The Origin of Chikwakwa Theatre

 The Chikwakwa Theatre: The
coming into being of the Chikwakwa Theatre in the 1960s gave rise to new
theatre groups. The leaders of Chikwakwa Theatre were
with a strong feeling and conviction that western theatre in the
Zambian society was divided along racial lines and that there would not emerge
anything of value If Western theatre remained unchallenged.

The Origin of Chikwakwa Theatre

The origins of Chikwakwa Theatre can be traced to the creation of the University of Zambia Dramatic Society (UNZADRAMS) at the University of Zambia. Formed in 1969, UNZADRAMS was primarily an association for students and lecturers at the university. Though conceived by students and lecturers of the English Drama course in the University, UNZADRAMS had among its members, students who were not part of the drama course. UNZADRAMS had no national following as such but concentrated on the production of plays which had a local appeal as stated by Hudwell Mwachalimba the first chairperson for UNZADRAMS:

<

p style=”line-height: 150%; margin-left: 36pt; text-align: justify; vertical-align: baseline;”>UNZADRAMS
has as its guiding philosophy a deliberate program for the promotion of theatre
arts among Zambians. This we are doing by presenting such plays and sketches in
which Zambian audiences can recognise their own ethos – the basis of
theatrical appreciation. Emphasis is therefore being placed on locally written
plays or those adapted to local situations.

 Most of the productions of UNZADRAMS were done for a
university audience. Due to the lack of a university theatre, the students and
lecturers, in 1969 set out to construct an open-air theatre in the Chamba
valley some seven kilometres from the university campus. The construction of
the open-air theatre was done through work parties. 

The name Chikwakwa meaning slasher symbolises
‘the way grass that formed the enclosure, was cut for construction of the
theatre. It also denotes the sense of cooperation and self-help that
characterized the process of construction. Chikwakwa theatre became a hive of a
good number of productions that included Kasoma’s
The Long Arms of the Law (1966), Fear of the Unknown, Houseboy (1969), Che Guevara (1970), Prodigal Son and Kazembe and the Portuguese (1971).

Michael Ertherton
(1971), a lecturer at UNZA, who has been credited with being the brain-child of
the Chikwakwa Theatre, in 1971 articulated his concept of a travelling theatre
which became the guiding philosophy for the Chikwakwa Travelling Theatre:

In Zambia, the
leaders of the people have sought to sweep away the white establishment
culture; one hopes that they have the insight to carry their cultural
revolution through to the masses. For our part we in the university looked up
to the clear skies and the rich manifestation of songs and felt that it was too
great a heritage to lose to the technocrats and black bourgeoisie and we set
about developing theatre on this basis.

 

Chikwakwa Theatre, therefore, is more than an open-air theatre
building in the bush near Lusaka: It is a commitment to the development of
theatre in Zambia from exiting cultural roots as they are manifested in the
performing arts and in ritual. The traditional performing arts were for all the
people and Chikwakwa Theatre must be concerned with the concept of popular
theatre. The theatre cannot develop solely for the better placed in society,
In the intervening years between 1966
and 1971 Chikwakwa Theatre and its forerunner UNZADRAMS participated in the TAZ
festival but the members realised that it was not feasible to get any award or
win recognition in a theatre association that was dominated by an enclave group
which was bent on preservation of its own notion of cultural superiority.

The tensions that had
characterised KDS in 1963 concerning affiliation to TAZ, loomed high in 1971
when UNZADRAMS entered for the TAZ festival a play
Fools Marry (by Kabwe Kasoma). A serious confrontation, with the
British adjudicator, ensued because the adjudicator failed to understand the
cultural content of the play. UNZADRAMS broke away from TAZ and Chikwakwa
Theatre became the external wing of UNZADRAMS that promoted theatre outside the
University through provincial tours and training workshops and the manifestation of
new works written by students and the lecturers at the university. 


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