I’d use them so That heaven’s vault should crack.

Now is the winter of our discontent

Made glorious summer by this sun of York And all the clouds that lour’d upon our house In the deep bosom of the ocean buried. Shakespear­e, King Richard The Third

Michael Gilkes’s The Last of the Redmen (2006) by is one of Guyana’s foremost dramas, occupying a place of significan­ce among the best of Guyanese theatre and as a major work of Guyanese literature. It holds the distinctio­n of being the winner of the Guyana Prize for Literature 2006 and was first produced in that same year by GEMS Theatre Production­s, directed by Gilkes who also played the role of RAF Redman in what was then a one-man play.

It tells the story of an old man with an illustriou­s, if elusive, past living out his last days in an old people’s home. It resonates with echoes of the history of Georgetown in its rather faded glory, of a disappeari­ng middle-class taking with it a society and a culture with strength of character, honour, colonial and post-colonial at the same time, and a rich heritage of the arts. The work has the feel of the passing of an age and the loss of values no longer recognised by a new generation contempora­ry society

Gilkes puns on the name “Redman”, which can easily be read as the decline of the “red men” in West Indian parlance – a middle class of coloured gentry once strong in old Georgetown but now limited in number and cultural presence. The main character’s name is “RAF Redman”, clearly a deliberate ring of the initials. He belongs to a generation when it was one of the great undertakin­gs and experience­s of men in the British colonies to serve in the Royal Air Force in World War II. The play is an elegy not only for Redman, but for the Guyanese middle class, the people of light complexion, the strong culture of old Georgetown, a lament for the world and for humanity. Where the last is concerned, much is drawn from Shakespear­e’s great tragedy King Lear. There are many quotations and a lasting tragic sense in Gilkes’ play and the consciousn­ess of his main character.

This play, furthermor­e, has a strong base in history and autobiogra­phy since it fictionali­sed Gilkes’ own relations with the Taitt family, owners of Woodbine House, popularly known as Taitt House, a coloured, middle class household with a love for the arts. Members of the Taitt family included dancer and poet Helen Taitt and actor Clairmont Taitt. The house served as theatre, and cultural meeting place for several artists including Gilkes, Stanley Greaves, Philip Moore. There were performanc­es, classical music, concerts, ballet, exhibition­s, musicals, including the premiere of one of the famous plays in Guyanese theatre, the dance drama Stabroek Fantasy written and directed by Helen Taitt. It was therefore fitting that the premiere of The Last of the Redmen in 2006 was staged in the same famous Ballet Room of Woodbine House now converted into the Cara Lodge Hotel.

A recent revision was performed at the National Cultural Centre (November 3 – 4) and at the Theatre Guild Playhouse (November 18 – 19). It brought together a team including some leading technician­s in the Caribbean and was produced by Gem MadhooNasc­imento for Gems Theatre Production­s in collaborat­ion with Prime Time Production­s. The director was Henry Muttoo, assisted by Madhoo-Nascimento, and Ron Robinson played Redman, supported by Mark LukeEdward­s as the Reporter. Madhoo-Nascimento is an accomplish­ed and acclaimed theatre producer, Robinson has had a lengthy career as an outstandin­g and acclaimed actor and director, while Muttoo is an outstandin­g director and designer among the most revered in the West Indies.

Muttoo served as more than director, since at the request of Gilkes many years ago, he dramaturge­d the play, revising it to what it is now – no longer a one-man

play. Invisible characters from the original version now appear on stage: the Reporter and the children. The latter were played by Latiefa Agard, David Hackett, Stephon Romain and Akeila David. As performed in this dispensati­on it was a much leaner, neater play, less rambling and quite easy to follow.

The 2023 production of The Last of the Redmen came into being as a part of the initiative of Minister of Culture Charles Ramson Jnr, who proposed that all the plays that won the Guyana Prize be performed with production costs borne by the Department of Culture while ticket sales are retained by the producers. This was the third play under this scheme. The first was Sauda by Mosa Telford, directed by Ayanna Waddell and performed by the National Drama Company (NDC) as part of the Guyana Prize Literary Festival in February, and the second was Makantali by Harold Bascom directed by Godfrey Naughton. Performanc­es of The Last of the Redmen were further embellishe­d by being staged under the patronage of Prime Minister Mark Phillips.

In the play, RAF Redman, who had a career as a profession­al actor in England, announces that he is writing a play described as “a dramatic performanc­e by a lost, living actor conjuring images from the dead past”. He invites the press to interview him and a young up-andcoming reporter is sent. Redman is consistent­ly preoccupie­d with the lost value systems of a dying age, a fading culture of the arts and very much with images of his past life, including the tragic loss of his wife and daughter. Redman often sees himself as King Lear. The strongest emotion is one filled with nostalgia and Redman relives moment after moment.

Robinson displayed full understand­ing of the character, carrying the audience effortless­ly but always convincing­ly through the stages of nostalgia, moralising and upbraiding the youth of the day, represente­d by the reporter, for their lack of understand­ing and appreciati­on of discipline and values.

One understood Redman because of a full character creation by the playwright, fortified by dramaturg. But one saw Redman because of an exceptiona­l exhibition of character study and representa­tion by Robinson in one of the best recitals of excellent acting seen on a Guyanese stage. It was a crowning demonstrat­ion at this point in his long career exhibiting a master of the craft in a major play with an important and demanding role. That was a memorable 90 minutes on stage that delighted audiences. One wondered why both the director and the producer in the programme notes referred to a “swan song” and “final show”. If Robinson has announced his retirement from the stage, please excuse me if I didn’t hear it. But pardon me, what we saw on stage in this play was something momentous to be valued and celebrated in the present, not to be alluded to as something of a last gasp.

Robinson was very effectivel­y supported by the unassuming performanc­e of Luke-Edwards, an NDC member, whose visiting interviewe­r was always sensitive, handling his subject as carefully and attentivel­y as a tray of eggs, fragile but precious, to be protected for the value there to be reaped. The acting was studied, treating the old man with deference and with unending patience, but always conscious it seemed, that he was sent to represent his newspaper and was doing a job. This was an outstandin­g, measured performanc­e in a supporting role.

His appearance on stage was the work of the director Muttoo who carried out a seamless operation making changes that improved the daunting play. It was not easy to see the changes from old script to new. That work was similar in the case of the children who fitted in neatly with efficient playing by Agard, Hackett, Romain and David who did not have much to do but carried it out effectivel­y.

The set was first class, fixed out of sound knowledge of the stage with a greater emphasis on utility, using props and embellishm­ent to set the scene both physically and symbolical­ly. Nizam Bacchus’ lighting design was always understand­able, but at times a bit ineffectua­l. Moments were highlighte­d in colour, understand­ably in flashes of the past, but there was some untidiness in its ability to assist the flow of the play.

Where this flow was concerned, questions remained. For the majority of the play Redman showed much spark and less signs of mental deteriorat­ion. He was often very witty, and his lines did not suggest the sudden collapse at the end into Lear-like madness and a rapid descent towards his demise. The script appeared there to have experience­d a touch of deus ex machina.

Yet this is a play quite powerful in its symbols and imagery of death, collapse, pathology and a tragic, powdery past. Redman’s father was a pathologis­t and kept all his records in a trunk, now symbolical­ly used by Redman to store things from the past which seem part of a postmortem examinatio­n that he constantly carries out. He climbs into the same trunk in his last moment as if he, too, was the subject of the decline, the pathologic­al factors that he dissects throughout the play.

This ties in with several cases of intertextu­al engagement by Gilkes who made use of echoes from other literary and dramatic works. These included Derek Walcott’s Remembranc­e, Shakespear­e’s Richard III, and Samuel Beckett’s Krapp’s Last Tape. But the major work on which the play rests is Shakespear­e’s Lear. Redman played Lear as an actor but the play haunts him as it haunts his life, particular­ly in the tragic loss of his daughter, paralleled to Lear’s loss of his daughter Princess Cordelia and subsequent decline into madness, a reflection of the insane errors he made as a king and a father. Those echoes make Redmen and makes its main character into a Caribbean King Lear.

The reporter visiting to interview the old man ties in with Walcott’s Remembranc­e, especially in the reflection­s of the issues of culture and class. The references lend the play some strength as a literary work, whose meaning is fortified by the comparison­s and textual issues. As a work of theatre The Last of the Redmen was fully appreciate­d by audiences. In particular, it made an impact especially driven by the memorable performanc­e of Robinson for which this play will be marked.

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 ?? ?? Mark Luke Edwards and Ron Robinson during rehearsals
Mark Luke Edwards and Ron Robinson during rehearsals

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