Saturday 4 June 2011

WEEKEND POST REVIEW! 28 June 2008


‘Waiting‘ lingers on in your mind.
 
WAITING, featuring Peter Mashigo. 
Written by Michael Wentworth 
and directed by Itumeleng Motsikoe
with music by Hilton Schilder. 
Reviewed by Brett Adkins.
 
WORK that revolves around self-
scrutiny is nothing new at the 
festival and, given the South 
African condition, at times there 
seems to be a plethora of it.
Festinos often have to wade 
through a stodgy marsh of material 
before stumbling across something 
that has an eye and ear-pleasing 
edge, that immediately captures 
the imagination and that doesn‘t 
sink into the depths of cliche 
within the first few minutes.
 
Michael Wentworth‘s script is 
certainly not entirely devoid of 
the formula, and there is a degree 
of predictability that pervades it, 
but the winning trick of this 
production is that it is extremely 
well-written.
While there is always evidence of 
an abundance of talent on both the 
main and fringe programmes at the 
fest – across all disciplines – 
the scripts are often all too 
pedestrian, with just glimmers of 
potential.
 
But here there is a solid one- man 
play which, invested in the hands 
of a performer like Peter Mashigo, 
makes a powerful impact while at 
the same time being gently enter-
taining.
Good writing demands a great artist 
to give it life, and Mashigo – a 
commanding stage presence in a big, 
essentially bare performing area – 
does not let the rich monologue go 
wanting.
This is a play about a solitary life 
– solitary in all senses of the word 
– and the always present undercurrent 
of simply waiting.
Waiting for things to get better, 
waiting for the right person to 
step into your life, waiting for 
that life-changing opportunity –  
or, as Mashigo‘s character, Jimmy 
Goeieboom, puts it: “Waiting for 
the show to begin.
As he recounts and takes stock of 
his life, Jimmy not only plays 
himself, but takes on the persona 
of all those who have come into, 
and left, his rocky road existence.
Indeed, the scene in which he 
plays out the meeting of the 
people who actually created his 
life, his young, head-in-the-
clouds 
parents, is one of tenderness 
juxtaposed with shrewd, witty 
observations about love, lust 
and courting. Jimmy‘s birth has 
striking imagery – all the more 
so, because it is portrayed with 
just a single but remarkably 
effective prop.
That sets the stage for the 
telling of the beginnings and 
the rest of Jimmy‘s turbulent 
life and Mashigo paints a vivid, 
colourful landscape across a 
stage furnished with just a 
solitary white bench and a set 
design of white backing screens, 
which allows for the economic use 
of light projections to create a 
particular environment.
 
But all eyes are on Jimmy. And 
that‘s what gives this work that 
elusive edge. Despite its lone 
figure on stage with nothing more 
than the simple clothes he wears, 
it is extremely visual and the 
story of how a human being is 
forced to come to a realisation 
of self through both painful and 
joyous analysis, is one few will 
not be able to identify with.
Instrumentalist Hilton Schilder 
provides dramatic sound backing 
that cleverly punctuates the 
piece and, because it is done so 
sparingly, has double the effect. 
The set and lighting design 
are also understatements which 
serve to isolate and enhance the 
essence of Mashigo‘s performance.
 
Waiting is a play which will 
linger on in your mind much 
later as you reflect on its 
pockets of magic, laughter and 
tension – and, if you do, 
Mashigo, Wentworth and director 
Itumeleng Motsikoe will have 
achieved what they set out to do.
 

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