Story and pictures
Innis Francis
Samuel Selvon’s 71-year-old novel, A Brighter Sun, was depicted by the Iere Theatre Production Limited during a four-day event to recognise what would have been his 100th birthday.
It was held at the Southern Academy for the Performing Arts (SAPA) recently.
The story was taken from the 1940s of the battle of the Atlantic. It was penned in 1952.
The narrative was set in Port-of- Spain and explored the encounters of two couples’ socio-economic differences in the World War II period juxtaposed with today’s societal government.
Poet and playwright Eintou Pearl Springer produced the script, which saw most nights, a sold-out audience.
Director Victor Edwards said each time the production is staged, there seems to be room to emphasise the interpretation of modern-day issues.
In this production, the message takes the audience away from the present-day hustle and reflects on the foundation of living a humble lifestyle to attain mental and sustainable goals.
Incorporating songs like Brown Skin Girl, Naked Yuh Come, Naked Yuh Go, and Rum and Coca-Cola also shared the music era at the time the novel was written.
Selvon was an author of novels and short stories. He was born to a Trinidadian father and an Indian-Scottish mother in 1923.
A native of San Fernando, he attended Naparima College in the 30s. He also worked as a fiction editor of the Trinidad Guardian literary magazine before he migrated to Britain in the 50s for where most of his work was featured in journals and newspapers, including the London Magazine, New Statesman, and the Nation.
Selvon was also the recipient of the Humming Bird Medal for Literature in 1969 and posthumously awarded the Chaconia Medal Gold for Literature in 1994.
It also jogged the minds of those in the audience of their function to hold a government accountable to be the servants of the people they swore to serve with subtle intonations that suggest growth and the ability to read and represent a community and the esteem reverence for the Red House.
The production company’s scroll dates back to 2010, with the emergence of the musical Eric, written by Zeno Constance which reflected the life story of T&T’s first prime minister Dr Eric Williams.