JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Saturday, April 5, 2025

CHOGM People's Forum a success

by

20091201

Queen's Hall in St Ann's was treat­ed to a de­light­ful cul­tur­al show over the CHOGM week­end. No­vem­ber 22 marked the first ma­jor event of the Com­mon­wealth Heads of Gov­ern­ment Meet­ing (CHOGM) with the open­ing of the Peo­ple's Fo­rum at Queen's Hall at 6 pm. The Peo­ple's Fo­rum was one of three civil­ian Fo­rums held with­in the CHOGM um­brel­la–the oth­ers be­ing a Youth and Busi­ness Fo­rum. Apart from the speech­es by the Head of the Com­mon­wealth Foun­da­tion and an ad­dress by Prime Min­is­ter Patrick Man­ning, the artistes of T&T be­gan to show their ex­cel­lence to our vis­i­tors. This would have launched a week of lo­cal artis­tic ex­cel­lence which cli­maxed with the ex­trav­a­gan­za for the of­fi­cial launch lat­er in the week.

The Sun­day show pushed the en­ve­lope in terms of lo­cal stage pre­sen­ta­tions, fea­tur­ing the­atri­cal per­for­mances in­ter­act­ing with dig­i­tal an­i­ma­tion. It al­so fea­tured com­mu­ni­ty folk fes­ti­vals trans­ferred to the West­ern stage. It was pro­duced by the Artist Coali­tion of T&T (Actt). Vis­i­tors were greet­ed in the lob­by by the kaiso-jazz sound of The Sean Thomas Quar­tet. The young jazz ge­nius host­ed three el­ders–trust­ed bass gui­tarist Dou­glas Re­don; pan vir­tu­oso Len "Boogsie" Sharpe; and vet­er­an mu­si­cian Michael Booth­man. Lat­er on, at the cock­tail re­cep­tion in the lav­ish tent, the CHOGM del­e­gates heard Mun­gal Patas­sar and his band Pan­tar with their sitar-fu­sion sounds.

LEFT: Dave Williams as Anan­si in �nan­si and Sky God.

RIGHT: Elsha Bar­tels as Moa­t­ia-the-Fairy-No-Man-Has-Ever-Seen.

The au­di­ence knew they were in for quite a show with a dif­fer­ence when they re­alised the Mas­ters of Cer­e­monies for the event was cham­pi­on To­bag­on­ian Speech Band the Ply­mouth Speech War­riors. The Speech Band is a mag­i­cal oral per­for­mance tra­di­tion made up of masked cos­tumed per­form­ers who re­cite com­bat­ive po­ems in mea­sured verse on a range of top­ics. The show then took off with a pi­o­neer­ing piece called Anan­si and Sky God, which paired vet­er­an lo­cal folk sto­ry­teller Aun­ty Thea with Dave Williams, the coun­try's top avant-garde chore­o­g­ra­ph­er, and his dance troupe. This an­cient West African sto­ry was per­formed against an in­ter­ac­tive dig­i­tal­ly an­i­mat­ed back­drop, cre­at­ed by young artist An­der­son Mitchell.

Next came an­oth­er in­no­va­tion, with an adap­ta­tion of the Hin­du epic The Ra­mayana as per­formed by one of the great vil­lage troupes, Ravi Ji's Prachar Kendra. The en­tire cast was made up of chil­dren. This was per­formed against an an­i­mat­ed back­drop that was il­lus­trat­ed by Tanya Williams. The next act was Lord Su­pe­ri­or. He had the au­di­ence eat­ing out of the palm of his hand with pieces like Michael Jack­son and Pres­i­dent Oba­ma. The show cli­maxed with rap­so artiste Atak­lan, one of the great young tal­ents of the con­tem­po­rary gen­er­a­tion.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored