Theatre in Uganda has suffered from the policies of those in power that allow them to syphon off what little resources are available for the sector. In the 1960s, Elvania Zirimu, Robert Serumaga, and others made theater productions that questioned the place of intellectuals in the newly-independent Uganda.
Byron Kawaddwa’s allegorical theater questioned the excesses of the brutal Idi Amin regime in the early 1970s. In the late 1970s, the buffoonery showcased by the newly-wealthy smuggler cronies of the government paved way for slapstick ‘Muzukulu wa Kabangala’ comedy. In the 1980s, due to the increasingly repressive political environment, creatives were careful to avoid politics in favor of the safe space offered by social commentary.
The rise of Yoweri Museveni’s National Resistance Army in the mid-80s brought tolerance for the revolutionary political theater of Alex Mukulu and the aspirational theater of returnee refugees such as the Ebonies and Black Pearls Theater. This same era coincided with social concerns including HIV, malaria, poverty eradication, and malnutrition that became key issues addressed in theater productions funded by NGOs. Unfortunately, this relegated commercial theatre to the periphery. People were now able to watch Uganda’s theatre stars for free under community mango tree gatherings instead of having to pay at regular venues.
But by the early 2000s theater had moved from playhouses to bars and lounges and taken the form of sketch and stand-up comedy by the likes of the Amarula Family and Theatre Factory. This is also where the new corporate class that had emerged out of the government’s privatization policies was going for entertainment.
Current status of theater in Uganda
Twenty years later, despite all the Drama and Theater graduates leaving universities every year, the trend of the early 2000s remains. Because comedy is not costly to produce, it is popular in bars that host sketch and stand-up comedy nights all over the country. In the capital, Kampala, where in the mid-90s hundreds of registered theater companies belonged to the Uganda Theatre Groups and Artists Association (UTGA), and there were dozens of playhouses, today you would be lucky to identify anything beyond the National Theatre and Theatre Labonita. Any theaters fortunate enough to still host social gatherings, like Bakayimbira Dramactors’ Pride Theatre, were turned into Pentecostal churches.
Attitude and cultural shift key for change
At present, there is hardly any conscious support for the growth of theater. This in spite of government officials’ frequent pronouncements on how the arts are important for Uganda’s economic growth and provide opportunities for young people. Even the Uganda National Cultural Centre (UNCC), currently better funded than ever, was actually much more effective and pro-artist when it was largely under-funded. So there is a huge need for policymakers to shift their attitude and for government to lead in regenerating the arts in Uganda.
Embracing the digital age for social change
Unfortunately for today’s producers and playwrights, the audience’s attention span has become much shorter. Even more challenging is the fact that the average entertainment consumer today is also a digital content creator used to posting short videos. The days of performances with long-winding narratives and deeper meanings that unfold strategically over time seem to be over.
What audiences want now are quickly-unravelling plots and engaging action snippets that can be uploaded onto digital platforms. And this excitement draws crowds to the concerts of musicians who use these platforms. If theater is to remain relevant in informing social experience, it must find a way to shift along with society onto the digital platforms without losing its essence as an intimate and transformational art form.