Jamaica Gleaner

Our stories on stage

- Mel Cooke Gleaner Writer Melville.cooke@gleanerjm.com

FROM THE loader man hustling passengers into cars they would probably have taken anyway to the market vendors enticing people to buy their produce in Coronation Market, Jamaica is full of theatrics.

However, there is a formal part of the entertainm­ent business named theatre, that we may not truly understand the value and impact of, because we take it for granted that we should put ourselves on a stage.

I got to thinking about this a little bit more than usual after speaking to actress Audrey Reid (who spoke about the impact of a play named Boops) and director Michael Holgate about

GARVEY The Musical, recently. Then there is the intended reopening of the Ward Theatre, Kingston, for production­s. The fascinatin­g thing is that there are so many plays that theatre space is woefully short in Kingston and other urban centres, with production­s driven largely by the presence of thespians such as Delcita and Shebada using makeshift spaces when they tour Jamaica. And while we see the advertisem­ents on television for special showings at holiday times, and are aware that a slew of new plays open after Christmas each year (the National Pantomime is the most famed) and probably have a vague idea of the tours which some production­s go on through places overseas where there is a strong Jamaican presence, we may still fall short of appreciati­ng theatre’s impact.

CREATIVE MINDS

Consider how many creative persons are required to do a play. Yes, there are the people on stage, but what about the person who writes the script, the director, the producer, the costume designer and maker, the light and sound technician­s, the set designer and builder, the graphic designer for the advertisem­ents and booklet, the video recorder and editor for those which are taped – and more. Yes, roles overlap, but there is a large talent pool and labour force which theatre supports.

And what supports theatre is the innate, irrepressi­ble desire by Jamaicans to see ourselves on stage. Yes, there are instances where a non-Jamaican play is staged as it is in the script, but often there is a Jamaican twist to the adopted tale. We love to see ourselves on stage – people who look like us, talk like us, in situations that are relevant to us.

And there is an entire industry around that. However, what is amazing is how little of the theatre output goes on to be made into movies. At the end of the day, after a play is staged and has its run, it is done and there is another production to keep fans entertaine­d. Films, we see over and over again. In addition, precious few of the scripts are published, so that another generation – or even another set of actors in another country – can stage it.

So we have no problem with theatre output. Longevity, though, is another matter.

 ??  ?? The Ward Theatre in downtown Kingston. From left: Lakeisha Ellison, Oliver Samuels and Dennis Titus, in a scene from ‘Frenemy’.
The Ward Theatre in downtown Kingston. From left: Lakeisha Ellison, Oliver Samuels and Dennis Titus, in a scene from ‘Frenemy’.
 ??  ?? Aaliyah Smith
Aaliyah Smith
 ??  ?? Ity
Ity
 ??  ?? Delcita
Delcita

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