Sal Capone: The Lamentable Tragedy of… the beginning of a most important dialogue initiated by this striking and moving staging of rage!

Sal Capone: The Lamentable Tragedy of… the beginning of a most important dialogue initiated by this striking and moving staging of rage!

Sal Capone: The  Lamentable Tragedy of ….Letitia Brookes, Tristan D. Lalla, Kim Villagante. Photo thanks to Urban Ink and the NAC.

This docu-drama or docu-fiction, a form of musical theatre  that ties together reality and fiction  inspired by real life tragedies , concerns  events that took place  in Montreal  (the death of an unarmed Freddy Villanueva in 2008)  and  the shooting of  unarmed Trayvon Martin in Florida  (2013)  which  set off the “Black Lives Matter” movement in the US .  We are immediately drawn back to Shakespeare’s    work The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus (1623) whose ending is inspired by  Seneca’s  “Thyestes” .  The  Roman play  concerns  the horrific torture and death of  children due to the rivalry between the  twin brothers, Atreus and Thyestes .  Atreus, takes vengeance on his brother Thyestes by tricking him  into eating his own sons who have been slaughtered and served up on a plate.   The unimaginable  horror of cannibalism in this situation obviously intrigued Shakespeare who ends his version of Titus Andronicus  in a similar way .

Still, given  the  current urban climate for people who are not perceived as white in our North American Society,   the situation  created by  writer Omari Newton is just  as disturbing because it draws attention to the nature of the murder  of  young people who are regularly slaughtered by the police or security guards  for no reason. In most cases the  police are not punished,  and the resulting frustration, grief and rage sets off  a form of  behavior that evolves into true  urban warfare  where the minds  of young people are set afire with the need for revenge. This is  what we see on the NAC stage!!

In the Sal Capone: Lamentable tragedy ,  a popular DJ dies after being shot by the police and in the ensuing violence , the   most innocent poet of the group also takes a bullet  against the   background  of radio reporters’  voices spewing out misinformation distorting  the events,  blaming  the dead people for their own death and announcing  many more deaths in the city. The  play contains the seeds of hopelessness and ongoing tragedy in our society  by pitting  rival brothers  as did Seneca, against each other ,just as much as  it shows how those rival  brothers are also just as much  victims of the forces in power  with whom no dialogue appears to be  possible .

The show is frantic, loud, booming, vibrating, and bursting with energy.  The group  of hip hop musicians, dancer and singers is preparing to launch a new album but with this sad news of the DJ’s death,  everything changes.

Tristan D. Lalla is  Freddy the rapper poet and who  speaks his heart out and refuses to resort to violence. His words were not always clear because the music was so loud but we got the gist of it very easily. . Kim Villagante plays Jewel, a local hip hop musician fueled by a searing anger  who  at the height of it all, is driven to her own form of white racist hate  when she threatens  to use her gun.  She confronts Chase, played by Jordan Waunch a Metis actor who becomes the person organizing the sale of the new album and he refuses to allow the launch party to become a demonstration against the police to respect the memory of the Dead DJ. He wants to see the album sell after all their hard work.  Letitia Brookes as Freddy’s sister Naomi ,  a wonderful young girl who represents the future and a balanced if not terribly idealistic  rapport with the world since she has not yet confronted the real tragedy on the streets. But when it does come, there  seems to be no hope left.

As a form of cynical  observer, Troy Emery Twigg, a first nations  actor playing  Shaneyney  a  transvestite  Maman  in the full tradition of Michel Tremblay´s  the Duchesse of Langeais! She is part narrator, part witness, part story teller but even then she  cannot remain a neutral outsider in this society of flamboyant choices where loyalties must be clearly stated.

Working with musicians, singers, street dancers, composers and actors,   director Diane Roberts, and the whole technical staff created an excellent show.  The music was rousing, exciting, vibrating and attacked us physically with its  electronic key board, vibrating bass sounds, hip- hop  rhythms  and a lot of street sounds including sirens, cars, young audiences  clapping,  video projections around the walls where graffiti, faces, moving images capture the chaos of the street as the anger overflows.  Five actors plus all the stage effects create the feeling of a crowd where  we too were  quickly integrated .

A legendary figure has come to life and it is to  be hoped that a real dialogue will take place as a result of this show which is already organizing discussions with young people . That is so important.  Even though the ending appears to be extremely hopeless, very important questions are raised during the heated exchanges between young  Naomi , Jewel and the men. What use is racial  profiling  among  all people in the street?  Creating racial division leads to more hate  as  French  film director Mathieu Kassovitz states in a recent interview . Why not  understand  the way class structure also creates division and anger? Author of the French cult film La Haine (Hate..1995)  about 3 friends linked by class because they are living in a French  Ghetto (Cité) on the outskirts of Paris: one North African, one sub-Saharan African, and one Jew.  The film deeply  shocked France when it appeared and Kassovitz  says that 22 years later, the situation in France is even more explosive because the country did not listen to those young  enraged people.  What  is happening now (demonstrations, and all manner of violence ) is the direct result of that deafness which made the situation much worse.   Omari  Newton is showing and telling us the same thing. We must listen to him and his artistic team. .

Theatre can create dialogue and we hope this play will  encourage people to talk! We need more of this forum structure produced by  theatrical  hyperrealism spawned by what is happening around us.

Come see this show!!  It plays in the Studio of the NAC from April 10 to 21, in the Azrieli studio at 20h00

PLease read Patrick Langston’s review of the show :

Review: Sal Capone production is “loud, violent and immersive” and finely wrought

Written by Omari Newton

Directed by  Diane Roberts

Sound designer Troy Slocum

Ana Cappelluto   Set and Lighting designer

Candelario Andrade  Video designer

Sarah Hall-K   Costume Designer

Emma Tibaldo Dramaturg

Crazy Smooth   Movement consultant

John Koensgen    Fight director

Cast:

Tristan D. Lalla  is Freddy Salazar jr.

Troy Emery Twigg is Mac/Shaneyney

Kim Villagante  is Jewel  De La Reyas

Jordan Waunch  is   Chase Cheddar

Produced  by Boldskool Productions in association with Holding

 

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