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What Men Want …depicting the travail of African woman

By Omiko Awa
04 December 2016   |   4:32 am
Written by Adelarin Awotedu with Dada Akeem directing, the play continues the gender debate and showcases multiple themes like marital infidelity, family squabble, randy husband and others.
A scene from the play

A scene from the play

The male folk across the globe is faced with issues of business, politics, family, multiple sex partners and, even, how to sustain their macho in a space where women are seriously finding platforms to express their innate energies and even being breadwinners in some homes.

Aside from business challenges, women are troubled when their husbands, despite their wealth and healthy children, have multiple sex partners outside their matrimonial homes, especially when the wife is putting in her best to see their marriage work. It is this capricious attitude of some men that make some women worry like mad and curse that men do not know what they want. And for those who cannot curse their husbands for breaking their hearts or cheating on them, they accepted that monogamy is superfluous, as one woman is never enough for an average man.

Dada Playhouse last Sunday, interrogated its audience with the play titled, What Men Want at One Place Plaza in Lagos.

Written by Adelarin Awotedu with Dada Akeem directing, the play continues the gender debate and showcases multiple themes like marital infidelity, family squabble, randy husband and others.

Opening with Morenikeji (Josephine Dada) reminiscing her past, when she and Kunle, her husband, used to enjoy themselves while the children were away to school, her disposition suddenly changes, as she recalls how Kunle of late describes her, as passé and stays away from home. He now keeps late nights.

Managing the situation, as they have got the number of children they want and their children are doing well in schools abroad, Morenikeji gets the shock of her life when Susan (Lucy Rotimi) walks in to say she is Kunle’s new wife. Full of rage, Morenikeji takes it for a joke, but Susan would not go; she packs into the house and begins to make herself comfortable. And this develops into a conflict between Morenikeji, the first wife, and Susan, the would-be second wife.

Thinking she knows how to satisfy Kunle sensual desires, the sassy lady begins to taunt the first wife, who never fails to tongue-lash her for marrying a man old enough to be her father.

Intimidated by Susan’s dress sense, Morenikeji puts up a fight to dress cute to win back her husband’s love. She, however, gives up the fight when she realises she is no match for Susan when it comes to such game. She takes solace in the adage that says, ‘the broom that chased the first wife is at the corner to chase the new wife.’

The two disagreeing women later joins forces, when they heard that their husband is planning to take a third wife; they plot to stop him. While Morenikeji handles the matter more maturely, Susan gets hot. She looks forward to meeting their husband’s secret lover to tear her into pieces.

Hell, however, is let loose when Susan finally meets Sidi, a 60-year old woman, Kunle is going out with. Susan attacks Sidi, who gives her the beaten of her life. Apart from being older than the first wife, Sidi runs a local restaurant where Kunle regularly eats. She is also known for giving her seven daughters to different men. Hearing this, Susan wonders what on earth could attract Kunle to such an irresponsible old woman with abominable sexual history?

Simple and short, the 45-minute play has no male cast. In fact, the randy Kunle is an ‘absentee husband.’

What Men Want is a rhetoric poser with multifaceted responses. With infidelity as main theme, the play showcases cast whose body languages and tonal expressions perfectly interpret their roles. Also, the playwright allows the character development to rise from simple to crescendo, where Susan was beaten blue-black and she learnt the hard lessons never to dictate to an Africa man the number of wives to marry. This systematic approach of unveiling the personalities of the two wives came in parts; firstly, Susan was in control in the first few scenes; where she bullied the first wife. The second and concluding parts saw Morenikeji directing affairs. This time she did not take her pound of flesh on Susan, but consoles and welcomes her to her home. She makes her to realise that the only way to win is to summit; to accept her fate as the second wife with more women on the way.

Though, the play depicts some of the heartbreaks the African woman experiences in marriage, it however, did not project feminism, instead, it depicts the African woman as docile, that has to accept all the nuisances of her husband in the name of culture and marriage. It also projects the African man, as a polygamist, who asserts his decisions on his wives, not minding if such pleases.

However, the core lesson is that women should fortify their hearts against betrayal, because no woman is immune to men’s sweet talk and other antics they employ to get what they want.

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