Tribal Soul » TOUR READY http://www.tribalsoularts.com Tue, 11 Oct 2011 16:37:01 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.2.1 The Man Who Committed Thought http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-man-who-committed-thought http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-man-who-committed-thought#comments Fri, 15 Jul 2011 07:17:51 +0000 tribalsoularts http://www.tribalsoularts.com/?p=107 div.img { height:auto; width: 20%; float: left; text-align: center; } div.img img { display: inline; margin: 2px; height:auto; width: auto; border: 1px solid #ffffff; } div.img a:hover img {border: 1px solid #0000ff;} div.desc { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; width: auto; margin: 2px; padding-bottom:1cm; } .heading_rp{ font-size: 18px; font-weight: normal; font-family: 'Hammersmith One',serif;}

The Man Who Committed Thought is currently taking bookings for an international tour 2011/12. For dates, please see our calendar on Facebook. To download an information pack for venues, please click here.

Edinburgh Fringe Festival First Award Winner

What do Shakespeare, the Bible, and a cow have in common?

The Man Who Committed Thought is a highly physical and literate solo show by Patrice Naiambana. In postcolonial Lion Mountain, a determined peasant seeks justice after having his cow eaten by the dictator of the land, President Janta. An initially indifferent Anglicised African lawyer, much given to quoting Shakespeare and the Western Canon, is forced to commit thought about his own personal responsibility for the state of his country. Patrice’s darkly humorous, electric performance style draws upon the story-telling tradition of the West African Griot.

The Man Who Committed Thought was created in order to shed light on Africans who are living, thinking and adapting to traumatic times and contemporary issues. It is an attempt to combat the racism and stereotyping that inevitably comes from repeated negative images and stories of a people, and to express the valuable lessons that Africa’s stories can give to the rest of the world. The play is a tribute to all those who survive war and horror and still continue to think, laugh and play.

PRESS QUOTES

“This is passionate theatre, brilliantly performed, about matters of massive import… Packs more power into its 80 minutes than most would-be writers manage in a lifetime… You are left gasping for breath.”
The Scotsman

“…A moving play…It illustrates the conflict between humanitarianism and humanism, and shows that right and wrong are not necessarily black and white, but rather, they are painted in shades of grey.” Kubatana.net

“Brilliantly, honestly, fearlessly challenging the status quo.“
Three Weeks

“[Naiambana] has charisma to burn, and the physical presence to back up that charm.”
The Stage

RECENT PAST PERFORMANCES

2011

Espressobar Ko D’oooooooor, The Netherlands
In connection with the seminar ‘Coloniality, Slavery and the Holocaust: Introducing the Decolonial Option’ at Roosevelt Academy, Middelburg

Pentecost Festival, United Kingdom

Rock Paper Sistahz Festival, Canada

Harare International Festival of Arts, Zimbabwe
Supported by the British Council

Roosevelt Academy, The Netherlands

2010

Théâtre L’Arrière-Scène, Belgium

Intwasa Festival, Zimbabwe
Supported by the British Council

Harare International Festival of Arts, Zimbabwe
Supported by the British Council

Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Hong Kong

2007

The CAPITAL Centre, United Kingdom

Soho Theatre, United Kingdom

CONCEPT, WRITING & PERFORMANCE: Patrice Naiambana
DURATION:
80–90 minutes
STYLE:
Theatre, storytelling
SCALE:
Small, easy to transport

]]>
http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-man-who-committed-thought/feed 0
The Gospel of Othello http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-gospel-of-othello http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-gospel-of-othello#comments Tue, 05 Jul 2011 12:26:51 +0000 tribalsoularts http://www.tribalsoularts.com/?p=136 div.img { height:auto; width: 20%; float: left; text-align: center; } div.img img { display: inline; margin: 2px; height:auto; width: auto; border: 1px solid #ffffff; } div.img a:hover img {border: 1px solid #0000ff;} div.desc { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; width: auto; margin: 2px; padding-bottom:1cm; } .heading_rp{ font-size: 18px; font-weight: normal; font-family: 'Hammersmith One',serif;}

The Gospel of Othello will be playing in Zimbabwe this November/December.
For venues and dates, please visit our calendar on Facebook. To download an information pack, please click here.

This project brings participants together with professional artists and theatre makers to develop and stage their own version of Othello. The play-building process engages with movement, improvisation, song, dance, and ensemble acting, melding Shakespearean verse with the vernacular of communities in order to interrogate Shakespeare’s play. We focus on key themes such as gender relations, exile, racism/tribalism, and ‘othering’. The rehearsal method encourages participants to voice their understanding of the themes, and to exchange ideas on social change. The second phase of the project supports the group to produce performances of the version of The Gospel of Othello they have created, opening up this conversation to the broader community.

This project builds on established community theatre and development work by offering an African diaspora/global perspective. Our artists are steeped in diaspora life experience and have the advantage of being able to observe and create from multiple cultural perspectives. The project is not merely an opportunity for skilled members of the diaspora to use their training and experience gained outside of Africa to assist in local capacity building; it also serves as a conduit for valuing and repositioning Southern local knowledges and sensibilities within the global North.


OUTCOMES

  1. Participants learn valuable skills in the performing arts, management, theatre production, workshop facilitation, and education
  2. Participants work together with highly-skilled and experienced international professionals, providing the opportunity to tap into creative networks in their home country and abroad
  3. Aspiring and professional artists/producers may be provided with creative entrepreneurial and apprenticeship opportunities, and continued skills development
  4. Participants are empowered to mount their own version of The Gospel of Othello, and given the necessary training and support to function autonomously once the project has concluded
  5. Performances of The Gospel of Othello will be used as a starting point to encourage community dialogue about key issues such as gender relations, racism and migration. Discussions take place through forms such as post-show discussions, debates, and participatory workshops


PROJECT HISTORY

The Gospel of Othello has been facilitated in the UK, South Africa, Canada and Zimbabwe with professional and emerging artists, as well as school children and community participants.

We devote the core principles of professionalism, discipline and creativity to any group of participants irrespective of artistic experience. These are the same principles required for any enterprise or community cohesion endeavor.

2011

Intwasa Festival: Bulawayo, Zimbabwe
British Council Supported

Canadian Stage’s Festival of Ideas and Creation: Toronto, Canada

Harare, Zimbabwe

2010

Intwasa Festival: Bulawayo, Zimbabwe
British Council Supported

2008

Port St John Junior School: South Africa

Chapeltown, Leeds, UK
Co-produced by The People’s Arts Council in Association with The Royal Shakespeare Company and The Leeds Bi-Centenary Transformation Project

 

FACILITATORS

Patrice Naiambana
Harold George
Juwon Ogungbe

 

 

zimbabwe Gospel of Harare Gospel3 Cassio Gospel in Zimbabwe HIFA2011 6659 HIFA2011 6660 HIFA2011 6670

]]>
http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-gospel-of-othello/feed 0
The Accused http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-accused http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-accused#comments Tue, 05 Jul 2011 11:52:52 +0000 tribalsoularts http://www.tribalsoularts.com/?p=122 div.img { height:auto; width: 20%; float: left; text-align: center; } div.img img { display: inline; margin: 2px; height:auto; width: auto; border: 1px solid #ffffff; } div.img a:hover img {border: 1px solid #0000ff;} div.desc { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; width: auto; margin: 2px; padding-bottom:1cm; } .heading_rp{ font-size: 18px; font-weight: normal; font-family: 'Hammersmith One',serif;}

Available for bookings now. To download an information pack, please click here.

An exiled African storyteller loses his memory; he has no name, no past. Stories flow by at seemingly disconnected tangents. Still he cannot find himself, but accusations bring unexpected truths.

The Accused is a multimedia dance performance that explores what the conditions of exile and detention might mean for migrants as well as host citizens. What do host citizens have in common with ‘outsiders’? How do we arrive at belonging? The piece is inspired by a true account of stowaways being thrown overboard; it presents a story about dreams of a life left behind and a life longed for. Prior to the performance, the audience is invited to interact with various front of house installations. In this setting they have a chance to tell their own stories, which are later fed into the live performance.

The Accused was developed with support from Birmingham Rep Theatre. Our challenge was to unearth an innovative diasporic form, anchored in classical African performance. We are pleased to have worked on the developmental process with Gail Parnel, Artistic Director of African Cultural Exchange, and Lola Adodo, Artistic Director of NewScopes Dance Theatre. The show has been invited to the Inaugural Scattered Seeds Festival and to South Africa by Aubery Sekhabi, Artistic Director of The State Theatre in Pretoria.

“As the piece drew to a close you felt, even with it’s rough edges, that you had been part of a powerful and intelligent theatrical experience which had provided an insight into lives usually made invisible by craven political sound bites and heartless tabloid headlines.”
Pervaiz Khan, Institute for Race Relations


 

DURATION: 1 hour 30 minutes –
2 hours, including front of
house interactions
STYLE:
Contemporary dance,
theatre
SCALE:
Small to middle

Concept and writing:
Patrice Naiambana
Choreography: Harold George
Performed by: Patrice Naiambana, Harold George, Leonora Stapleton, Gaël Ravedovitz
Visuals: Derek Nisbet (Talking Birds), Anwa Essien, Matthew Krishanu
Sound: Juwon Ogungbe

]]>
http://www.tribalsoularts.com/the-accused/feed 0