Tag: performances

  • The Voice Nigeria delivers on thrilling performances

    The Voice Nigeria delivers on thrilling performances

    As the third episode of The Voice Nigeria talent hunt came underway last Sunday on Africa Magic, the show delivered on thrilling performances, disappointment and elation

    At the end of episode three, the coaches had each added two talents to their respective teams.

    Sunday’s episode ended with #TeamTiimi signing up Blessed Eke and Godwin while Obichi Marshall and Arewa Comfort, who got all four coaches turning, joined #TeamWaje. Joy Ebiem and Torisheju “Tori” Ogbe teamed up with #TeamYemiAlade and finally, Emmanuel Okafor and Tama Nisa joined #TeamPatoranking.

    #TeamYemiAlade currently leads the pack with seven talents, while #TeamTimi and #TeamPatoranking have six talents each. #TeamWaje comes in with five contestants and this means all four teams have collectively filled about half their slots.

    The Voice Nigeria airs on Africa Magic Showcase and Africa Magic Urban every Sunday and is sponsored by Airtel and Coca Cola.

  • How artistic performances resolve conflicts

    How artistic performances resolve conflicts

    The first stakeholders parley by the National Troupe of Nigeria (NTN) was held in Lagos last week.  At the parley, the Artistic Director of the Troupe, Mr. Akin Adejuwon used the opportunity to unveil his plans to make the Troupe attain more heights to justify the transformation agenda of the federal government.  It was an opportunity for various interest groups and artistes and other stakeholders who have been working for the good of the Troupe to make their own contributions on how to ensure that the performative aspects of the National Troupe of Nigeria is maintained if not surpassed.

    Adejuwon stated that henceforth the primary assignment of the Troupe is to discover new talented artistes and encourage them to attain their goals in life as professionals.  With these new artistes, it is hoped that the National Troupe assignments would not only become more widespread in outlook, but is also geared towards reaching out to a greater number of people both at home and abroad.

    He said: “We intend to begin this revival project with a three state tour scheduled for this November.  We will organize two festivals.  The first, is the Domestic Festival of Performing Arts.  The other is an Abuja International Festival of Performing Arts.  The maiden edition of the first one is planned for 2015 while subsequent editions will be rotated among the states.  The second one will happen first in Abuja 2016 to make the federal capital territory feel the pulse of the Troupe in its epitome.”

    On the whole, Adejuwon intends to make Nigerian soldiers be a part of the tempo of this performative tendency of the Troupe.  In this regard, he said, “the present security situation in the country brings the import of this arm of government to the fore.  We will represent this importance through our performative expressions and then promote same.  Interestingly, we have just been invited to perform at the Nigerian Armed Forces Remembrance Day celebration 2014.  I therefore consider this performance by the Troupe a unique one.  Apart from being the first foot forward within my vision of making the Troupe current and relevant in the Nigerian scheme of things, I see the performance which is billed to take place at the Aso Rock presidential Villa Banquet hall before a select audience of the president, his family and all service chiefs as a way of deploying the performative expression in a conflict environment.”

    Adejuwon also promised to maintain most of the old programmes of the Troupe in order to continue to promote the indices of the art, “since the National Troupe is the apex of Nigeria’s rich cultural heritage.

    In his keynote speech, Professor Sunday Idodo of the University of Maiduguri and the President of the Society of Nigerian Artistes, (SONTA) highlighted the need for the Troupe to be more visible.  In his theme, the performative expressions in a conflict environment, he stated that an active National troupe should be in the forefront of making the whole people, the whole nation and indeed everybody to see, feel, watch and gain from its numerous, constant and engaging performances spread across the nation.

    He said “In the creative enterprise conflict is a constant, especially in the performative genre.  The preoccupation of any drama for instance is to generate conflicts and resolve them.  These conflicts are also derive from human experiences and engagements with his/her environment.  When conflicts are stimulated or imagined, they are also placed within plausible context of human appreciation.  The capacity of the performing arts to interrogate human condition and proffer solutions is innate to drama and the art forms of music and dance can add value and substance to the conflicts.  No one watches a theatrical piece without taking one or two lessons home apart from its entertainment values.

    The beauty of performative expression is its captivating intensity to hold spell bound an audience to a recreated world of imaginative reality that an audience can hardly dissociate itself from.  In other words, when a performative expression is well constructed and presented it does have a hold on its audience and capable of influencing and transforming them too.  It is on this account that the role the theatre can play as a change agent and as agency of mediation in conflict resolution can be understood.”  This is what we expect the National Troupe to be doing constantly.

  • Borno’s sports chief says peace will improve athletes’ performances

    Borno’s sports chief says peace will improve athletes’ performances

    The Director of the Borno Sports Council, Mohammed Bashir, on Wednesday expressed optimism that the state would perform optimally in sports competitions as its security challenges had reduced.

    Bashir told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on telephone that security measures in place in the state would enable athletes to concentrate on training. He said the sports council had been revived while zonal competitions had started among athletes.

    The official said the council was planning to organise competitions for secondary schools in the state.

    “We decided to involve the ministries of education and local government this year. Our goal is to discover and develop grassroots athletes in schools in rural areas,” Bashir said.

    The director revealed that scholarships would be awarded to athletes who distinguished themselves at the competitions. He told NAN that the state would be competing in cycling at the 9th Garden City National Cycling Championship to hold on Feb. 9 in Port Harcourt.

    “Our athletes are improving; so, we are sure they will perform greatly and make us proud in Port Harcourt,” he said.

  • One convocation, two performances

    The National Theatre, Lagos, came alive when the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) Theatre Group staged two performances to mark the institution’s second convocation, reports PAUL OLUWAKOYA.

    Guests saw the richness of the country’s cultural heritage when the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN) Theatre Group staged its performances at the National Theatre, Lagos.

    The NOUN Theatre Group entertained guests with Enough is Enough and a Bata dance.

    The play, written by Dr Onyeka Iwuchukwu, draws attention to the plight of women in contemporary African society.

    Throughout the tension-soaked performance, it was clear the audience enjoyed every bit of it, given the applause that followed each scene. A market scene, where touts extorted money from women traders at their stalls, was especially interesting. The touts carried out their mission forcibly; and so, it was no surprise the kind of exhilaration in the air when the traders revolted and protested in one-voice.

    At the end of the play, the cast changed into traditional adire attires with women wearing the fashionable Oleku styles and Sisi Oge hairdos while the men had their caps on to complement the adire attire. Clad in their traditional outfits, they got on the stage for the second performance, entitled: The Music and Dance of Bata. Accompanied by bata drumming, the dancers danced with well-measured steps to the stage and were received by a resounding applause.

    As the drummers beat away in a maddening frenzy, the dancers danced with dexterity. The dance patterns varied in response to the lead bata drummer. The dance showcased the rich cultural heritage of the Yourba people. And as the troupe danced, they took guests into that cultural richness which celebrates life and work hard.

    As in ancient times, the dancers invoked an ancestral spirit to give vent to their mesmerising and eccentric displays.

    According to Iwuchukwu, the lead dancer, the bata dance has become a global phenomenon embedded in evocative and deep percussive recourse to a rich culture and heritage.

    She said: “The dance was used essentially to demonstrate Yoruba’s rich cultural traditions and it has come to stay. The dance performance is the highpoint of the event.”

    Although from the eastern part of the country, Nwachukwu said, as a stage performer, she is completely sold to the culture – hers or the Yoruba’s. She added that the theatre is her life. She said: “If I fail to dance, my legs will not forgive me. If I also fail to sing, my voice will always weep for me. And if I fail to stand on stage to deliver my lines in drama, what else will I do?”

    She said it was not an easy task putting the productions together, saying it took the dedication of every member of the troupe, who is mainly staff and pupils.

    Like Nwachukwu, a few of the cast also shared their experiences. For Christiana Uzoukwu, whose stage name is ‘Betty’, she now appreciates the maxim: ‘dignity of labour’ through the rehearsals of the bata performance. Uzoukwu, a business woman and mother studying law at the NOUN, said: “It has made me appreciate hard work the more and urged the need for one always be ready to stand for rights at anytime. This has also helped me to focus more on my studies, business and family.

    On her part, Onyebuchi Vivian Nkiru, a dancer, said the attires brought back memories. She said: “It reminded me of a first-time experience as a stage dancer. This stage experience is one of my best so far. The dance was one of fast tempo and a challenge which I enjoyed and overcame because of my passion for the dance.”

    For Obatosin Tolulope Folusho, who acted the ‘real policeman’ in the drama, said it was excitement all the way. “I am filled with excitement to have played such roles; they are actually my second experience on stage. And I am motivated to keep on moving. Although I won’t say I was a very good dancer during the bata dance, the experience was cool. I still preferred and enjoyed my role as an actor,” he said.