The Voice Newspaper: May 2023

Page 51

MAY 2023 THE VOICE |

51

Lifestyle

Tale of love and Haiti... and voodoo

D

IRECTOR OLA Ince has told Lifestyle she aims to deliver the musical Once On This Island with a dose of Voodoo reality that has been missing from previous productions. The award-winning musical kicks off the Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre’s 2023 season this month. A story of love, grief, faith and hope, Once On This Island tells of peasant girl Ti Moune, a boy called Daniel, and a union which prejudice forbids. Ince, right, admits she wasn’t familiar with the story prior to being introduced to it but quickly became captivated by the narrative, and not for the reason most might think. “I didn’t know the musical at all before Regent’s Park Theatre sent it to me. When I heard it, I found it really intriguing and quite jarring,” Ince said. She added: “Why were these people singing so happily about colourism, what is this? I’d never before heard or seen a musical that spoke about colonialism and colourism, especially within the

Director Ola Ince’s new musical Once On This Island aims to challenge perceptions. By Joel Campbell Caribbean so frankly. And I wanted to find out more. “The story is set in Haiti, when the island was referred to as the Pearl of Antilles. “It was a French colony for a very long time and this story is about a dark skinned young woman who falls in love with a light skinned young man, and how forbidden that romance is and what she decides to sacrifice in order to try and pursue a relationship with him. “It’s also about what she ends up losing because of pursuing this relationship, which is not being supported by the community. That all comes from the French involvement in Haiti, that all comes from colonialism and colourism.” Based on a novel by Rosa Guy, the original West End production won Best New Musical at the Olivier Awards when it premiered in

10 May – 10 Jun

openairtheatre.com

1995 and the most recent Broadway revival won the Tony Award for Best Musical Revival in 2018. Paying homage to the original author, Ince said: “It’s quite a deep story. Rosa Guy is a Trinidadian woman, I used to read her books as a teenager. “She lived in New York and she wrote a book called My Love, My Love: or The Peasant Girl, which is a much more visceral and spiritual version of this musical, which I’ve read a lot and I am trying to sow as much of the book back into the musical as possible. “The big thing that was important about this particular love story is Ti Moune’s belief system and how she tries to achieve her love and that’s through Voodoo. I think a lot of productions have shied away from that. Not that I have seen them all, but I thought that we should really embrace that. That is the heritage, that

is the culture of Haiti and it has been demonised. I want people to watch the show and go ‘Voodoo is a religion, that’s it’. “Just like everyone is able to be respectful towards Christianity, Hinduism or Sikhism, why not have the same amount of respect for Voodoo?” Ince’s work is known for challenging perceptions and presenting ‘facts’. Excited to be taking on the award-winning story, she enthused: “Once On This Island is a poignant, moving and politically charged story. “I’m thrilled to be working with an extraordinarily talented team at Regent Park’s Open Air Theatre; a place where true magic happens. It’s a dream come true.” Catch the full video interview on our website. May 10 – June 10, 2023 Assisted Performances: Mon-Sat 8pm, Thu & Sat 3pm BSL Interpreted: June 6, 8pm Captioned: June 9, 8pm Audio Described & Touch Tour: June 10, 3pm, Tickets from £25 www.openairtheatre.com

PRESENTING THE ‘FACTS’: Ola Ince is excited to be taking on the award-winning story


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Duo helping to conquer swimming fears head on

3min
page 55

SPORT ‘They understand me’

4min
page 54

Why being different is a strength and not a weakness

4min
pages 52-53

Tale of love and Haiti... and voodoo

2min
page 51

Don’t mess with ‘The Boss’

3min
page 50

Tate Britain celebrates 40 years of Isaac Julien

6min
pages 48-49

Loss, love and family are centre stage

3min
page 47

Miss Erica’s strutting her stuff

4min
page 46

The Gospel Truth Sadé Thomas Jesus and drill

3min
page 44

Ageing with the grace of God in a world untainted by sin

2min
pages 42-43

Nothing But Truth and Light Trust God for He is present

2min
page 42

Montel Gordon Stephen reminds us how far society still has to go

3min
page 41

Being young, Black and female is my superpower

4min
page 40

Lyndon Mukasa Is this Australia’s chance?

4min
pages 38-39

Blackstory Partnership event marks Windrush anniversary

1min
page 37

Maxiemum reward!

2min
page 37

Dementia Aid puts heart and soul into campaign

2min
page 36

Support grows for Diane Abbott after whip removed

2min
pages 35-36

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023

1min
pages 33-34

Scrap the Bill of Rights

2min
page 32

More Black union members are heading for the picket lines

2min
page 31

FIGHTING RACISM ISN’T AN OPTIONAL EXTRA

3min
page 30

WORKPLACE ‘REP’ IS EMPOWERING

3min
page 29

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 BEING A BLACK UNION WORKPLACE

2min
page 28

Putting race back on the agenda Kate Bell, Deputy General Secretary of the TUC, says the union movement is committed to anti-racism

2min
page 27

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 CENTURY OF BLACK SELF-ORGANISATION

3min
page 26

What the Year of Black Workers is all about

2min
page 25

BLACK WORKERS CONFERENCE 2023 Empowering members to make a difference

1min
page 25

The Year of Black Workers

4min
page 24

Men suffering domestic violence ‘is still a taboo’

4min
page 22

Do you know your risk of type 2 diabetes?

1min
page 21

Thousands avoid type 2 diabetes with free evidence-based lifestyle programme

3min
page 20

Terence Channer Reflections on a world characterised by colour

3min
page 19

Dotun Adebayo Rate him or hate him - you can’t ignore him! Jah Shaka - revolutionary who inspired all rastas to the end

4min
page 18

‘Black business mag boosted my enterprise’

3min
page 17

Why it is so important to build generational wealth

3min
page 16

Microaggressions are really not that micro

4min
page 15

Sherae No child should face Afro hair school ban

3min
page 14

Momentum for reparations

7min
pages 11-13

£1bn fund ‘to decolonise colonial grant-giving’

4min
page 10

increased fibroid risk’

4min
page 9

Hair relaxers ‘causing

3min
page 8

Quit the Commonwealth

4min
pages 6-7

THAT BAN LOCALS’

2min
page 5

‘AVOID JA RESORTS

3min
page 4

‘The prison staff don’t really care about you’

4min
page 3

Inside THIS MONTH The Voice says

1min
page 2
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.