Revival: "Obama: The Musical," started in Nairobi as a one-man show after the young US senator spoke at the 2004 Democratic convention; it morphed into a full cast production during the 2008 election season.

“Obama: The Musical”

In song and dance, Kenyans see a savior capable of uplift – and visas – in the new US president.

By Rob Crilly | Correspondent / January 20, 2009 edition

Nairobi

Nairobi

Barack Obama has gone out of his way to begin playing down expectations and distancing himself from the notion that he is some sort of chosen one, put on Earth to deliver a brighter future for all.
Only no one has told his fans in Kenya.

As the cast of “Obama: The Musical” stomp, sing, and salsa their way through their fast-moving stage production at the Kenya National Theatre one thing becomes clear: To Kenya and the rest of Africa the 44th president of the United States is nothing short of a savior.

The sound system hums, the actors stumble over their words, and an overenthusiastic band threatens to drown out the lines altogether. Yet nothing can quite hide the messianic message.

“Unto me, a man from Kenya,” says Danson Mateya, playing Mr. Obama’s father, “and a woman from Kansas a boy shall be born and his name will be… ”

“Barack Obama” comes the slightly tardy response from the audience, crammed into narrow seats that look as if they have been salvaged from a 1960s fleapit.

On stage, the action veers from a Kenyan village to Hawaiian basketball courts and on to the 2004 Democratic convention, where Obama first sprang to prominence.

It is an 80-minute, $7-per-ticket tale of the American Dream, of African poverty, and of hope overcoming adversity – all told through pulsating rhythms and shuffling feet.

The show sold out during the November election season and was hastily revived on the eve of this week’s inauguration to take advantage of the excitement on the streets here. (Local TV was totally devoted to the inauguration yesterday, and big screens were set up in town and village squares to broadcast the inauguration.)

• • •

From village to White House in one generation is a tantalizing story in a country where millions live on less than a dollar a day.

Director George Orido, a former soap opera star who devised a one-man show to coincide with Obama’s 2006 visit to Kenya updated it to include caricatures of villains: a winking Sarah Palin and John McCain, portrayed so goofily that he can barely use a mobile phone.

“The main message for my show is that anything is possible if you believe and work hard at it,” he says. “That’s important, because I come from a part of the world which has been written off by the rest of the planet. We can’t even feed ourselves.

“Obama’s story is one of turning things around, mobilizing people and making change.”

Kenya is a country desperately in need of a leader prepared to deliver his people to safety.

It is barely a year since tribal fissures were exposed in weeks of political violence. More than 1,000 people died as disputed elections brought rioters to the streets and slums burned.

Now hunger is stalking a tinder-dry land.

Last week the government declared a national emergency as food stocks dwindled to dangerous levels, putting 10 million people at risk.

Government ministers announced extra deliveries of food – as a special inauguration gift – to the region around the village of Kogelo, where the Obama family’s simple farm of cornfields, mango trees, and grazing goats is located.

Today the Obama homestead, a seven-hour drive from Nairobi, is a very different place from the one depicted in Mr. Orido’s musical, where cockerels crow and women wear colorful wraps.

The rutted dirt track that leads to their cluster of huts was smoothed and graded last year. An eight-foot gate and security officers guard the entrance. And surveyors for the public electric utility arrived the day after Obama’s Nov. 4 victory – with electricity following soon after. The Kenyan government has pulled out all the stops for the area so that the international focus on the Obama family doesn’t capture a backward and impoverished land.

Locals arrive looking for help from the family to get American visas while foreigners simply gawp at the latest stop on their Kenyan safari holidays.

• • •
Back on stage, the Obama story darkens and the rhythms slow as the young black man endures racism and uncertainty growing up in America. It is the one moment of melancholy in an otherwise upbeat show.
Around him drug addicts writhe on the ground as Obama finally realizes it is time to clean up his act. He has come through his temptation and survived the wilderness.

For Orido, the biblical resonance is deliberate.

“Blacks have long been seen as less than human. Obama changes that by going to the White House,” he says, on the steps of the theater after Monday’s show.

“For us that makes him like a prophet and to associate him with a religious figure is not a sin.”

Indeed, in the language of the Luo – the tribe of Obama’s father and Orido – the word “Ruoth” is used for both leader and for Jesus. Never mind that Barack means “blessed” in Swahili, the lingua franca of East Africa.

So while the spin doctors in Washington may be trying to play down Obama’s ability to walk on water, miracles are expected in the land of his father.

Every Kenyan seems to have a wish list of roads, schools, and hospitals that they hope an Afican-American in Washington can deliver. At the very least he offers a role model for a continent awash with corrupt politicians.

In November, celebrating the Obama victory, Zachary Oremo, an unemployed Kogelo resident, described his hopes for the Luo president of the United States. “We will be able to go to America, get a passport and get a good job there,” he said with a perfectly straight face.

In some ways “Obama: The Musical” sheds little new light on Obama’s story. It is a great celebration of African music and dance without really getting to the heart of what makes the man tick.

Instead, it casts a huge spotlight on Kenya and Africa’s hopes and expectations: the allure of the American dream and of the man living it. It captures a feeling of deliverance from misery that is abroad in a land stalked by hunger and pestilence.

Alison Davidian, an Australian working for the United Nations in Nairobi, who was in the audience, says the message is clear.

“It showed how proud Kenya is of one of its own sons. When a company in Kenya is putting on a play about the president of the US and he becomes a hero for people in Africa, that’s a rare and special thing.”

All that’s missing is a manger.

( More backstory articles )

1. Bewitch | 01.20.09

How can he be one of Kenya’s sons when he was born in the US of A? Do they know something that we don’t. Is his birth certificate really just a fake? Makes you wonder.

2. TOM | 01.20.09

Barack obama you are a great person. I’m glad your our president.I hope you have a great term,even two.I pray to you that you and your family will have a great time in the White House.THANK YOU FOR BEING A GREAT PERSON!!!!

3. Robert | 01.20.09

President Barack Obama is helping more members of our species begin to realize that the ideas, knowledge, judgment, determination, values, reasoning ability, language skills and all the rest of what is produced by the brain inside the skull of a particular individual who has been elected to lead America is what really matters, not the assortment of physical features which characterize the body in which that brain happens to reside. 21st century humans would consider the idea of categorizing books in a library based on the color and other features of the covers of those books to be absurd. When will similar Stone Age classifications of the members of our species be considered equally absurd?

4. Aaron | 01.21.09

Bewitch - it’s figurative, because of his Kenyan ANCESTRY. But I’m sure you knew that and you were just being spiteful because you didn’t want President Obama in office. But he’s your President regardless, so maybe you should maintain at least the slightest degree of respect.

5. Egidio Vaz | 01.21.09

Kenya is playing a silly and out-of-touch political dance. Kenyans should once for all times understand that Barack Obama isn’t a Kenyan citizen nor he was born there. Barrack is accidentally a son of a Kenyan and an American mother who was born quite far away from Kenya and unfortunately, badly knew his (Kenyan) father.
Kenyan should also understand that Barack inherited nothing from Kenya other than his paternal ties. Therefore, Barack is as 100% American as Raila Odinga is 100% Kenyan.
The relations between Africa and USA might change. Though, this should happen not because of Barack´s “African linkages”. Instead, this might change because of his vision for change in the relations he is about to establish with the whole concert of nations.
As an African, I definitely repudiate this “neo-patrimonial” way of doing politics and out-of-touch was of doing politics and lobbying. It’s rather harmful always putting a stomach ahead of intellect and diplomacy.

6. JJ | 01.21.09

That’s really excellent. Barack means blessed in SWAHILI and baruch means blessing in HEBREW. Is that or is that not amazing?
FOR BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA, I WISH HIM A LONG LIFE AND FOR HIS WIFE AND CHILDREN, TONS AND TONS, AND LOADS AND LOADS OF GOOD HEALTH.

7. Tantor | 01.21.09

What a classic example of unrealistic expectations, soon to be followed by “Obama, The Tragedy.”

8. Sticky | 01.21.09

I just hope we Americans have enough to feed the World’s poor and destitute. It would be such a shame to fail at this attempt to cure the World’s oppression of the lesser privileged members of the race.

9. Myke | 01.21.09

We have been sending foreign aid and charitable money to Africa for about as long as I can remember. Where did all this money go. As for these people thinking they will get a Visa and come to America and get a good job, they probably have a better chance at a job than Americas since the government is still passing out work Visas to different countries even as millions of Americans are losing their jobs.

10. W | 01.21.09

Boring.

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