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It’s
glitzy, sassy and just rollicking good fun! Broadway came to
Karachi again last month with Chicago, a well-loved musical
that was also turned into a Hollywood film in 2002. The Pakistani
incarnation of this stylised, period-specific, tongue-in-cheek
tale of glamour, deceit and corruption was made possible by
Made for Stage Productions. The company is the brainchild of
the very determined Nida Butt who is also the director, producer
and choreographer of the show..
This was the second
time that Chicago was being staged in Karachi and both runs
were received with great enthusiasm by audiences. So just how
did a small group of young people, without having any professional
training in acting, dance or singing, take on this extremely
challenging of genres and make it a success?
To some extent, it seems like fate. Nida, for instance, is a
lawyer by training. After completing a degree in law from England,
where she specialised in human rights law, she returned to Karachi
to work briefly in the corporate sector and then for the NGO
Aahung, which focuses on human rights and social uplift. Drawn
inexorably to the performing arts, she initially attempted to
juggle both her interests. But as her involvement with theatre
increased and she established her own production house, dabbling
in both fields proved impossible and Nida decided to switch
careers completely. “I am foremost a dancer,” says
Nida, who would often perform onstage during her college years.
She is not a trained dancer (although she did spend a year in
New York learning salsa and tango), but dance is something she
says she is “supremely confident about.” It followed
naturally then, that she chose the genre of theatre musicals
as a venue for expressing that passion.
It takes nerve to tackle Broadway shows, rooted as they are
in high calibre performances in singing and dance, in an environment
where neither have flourished. But Nida says she never had any
qualms about her performers looking shoddy or amateurish onstage.
“I was sure of what I wanted from them and how it should
all look.” And to their credit, each member of the Chicago
cast is credible in his or her role, pulling off the histrionics
as well as the song and dance routines with panache. They have
completely bypassed the pitfall of looking and sounding like
a high school performance, which English plays in Pakistan inevitably
suffer from.
The key, according to Nida, is correct casting. “You have
to wait very patiently. One must hold out for the right person
and they will appear.” Once the casting was done, Nida
worked with each of the actors, explaining the character to
them. Then they were versed about their stage movements. Next,
they were sent to the band to learn their songs and, of course,
there was still all the dancing to be tackled. Nida is quick
to describe herself as a hard taskmaster but the cast agrees
that she drives herself hard as well. “She is very fair,”
says Benazir, one of the dancers in Chicago. “So if she
does criticise you, you know that you actually deserve it.”
One of the unique challenges of this kind of production was
the fact that there were 40 to 50 people onstage at any given
time. “Getting people to commit their time to the project
was difficult with so many people involved. At many points a
large number of them are idle but they still have to be there,”
says Nida. “But that’s why you must create a professional
environment. They are all getting paid a substantial amount.
I’m giving value to their time and that’s what raises
the cost of production. This also makes them accountable to
give their best.”
Obviously, the musical score of the production was the most
integral part of the whole project and Nida brought Omar Bilal
Akhter on board as the musical director. Omar has his own band,
with the quirky name Aunty Disco Project, which has recently
recorded an album. He has also worked with various other performers
and hosts a radio show. One would think that finding the right
musicians would have been the toughest part but Nida identified
the band very easily since some members were known to her family.
“They have played at dinner parties at my parents’
home,” says Nida. “We gave the band the music, which
they learned to play by ear since there was no written score.
They are incredibly talented,” says Nida of the orchestra,
whose members range in age from 21 to above 60. Both Nida and
Omar agree that when they heard the orchestra play the music
for Chicago for the first time, they were both floored. “It
was then that I knew the show could be done,” recalls
Nida.
Omar worked with each of the actors, tailoring the songs to
their capabilities and getting the best from all of them. “We
had very strong singers,” says Omar, “especially
the choir boys. But it’s a matter of training and this
is a specific style of singing. I was more like a band leader,
rallying everyone on, saying you can do it, you can hit that
note.” And hit the right note they did, starting with
the opening number “All That Jazz” which makes the
audience sit up a little straighter. “It was very rewarding
to see the huge improvement the less confident singers made
and how the stronger singers brought their own vibe to a song,”
adds Omar with a smile.
One reason why Chicago manages to look authentic is the attention
to detail. The costumes, for instance, are impeccable. “We
had a huge budget for the costumes,” admits Nida. “People
don’t realise how high our production costs are. We didn’t
even have an auditorium, after the Arts Council showed us the
door at the last minute. So we had to construct our own stage.”
Another notable feature of the production was the lighting which
is so crucial to how the show looks. “I designed the lighting
myself,” says Nida. “I got some criticism in the
first production of Chicago for the lighting and this time I
read some books and have tried to educate myself. And I had
an 18-year-old girl sitting at a panel and controlling the lighting
during the show.”
Chicago has wowed Karachi audiences, from teenagers to grandmothers
alike. But hasn’t the moral brigade raised its eyebrows.
“Well, we have received some criticism but then, we have
been very discreet in our posters and billboards,” says
Nida. “I think the conservative element will just not
go to watch the show,” says Faraz, who plays corrupt lawyer,
Billy Flynn. “I have only got positive feedback. In fact,
I am looking for constructive criticism. I much prefer to know
what I did wrong,” insists Faraz, who is now known simply
as Billy to many. Nida, on the other hand, admits that she has
received some flak for not using the theatre platform to send
out a social message. “Why does all the burden of social
advocacy fall to theatre alone? Why doesn’t someone ask
an industrialist what he is doing for society? I’m just
doing what I love and I’m not obligated to do it a certain
way. I am putting on a show that provides employment to 200
people. That’s my contribution,” says Nida.
But what relevance does a show like Chicago have in our cultural
context? “None at all,” Nida is quick to retort.
“But then neither does a Bollywood or Hollywood film.
It’s pure and simple entertainment. During the last few
performances in Karachi, I had stopped watching my actors and
I would watch the faces in the audience, some people literally
had their mouths hanging open. Looking beyond the blonde wigs
and mini skirts, Chicago, actually does have a social message
which can be universally applicable to any society.” The
fact also remains that this kind of entertainment only caters
to a very narrow audience. “As an artist, I am completely
selfish,” she states, “I am doing what I am interested
in and that’s why it is working.”
Omar, however, hopes that as a team they can one day “put
up something which is more accessible to a wider audience.”
Faraz feels that the problem is lack of exposure. “Most
of our audiences cannot handle a performance like Chicago because
most people don’t have the background.”
For a while, at least, the team deserves to rest on its laurels,
even though Nida is already planning her next venture. Perhaps,
in the future, Made for Stage Productions can give Broadway
musicals a local aesthetic. “Right now, I am still learning,
I know nothing,” says Nida.
Whatever they do, they have set the bar high – for themselves,
as well as for anyone else who may want to follow such an act.
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