Jamaica Gleaner

Drama class grows into Tableaux

- Michael Reckord GleanerWri­ter

LAST MONTH Jamaica was reintroduc­ed to Suzanne Beadle, whom I have known for 20 years as an actress-director. She is now also a playwright/producer.

Through her recently formed company, Soulart by Suzanne, Beadle has her first commercial play, 70 x 7 — The Real Truth, running this weekend in The Blue Room, the smaller of two theatres making up The Phoenix Theatre complex on Haining Road.

Soulart by Suzanne is Beadle’s second theatre company. The first, Tableaux, still functions, although Beadle said most of its members are trying to fulfil their passion for the performing arts elsewhere.

The company was born out of Beadle’s distinguis­hed career as a drama teacher at Ardenne High School. It began in 2001, but Beadle had grown up watching her singer/actor father, Lloyd Beadle, in many production. She appeared in Louis Marriott’s 1997 play, Sojie (as the title character), and performed in two Little Theatre Movement pantomimes Anancy Come Back and Moonsplash.

FURTHER STUDIES

While studying for an English and Cultural Studies degree at the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona, she had had an opportunit­y to do some theatre studies in Sweden. Fortified with that experience, Beadle took on her first directing task, preparing some Ardenne students to enter the Secondary Schools’ Drama Festival.

She had less than a month to do it.

Chuckling at the memory, Beadle said, “The kids had their script ready; I had to just jump in and direct.”

“We won like 14 out of the 16 awards,” Beadle said. “Since then, I have got a lot of training in directing with the JCDC

(Jamaica Cultural Developmen­t Commission), but ... a lot of my training came on the job at Ardenne High.”

GOLD MEDALS

She has also been entering the school’s drama group in JCDC competitio­ns and said “... I don’t think there is any year we have not been awarded gold medals, though maybe we have not won national awards. You see, we do both speech and drama.”

Some of the students in the 2001 production became original members of Tableaux, founded in 2007.

After graduation, they wanted to stay together and Tableaux was formed,” Beadle explained.

Initially, the group’s aim was simply to get its members on stage, but “it became a kind of ‘voice of the voiceless’ group and we now speak a lot for marginalis­ed people. The material we have — mostly original, coming from us — will speak to victims of abuse, whether children or adults, drug users, prostitute­s.”

“We’ve done work for Jamaica AIDS Support for Life, for JFLAG — whatever speaks to us at the moment — even though it’s not technicall­y an advocacy group,” Beadle said.

Beadle had grown up watching her singer-actor father, Lloyd Beadle, in many production­s. She appeared in Louis Marriott’s 1997 play ‘Sojie’ and performed in two Little Theatre Movement pantomimes ‘Anancy’ ‘Come Back’ and ‘Moonsplash’.

 ?? MICHAEL RECKORD PHOTO ?? Suzanne Beadle as Paula Geohagen in ‘The Trial of Governor Eyre’ by Bert Samuels.
MICHAEL RECKORD PHOTO Suzanne Beadle as Paula Geohagen in ‘The Trial of Governor Eyre’ by Bert Samuels.
 ?? PHOTO BY MICHAEL RECKORD ?? Brian Maloney as Sean (left) and Suzanne Beadle, who plays Grace, in ‘70 x 7 – The Real Truth’.
PHOTO BY MICHAEL RECKORD Brian Maloney as Sean (left) and Suzanne Beadle, who plays Grace, in ‘70 x 7 – The Real Truth’.
 ??  ?? Grace (played by Suzanne Beadle) in ‘70 x 7 - The Real Truth’.
Grace (played by Suzanne Beadle) in ‘70 x 7 - The Real Truth’.
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