Friday 28 March 2014

Chintsa East School Drama Club presents: The Gingerbread Girl

What a delightfully dazzling two hours spent at Tea in the Trees yesterday evening, when the Drama Club of Chintsa East Primary School treated us to a highly entertaining show, telling the story of what happened after The Gingerbread Man...

The production poster,
and program (below right)
And what a perfect setting for the play – Tea in the Trees’ Forest Theatre, where a 50-strong crowd  gathered to watch a very local version of the sequel to the epic children’s Fairy Tale, in which the village and surrounding farms of Chintsa have been ravaged by the Gingerbread Man. 

The story unfolds with the Gingerbread Man Creator/village baker coming up with the bright idea of creating a new, benevolent and loving answer to the scourge of the original gingerbread person: a Gingerbread Girl!  There is an amazing moment of genius in this play as the local law enforcement characters, who get wind of this new plot, come in to arrest the baker, and she stands up to them citing her citizen’s rights!  



The play then got a huge round of laughs from the audience as the original Gingerbread Man, played by Grade R teacher Phumla Pakamile – who had stepped into this role only a day before due to stage fright in the original player! – starts to harass and tease the new Gingerbread Girl in an attempt to foil the baker’s plan to rid the village of him, the baker’s bad baking mistake.

The production was presented in true old-fashioned theatre style, with each player individually introducing her/himself, saying what grade they were in and what character they would be playing.  It was all carefully guided by Volunteer Co-ordinater and University of Kent Drama graduate Charlotte Whitehead, who started the Drama Club in an effort to introduce theatre to the school and also to encourage some of the more especially quiet and introverted learners at Chintsa East Primary School, where much of her work takes place (and with whom Friends of Chintsa has a long and colourful partnership), to come out and try a different form of expression.


 For the players who took part in the final production this definitely seemed to have done the trick: to me there was a marked difference in confidence among many of the children I have met and worked with since starting my work with FoC.  They all projected their voices well, speaking clearly and fluently, and recited all their lines without a hitch – Charlotte hardly had to voice prompt from her first row seat at all! 

This is Chintsa East Primary School’s second play, the first being a public performance some years ago of Where The Wild Things Are.  As a transformative program, the Drama Club provides a much needed alternative to the challenging circumstances these little people are growing up in, and speaks directly to their natural ability to pretend and play – perfect!  Every school should have a Drama Club!                              





We would like to congratulate Charlotte and the Drama Club players on a truly outstanding performance.  You all worked very hard on this project, and it showed!  If this spirited group of actors keeps up the current trend, they will become a great set of new leaders to watch out for. 



Imagine what more of this kind of work could do for the youth in our village!


From top: Babalwa Haji, who played the baker's 'Igor', receives her performance certificate
from her director, Charlotte, and then takes a bow.
Bottom: one of the gingerbread men that Charlotte made for each of the players

No comments:

Post a Comment