Corner 4am and Cuba
Corner 4am & Cuba is a memorial to a 14 year-old boy, Jeff Whittington, who was murdered in Inverlochy Place, near Aro St in 1999. The director of this hour-long piece of collaborative theatre has said Jeff's brutal murder just needs to be remembered.
The nine people who devised this play have culled newspapers and court reports, interviewed friends and relatives, and used anecdotal evidence and their own instincts to create a sort of theatrical collage that seeks to "explore fundamental questions about Jeff's murder and the effect it had on the community around Cuba Street."
Once an overlong and ineffective preface to the play, which takes place in the passageway beside Bats Theatre, is over, the audience is led into the theatre through the side door, where it soon finds itself in a school assembly being addressed by the Principal announcing the death of Jeff.
From then on scenes, few lasting more than three or four minutes, take us back and forth from the trial of the two men accused of the murder, to the police station, to school friends blaming each other for not doing enough to help him as well as fondly remembering him, to some Cuba Street characters such as a shopper, a restaurant owner, a prostitute, and a group of partying gays.
Parts of newspaper editorials, news reports, letters to the editor and a dismissive columnist's article are read out, all adding to the total picture of the effect that the murder had on Wellington, but the one person you don't see is Jeff. However, though his presence is always felt you never get to know him beyond the fact that we are told he was a gentle boy with a quirky imagination and he dyed his hair purple and painted his fingernails green.
Using only numerous green plastic recycling boxes for seating and two wheelie-bins for a bar and a shop counter the setting, ably lit by Jen Lal, conveys the emptiness of Cuba Street at 4am. Ronald Trifero Nelson keeps his eight actors moving seamlessly from one scene to the next but curiously I was left unmoved and uninvolved except for two scenes.
The police officer who felt guilty for not doing enough to help Jeff on the night he died rang true and was touchingly performed as was the heartbreaking song What About the Days written and sung by Romy Hooper.
by Laurie Atkinson
After an ill-conceived start, The Corner 4am and Cuba sets itself a big challenge to win its audience back. And it does, with a finally powerful community theatre docu-drama provoked by the murder, eight years ago, of a 14 year-old high school student - Jeff - out and about in the wee small hours with his purple hair, black fingernails and a reduced capacity to look after himself.
Bringing us down the side alley to the BATS auditorium could well have given us a salutary dose of some seedier side of our city's night life. Instead we are obliged to cram into a corner of the Central Fire Station's back yard and watch a young woman graffiti artist at work, spray-painting a wall through a stencil ...
The interminable wait for further and more interesting action is surely a first-night hiccup. But when - as the 'Zathan' tag is revealed - the remaining cast finally arrive in a long line humming to a guitar, they evoke nothing more than a bunch of young thespians taking themselves awfully seriously. Then, when at last we are allowed out of the cold into the theatre, we have to stand and watch and listen to more - much more - of the humming and strumming and walking to and fro in a space littered with green recycling bins and a couple of wheelie bins ... Again, interminable. Why?
Is it assumed that we have heads so full of our own little worlds that we have to be put through this mind cleansing - mind numbing? - process in preparation for the story to come? Well I say bollocks to that. We have come ready and willing to engage in a theatrical experience and we don't need to be patronised or manipulated this way. (If I have misunderstood the intention here, please enlighten us.)
A song, 'We all come out at night ...', enlivens proceedings at last, an outburst from Graffiti Girl sets the time as 1999 - "As we sing Happy Birthday to the New Millennium I can't help thinking we're going backwards" - and we are 'cast' as high school pupils as Jean Copeland, in the role of Principal, asks us to find a seat.
Her words - she tells us of the violent death of a "Jeff", a fellow pupil, then updates and counsels us in at subsequent 'assemblies' - are those of Prue Kelly who was the Wellington High School Principal when Jeff was murdered. 'Zathan', it turns out, was Jeff's self-selected street name.
Other devices for revealing what happened, and for taking us all on the quest for 'why?', include monologue musings ("I'm thinking of hate as a kind of power ..."), interactions within the Cuba community, a post-funeral wake involving Jeff's close friends, witness testimony from the trial transcript (Jason Meads and Steven Smith phoned their fathers when they realised what they'd done and turned themselves into poilce), and eye-witness flashbacks to the fateful night itself, including the observations, attitudes and actions of the perpetrators which are semi-imagined and dramatised in various versions using different actors each time ...
Also insightful and touching is a post-incident interview between the over-worked police person (Jaki Trolove) who did not give the clearly incapacitated Jeff a lift home and a senior officer (Jonny Potts). Andrew Waterson, Romy Hooper, Stewart Pedley and Luis Portillo complete the impressive ensemble whose collective research, commitment and dramatic skills combine to imbue us with as much of an understanding as we can hope to achieve of this senseless, stupid crime.
Hooper's singing of songs she composed herself, Pedley's singing and guitar playing, and Jen Lal's lighting enrich proceedings, helping the substantive hour to supersede the 20-odd minutes (far fewer now, I trust) that go before. In retrospect I feel something evoking the carefree quest for youthful "freedom" in a lively city would have been a better set-up for what follows.
Given the opinions that have been expressed on this site about devised work, I am bound to add that Corner 4am and Cuba does not have the greater resonances of, say, Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange or Paul Rothwell's Hate Crimes. There are certain truths that fiction explores better and dimensions of character, plot structure and theme that good writers do better than most devising groups (with one or two honourable exceptions).
What gives this production its strength is that it is based on something that really happened in the very community that is now confronting it. It offers an experience that cannot help but nudge us to think about our individual and collective rights and responsibilities, and our capacity for inhumanity to each other.
by John Smythe
In this powerful and moving piece of drama presented by the Wheelbarrow Group, Ronald Trifero Nelson directs a cast of eight young people to explore a seemingly pointless death and offer theatre as therapy. It contains violent content that may offend, and will certainly disturb, and notices in the foyer recommend counselling services to those who want to talk about issues raised by the performance.
In a true and horrific incident, a 14-year-old boy called Jeff was beaten to death on a side street in central Wellington early on the morning of 8th May 1999. The boot prints of his two assailants, Jason Meads and Steven Smith, were imprinted on his scalp. With his purple hair, green fingernails and facial piercings, perhaps Jeff was killed because he was gay, because he was on drugs or simply because he was in the wrong place at the wrong time ...
by Kate Blackhurst
Portraying a relatively recent 'real life' murder on stage is a gutsy thing to do, more so when it's the beating to death of a 14 year old for nothing more than being a little different and in the wrong place at the wrong time. In May 1999 two men in their 20s beat purple-haired Jeff to death - their account of what happened that morning and two imagined alternatives, all of them chilling, are portrayed in the production without a drop of blood or even a body.
We see Jeff, never on stage, but through the eyes of the police, the accused, Jeff's school friends, eyewitnesses to the murder, and through the Cuba Street regulars. In terms of the impact of the murder, that's most movingly portrayed by the busy police officer who refused to give Jeff a lift home, and who keeps seeking reassurances that they weren't to blame for what happened afterwards.
Court records, newspaper headlines, interviews carried out by Neilson, are all thrown into the mix in what he describes as a 'compiled' theatre work, and that's a good description. The actors are also very much part of that creative process and that's reflected in their performances on stage. This is basic storytelling - no external sound, only a few recycled rubbish bins as props, it's all on the actors and the script to carry it. The play has moments of extreme emotional intensity, exhausting for actor and audience.
Neilson is an adventurous director, determined to take the audience out of its comfort zone too, starting by having us stand outside to watch an event en route to the warmth of the theatre - a neat idea but it should only take a couple of minutes not 10. Then we have to wait to take a seat, briefly becoming part of the action, a neat touch.
It's refreshing to see theatre that's relevant and topical - given the bewilderment in our society over young people killing each other in assaults and in cars.
This production is brave and memorable, but somehow we never get to make a strong emotional connection with Jeff, and the Cuba Street characters' stories tend to fall flat, coming as they do in between the powerful murder scenes.
by Lynn Freeman












