A Man of Good Hope review, Linbury Theatre, London: Minimal props, maximum use of the imagination

Based on Jonny Steinberg’s book about a refugee’s true story as he progresses through Africa after setting off from Mogadishu

Michael Church
Wednesday 17 April 2019 10:55 BST
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A Man of Good Hope, Linbury Theatre, London
A Man of Good Hope, Linbury Theatre, London

A show with many progenitors will either turn out a flop or develop synergy, and it’s nice to report that A Man of Good Hope comes into the latter category. Co-produced by the Royal Opera, Repons Foundation, BAM, and Les Theatres de la Ville de Luxembourg, and with Comic Relief funding the Isango Ensemble who perform it, this production premiered in Cape Town, was adapted for staging at the Young Vic, and has now made its landfall at the Linbury.

It’s based on a book about a refugee’s true story as he progresses through Africa after setting off from Mogadishu, and it presents that book’s author, Jonny Steinberg, in fictionalised form as he faces the people whom he has himself fictionalised. We first meet the protagonist as a young boy, whose odyssey begins after he sees his mother arbitrarily shot.

The catalogue of casual cruelties he then endures leads him to develop a streetwise cunning, and although his dream is of emigration to America he winds up on the outskirts of Johannesburg, in a township of a kind which the Isango performers themselves hail from. There are moments when the libretto addresses domestic issues for a domestic South African audience, but it’s essentially a tale of pathos and anger, courage and despair, finally ending up in battered, philosophical triumph.

Mark Dornford-May’s directorial style comes out of the Peter Brook tradition, with minimal props and maximum use of the imagination – lips and tongues do for ringing telephones, four tyres equal a lorry. Under the musical direction of Mandisi Dyantyis and Pauline Malefane, six big marimbas plus a constant backdrop of vocal harmony speed the action along so fast that these versatile singer-dancers’ feet scarcely seem to touch the ground. The singing has that warmly piercing vibrancy which is only to be found in the townships of South Africa.

Everyone on stage has their own character, and all carry conviction, but one figure stands out from start to finish: Siphosethu Hintsho, voice as yet unbroken, but bright as a button and already an all-round star, whether singing, clowning or dancing.

This show will alternate in repertory with a grimmer one by the same company: SS Mendi: Dancing the Death Drill, which deals with an African maritime tragedy of the First World War.

Until 4 May

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