Monday, November 29, 2010

My Dream Cast For Belonging


1.                  Kuku: A young wild hen. She feels lost amongst her kind. She is an impertinent free thinker, always wanting to know the what, how and why. Constantly challenges the status quo.

1st  choice- Meredith Grey.
Reason- If Meredith Grey of Seattle Grace Hospital had been an actual person, she would capture the very essence of Kuku. The Grey’s Anatomy lead character truly embodies the spirit of the quirky young hen.

2nd choice- Miley Cyrus
Reason- To appeal to that demographic... you know... the demographic in whose hands the fate of the global entertainment industry lies- Ms. Miley Cyrus would get a call up.

3rd choice- the original actress off the BBC radio drama version of Belonging
Reason- Just listen to her!

In the interest of publicity, Lindsay Lohan might want to consider it as a perfect chance to make her big comeback. Or if Paris Hilton is still interested in proving herself as an actress...

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2. Mama Kuku: The long-suffering mother of Kuku. A typical hen; silly and easily panicked. The prattler; quite happy with life as it is and of the mind that Kuku would do well to follow suit.

Reason- Her ‘Vera’ on Meet the Browns gives her my vote. Just the right touch of ditzy!

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3. Jobo: The pompous rooster believes all life in the veld would come to a standstill if he were not there to crow. A dominant know-it-all.

 1st  choice- Cordon Bleu (from High School Musical)
 Reason- He did some interesting voices when he appeared on an episode of Tyra’s show. For this reason, I do not think Jobo’s posturing would be too hard for him.

2nd  choice- Justin Chambers, the guy who plays ‘Alex Karev’ in Grey’s Anatomy (yes- it is my favourite TV show) could do the arrogant rooster as well. Though what he was thinking when he took the role of that JLo pursuing dweeb in the wedding planner eludes me. Here’s a movie his kids would enjoy watching... I wonder if that would be reason enough to lure Brad Pitt to consider taking the role?
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4. BereThe matured alpha female Hyena in the pack. Open-minded. Has bursts of fierce temper.

 Choice: Meryl Streep.
Reason: Mama Mia showed she can let her hair down and do humour. Meryl Streep bears this uncanny resemblance to a former boss of mine. Especially in ‘The Devil wears Prada’. My boss to the boot! I was terrified of this lady and yet revered her which is the right mix of the feelings Bere’s character inspires around her.
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5.Ruma:  A young alpha female Hyena. Bere’s sister. She is the embodiment of viciousness at its meanest. The staunchest bigot.

 1st  choice- Whoopi Goldberg
Reason- I can hear Whoopi’s voice playing the menacing Ruma

Reason- How many can do meanness quite like the Ugly Betty vixen?

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6. ZinoA young male Hyena. Ruma’s devoted sidekick- her shadow and, on occasion, echo. The wimp/stooge of the pairing.

Reason- He could pull off the hyena sidekick with aplomb.
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7. Guinea Fowl:  Adult male Guinea Fowl. Ruma’s feeble victim.

 Choice- Chris Rock
Reason- I would love to see everyone’s favourite comedian give new meaning to the angry resignation of this wretched bird.


Sunday, November 21, 2010

My Reasons Belonging Deserves to Be On Screen



Of course there have to be more reasons that I believe in Belonging being suitable cartoon material besides…

  1. The dialogue for ‘Belonging’ flowed into my mind in ‘cartoon motion.’

Here is a list I compiled of others:

  1. Belonging is a story with a lesson of tolerance. The world can never have too many stories that advocate acceptance of each other as people- as human beings- considering;
-          the xenophobic attacks in South Africa
-          religious tensions in Nigeria
-           tribal conflicts across the African continent and others
-          Israeli-Palestinian conflict
-          French expulsion of the Roma
-          Francophone and Flemish speaking disputes in a small town in Belgium
-          the Immigrant Bill in Arizona
-          racism
-          and political clashes just about anywhere we care to look

  1. The global necessity of the message of tolerance/ acceptance guarantees ‘Belonging’ a global appeal.

  1. Belonging’s prominent themes (e.g tolerance/acceptance) extend across generations. So it would be another All Ages opportunity for families to sit, hopefully laugh and to learn from together.

  1. Belonging, the animated feature film would be fun to do as well as fun to watch. Lots of laughs for everyone.

  1. Belonging could be a multi-national production integrating ideas from a worldwide pool in the true spirit of the era globalization.

  1. (a) It would be that more fulfilling to have a production process that could engage unrecognized artistic, technical, and vocal talent from communities commonly deprived of exposure. There are gifted people out there who seek only a break through. Their battle is my battle.

Failing to have (a)....
(b) Hollywood actors performing an African script!!! Need I say more?

  1. The production of ‘Belonging’ for Hollywood would go a significant way in aiding the awakening of the movie world to the wealth of unexploited stories in Africa, sitting and waiting to be turned into films.

  1. ‘Belonging’ is an excuse to celebrate the wildlife of Africa and the color that is Africa.

  1. ‘Belonging’ is a screenplay out of Africa by an African. In the age of diversity, Belonging is an opportunity for Hollywood (if it wants it) to show its support for writers from a broader scope.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

A 2010 Golden Baobab Prize Winner: Mirirai Moyo

In my Inbox this week was an e-mail notifying me that my story- Diki, the Little Earthworm had been chosen as a 2010 winner of the Golden Baobab Prize.
I wrote a story that I would have wanted someone to tell me when I was a child- that said it is okay to be different (in all the ways that we will be different) and that even when you are different, you are still special.
I felt- and will always feel- very strongly about the subject. And I had visions for the story. The battle was in finding a publisher who appreciated the essence of the idea enough to publish it.
I am grateful to the Golden Baobab team for giving African writers this opportunity for recognition and promotion of their efforts. And it is truly an honour to have had my story chosen as a winner of this prize.
And the award coming at this stage in my ongoing quest to have my screenplay version of ‘Belonging’ made into an animated feature film really can be taken as a valuable reminder, by myself-  anyone in need of it, to keep dreaming- keep believing- and keep trying...
See Golden Baobab 2010 Winners

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Dreaming In A Third World Country


Seeing the Belonging script made into a feature film seems simple enough- doesn’t it? Oh, believe me, I thought so too.
But there are some dreams you may have and then there are certain dreams you are not expected- permitted- to have when you live in my world. Ever felt like that?
“You should have made it into a cartoon...”
“It would make a good cartoon...”
“Cartoon...”
“Cartoon...”
“Cartoo...”
What happened to the remarks that affirmed what I had believed from the very first with the story of Kuku flowing through my head onto paper in ‘cartoon motion’?
Clearly they were just things people said; (a) as they were the right things to say- and/or
(b) they were not really expecting me to follow through (on the idea).
Because when I made known and acted on my intention of seeing ‘Belonging’ made into a feature film it brought on this series of flip-side reactions;
“This is Zimbabwe!”
“You are in Zimbabwe!”
It is. I am. And so? Should those be grounds on which a dream cannot be had?
Incredibly- yes! “Maybe if you were in the States...” “Or if this were South Africa...”
But I am not. It is not.  I am here- in Zimbabwe- and I burn with a dream.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Journey To A Dream...


I have a dream... of seeing my screenplay version of Belonging made into an animated feature film.
Somewhere early in the initial jotting down of draft dialogue for ‘Belonging’ the radio drama, it all flowed through my head in what I took to describing as ‘cartoon motion’. Thinking of it now, I sorely wish I could remember the precise moment- that exact instant, the very line, every detail- to share it with you... because just like that, in the sparking of cells somewhere in my brain, a possibility came into being.
If only we could always tell... that this fleeting (almost wishful) thought will someday, in future register as a defining moment then we would know to capture it in mind, note it down or something! 
Vexing as it is, not being able to recall the day- the time- positioning will not lessen the significance of the thought that I had... ‘This could be a cartoon.’ That realisation was the beginning of a journey to a dream.