Myself and Harina had the privilege of going on the road for part
of the Stage bus tour of the Peloponnese jointly sponsored by the
Cultural Olympiad and the Indonesian Ministry of Culture. It was
conceived and organised by Mikhail David and his wife Ary Sutedja,
springing out of the great success of the JakArt Festivals and
this year's Festival a la Carte, which took the Stage bus on a
tour of 15 Indonesian towns and involved around 500 performers.
The Greek tour included Subud members Marcia Coleman, Viviana
Bulow-Hube's daughter, and Luluk Purwanto, famous Jazz violinist.
Luluk came with a quartet (photo) led by her pianist husband
Rene van Helsdingen and including a top bass player, Essiet Okon
Essiet and top drummer Marcello Pellitteri, from New York. Check
them out at http://www.luluk.com/
Marcia came from Denmark with her partner, Moussa, an electric
bass player and his group of 3 musicians originating from Mali.
Two of them play the Kora, which has 20 strings set in a V
formation and a gourd-like sound-box and is played somewhat like a
harp. Check them out on http://www.moussadiallo.com/
Rene (also opened) commissioned the Stage bus, got the
necessary licence to drive it and supervises all the setting up,
doing many of the jobs himself. He is a truly remarkable person.
After hours of setting up the stage and the two screens (shadow
puppets and back projection), the sound system, etc, Rene changes
his clothes, comes out and plays exquisite jazz piano, a
completely transformed person. Then he has to pull everything
down, working into the small hours.
Luluk and the trio first did an 8-day stint in Athens with the
smaller Stage Bus - yes, there are two - and then joined the tour.
Two talented young dalangs did wyang shadow puppet performances. A
group of dancers and musicians from Kalimantan came for the second
half of the tour. There were also two pretty and graceful dancers,
one from Bali and the other from East Java. The audiences were
very appreciative, many staying afterwards to ask questions.
There were historical towns, small towns, big towns, friendly
town officials, unfriendly town officials (more of the former,
fortunately). The Cultural Olympiad were supportive and
cooperative, but Mikhail and Ary also had to cope with politicians
trying to use the programme in nasty political games. Physically
and emotionally gruelling, but for me this series of projects from
the first JakArt festival to the current tour of Greece is the
best example of Subud folk working determinedly with others to
promote the arts, broaden people's artistic experience and bring
people from different nations closer together.
By the end of the tour we said our good byes to the Stage Bus
sadly. Personally, I hope that a way can be found to bring the
Stage Bus to the congress in Innsbruck, continuing its tradition
of making no distinction between those in Subud and those not.
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