After 20 years in politics, including being a Cabinet minister and parliamentarian for more than a decade, Ralph Maraj returns to his first love–the theatre. He is now rehearsing one of his plays The Saint, for performances at the Naparima Bowl on March 15 and 16 at 8.30 pm.
"I am really glad to be back in the theatre. I never knew how much I missed it, how much I needed it." It is so nourishing and liberating compared to the aridity of politics. I will never leave my art again," Maraj said in a release.
The former minister started his career in the theatre as a teenager at Naparima College in the '60s when he won two Best Actor awards at the Secondary Schools Drama Festival.
He later joined the Drama Guild and under the direction of James Lee Wah, played an amazing variety of roles from classical to local including Romeo, Mark Antony, Macbeth, Shylock, Marquis de Sade, Eddie Carbone in A View from the Bridge, Boyle in Juno and the Paycock, the lead role in Man Better Man.
Maraj started writing and directing plays in the mid-'70s and in a space of ten years produced over 20 full-length plays, many of which won awards at the National Drama Festival. These include, The Missing File, Under the Sapodilla Tree, Cynthia Sweetness, The Broken Bridge, Flowers of the Nation, The Archbishop and the Prime Minister, The Saint and others.
Maraj also played lead roles in two local movies, The Right and the Wrong and Bim. He was the host of the three television series Cross Country, Book Talk and Feedback. Maraj was also the President of the National Drama Association for three consecutive terms.
He was also the longest serving Foreign Minister of this country, serving for ten years in that capacity. He was also the Minister of Information and Communications and represented the constituencies of San Fernando and Naparima for the 11 continuous years he served as a Member of Parliament. He is also a graduate of the University of the West Indies and was a teacher at Naparima College for 17 years.
He wrote and staged The Saint in the 80s to the delight of packed audiences. The play is set in a rich business family in Trinidad and Tobago. Problems arise when the elder of two sons wants to become a saint and decides to give up worldly ambitions. His younger brother must now take charge of the family business.
Maraj said The Saint is a human drama during which all the characters experience some degree of evolution. He also noted that the play is suitable for all ages.
Tickets are now on sale at the Naparima Bowl, SRS Drugs in Marabella and Urban Curry Caf� in Gulf City.
?