The
illegal trade in African ivory is the central focus of Mlima’s Tale, a new play by Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Lynn
Nottage. The 80-minute show is receiving
its first professional production since its 2018 world premiere
at The Public Theater in New York City.
It plays at the
Westport Country Playhouse through October 19th.
At the
onset, the show opens with what appears to be an African native in ritualized dance,
praying to the gods or maybe his deceased ancestors. Soon, we realize, the actor is actually the
representation of Mlima, the last of the bull elephants with tusks six-feet in
length, who is being hunted by poachers for his prized ivory. There is no escape for the animal, even after
40 days of trying to elude his human predators.
He is finally caught and butchered by the pursuing men. This begins a chain of events, chronicling
the illicit trafficking of the purloined ivory from the African plains to its
final incarnation as a high-priced piece of artwork on display in the foyer of
a Chinese mogul’s a high-rise penthouse apartment.
The play
is crafted as a series of self-contained vignettes detailing each step in which
the tusks are ferreted from Kenya, their starting off point. There is the set-up, confrontation, and
resolution, usually involving corrupt officials. The feel comes across as more of an academic presentation
and less of an engaging story with a strong theatrical core. Audience members are most likely going to be revolted
and outraged by what they witness happening on stage, but there is not much of
a dramatic arc to keep us emotionally connected.
The one
thread that resonates throughout the production is the ghostly presence of the
slain Mlima. He hovers over the ending
of each scene as an apparitional witness to the venal dealings being
committed. Unspoken and with minimal
stirring, he lightly dusts the faces of each conspirator, silently marking
their involvement in their connivance.
While the
three performers – Jennean Farmer, Adit Dileep, and Carl Hendrick Louis – play
each of their rotating roles with assurance and believability, it is the
performance of Jermaine Rowe as the doomed pachyderm that anchors this
production. His muscular frame helps
create the illusion of a large, once proud, elephant. A noted performer with the Dance Theatre of
Harlem, the actor is agile and spare with his movements on stage, conveying an
angst and sorrowfulness in both life and death.
Director
Mark Lamos keeps the pacing brisk as the settings change from such varied
locales as African, Vietnam and China. There
is almost a documentary feel to the scenes that accompany the sure-handed assertiveness
to his direction.
Choreographer
Jeffrey Page’s work with Jermaine Rowe is powerful and impassioned.
Yana
Birykova’s minimalistic porjections can be haunting – a large moon hovering
over a naked stage - and overt as demonstrated
by slides of the slaughtered Mlima projecting from the backdrop. Composer Michael Keck’s musical interludes
are affecting and help set the tone for the production.
Mlima’s Tale, playing at the Westport Country
Playhouse through October 19th.
For information and tickets, go to https://www.westportplayhouse.org/MlimasTale
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