The theatre production of Bangles was shown at the Platform Theatre Hornsey Road, London on Saturday 15th November 2014. There were two shows T 3pm and 7pm respectively. Our Lead Reviewer Babs Carew attended the 3pm and screening on behalf of www.babso.org and reported that the screening had in attendance people of different nationalities and ages and that although the Platform Theatre is a small place, the screening was fully booked with a waiting list. Below is his review of the Production.
Storyline: “Bangles” tells the powerful story of a young British born Nigerian filmmaker and poet, Theresa who is still haunted by memories of her abusive, now deceased father. Despite her best efforts, she is unable to convey the depth of her pain to her stern mother, Gbemi and her cocky, confident brother, David. However, as the second anniversary of her father’s death approaches and familial tensions arise, Theresa and her family are compelled to confront a devastating past in a way which changes their lives forever.
Combining powerful live theatre with searing and unusual film footage, “Bangles” is an innovative multimedia production exploring the timeless themes of reality and perception, bitterness and healing. After being enslaved for so long, is freedom EVER possible?
The storyline is relevant in this day and age where children have had to bottle abuse without being able to tell anyone and are suffering as a result of it. They cannot move on with life and fin it difficult to trust. The play was written by Michael Ajose, directed by Fana Cioban and produced by Abay Aromire. The rest of the crew consisted of Emma Nan Hu who was the film maker, Petr Vocka, the Lighting Designer, Philip Matejschuk, the Sound Designer and SiJ in charge of the tracks.
Cast: the cast consisted of three people namely Ama Addison as Theresa, Kemi Lofinmakin as Gbemi the mother and widower and Emmanuel Ogunjinmi as David. Although there were only 3 people in the cast, they studied their roles properly and brought them to light making the whole story believable. I saw raw, natural talent waiting to be harnessed. Ama played the role in such a way that you would believe that she was just replicating what she had been through in real life. Her closing remarks that ended the production were most believable that if you were in the audience, you would have empathised with her and probably even cried. From the beginning to the end, she was in her role and never slipped away. Kemi, what can i say. You played the role effortlessly that i began to wander if you had to manage children in the category you played. You played a natural African, gullible Christian mother. All i can say is well done. Emmanuel, I am sure that in real life, you are opposite of the role you played, but your steps, your sarcasm, your table manners and in the end your sober nature were all on point.
I would like to commend whoever was responsible for casting for this production. You could not have got better people for those roles. I also commend the Director and the entire crew for a job well done. It was indeed a team effort.
Sound: Although this was a theatre production, the sound quality including those if the images that were shown was perfect. The words were clear and concise and you could follow the production from beginning to the end. Well done!
Overall performance: Watching this production reminded me of pre-Nollywood when i used to watch plays on stage such as Village Headmaster, Aiye, Jaiyesinmi just to mention a few. The timing was meticulous. There were no gaps even when costumes had to be changed. Everyone played their roles perfectly. Feedback from all the people we spoke to was positive. One of the comments said ” well done for the production, I really enjoyed it, really great work and to think it was a 3 cast show, they did well”. Such was the consensus for the viewing I went for, not a negative comment. As a Nollywood movie reviewer and critic, the production made me want to go back and support our local theatre.
The question remains, if the production which was free on this occasion was advertised for £15 or £20 would i go and watch it or would i recommend it. Without a doubt and without thinking twice, i would take my wife out to watch it. It is 2 hours well spent.
I spoke to the team after the event and discovered it took 3 years to bring the production to light. Getting it right is important and the time spent in developing the production was worth the while. Proper planning they say prevents poor performance and that was the case in this production.
Once more to the entire cast and crew all I have to say is a big well done. I am looking forward to the next production by Colours Production.
Watch the trailer:
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