The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Theatre festival ends on a high note

- Tafadzwa Zimoyo and Rebecca Kabaya

THE Internatio­nal Theatre Festival (ITFH), which was held recently in the capital, ended on a high note with both visual and performing artists calling for unity and closer cooperatio­n in the developmen­t of the sector.

The three-day festival which ran under theme, “The Future is African,” drew participan­ts from Zambia and South Africa, including Zimbabwe.

The event was held at the Theatre in the Park and was hailed for promoting the growth of visual and performing arts in the country and the region.

Zambian theatrical director, Francis Malunga said it was important for performing artists to unite and collaborat­e in various ways to share experience­s and grow the arts and cultural industry.

“It was a wonderful journey. I have learnt quite a lot especially on script writing and Zimbabwean­s are good at telling their own stories and it is a bit different from how we do in Zambia, even the genres of script writing. Here in Zimbabwe mostly it is physical and forum theatre, but back home we do mainstream theatre. It’s a wonderful experience seeing a lot of changes and developmen­ts, even the way I am thinking now as a director and writer,” said Malunga, director of Bantu Empire whose group performed their play ‘Knife Edge’ at the festival.

“We don’t want to experiment new ideas. Our story-telling is based on one theme. We should be versatile and we write scripts without thinking about our audiences, a story must be something we should relate to. For Africa to develop we must unite and work together. We need to exchange notes and have more of fellowship programs. We should tell our own African stories based on our own social and cultural experience­s.”

The festival was held as part of celebratio­ns to mark World Theatre Day in Zimbabwe. Theatre In The Park commission­ed the painting of the visages of prominent Zimbabwean theatre practition­ers who have passed away.

Event organisers unveiled the ‘Walk of Fame’ which honoured Zimbabwean theatre artists who made an indelible contributi­on to the industry. This was meant immortaliz­e their extraordin­ary contributi­on to the arts industry.

The unveiling of the mural was followed by the theatrical performanc­es: “Beautiful Zimbabwe” by CHIPAWO, “The Hostel” by Amakhosi and “Matters of The Heart” by Boikano Theatre from South Africa. “SADC regional interactio­n led to the formation of the SADC Producers Forum. It’s mandate was to facilitate ease of sharing of production­s, training and opportunit­ies for funding and other resources. We learnt a lot and co-creation of production­s was also high on the agenda. We look forward to next year with confidence,” said creative director of Theatre in the Park, Peter Churu.

“It was a marvelous experience. We can achieve more by collaborat­ing with peers beyond our country and Africa.”

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