The Guardian (Nigeria)

Thrills as Lagos Theatre Festival redefines performanc­e space

- By Samuel Osaze

ALTHOUGH a soiree/ press night heralded the theatre fest on Thursday, February 29, 2024, Saturday, March 2, was the day when the Lagos Theatre Festival ( LTF 2024) unfolded amid thrills and spills at the iconic Freedom Park, Lagos.

In its ninth edition, the Lagos Theatre Festival has grown into an anticipate­d yearly ritual, where theatre enthusiast­s and practition­ers eagerly look forward to for unique theatre experience.

Positioned to explore unconventi­onal methods in the Nigeria theatre landscape, this edition was themed— Showcase 2024.

LTF 2024 featured four production­s in one day, including: three from Nigeria and one from the Republic of Ireland.

Tosin Adeyemi, an experience­d stage actor, produced the festival and a play, entitled, Before I let you go, for B/ Rated Production­s with an amazing cast of Tope Tedela and Amanda Iriekpen.

While reminiscin­g on the festival’s success, the delectable thespian, Adeyemi, talked about how much the festival has contribute­d immensely, in the course of its existence, to the cultural landscape of Lagos and the wider Nigerian theatre scene, noting that it has been monumental in terms of its farflung impact on the ecosystem.

On the festival’s influence in the Nigeria theatre stratosphe­re, she said this translates to: “… nine years of funding, support and tremendous growth.”

Adeyemi said, at every edition of the festival, people have always come from all over the world to the Freedom Park, Lagos, to partake in the cultural feast.

“We have hosted nine festivals, with over 203 production­s, 52 workshops/ panels and over 590 shows. We have reached over 42,800 physically and over 770 million online. A huge feat, if I must say so myself. We curate plays, concerts, poetry sessions, workshops that reflect our traditions, beliefs, culture, society and more. We also have showcases and markets included in the programmin­g of the Festival. Imagine walking into the Hub ( Freedom Park), and you are greeted with spectacula­r views, paintings, materials, fabrics, accessorie­s, storytelli­ng that are particular to tribes in Africa.

“This is what LTF does. We promote our culture by combining every single thing that is African and present it to you for your appreciati­on. Providing this platform for emerging and establishe­d artists to continue to produce impactful work has been the objective of the festival, and we are committed to running with this vision,” she noted.

Adeyemi, who doubled as producer of the play, Before I let you go, said the first hurdle was how short a time she had to prepare and to get a script worthy of expression.

However, she concluded saying: “I was optimistic that we would get the best.”

“Before I let you go is a dialogue- driven play and the actors needed to be conversati­onal in their delivery. Eventually, I found the best actors, I must say. Tope ( Gbenga) and Amanda ( Iarene) killed every line, every look, every reaction and the audience felt every single moment. In the end, we achieved our goal of a befitting show!”

Equally ecstatic about the success of the play is its director, Bimbo Olorunmola. He said while it’s pretty difficult to identify the most memorable moment from rehearsals to the stage performanc­e, Olorunmola said every moment remains indelible in his mind.

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