04 FEB Michael jones
Transcription
04 FEB Michael jones
TONIGHTSTAGE 4 TUESDAY FEBRUARY 4 2014 Comic’s career hits high note LATOYA NEWMAN RACEY-Lee Oliver has a lot on the go in entertainment. She’s an amazing singer and a two-time Naledi Awards nominee for her role as Deena Jones in the South African production of the Broadway musical, Dream Girls. You may remember her as the supporting actress opposite David Kau and Joey Rasdien in the action comedy, Blitzpatrollie, and she stars in the popular TopTV reality series Sugarushed. But the reason we wanted to speak to Oliver is because of her growing popularity in stand-up comedy. She will be among a host of comedians who are touring the country with the Kings and Queens of Comedy Show and brings with her a fresh take on the musical style of comedy. In an interview with Tonight the Joburg-based, proudly Cape Town “farm girl” told us a bit about where it all began. “In the beginning there were the Goliaths…” – just joking – what she actually said was: “I met Jason Goliath (popular comedian and one half of the Goliath and Goliath comedy franchise) at a gig we did together. He saw me perform and came up with this awesome idea to come up with funny lyrics for parodies to popular songs. Later, when I met with him and Donovan Goliath (no relation to Jason), we got to talking and I told them that I also do singer impersonations. So I had to do some for them, which was very intimidating, but they laughed and that was how it all began,” she explained. Oliver said that since childhood she has sung and performed her impersonations in front of the mirror: “It just came naturally to me. I also love to make people laugh and now I’m doing comedy.” But taking that plunge into comedy wasn’t as easy as it sounds, said Oliver, as she recalled her first stand-up gig at the popular AWEdnesday Comedy Jam in Joburg. SIFISO NENE 5 SKHUMBA HLOPE Tonight is giving away five double tickets to the East Coast Kings and Queens of Comedy. To win SMS King DN, your name and area to 33963. SMSes charged at R1.50. Winners will be contacted telephonically. PICTURE: GOLIATH AND GOLIATH MAKING WAVES: Tracey-Lee Oliver. “After Jason and Donovan discovered I could do impressions they booked me for AWEdnesday… my stomach turned immediately. I thought I was going to crash and burn in front of that crowd.” But crash and burn she did not. We caught part of Oliver’s set from that night on YouTube. Judging by the audience who were rolling with laughter we believe she was a hit. “I’m a singer. I’ve been singing live and professionally for nine years. With singing you rehearse, you know the songs. And then along came stand-up comedy. That moment when you are basically naked on stage and exposed. But I got a standing ovation and it was so much fun,” she laughs. Having now also had a crack at acting and comedy, Oliver said she is hard pressed to state a favourite. “It’s difficult for me to separate the three because they all relate to performing and I love performing, especially live – having that immediate response from someone watching me there and then.” The Kings and Queens of Comedy marks Oliver’s first major stand-up tour: “I really owe Jason and Donovan. They’ve given me such a massive break. The type of comedy I do is a formula we figured works. I’m blessed to know a lot of comedians personally and it’s a bit intimidating as a newbie in the industry to be touring with guys who’ve been doing this for 15 or 20 years, such masters of their craft. I would just be happy to be with them, even if I wasn’t performing… even if I was like a runner or something,” she laughed. Some of the big names Oliver will be rolling with on this tour include Marc Lottering, Riaad Moosa, Darren Simpson, Darren Maule, Anele Mdoda, Celeste Ntuli, Mark Banks, Trevor Gumbi, Tshepo Mogale, Muthu Murugan, Kurt Schoonrad, Stuart Taylor, Ndumiso Lindi, Mel Jones, Rob van Vuuren, Donovan Goliath, Simmi Areff, Chester Missing and Conrad Koch, Jason Goliath, Deep Fried Man and many more. The show starts in Cape Town on Saturday at The Grand Arena, GrandWest, is in Durban on February 14 at The ICC; Port Elizabeth on May 24 at The ICC and in Joburg on May 30 and 31 at the Centre Court at Emperors Palace. “This show will also mark my first professional comedy show in Cape Town since leaving there nine years ago. I’m looking forward to seeing everyone from my home town, Grabouw, so they must please get into their cars and come over the mountain and see the show,” Oliver laughed. ● Tickets for Kings and Queens of Comedy start from R160 at Computicket. British cellist brings music of the heart home “WHEN I was 19, I got to meet Princess Diana, Prince Charles and the rest of the royal family,” says British-born cellist Michael Jones (pictured). He is in Cape Town and we are chatting over the phone about his upcoming performance in Durban. During his college years, he says, he was chosen to play for the British royal family and he got to chat to the late Princess of Wales on the couch for a few quick minutes. Still, that has to be one of the coolest honours ever. “And the wine was quite amazing too,” he laughs. Jones is easy-going and delightful with a real interest in South Africa. He asks me about Durban, the weather and interesting places he can see. Jones was three when he discovered his passion for music. “When I was a toddler, my parents came to South Africa. My dad worked TONIGHTSTAGE WIN! WIN! WIN! T VALENCIA GOVINDASAMY TUESDAY FEBRUARY 4 2014 in a business in Joburg, so he took my mum, sister and I to Mozambique for a weekend. I was only three, but I do remember a swimming pool and there was a piano in the room where we stayed. And I reached up to get the keys. My sister and I were playing with it and I was hooked from that moment. So I have a South African start to my roots.” For the popular UK cellist, music has the ability to touch one’s heart. “During my stay in Cape Town, I went to a less fortunate community with a family who is hosting me here. They opened their home to me and we visited an area where there are people who don’t have a daily meal. A lot of them have never seen a cello nor heard one. I played Bach and it was like complete contact with them. “I didn’t have to speak in English, Afrikaans or any other language. The music itself is a direct language to people’s heart. It’s a way to communicate without expressing it in words. That was truly amazing. It proved my point with the reaction from those people who haven’t eaten the entire day. They were silent and they were touched. I could see their expression and it made it worth it.” He has performed across the globe, from New York and London to Japan and Hong Kong, but Jones is extraordinary and humble. “I just want people who watch me perform to feel better about themselves and walk away with a kind of well-being feeling, sort of how they feel after a massage.” He performs tonight along with the Friends of Music at the Durban Jewish Centre. The programme features a selection of Bach suites and Rodrigo’s Fantasia. ● Michael Jones performs tonight at the Durban Jewish Centre with Friends of Music. The show starts at 7.45pm. Tickets are R60 for members, R70 for non-members and R20 for orchestral/students. Visit www.friendsofmusic.co.za CELESTE NTULI A better laugh for all in Zulu comedy show HELEN HERIMBI SHE STANDS behind a black podium, a colourful patterned doek on her head and a glittering black jacket that has patches of kente cloth under the lapel. She clears her throat, greets all “ladies and gentlemen, Members of Parliament… skhothanes and pantsulas”, before she goes into a lengthy speech announcing her intention to run for president. She is Nkosazana Zoomang – not to be confused with former Minister of Health Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma. Zoomang is satirical and the funny brainchild of comedian Celeste Ntuli, who is one of the headliners of 99% Zulu Comedy Show, which takes place at the Lyric Theatre at Gold Reef City on March 7 and 8. The show’s theme is “A Better Laugh For All” – sound familiar? – and although Zoomang may not be making it on to that stage with Celeste, there’s no doubt that there will be plenty of laughs at the expense of some of our politicians. “Political analysis or jokes about politics are obviously about who is in power,” says Ntuli. “But I’m more about the social side. Politics doesn’t interest me much, as I gravitate towards social issues. But I know that (political) things are going to pop up in my set. “There’s also the obvious things, like talking about Bafana, but whenever I do shows where there is a long line-up, I try to not talk about what everyone else has already talked about. I like to stay different.” Although, as the name of the show suggests, the main language that will be used on the night is Zulu, the comedians come in different shapes and funnies. Expect to see the likes of Skhumba Hlope, Sifiso Nene and Simphiwe Shembe at the Joburg show, and Tips (aka Shampoo), Mpukane and others at the Durban leg of the event on February 14. Durban is actually where it all started back in 2005. Now the show travels to Mbombela (formerly Nelspruit) and Witbank regularly, and there are plans to take it to Bloemfontein this year. The show’s founder, Monwabisi Grootboom, says: “We started out in Durban, and sometimes we have the shows at the ICC, but we always sell out at the Playhouse.” He continues: “We’re also the only comedy brand that takes residence in provinces in a sustainable manner. “There’s also Blacks Only, but it’s primarily based in Joburg. It’ll travel one time to Durban, and another time to Cape Town, but not regularly.” Like Blacks Only – which was devised by David Kau – 99% Zulu Comedy Show has themed shows. With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, Grootboom says the Durban show will task comedians with writing material around love and relationships. “It’s also an election year,” he explains, “so, with the Joburg show being so close to voting time, it’s fitting that we should make that the theme.” Politicians are never safe when it comes to comedy. Just recently, Whacked – the company co-owned by comedian John Vlismas, and which organises the annual Comic’s Choice Awards – created the Mass Hysteria travelling comedy show, which turns a group of stand-up comedians into a kind of parliament all of its own. Obviously, a person’s vote is their secret, but that’s when it comes to electing a government that has the best interests of the nation at heart. What about when it comes to comedy? Who would you pick for president? Grootboom lets out a belly laugh and, without a second thought, says he would give Skhumba his vote. “Just for being random and crazy… he’s really unpredictable.” ● Don’t miss 99% Zulu Comedy Show on February 14 at the Playhouse in Durban at 8pm. It then heads to the Lyric Theatre at Gold Reef City on March 7 and 8 at 8pm. Tickets at Computicket. An energy injection for touring Othello LATOYA NEWMAN THINK Theatre’s annual production of Shakespeare’s Othello will showcase the talent of two young actors in the roles of Othello and Desdemona this year – Durban’s Nhlakanipho Manqele and Joburg’s Cara Roberts, who was most recently seen in the movie Durban Poison. Director Clare Mortimer said the duo have brought an energy injection to the show. “As much as we miss our friends of old, it’s been exciting having two new people in these leads. Especially in our sixth year (of the production), it’s given us an energy injection of having to start from the beginning in some circumstances. They bring a fresh energy to how they portray their characters and in some circumstances this affects how we (the old cast) portray our characters. So it’s all fresh and exciting.” Manqele has appeared in Rajesh Gopie’s The Coolie Odyssey, which won him best newcomer and supporting actor awards; Neil Coppen’s Abnormal Loads; KickstArt’s Don’t Dress for Dinner; and Waiting For Godot, among others. Roberts has landed a role in Fynbos (Harry Patramanis), in Slabolepszy’s Over the Hill (Dominique Gumede) and she played Petrus in The Guards written by Ian Roberts and directed by Josette Eales. We caught up with the duo to find out how they’ve settled into their new roles. “I always knew it would be a challenge because I’ve never done it before,” Manqele said, “But the cast who’ve been doing Othello for a while have helped us get along… If anybody else but Clare had been directing, I wouldn’t be where I am now with this character, which is confident. Clare has a passion for Othello and she is hands-on.” Roberts said landing the role means she gets to perform in a play she’s fond of and that’s directed by a woman. “I’ve always liked Shakespeare and Desdemona is often an underrated character. I’ve also always wanted to work with a female director and Clare’s passion for Othello is so strong that it’s almost as if it bleeds into you as the performer.” Clinton Small resumes his award-winning portrayal of the villainous Iago with Mortimer as his wife Emilia. The production also features Michael Gritten, Daisy Spencer, Marc Kay, Bryan Hiles, Rowan Bartlett and Darren King ● Othello runs at the Hilton College Theatre from February 7 to 14, the Playhouse Drama in Durban from February 17 to March 20, the University of Johannesburg from May 5 to 16, and at Pretoria’s Brooklyn Theatre from May 18 to 22. School performances are 9am and 12pm daily, Mondays to Fridays, with a public performance on Tuesday February 25 at 7pm. R55 (R80 for adults at the public performance). Book through Doreen Stanley at 033 343 4884 or 084 556 0668, or e-mail [email protected] NEW FACES: Durban’s Nhlakanipho Manqele and Joburg actress Cara Roberts are Othello and Desdemona in Think Theatre’s Othello. PICTURE: VAL ADAMSON