Theatre review: Ali Baba Chalees Chor
Kids are the hardest audience to impress when it comes to theatre; what’s harder is making them enjoy a tale that has been told millions of times. Director Umair Rafiq, with his version of Ali Baba Chalees Chor, did exactly that — made kids laugh out loud as if it was a new story for them.
The play took place at the Zia Mohyeddin Hall at the National Academy of Performing Arts (NAPA) during their children’s theatre festival Bachpan Kay Rung. The story of Ali Baba and Forty Thieves was narrated in such a way that nobody was killed during the play because violence and children don’t go together. It was summed up in less than an hour keeping in mind the attention span of the target audience, i.e. children. Everyone in the hall loved the theatrics of the actors who presented the story as if it was something no one had heard or read before. Impressive, isn’t it?
The director of the play Umair Rafiq played the narrator and kept interrupting the story with his appearance or voice over, and it didn’t disturb anybody as it was synced well. There was a cowardly woodcutter Ali Baba (Muneeb Baig) who stumbled upon a secret cave that was home to a treasure left there by the 40 thieves. He was intelligent enough to steal some of the treasure so that nobody gets suspicious, however, when his brother (Aqeel Ahmed) tried to do the same, the thieves find out that the cave had been breached.