Friday, March 8, 2013

The Heart of the Show: Mayaa Boateng






Mayaa Boateng, a celebrated performer in Fordham University's Theatre Department, is perhaps one of the few graduating seniors looking towards her future and career saying: “I feel like I am ready.” At a Saturday morning interview right before tech rehearsals for her last show on the Fordham Mainstage, Mayaa displays a relaxed focus; the ideal state for someone preparing for great success with many roles and interviews to come.

Mayaa did not start off acting in the most traditional route. The daughter of Ghanian immigrants who settled in a struggling urban section of Maryland, it wasn't always easy to find creative outlets in her surroundings. One of her very first performing exploits occurred at the tender age of nine, when she began practicing pantomime. “I would paint my face and do sign language and learn these gestures to music,” says Ms. Boateng. "Movement was the first way I learned to tell stories".

In her adolescence, Mayaa was a graduate of the prestigious Duke Ellington School for the Arts in Washington D.C, near where she grew up in Maryland. She credits this period of her life with introducing her to “the rigor and the value of acting.” She gained an array of theatre-related valuable experiences in high-school. Laughing, she recalls her part in The Wiz, where she did not play and average part, she confesses—“I was the stunt woman of the show…I was actually flying across the stage.” And as if flying wasn’t enough, she also learned “to walk on stilts and crack a whip,” which, “I still have on my resume” she said.


All of her life through the end of high school, she tried to maintain a wide range of interests in and out of theatre. She recognizes that is part of what drew her to Fordham's Theatre program, which gives a Bachelor of Arts including academic work.  She says, “I am grateful about Fordham’s curriculum. I knew that I had so many talents, and so many passions, and so many things I wanted to explore to inform my acting.”

Mayaa strongly feels that acting is not something apart from the rest of the academics. As an example of this, Spanish has always been one her favorite and also most practical school subjects. “It’s humbling to learn another language”, she says. Her Spanish skills came in handy when she played a Mexican character in Lydia in 2012 and in real life, too, when she traveled to Colombia. While there, she and her friend found themselves at a local high school where her friend’s dad was a professor. “We went there and spoke to the children and we were teaching them English! It was amazing” she recalls with enthusiasm.

In another international experience, in 2007 Mayaa traveled to Senegal with the “Art Creates Life” humanitarian association. “It was probably one of the best learning experiences I ever had. We were raising AIDS awareness” she explained. Mayaa has always found other ways to use her talent for more than just her own enjoyment. It is essential to her that her work serves a greater purpose in educating and affecting people. “I find that I always tell myself that I don’t want ‘just’ to be acting in life. If I’m not using my skills as an actor to do something for the world, to do something greater, than why am I doing it for?”

Since she has come to Fordham, she has donated her considerable talents all over the place. She was cast in at least one play every semester of her college career, usually in lead characters requiring emotional depth and character research. Her performance in "The Wedding Band" in 2010 brought audiences to tears and to their feet.

To her surprise, in the summer between her junior and senior years she found out she was the first ever recipient of the Denzel Washington Theatre Scholarship, a major honor that led her to be featured in several publications from the school newspaper to Theatre Department promotional materials.

Her final Fordham show and most recent production, Ruined, by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Lynn Nottage, reveals the struggles that Congolese women endured during the brutal civil war of the nineties and early 2000’s. Many women found themselves being violently abused by national and rebel soldiers. The characters of Ruined were forced to decide, as many women in the Democratic Republic of Congo were, that life would be safer for them if living in a brothel. The play deals with issues of rape, prostitution, genital mutilation, and sisterhood, which is seen in the play as one of the only ways to survive. 

Boateng describes this production as “the hardest show I’ve ever worked on…It’s been a roller-coaster.” Mayaa plays the role of Salima, the one character that sees the most tragic end through the course of the play. From the very first rehearsal Mayaa knew it would have been a tough role. Her emotions were tapped in an unexpected way at the first read through, where she had a break down while rehearsing. “Being able to find yourself in the character and distance yourself from the trauma at the same time is so hard,” explains Ms. Boateng. But her advice when deeply challenged by a show is “trust your director.” "Working with the director of this Fordham production of “Ruined”, Isis Misdary, has been such a growing experience for me” Mayaa said. “She kept on repeating to us ‘Pursue your objective  with passion! She has been amazing.” In regards to Misdary’s encouraging spirit, Ms. Boateng stated “I feel like I as an actor, I really ‘pursued the objective with passion’. That just speaks to what I learned as an actor, not to only pursue my objective with passion, but what I want in life as Mayaa.”

               Regarding awakening the world about the violence of women she comments: “I feel really strong about the mission of this play. I want to continue to bring important stories to life, which is my real task through acting” she stated. “These women, their bodies have been used as the battle ground…they all have such a desire to be heard, to have their stories heard. And I feel like there’s power in that both for the characters and for the real Congolese women and for myself, for them to be heard” Ms. Boateng says.

             Mayaa is ready to “pursue her objective with passion” she repeats while smiling firmly. Ms. Boateng’s intends to stay in New York and audition until her next opportunity makes its way. In addition to preparing to take on the big city, she has been working as an audition monitor for Actor’s Equity Association for the last several months . Looking to her future, Mayaa is open to new acting opportunities in film and television bu she knows, “my heart is in the theatre.”












Making of "Ruined" at Fordham-From First Sketch to Last Performance

Slideshow of the work that went in to the Spring 2013 Fordham Theatre Mainstage production of the Pulitzer Prize-winning drama "Ruined" by Lynn Nottage, directed by Isis Misdary. From first costume renderings and set build to rehearsals and performance shots.

Ruined Character Sanctuaries


Production Photos







Fordham's Mainstage Production of 

RUINED 
by Lynn Nottage
Directed by Isis Misdary

Performances: Thursday 2/21, Friday 2/22, Saturday 2/23, Wednesday 2/27, Thursday 2/28, and Friday 3/1, all at 8:00 pm

"Ruined," set in the Congo, deals powerfully and poignantly with ethnic culture clashes, violence against women, and global accountability. The play has garnered rave reviews: "Lust and rivalry, humor and affection are part of the story. And so, however improbably, is love (Miami Herald, Christine Dolan)." NYT's Ben Brantley wrote, "The show...is never less than compelling...in creating a complete and hauntingly contradictory world onstage." And Ms. Nottage summed up her play this way: "[Ruined] is not about victims, but survivors."

Directed by Isis Misdary
Asst Director: Savannah Whetsell
Scenic Design: Alexis Distler
Asst. Scenic Design: Jessie Bonaventure
Costume Design: Oana Botez
Asst. Costume Design: Zoe Allen
Light Design: Megan Lang
Asst. Light Design: Alex Denevers
Sound Design: Brendan Connelly
Asst. Sound Design: Aidan Meyer
Props Master: Deb Gaouette
Production Stage Manager: Ellen Goldberg
Asst Stage Managers: Lawrence Schober & justice Longshore

And

Micha Green as Mama Nadi
Kalon Hayward as Christian
Courtney Williams as Sophie
Mayaa Boateng as Salima
Amber Avant as Josephine
Bobbac Kashani as Mr. Harari
Josh Tarpav as Osembenga/Kisembe
Taylor Purdee as Fortune/Soldier/Miner
Ruben DeParis as Simon/Soldier/Miner
Aja Singletary as Laurent/Soldier
Matthew Tiemstra as Aid Worker 

Thursday, March 7, 2013

A Review of Ruined


          Playwright Lynn Nottage confessed in an interview for the Arena Theatre, that when she first went out to Congo in 2004, she was looking for a story to tell, but she wasn’t sure “what” story yet. Ruined takes place in the Congolese Civil war, a “war about women”, which Mrs. Nottage has came to know about just by interviewing Congolese women. Since 1988, Congo has been ravaged by on and off again armed conflicts , which saw the death of over 5.5 million people and silently destroyed the lives of thousands of women. The acts of violence are mostly hidden by the government, which is afraid of additional revolutions by the soldiers.
           Before audiences experience the show, director Isis Misdary shares her mission of “Ruined” in the pages of the program. “This is why this play. And why this play now” Misdary writes. “Congress failed to renew the Violence Against Women Act, but it has also stalled on the global version, the International Violence Against Women”, Misdary states with a clear and important agenda.

           On the Fordham stage stands a military tank, which will not only be the place where all of the scenes will take place, but also where the actors change and prepare for their upcoming acts. The choreography of the scenes gives a rough effect to the play, which suits its difficult plot, but interrupts its flow. The scenes are very emotionally heavy, and are all characterized by a sudden end, which increases even more a sense anguish through the audience. There is no backdrop or walls, everyone can see straight back to the pipes and electrical boxes on the interior of the stage. This is meant to represent the ruggedness of the situation, yet it is hard to mesh the scenes which are supposed to take place in African suburbs with the cinder block background. However, the set is not the point of the production and that is very clear from the start.

          “Rape is a weapon of warfare to gain territorial control through displacement and to establish a stranglehold of fear in the villages” Misdary explains behind the scenes of the rehearsal of one of the most emotional scenes of the play. This scene sees the character of Salima, one of the most “ruined” women of the play, explaining the story of her rape to a younger “ruined” girl, Sophie. The play takes place in a prostitutes’ shed run by the apparently strong figure of Mama Nadi, whose past, not too different from the ones of the other women, will be revealed only at the end of the play. Salima, whose destiny is the most tragic, is what kept the play alive. Her performance, by Fordham Lincoln Center Senior Mayaa Boateng, leaves the audience holding its breath, speechless in front of all her despair. Salima will in fact represent what being ruined really stands for. 
         The play is mainly named in reference to how girls that experience genital mutilation are colloquially referred to as "ruined" ones. Yet oftentimes, the brutal acts go beyond rape to purposeful mutilation. The victims of this violence, not only are destined to a physical violence, but also to a psychological one. As Salima explains to Sophie, often women are banned from their family and husbands because representing dishonor. The characters each represent different ways they are all "ruined" and some even demonstrate the power and courage it takes to overcome it. 

          Due to strong sexual content and the harsh language of the play, it is surprising that this play has been accepted to perform at a Jesuit University as Fordham is. Students indeed, had mix feelings about this. Some of the most conservative did not appreciate some of the directors choices from rape scenes on stage to near nudity. But others feel that it is important for Fordham to address such important human interest issues; bringing these difficult subjects into an art form makes them more digestible and most importantly, learned of.
Mayaa Boateng Denzel Washington Scholar!

Here is the Fordham Observer article discussing Mayaa Boateng's theatre scholarship!