Jamaica Gleaner

Awards won’t keep audiences coming

Glen Campbell lives mantra of always developing

- Mel Cooke/Gleaner Writer entertainm­ent@gleanerjm.com

GLEN CAMPBELL is able to give audiences at the Centrestag­e Theatre, New Kingston, Jambiz base – and further afield – a laugh a minute (or at even shorter intervals).

But although he was smiling when accepting the award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role at last month’s 2018 Actor Boy Awards, Campbell, who is edging up to four decades in theatre, including doing two shows a year for the past two decades at Jambiz, was not joking when he advised that awards are not a finish line and “people like Viola Davis, Meryl Streep – they tell you they’re not there and they’re still growing. I believe that”. Campbell won the award for playing music producer Ricky Prince in the current play Right Girl, Wrong Address.

Speaking to The Gleaner, Campbell related that the continued push for developmen­t, not only artistical­ly, but also financial. “They (the audience) are not going to buy a ticket because Glen won an award. They are going to buy a ticket for what I am doing now, and if they are happy, they will buy a ticket for the next show,” Campbell said emphatical­ly.

SETTING STANDARDS

It is a matter of standards for himself and the Jambiz theatrical outfit he is a member of, which puts on two production­s annually, one of them opening each Boxing Day, as part of the traditiona­l flurry of holiday curtainrai­sers. “Never let it be said that Glen Campbell must retire. No, no, no! It is mine and Jambiz’s standards that we keep up, why we can sell half or more than half of the dates before the show opens,” Campbell said. Many of the midweek shows are benefits and, without knowing even the plot, persons purchase a night, and tickets are sold through organisati­ons like service clubs. “That is the kind of goodwill that we are talking about. When you have that, you have to keep it up,” Campbell said, underscori­ng the kind of audiences which come to Centrestag­e by noting that a woman came to a performanc­e of

Right Girl, Wrong Address recently to celebrate her 90th birthday.

As music businessma­n Ricky, Campbell plays the protective big brother of Akeem Mignott, who is interested in a young woman (Sheree McDonald-Russell), determined to navigate her way beyond a life in the ghetto through music. Though it was not a lead, Campbell put no less of his ability and effort into the role. And there is more than a hint of profession­al pride in his voice as Campbell, who describes a blend of comedy and drama in a production which has people laughing and crying in turn, says, “People are saying they are happy. I am doing something different each time I go on stage.” His role models for diversity include Anthony Hopkins and Leonardo DiCaprio.

‘Never let it be said that Glen Campbell must retire. No, no, no! It is mine and Jambiz’s standards, that we keep up why we can sell half or more than half of the dates before the show opens.’

 ?? HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER KENYON ?? Glen Campbell (left) accepts the award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his performanc­e in ‘Right Girl, Wrong Address’ from Rodney Campbell at the 2018 Actor Boy Awards, held at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel, New Kingston, on March 26.
HEMANS/PHOTOGRAPH­ER KENYON Glen Campbell (left) accepts the award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his performanc­e in ‘Right Girl, Wrong Address’ from Rodney Campbell at the 2018 Actor Boy Awards, held at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel, New Kingston, on March 26.
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