‘I Will Marry When I Want’ Review: A Living History That Doesn’t Meet Expectations
The cast do their best with that they're offered, which just happens to be oftentimes, not good enough.
The cast do their best with that they're offered, which just happens to be oftentimes, not good enough.
The play doesn’t quite fulfil its promise as it was marketed. It, however, takes a serious jab at how old, rich men pry on young girls.
This play is a step in the right direction to redefine Kenya's slapstick stage comedy by highlighting important issues like queerness.
A conventional story told in an even more conventional way, a stage play with no illusion, no poetry, and no wonder.
Although the play is an adapted work, the director and the actors flesh it out successfully, centering it on the middle-class Nairobian.