The Reworked South African Version Of 'King Kong' Is Absolute Genius

All-black South African cast explosive in the rewarding "King Kong" revival at Joburg's Mandela Theatre.
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Daniel Rutland Manners

What "King Kong" has proved again is how important it is to tell our own stories by our own people and how an audience responds. If anyone dares tell me again that we don't have enough musical theatre talent in this country, I will have my arguments and evidence handy.

The talent that pops on that stage is astounding. There's not a voice or a step out of place and when counting the performers during the encore and realising that there are only 22 to keep the whole thing going, it's even more astonishing.

It's a glorious show from beginning to end and it is the detail in every second that adds a truly superior quality. Not only is it well done, it's innovative and keeps unfolding one surprise after the other in the staging, the music, the performances, the sets and the costumes.

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Jesse Kramer

On entering the Mandela Theatre, I was quite surprised by the quite austere-looking set, which appeared to be made of wood. I liked it but was slightly puzzled by the context. It was only with lighting that I realised it was corrugated iron, which reflected and displayed differently because of specific lighting. It's a clever set, masterfully designed to change and offer different settings and allow the cast to pop on and off stage depending on the scene through different entrances and exits.

There's an authenticity which is enhanced by the costumes that buy into the period; an understated, realistic portrayal of the time, which immediately transports one to that place.

The synched waists, the collars, the billowing skirts for the women while the temptress is in a dress that fits like skin with two-toned black and white shoes for Lucky, the snappily-dressed gangster. And the way they move encapsulates the period and the place magnificently, with the explosive style of Gregory Maqoma blending the past with the present perfectly. It keeps the mood swinging throughout.

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Daniel Rutland Manners

More than anything, though, it is the cast that completely overwhelms with their excellence, enthusiasm and energy. From the leads to the ensemble, there's a compelling urgency as they step onto the stage to unveil the story of a brilliant boxer on the brink of breaking through the barriers presented by his blackness to conquer the world.

And while this plays at the height of apartheid, this reworked story embraces both the present and the past to bring all ages on board. It resonates as strongly in a world where #BlackLivesMatter still needs to be spelt out.

There is substance to the story but with a score that holds many familiar and haunting songs from the past which have been emboldened by some additions by the gifted Charl-Johan Lingenvelder.

This is a musical and we're never allowed to stop that foot-tapping for long. It is so unmistakably South African with the Kwela, Marabi and Mbaqanga mixed through with some heart-stopping jazz. Even the ubiquitous Back of the Moon still has that unstoppable power only music achieves time after time.

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Daniel Manners

It's thrilling to watch for the performances, from Sne Dladla's remarkable narrator Pop who seamlessly weaves the story for his young charges with their dreams of sporting greatness to the magnificence of Andile Gumbi who seems, physically and in song, born for the part of the majestic King Kong. It's as if he towers above the rest, which immediately gives him a presence that's hard to resist and as he falls before reaching dizzying heights, it breaks your heart.

In contrast, the petite Nondumiso Tembe as his fickle girlfriend is the perfect Joyce, perhaps the most difficult part to play because of the Miriam Makeba memories. But she steps up, lets that gorgeous voice rip and claims the part –- and as a rewards, Joyce is the one who elicits the loudest audience groans because of her betrayal! Her distinct voice is offset by the honey-toned sounds of Lerato Mvelase [Petal] and Ntambo Rapatla [Miriam] that further bolden the lead group.

There's also the gregarious Jack skilfully crafted by Tshamano Sebe and the wily Lucky played with slimy slickness by Sanda Shandu, as the gangster who wants his gal while humiliating the guy who won her heart. But money and power talks. It did then and does even more so today. With the ensemble underpinning the production in all areas and killing it in the dance, it's a joy to watch.

If you like musicals -- and there's no doubt South Africans do -- don't miss this one. It's one of the best and it's homegrown. If you like shows with substance, it's all there from the historic awe-inspiring beginnings of King Kong to everyone that participated in it then and in this remarkable revival.

But most of all, the spectacular cast speak volumes. What they have achieved is phenomenal and adds immeasurably to the richness of our theatre landscape –- and will hopefully in the future make our musicals more representative. Gauteng audiences missed out on the spellbinding Dreamgirls a few years back. Don't allow it to happen again.