Two love stories, one stage—A Deal With Darkness lit up the Naparima Bowl from April 17 to 19, holding audiences spellbound as performers brought local folklore vividly to life in a haunting and emotionally charged narrative of love, sacrifice and consequence.
Written and directed by Paul Banseelal, the production transformed the auditorium into the rural village of Tortuga in 1919. From set design to costumes, the staging created an immersive atmosphere as the cast sang and danced their way through a world populated by spirits, ghosts and jumbies—including La Diablesse and the Soucouyant—who roamed the night, terrorising villagers and forcing them indoors at sunset.
The musical stage play drew heavily on Trinidad and Tobago’s folklore and oral traditions, weaving supernatural elements into a human story anchored in moral conflict and desire. As the narrative unfolded, the village of Tortuga—once peaceful—descended into chaos after a desperate resident struck a bargain with the Devil in exchange for a pot of wealth rising from the earth. The deal unleashes a series of tragic events marked by sickness, death and fear.
At the centre of the story is Celia, La Diablesse, portrayed by Annamarina Mohan. Living in the forest beneath a silk cotton tree, Celia undergoes a transformation after falling in love with Christopher, the estate owner’s son, played by Bashiruddin Hosein. Love becomes her turning point, drawing her away from her darker nature.
A second narrative thread follows the well-known folklore of Maria, the Highway Ghost, who was killed after being bitten by a serpent and now roams the road in search of her lost love, Arjoon. Their relationship, destroyed by prejudice and cruelty, adds another layer to the play’s exploration of longing and loss.
Together, the intertwined stories reinforce the production’s central message: that good ultimately triumphs over evil. Celia, Maria, and Morgan, the village obeah man, confront the Devil, his fearsome Lagahoo, and Shanty the serpent woman, in a climactic battle that sees broken contracts with darkness restored and trapped souls finally set free.
Describing the production, Banseelal said, “Set in the village of Tortuga, Trinidad, in 1919, A Deal with Darkness is a musical stage play rooted in the folklore and oral traditions of Trinidad and Tobago. The play explores themes of love, sacrifice, morality and spiritual consequence, culminating in a final battle between good and evil.”
