Thursday, 14 March 2013

KEMIYONDO COUTINHO Actress, Playwright and Female empowerment activist



Kemiyondo Coutinho is the most inspiring and self driven 20 year old you will ever meet. At such a young age, she is a self driven actress, playwright, female empowerment activist and student currently in her final year of school. We talked to Kemi- as she is known by most of her friends- and she shared with us about her passion for theatre, women empowerment and she also did a breathtaking skit from her famous play Jabulile.

About Kemi
Kemi always had a passion for theatre. At the age of nine, she took part in her first play ever. Acting is one thing Kemi does with a lot of passion and this is visible through her work.  “I liked attention so I noticed this would be a good way to get attention so I took it on and fell in love with it.”                                                                                                                                                             Kemi  was born in Uganda 20 years ago. She moved to Swaziland when she was only 3 weeks old but moved back to Uganda in 2001. However she kept attending school in Swaziland until she finished high school and later enrolled in University in the Portland, Oregon and The Lewis and Clarke College to study communication and theatre.
”Of recent I have become somewhat of a gender/ female empowerment activist and I don’t like to use the term feminist I’m all about equal opportunities for women. I feel like there is no balance in African society and there aren’t enough opportunities for women in Africa. Through theatre I try to empower women, try and make the voices of women be heard,’’ Kemi says.                                                                    It is for this reason that Kemi started her own theatre company called Voices of Abafaazi, when translated means Voices of Women. Through theatre Kemi tries to make the voices of women heard. Kemi attends school at The Lewis and Clarke College, in Portland Oregon where she is currently pursuing two degrees in one; communication and theatre.

About Jabulile
Kemi started writing her famous one-woman play Jabulile while in high school as her final project for school. “Opposite the bus station I used back in Swaziland, there were these women that used to sell fruits and vegetables, and I noticed they were always smiling especially being women and from a lower economic status, I looked at these women and realized it cannot be easy to wake up every morning.” This inspired Kemi to start her research for the play. She decided to interview the women and weaved the stories of all the women she interviewed wrote the story of Jabulile and four other market women.  In her play Jabulile we meet seven characters. However there are four main stories. She did this because she believes there is at least one character that each member of the audience will connect with.  Kemi has performed her one-woman play Jabulile in front of many audiences across the world.                                 
 “I first performed Jabulile in Swaziland at my school, then I performed it a theatre in Swaziland and then it got entered into the National Arts Festival in South Africa, the biggest arts festival in Africa and the second biggest festival in the world. I then showed it at a gender symposium in Portland Oregon and then my school sponsored me to take it back to South Africa. I did it again at my school in Portland, Oregon for donors at my school and very recently I it to New York. It was very exciting as this has always been my dream.”

Her other work
Kemi also recently wrote another play titled In the doll house. “It’s about African American women and issues they face growing up as a black girl, so I went into issues, dealing with hair, the way they believe they should dress in order to feel sexy.” The play was entered it into a competition and was a finalist. However Kemi says she will enter the play into the competition again this year because she believes it can win first prize.                                                                                                                                                                      
Kemi also featured in another play at her school titled The Blue Room.“ I didn’t write it but it’s about a sexual network and showed how people can be different depending on who they are with. I just auditioned for fun and got a part.” However Kemi feels that it is important to utilize every opportunity you get to show your talent.
Kemi has also been working on another play for her Ugandan audience that she hopes to start showing come September titled Kawuna; tag you are it. The play tells the stories of 4-5 women living with HIV/AIDS in Uganda “ You will meet a housemaid, a wife a prostitute, a white expatriate, all of them wearing black and different kind of red shoes to reflect their social class, but at the end of the day you realize that they were infected by the same man.”
Aside from theatre
Kemi also likes working with children. During the summer of 2010, she worked at a project in Mulago Hospital working with children and adolescents infected with HIV/AIDS and started a theatre group there. “It gave them a sense of belonging and a family because many of them are orphans. In the future I definitely want to work more with children.” Kemi also likes to write and analyze the way society portrays women in the media.


Getting into character
“I have done this show so much, it’s immediate and I’ve gotten to know the characters so well.” Her director has also helped Kemi a lot in getting to know her characters in the play Jabulile.  “We examined each character closely. I learned the way each of them talked, walked and so many other things.” Kemi also wears a hat while she is performing.  “Every time I take off the hat, it’s a transition from one character to another and with this transition you have to let go of the other character.” Kemi also visited the women she portrays in her play several times and recorded them. This helped her learn the way these women spoke and interacted with the people in their lives. She also interviewed several educated and upper class women the way they spoke. “You will hear one story in the play and it’s influenced by about four different kinds of women of women.”                                                                                                   
When asked about stage fright, “once I get into character, I never get scared. But once it’s over and I have to take a bow, that’s when the stage fright kicks in!”

The Vagina Monologues
The play the Vagina Monologues raised many eyebrows in Uganda but Kemi is proud to say she has performed a monologue or two in the play in Oregon. To Kemi, the play is an eye opener and she is will gladly do it again this year. Kemi believes it’s a play everyone should watch and is very determined to bring the play to Uganda and have it accepted by all Ugandans.  “I will bring it to Uganda one day, even if it takes me twenty years.” Kemi believes it’s a play everyone should watch because it addresses the fact that women cannot freely talk about their genitals without it being frowned upon. “The monologue I’m famously known for, The Angry Vagina talks about issues women talk about and face on a daily like tampons. If this play can be performed in Nigeria, I don’t understand why it cannot show in Uganda which is supposed to be more liberal than Nigeria. This just shows our lack of understanding of the issues affecting our society.”                                                                                                                                                          To Kemi, this shows how much writers we are restricted in their work and this is one of the reasons why it has taken her so long to write a piece to show in Uganda. But she believes as a writer she has to adapt to different society and different situations. “In my new play I cannot remain oblivious of the fact that some things will not be allowed in Uganda so I have to leave them out and this makes me sad.”

Passion for women’s rights and equality
In 2008, Kemi took on a class which focused on gender. This showed her how handicapped and vulnerable women are in all societies. She also did a communications class that opened her eyes to the way the media portrays women and how it is used to keep black women at the bottom. This exposure ignited her passion for women’s rights and gender equality. “I believe it is important to make a change the way you know how and for me it is theatre, and the more you do it the more passionate you become.”

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