[NEohioPAL] BerKo review: FELA! @ PlayhouseSquare

Roy Berko royberko at gmail.com
Wed Apr 3 10:13:39 PDT 2013


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*Afrobeat, political commentary FELA! rocks the Place Theatre            *

Roy Berko

(Member, American Theatre Critics Association, Cleveland Critics Circle)



At the conclusion of FELA!, the Afrobeat political awareness musical, now
on stage at the Palace Theatre, caskets are carried onto center stage and
piled up.  On top of the stack of caskets, emblazed with names such as
Martin Luther King and Malcolm X and words such as “freedom,” “bullying”
and “oppression,” was a vertical box of death entitled, “Chardon High
School.”  Yes, FELA! is filled with music, but it is a wrenching tale of
genocide, oppression and death, not only in Nigeria, where the show is set,
but across the world, including a Cleveland suburb.



FELA!, which opened Off-Broadway in September of 2008 and, due to positive
reviews and audience reaction, was moved onto Broadway in November of 2009,
ran until January of 2011.  It won three Tony Awards.



The show’s path to production is quite interesting.  Stephen Hendel, who
later, along with Bill T. Jones and Jim Lewis conceived the script, came
across a CD of Fela Anikulapo Kuti, who was not only a composer, but a
Nigerian underground leader opposed to his country’s controlling and
corrupt regime.  Hendel saw the songs as a strong message for the
disenfranchised, and so the idea for a show was hatched.



The musical centers on Fela’s days when he was targeted by over 1,000
government soldiers intent on closing down his legendary Lagos nightclub,
The Shrine.  A combination of concert, biography, plea for peace, and
opposition to oppression, the dance, music and story make for intriguing
theatre.

Fela Kuti’s Afrobeat is a mixture of jazz, funk, African harmonies and
rhythms.  The sound is created by a blend of modern and African instruments
and uses lyrics that attack not only Nigeria’s oppressive dictatorships,
but the very nature of hate in the world.  Those lyrics tell story after
story of political unrest and human desperation for freedom.  The constant
pounding of the music’s beat illuminates Kuti’s belief that “the drumming
is the voice of the world.”

Bill T. Jones, who is a master choreographer, has combined the dance
movements of Nigeria, with modern concepts to create exciting, sensual and
exhilarating staging.  It’s impossible to sit and just watch.  The audience
was swaying, shouting, singing, and moving, creating an emotional bonding,
mirroring Fela’s mesmerizing effect on his fellow countrymen.

As the so accurate welcome sign in the Palace lobby stated, “First you’ll
feel it in your feet.  Then you’ll feel it in your soul.”

The touring production, though too long, is a spectacle of dance, song,
projections, strobe lights, and energy.  The performances are excellent.  The
singing and dancing of highest quality.  The staging creative.



Handsome, sensual Adesola Osakalumi, who also played the role on Broadway,
is compelling as Fela.  He has a fine singing voice, plays various musical
instruments, dances well, and totally populates the role.  Part of the show
is audience participation, and he handles that difficult task with charm
and ease.  Sometimes he is a little hard to understand due to his fidelity
in using Nigerian accented English, but this is usually a moot factor as
many of the words spoken on stage are projected onto the stage’s backdrop.

Michelle Williams, best known as a member of the R&B/Pop group, Destiny’s
Child, sings and acts the role of Fela’s main woman, Sandra Isadore, with
ease.

Melanie Marshall displays a wonderful singing voice as Funmilayo, Fela’s
mother and muse.

The rest of the cast sings, dances, and develops the correct sounds,
movements and concepts.

The ten-piece on-stage band is Afrobeat powerful!

*CAPSULE JUDGEMENT:  FELA! has a compelling story, fantastic choreography,
and high production quality. It’s a shame that it was only booked into the
Palace for a three-day run.  Positive word of mouth would have propelled
the show into a long running box office hit.  *



Tickets for* FELA!*, which runs only through March 4, 2013 at the Palace
Theatre, can be ordered by calling 216-241-6000 or going to
www.playhousesquare.org.

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