One Man's
Story is a musical theatre production, (written, produced and part
choreographed by Carolyn Edwards) telling the life story of ‘Bongo’ Eddie Folk
(Phil Kaila), the percussionist of international 80s and 90s chart-topping
American band 'Kid Creole And The Coconuts' for over 30 years. Bongo, had made
his home in Liverpool for over a decade before finding love with Carolyn
(Carolyn Edwards).
Two years in
the making of this premiere raising funds, the performance celebrates the 10th
anniversary of Genie In The Gutter charity which supports people with issues
including homelessness and mental health, helping them to recover from
addiction. Coming from a poor background in a racially segregated Brooklyn, New
York, Eddie became a patron.
The story is
told with love at its heart from the point of view of Carolyn Edwards, founder
and director of Genie In The Gutter. Edwards’ love affair with Eddie Folk was
cut short when he returned to his native USA but became ill and subsequently
died in 2016. Shortly afterwards the charity lost 90% of its funding leaving
Carolyn devastated with grief and loss. Carolyn however believes that Eddie
reaches from beyond the grave to guide her to this creative project with the
ultimate message that ‘life truly is a wonderful thing’.
The show
opens with a percussion band (on stage throughout) in one corner and a giant
projection screen centre stage. Music co-composed and directed by Matt Shaw and
Kid Creole Band’s Mark Anthony Jones is vibrant accompanying a high energy
contemporary dance routine performed to rhythmic percussion. It felt like a 70s
disco party with a psychedelic giant screen background that segued into a
Brazilian carnival complete with lavish Samba costumes and glorious feather
headpieces. The choreography lead by Gillian Orrett has been credited as
collaborative with the performers and the dedication of the talented dancers
shone throughout the production. It is hard to believe that this is Olivia
Jones' first professional performance. The funk, disco and Latin dance numbers
highlit the show as the ensemble cast performed the story of Eddie’s rise from
a shoe-shine boy to playing with world touring band Kid Creole And The Coconuts.
The audience loved it with ample opportunity to sing and clap along. With so
much ground to cover Edwards cleverly introduces Narrator (Simon Lennon) who
holds the show together with his beautifully lyrical voice. The narration,
written in rhyme undulates as Lennon commands the stage without ever intruding
on the performance. Director (Jen Heyes) utilises the huge Philharmonic stage
and projection screen to the full interspersing clean original background film
footage of ‘Bongo’ Eddie’s rise to fame with social historical references.
Footage of Maya Angelou reciting her poem ‘Still I Rise’ was a particularly
powerful and moving moment. The production does not shy away from Eddie’s
womanising past and dancer Talisha Thomas-Lindsay also plays Barbara (with whom
he had two daughters in New York) beautifully as the production covers the
earlier years leading up to his drink, drug-fuelled womanising height of fame.
Edwards emphasises Eddie’s humour and charisma and Phil Kaila brings a
believable presence of Eddie to the stage. At the end of act one it is 1988 and
Eddie has fathered a son to Liverpool girl Doreen. They are not together but
Eddie loves his son and stays in Liverpool while continuing to tour with Kid
Creole. The first half closes a little early after forty-five minutes as a
guest performance by Kid Creole And The Coconuts was cancelled last minute.
Whilst this would have been fun the production did not suffer unduly from it.
Act two
opened in contrast much slower, concentrating on Carolyn’s love story and her
pain after Eddie’s death all told and narrated in rhyming prose. This however was
evidence of the creator being too close to the project and although Edward’s
tango with Eddie showcased her talent as a dancer, her self-portrayal and grief
was at times uncomfortable to watch. Original film footage and a sparkling
glitter ball helped to highlight the highs and lows of fame and fortune. Narrator
(Lennon) again held the performance together with support from the ensemble and
fabulous musicians as they played Frankie Goes to Hollywood’s The Power of
Love. The show ended on a thorough high with the ensemble swelled by the
addition of a chorus of ‘Genie’ service users earning a standing ovation and
full audience participation in the singing and dancing musical finale.
One Man's
Story is a fundraising collaborative work between ConYoBongo and Genie In The
Gutter. Set up in memory of Bongo Eddie and blending multiple artistic genres,
such as contemporary dance, yoga and bongo drums, ConYoBongo also blends
artists from varying artistic/social backgrounds and has aims of producing high
calibre professional musical theatre shows. ConYoBongo aspires to combine the
real with the virtual and grass roots, emerging and professional high-profile
artists to co-create innovative live integrated theatre and memorable audience
experiences that are fully inclusive and accessible for all.
Reviewer - Barbara Sherlock
on - 7/9/18
on - 7/9/18
No comments:
Post a Comment