To sell out or not to sell out? That is the question. Or is it?
Did Shakespeare consider himself a hack? Or was he too busy keeping the Lord Chamberlainâs Men afloat with the quality (and quantity) of his playscripts? Did he encounter the strange impulse in his audiences to lionize and then tear down what he had the audacity to be paid for? Did he suffer from that obtuse inclination to feel guilty once he achieved a modicum of financial stability?
What does it actually mean to âsell outââand is that even a relevant concern in a city where market-rate rents far exceed most artistsâ capacity to pay them no matter what salary they command?
Rotimi Agbabiaka in Manifesto at Brava Theater Center. (Robbie Sweeny)
Itâs an age-old dilemma, and as such, one cannot expect it to be solved in a scant hour, the approximate length of Rotimi Agbabiakaâs newest solo show, Manifesto. While the struggle to reconcile the artistic conscience with the hierarchy of needs is real, in Agbabiakaâs hands it somehow becomes fun. Like a juicy gossip sesh with your âgay best friend,â Manifesto lets us listen in on Agbabiakaâs questioning internal monologueâalong with all of the voices he carries with him, from fame mongers to talk-show hosts, James Baldwin to Beyoncé.
With all the bonhomie of a television personality, Agbabiaka bounds onto the stage to an Afrobeat soundtrack, to bask in audience applause. Serving Nigerian-cool realness, his energy crackles and dominates the room, but in a friendly way. âWow,â he observes, laughing delightedly. âYou have no idea what youâre in for.â
What follows is a series of humorous sketches, gently directed by Edris Cooper-Anifowoshe, skewering the theater âindustryâ and Agbabiakaâs role in it. He tells us right away that we donât need âpermissionâ to create. Donât need to wait by the phone for that âcall.â That the call comes in the very next stage moment is the punchline, and weâre whisked off to New York City where he beats out Laverne Cox for a coveted off-Broadway role (last Spring, Agbabiaka was a featured player in Playwrights Horizonsâ If Pretty Hurts Ugly Must Be a Muhfucka). This minor success sets off a rampage of soul-searching for which there are no definitive answers.
Rotimi Agbabiaka in Manifesto at Brava Theater Center. (Robbie Sweeny)
Does his accomplishment turn him into one of the aggressively soulless wannabes who jockey for position on that beloved game show, Show Biz Circle Jerk? How about the fact that heâs considering leaning into his African heritage as a selling point, despite having grown up in Texas?
âIf you need a Nigerian, Iâm your guy,â he tells his fellow contestants. âIâm taking this shit all the way to Hollywood!â On a more quixotic note, he tries to explain to his dryly unimpressed (and hilariously deadpan) father how his vision of theater is one of revolutionary ideas, even as he admits that he wonât do theater in Nigeria since thereâs no money in it.
âThatâs all we want, isnât it?â expounds game-show Rotimi. âI want that Jay-Z-Beyoncé price! Cause ainât that the revolution?â
In Agbabiakaâs animated hands, each character is lovingly lampooned, including himself and his contradictory ambitions. With his sheer physical presence, a chair, and the dramatic ambers and aquas of Jenny B./Shady Ladyâs lighting design, Agbabiaka fills the room with a wealth of insider buzz and infectious laughter. The New York Times has called him âwhimsical,â he makes a point of mentioning. He is a delight.
God, the Nigerian Drag Queen, takes the stage in Rotimi Agbabiaka’s Manifesto. (Robbie Sweeny)
But for a show called Manifesto, written by a performer known for his affiliations with artistically idealistic organizations such as the San Francisco Mime Troupe, thereâs actually very little in the way of politicized content. Even a cameo appearance from Godâa pep-talking, Nigerian Drag Queenâand an additional world-weary word of inspiration from James Baldwin glosses over the crux of the dilemma we started with. What is a fair price tag for the life artistic?
Itâs not at all clear what Agbabiakaâs course of action for the future will be, as he considers the crossroads of conscience and commerce, or how he truly feels about putting the question to the test. For all of his playful vignettes poking fun at the addled agents, vapid influencers, and tone-deaf producers that crowd the industry, thereâs no real moment of reckoning: not for them, not for Agbabiaka, and not for us.
Only the final monologue, a pithy poem entitled âThe Revolution Will Not Be Tweeted,â hints at Agbabiakaâs deeper political inclinations. Itâs a brilliant, headline-parsing chant, taking to task our obsessions with celebrity, and wryly noting that âthe revolutionâ will not âgive you an endorsement deal.â A postscript, if you will, to this love/hate letter to the actorâs life, with an undercurrent of warning. Which side are you on, Agbabiaka asks his audience with a winning smile. As to determining what side heâs on, the mic drop will have to suffice as a signifier.
‘Manifesto’ plays through Saturday, Feb. 15, at Brava Theater Center in San Francisco. Details here.
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