Tag Archives: Dominica Plummer

NIGAMON/TUNAI

★★★★

Edinburgh International Festival

NIGAMON/TUNAI at the Edinburgh International Festival

★★★★

“We emerge from the experience wiser and somehow purified of the noise and bustle of the world outside the performance space”

Nigamon/Tunai, brought to the Edinburgh International Festival by Onishka Productions, is a joint collaboration between artists and water protectors from indigenous peoples in North and South America. Artists Émilie Monnet and Waira Nina present a show that features water, plant life, and sounds and sights created by humans using musical instruments and art objects made specially for the show. Nigamon/Tunai illuminates the struggle that indigenous peoples of the Americas are currently engaged in to protect the environment which is both sacred to them, and necessary to their existence. As Monnet and Nina point out, loss of these resources impact everyone, including those trying to minimize their footprint by driving electric cars, for example.

A narrative emerges in Nigamon/Tunai to explain a world view that centres around the importance of water, but also copper. It’s an element well known and scientifically proven to purify water. Indigenous peoples have always known this. Once the Anishinaanabe of the North could pick copper off the ground for their rituals and for water purifying, but now multinational corporations mine the copper so extensively that copper has become scarce, and worse, is destroying the mountains and forests where copper is found. In South America, a similar narrative tells of multinationals destroying large tracts of the Amazon with mining and road building and destruction of indigenous lands, and their water sources. Nigamon/Tunai is protest, as well as art. In building the show, Monnet and Nina create a space that is representative of their sacred spaces. They invite us to observe their rituals, and to share water, so that we can better understand the seriousness of what is being lost.

The show begins with sound and light. Figures emerge and disappear into a smoky atmosphere. They circle stones, trees, pools of water, and us, the audience. Metal pitchers are suspended in this space, and as water is poured into them, we realize that these water carriers are also musical instruments. In fact, there are several kinds of metal instruments, including the nose flute, all providing a variety of musical sounds. There are also drums. There is birdsong, and birds from both North and South America are represented. Later, the humans imitate these sounds, and from them, a language begins to emerge. We learn in the post show talk that these sounds are improvised every performance, so that the language that is being created, is always different. Throughout Nigamon/Tunai, explanations are offered in a combination of Anishinaabemowin, Quechua, Spanish, French, and English. We hear these as snatches of conversation between shamans, water protectors and artists in North and South America. They are using both modern and traditional ways of communicating, all with a common goal in mind. To protect the land and the water that sustains them—and which sustains us all.

For Onishka Productions, the point of Nigamon/Tunai is to show us the wealth of knowledge and art created by indigenous peoples, and to focus particularly on the role of women as water protectors. The performers in the show are all women. From them, we learn about the connection between turtles, water and copper. Turtles are literally the backs on which our world is built. Water sustains the trees who are also emotional beings with their own distinct languages. Copper, carried by the women in their water containers, keeps that water pure and drinkable. In the one hundred and five minutes of this dreamlike show, we are invited to discard our modern views of the world, and focus on the essentials for life. Water, copper, and the land that supports all growing things. We emerge from the experience wiser and somehow purified of the noise and bustle of the world outside the performance space.

The 2024 Edinburgh International Festival’s slogan is “rituals that unite us.” Nigamon/Tunai fits that description perfectly. The slow pace of this show won’t be for everyone. But if you are willing to enter the space that the collaboration of indigenous artists from North and South America have created, and to shed your own cultural expectations, you will have a meaningful encounter with very different ways of looking at our world. In its own unique way, Nigamon/Tunai is the copper that purifies us, and sends us back into our own world, looking at our lives through a very different lens. The process is both memorable, and haunting.


NIGAMON/TUNAI at the Edinburgh International Festival – The Studio

Reviewed on 15th August 2024

by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Helena Valles

 

 


NIGAMON

NIGAMON

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SUITCASE SHOW

★★★★★

Edinburgh Festival Fringe

SUITCASE SHOW at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe

★★★★★

“takes a bunch of second hand materials of all kinds, and creates magic with them”

New Zealand Company Trick of the Light Theatre has made a career out of performing shows that leave as small an environmental footprint as possible. Suitcase Show shows how they remain true to that commitment. Everything is either second hand, or created from commonplace materials. Even the technical wizardry is economical, and designed to lessen the weight and number of personnel that had to travel to Edinburgh. As the show opens on a dimly lit stage, it’s not surprising to see a heap of battered suitcases neatly packed together. One is already opened, and inside, a record player’s turntable is slowly revolving as music plays. As more suitcases are opened, complex worlds in miniature emerge. And complex, intricate, life changing stories emerge alongside all this amazing design. But there’s an even bigger story tying these worlds together. The Traveller (Ralph McCubbin Howell) is at border control in an airport, facing a simultaneously bored and hostile baggage inspector (Hannah Smith).

What happens next is predictable enough. The baggage inspector tells the Traveller to open his suitcases. He refuses, but drops some unsettling information. Not only did The Traveller not pack them himself, he’s not even sure what’s in them. He repeatedly warns the baggage inspector that she won’t like what she finds. She doesn’t back down, even though her two colleagues are too busy playing cards to help. (They’re off stage, but we see them on video, played by Anya Tate-Manning and Richard Falkner). With one final warning, the Traveller opens a suitcase. It shows what looks like a diminutive Christmas village. With houses gradually lighting up, and a screen that shows silhouettes of tiny figures interacting inside one house. You could be forgiven for thinking that this is going to be a heart-warming Christmas story. You would be wrong.

No spoilers here, and I will only say that each suitcase reveals a different world, uniquely designed, with different performance skills to illuminate the tale. One story is told through the medium of two hands enacting the complete life story of two strangers who meet and fall in love on an airplane. Another uses shadows to tell the story of a bear, a train, and an escaping autocrat. You get the picture. What you won’t get, initially, is where this is all going, apart from the fact that it seems to be a series of loosely connected stories about traveling. And while we are being enchanted by all these suitcases and their stories, there is a more macabre drama brewing. When the Traveller’s identity is finally revealed, it will seem both offbeat, and somehow deeply appropriate. There’s also a grim video showing what happens to baggage checkers who ask too many questions. It that isn’t karma for all the times we’ve been stuck in airports going through baggage checks, I don’t know what is. I do know I won’t be asking searching questions of my fellow travellers any time soon.

Trick of the Light Theatre confirms that there is no end to the funny, quirky, deeply unsettling drama that has been emerging from New Zealand lately. And where would New Zealand films be without the extraordinary design and special effects that have revolutionized the industry? In its miniaturized, environmentally conscious way, Trick of the Light is doing something similar for theatre. Suitcase Show takes a bunch of second hand materials of all kinds, and creates magic with them. Director Hannah Smith and writer Ralph McCubbin Howell make a show from an absurdly mundane location and situation—equal parts humour and horror. But it’s the battered suitcases that reveal truths about life and death lurking in places you shouldn’t look. Then again, look you should, because every suitcase shows a story you won’t want to forget.


SUITCASE SHOW at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe – Summerhall – Old Lab

Reviewed on 13th August 2024

by Dominica Plummer

Photography by Rebekah de Roo

 

 


SUITCASE SHOW

SUITCASE SHOW

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