La
mort du grand auteur dramatique
jamaïcain Trevor Rhone
Rhone --
voice of the ordinary Jamaican
by Michael Reckord
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Jamaican
playwright
Trevor Rhone
dies at 69
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The late multi-talented theatre
practitioner Trevor Rhone was
planning at least a couple of big
projects before he died of a massive
heart attack on Tuesday.
One was a December production of his
most admired play, Old Story Time.
The other was the formation of a
standing company of actors whose
repertory would be Rhone’s plays and
who would be able to play anywhere
in the world at short notice.
This the Sunday Gleaner learnt from
Director of Studies at the School of
Drama Eugene Williams the day after
Rhone, an internationally acclaimed
playwright, producer, director,
actor, screenwriter and teacher,
died, aged 69. He had suffered a
minor heart attack some years ago.
Tributes for his contribution to
Jamaican, and indeed Caribbean, theatre
and condolences to his family have
been flowing throughout and into
Jamaica, for not only have tens of
thousands in the island seen Rhone’s
20 or so plays and films and studied
them in local schools and
universities, but his works have
delighted even larger numbers abroad.
Internationally, his best known work
is without a doubt the 1972 film The
Harder They Come, which he co-wrote
with the late Jamaican filmmaker
Perry Henzell. It has been shown in
cinemas around the world continually
since its release. Just two weeks
ago, the Theatre Royal Stratford
East and UK Arts production of the
musical by Henzell based on the
film, was staged in Miami and got
excellent notices.
For his co-written film script of
Milk and Honey (1988), Rhone earned
The Genie Award (for Best Original
Screenplay), Canada’s highest film
honour. Another of his very popular
films is Smile Orange, which is
based on his stage play of the same
name. That hilarious comedy set in a
sleazy Northcoast hotel launched
Rhone as a national figure in the
early 1970s and ran for a record (at
the time) 245 performances. Other
plays of his, most notably Old Story
Time, had even longer runs.
Others of his popular as well as
critically acclaimed plays are School’s
Out, Two Can Play and Bellas Gate
Boy. The last named refers to the St
Catherine district in which Rhone
was born in 1940, the 23rdt and last
child for his father, and where he
spent his childhood years. On the
day before he died, Rhone and his
brother Neville visited the district
to see the basic school the
playwright had recently helped to
set up and named after his mother
and an aunt.
Rhone said that he wrote 'To mirror
the lives of the ordinary man, and
to reaffirm his strengths in such a
way that he learns to diminish his
weaknesses and to believe that he
can make a positive difference in
his society.”
The statement sounds serious, and
Rhone was serious about his work.
Trinidadian theatre critic, producer-director
Judy Stone wrote of him: “He is a
rare breed, the serious writer with
the common touch.”
In a published interview with
Professor Mervyn Morris, the
playwright said that while doing
research for Smile Orange, he spent
seven days talking to a former hotel
waiter and making “reams and reams
and reams of notes.”
It was important to him, he
explained, to get his facts right.
“I panic if I should ever say
something that was not true, or not
real, in terms of my work. So I
check just about every detail,” he
said.
His seriousness was evident, too, in
his teaching. During a 2003
playwriting class at which this
Sunday Gleaner writer was present,
Rhone got annoyed with one
participant who had not done any
preparation for the class and
declared that he was turned off by
students who were not committed.
When the topic turned to creating
characters, Rhone, speaking with
characteristic energy and humour in
his trained, deep, rich voice – his
speech as always a shade too precise
-- declared, "Characters must be
allowed to write their own scripts,"
He confessed Old Story Time took
him five “painful years” to write
and told of various structurally
flawed versions which ended up in
the waste basket. He also spoke "with
humility and pride" of Miss Aggie,
the major character of Old Story
Time, as "one of the best
protagonists ever written." Certainly,
she comes across as a very real
person, one willing to write and
capable of writing her own script.
Rhone was a major playwright who
knew his worth. Nevertheless, in
recent years, he has not produced a
major new play (Positive, produced
in 2008, is a didactic work written
on commission to promote safe sex).
Why? A friend and fellow playwright
told the Sunday Gleaner of knowing
that Rhone had a new play “in a
drawer” but was apparently reluctant
to produce it because he was unsure
of the reception it would get with
the current “roots play” loving
audiences.
Was that the same play Rhone told
the 2003 playwriting class he was
then working on, a play about the
relationship between political
tribalism and social chaos? Some
researcher will eventually discover
the answer to that question, for the
research work, at high school and
university level, which began on
Rhone years ago will continue.
Rhone received many national awards
from the Jamaican government, including
Commander of the Order of
Distinction and the Prime Minister’s
Award for Lifetime Achievement. In
a July 2007 on-line American poll,
he was voted third among the top 100
Black screen icons of the past
century, placing third behind Sidney
Poitier, who was in second place.,
Denzel Washington topped the poll.
Spike Lee and Morgan Freeman placed
fourth and fifth respectively.
At Rose Bruford College, in Kent,
England, Rhone studied acting,
starting off weakly but eventually
finishing at the top of his class
with seven Distinctions and one
Credit. The turnaround came when he
was inspired by the “I am the
greatest” chant of boxer Cassius
Clay, later Muhammad Ali.
Rhone was one of the chief forces
behind the phenomenal growth of
Jamaican theatre from the early
1970s, and he is owed much by the
current crop of playwrights,
producers and theatre practitioners,
generally.