![From left, Mandy Mifsud, Gilbert Formosa, Olivia-Ann Marmarà in B’Sogħba Kbira. From left, Mandy Mifsud, Gilbert Formosa, Olivia-Ann Marmarà in B’Sogħba Kbira.]()
B’Sogħba Kbira is a dark and quirky comedy from Maltese playwright Simon Bartolo which revolves around the Ciappara family, a family that is slightly more eccentric than one’s regular neighbours.
One of the sibling’s is unhealthily obsessed with animals, another is the source of every rumour in the street, and yet another fiddles neurotically with her rosary beads in fervent prayer. And then there’s the sibling who is obsessed with swords.
The only one constant in this charismatic yet peculiar family is that they hate each other’s guts.
When a sudden death takes the siblings by surprise, their antics are taken to a whole new level. Things heat up further when inheritance comes into play.
Following Bartolo’s massive success with Jiena Nħobb, Inti Tħobb, Ħabbilni Ħa Nirbaħ, Tikber u Tinsa and B’tal-Linja Jaqbillek Żgur, B’Sogħba Kbira pushes the audience to take each other with a pinch of salt and definitely less seriously, as director Roderick Vassallo explained.
Bartolo’s dialogues are written with such craft that Vassallo is expecting the audience to naturally burst into laughter. The work can be described as a farce but the director prefers to couch it in terms of an...