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The Empire Builders: A bold experiment in alternative theatre!

Tonderai ChiyindikobyTonderai Chiyindiko
March 6, 2021
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An intimate listening party of The Empire Builders, an immersive audio production performed by the Kwasha! Theatre Company is a bold experiment in an alternative theatre! Presented by the French Institute of South Africa (IFAS) and the Market Laboratory, the production took place in the Lindalani Gallery of the Market Theatre just a week or so after it had been launched for free public listening on its purpose made website.

See also: The Shopping Dead was a Wholly Collaborative Experience

In what is possibly a first in South Africa and perhaps the continent, this innovative binaural theatrical production which promises to give the listener a sense of space and dimension of the world of the play, (and) which was recorded on separate microphones ensuring that when listening it is transmitted separately into each ear was not only novel and ground-breaking, but also futuristic in how the listener is invited to add their own nuances, ideas and colour to co-creating the world of the play and its characters.

Kwasha! Theatre Company in The Empire Builders (Photo by Oscar Gutierrez)
Kwasha! Theatre Company in The Empire Builders (Photo by Oscar Gutierrez)

One could argue that The Empire Builders is exactly the kind of non-contact audio-based theatre experience needed, but also the only kind possible during a time where gatherings are prohibited, theatres are closed or only allowing limited numbers, humanity has been battered, cowed and curfewed into submission by Covid-19 and with the ever-changing regulations making any kind pf planning a nightmarish experience.

See also: The Women Making Waves in Theatre in Africa Part 1

Introducing brave and visionary first-time director, Dintshitile Mashile, The Empire Builders was recorded as live theatre albeit without an audience, in an actual theatre, with actors fully in costume, all of which was part of a daring directorial vision to bring to life this challenging play. The masterful sound design of Yogin Sullaphen given how sound was the main element of the play needs to be noted and celebrated, for this cannot have been an easy feat.

It is perhaps serendipitous then that the choice of staging such a production depicting a bleak, dark and suffocating world was selected to be staged, for it not only epitomises how many in the world have felt and still do, but also the hopelessness which has engulfed the world as the pandemic rages on.

Kwasha! Theatre Company in The Empire Builders (Photo by Oscar Gutierrez)

With a choice of listening to the three-episode play in one sitting or per episode, The Empire Builders which was described as an “immersive audio experience” certainly does so much more and thus represents bold alternative audio-based theatre which opens up new avenues for actors, but also for audiences as the limits of which have existed are pushed and stretched to dream-up a broader theatre-verse.

See also: Kamphoer – die verhaal van Susan Nell, a story of tragedy and pain

The play was written by Boris Vian, a celebrated French writer, poet, critic, actor, musician, singer, translator, engineer and inventor best known for his poems, short stories and plays most of which depict the human condition as being an absurd, bleak and dark – one best known proponent of such work being Samuel Beckett and his seminal Waiting for Godot.

The Empire Builders is available for free listening until mid-March on The Empire Builders as well as through the IFAS and The Market Theatre websites.

See also: Robert Serumaga: The Pantheon of Uganda’s Theatre in the ‘70s

The Empire Builders performed by the Kwasha! Theatre Company, presented by the French Institute of South Africa (IFAS) and the Market Laboratory was directed by Dintshitile Mashile, with sound design by Yogin Sullaphen featuring Upile Bongco, Joel Leonard, Wonder Ndlovu, Mosie Mamaregane and Sboniso Thombeni.

Tonderai Chiyindiko

Tonderai Chiyindiko

Tonderai Chiyindiko is a part-time arts writer and contributor. He holds a B.A honours degree in drama from the University of Zimbabwe and a Masters degree in Applied Drama from University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa. He has been part and parcel of the theatre-verse both as an actor and director and more generally worked extensively within the cultural and creative industries sector in various capacities.

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