Lupita Nyong’o was not the only one who reacted with sorrow at the alarming set of images posted on Twitter last Wednesday, April 19 by Mugambi Nthige — one of Kenya’s leading stage and screen actors — of the apparent coming down of the curtain on Phoenix Players.
The images of auctioneers loading up boxes filled with costumes, props and electronic equipment out in front of Nairobi’s Professional Centre went viral on social media following Mr Nthige’s tweet.
But just as it was easy to assume Mr Nthige had snapped those shots himself (probably on a smart phone), so it was just as likely the well-known actor was sharing a fact when he added “Phoenix Players has shut down.”
In reality, it was Tim King’oo, Phoenix’s acting stage manager, not Mr Nthige, who had taken those shots and posted them on the WhatsApp site ‘Phoenix Rising.’ “Mugambi must have lifted them from there,” notes another Phoenix stalwart and the theatre’s acting administrative officer, Brenda Muthoni, who’s been working for the players since 2015.
“It’s understandable, looking at those images, to assume, as Mugambi did, that Phoenix Players was finished, but it is not,” Ms Muthoni said.
The auctioneers apparently came down on the theatre over Sh3.8 million rent arrears owed to the landlord, the Association of Professional Societies of East Africa (APSEA ), which owns the Professional Centre.
What’s more, that sum doesn’t include the bill sent from Dews Traders auctioneers for services rendered last Wednesday amounting to another Sh120,495.
But neither Ms Muthoni nor Mr King’oo nor the newly constituted board are prepared to concede the demise of Phoenix. Ironically, neither are a myriad of well-wishers who have come out on social media suggesting something had to be done to save Phoenix.
“Yet where were all those well-wishers when we needed them?” asks Anita Ngugi, Phoenix’s previous marketing manager. “We had even hoped Lupita would come to see a show at Phoenix when she came to Kenya some time ago,” Anita adds, recalling as Lupita had tweeted, her [award-winning] career had actually begun with her acting with Phoenix Players.
Yet just as Mr Nthige noted in his initial tweet, Phoenix has gone through many years of woe. Indeed, since its inception in 1982, when the late James Falkland and Peri Bhakoo registered Phoenix Players Ltd., the company has struggled.
Annual membership combined with ticket sales had previously sustained repertory theatre, including Phoenix’s predecessor, Donovan Maule Theatre.
But as membership numbers and corporate support dwindled, and the government didn’t see the value of Kenya’s creative economy, times got even tougher.
Yet according to Ms Muthoni, further complications compounded Phoenix’s recent woes. She and others say the Phoenix’s current problems are also due to major “mismanagement issues.” Stories of actors and directors not getting paid are rife. So are stories of actors announcing they’d never work at Phoenix again unless the management changed.
David Opondoe, who was general manager at the time, says he quit Phoenix two years back. Yet he admits he’s still the sole signatory of the Barclays Bank account.
“We don’t even know how much is in that account,” says Ms Muthoni.
Apparently, it is only the previous board which appointed Mr Opondoe back in 2013, that can change the signatory.
Yet according to Mr Opondoe, that board no longer exists. The previous board chairman, Nani Njoroge, had resigned as did other board members, including Peter Nduati, Lorna Irungu, Mugambi Nandi and Ronald Kingangi.
With no board of directors, no general manager and no access to Phoenix’s bank account, it was not a surprise to receive an eviction letter from APSEA in November 2016.
“I took the initiative to email the previous board and informed them about the [eviction] letter,” says Ms Muthoni.
But from then on, Mr King’oo and Ms Muthoni have been holding meetings with thespians who’ve previously been affiliated with Phoenix and who sincerely want to see the theatre company survive.
According to Phoenix Players’ Articles of Association, a new board had to be elected by paid-up members. But as all the previous memberships had elapsed, Mr King’oo and Ms Muthoni had to recruit new members willing to pay the Sh1,000 membership fee.
It was those members who subsequently elected a six-person board, which is already planning the first fund-raiser production that Mr Nthige mentioned in one of his subsequent tweets last week.
“It’s true we’ll have to find a new venue and set a date, but Phoenix Players intends to stage August Wilson’s Gem of the Ocean, co-directed by Sahil Gada and myself,” says Mr King’oo, who directed Wilson’s Fences a year ago at the Phoenix.
“If the Phoenix is ever going to rise again, it’s got to be now,” adds Martin Githinji, a long-standing Phoenix supporter and passionate member of Kenya’s theatre community.
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