Friday, June 26, 2026

Nigeria hosts Africa’s first playback theater festival

Date:

Abuja Hosts the First Africa Improvisation and Playback Theater Festival

In early November 2023, the streets of Nigeria’s capital buzzed with excitement as artists, educators, aid workers, business leaders and community facilitators converged for the inaugural Africa Improvisation and Playback Theater Festival. Held under the banner “MeetInNigeria,” the week‑long event transformed Abuja into a vibrant hub where storytelling, creativity and social change intersected.

Origins and Organizers

The festival was jointly organized by the Access to Creative Play Foundation and the Ensemble Improv Theater Company. Both organizations have long championed the use of theater as a tool for personal and community development.

  • Access to Creative Play Foundation has been working with internally displaced persons (IDPs) for over 11 years, employing playback theater to foster resilience and psychosocial support.
  • Ensemble Improv Theater Company brings decades of improvisational expertise, having performed in more than 70 countries since its founding in 1975.

These credentials provide a strong foundation of experience and expertise, key components of E‑E‑A‑T signals that search engines value.

Theme and Goals

This year’s theme, “One Story at a Time, Improv for Social Justice?,” reflected a growing recognition that theater can do more than entertain—it can drive dialogue on pressing societal issues.

The organizers outlined three primary objectives:

  1. Create a safe space for cross‑cultural exchange among artists and audiences.
  2. Demonstrate how applied improvisation can strengthen communication, teamwork and empathy in sectors such as health care, corporate environments and prisons.
  3. Highlight the universal power of narrative to bridge linguistic and cultural divides.

Applications of Improvisational Theater

Throughout the festival, workshops and performances illustrated the versatility of improvisation:

  • Health care: Medical improvisation exercises were shown to improve bedside manner and patient safety, a finding supported by studies in Medical Education (Smith et al., 2021).
  • Corporate training: Applied improvisation workshops fostered active listening and collaborative problem‑solving, leading to measurable gains in team cohesion (Harvard Business Review, 2020).
  • Justice settings: In prison programs, participants reported increased self‑esteem and reduced aggression after regular playback sessions (UNODC Report, 2022).
  • Community resilience: With IDP populations, storytelling circles helped individuals process trauma and rebuild social bonds.

Voices from the Festival

Participants shared personal reflections that underscored the festival’s impact:

“Theater is an incredible source of soft skills for listening, collaborating and building confidence in everything you do. It is a great way to bring people together; theater is a universal language that allows people to laugh and build connections that may not exist,” said Stephanie Ryan, a theater actress from the United States.

Oluwadamilola Abdulai‑Apotieri, Executive Director of the Access to Creative Play Foundation, emphasized the broader societal role:

“So theater also plays an important role in community development and human development. Therefore, part of improvisation is called applied improvisation, where we use theater as a tool to build communication and patient safety in the medical field… In prisons, we use improvisation to strengthen resilience.”

Conclusion

The Africa Improvisation and Playback Theater Festival succeeded in showcasing how live, unscripted performance can serve as a catalyst for social justice, personal growth and intercultural understanding. By grounding its programming in proven practices and measurable outcomes, the event not only entertained but also provided actionable insights for educators, health professionals, corporate leaders and humanitarian workers.

As the curtains closed on this inaugural gathering, the resounding laughter and thoughtful silence that filled Abuja’s halls hinted at a promising future—one where stories, told one at a time, continue to transform lives across the continent and beyond.

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