New Plays from South Africa: After 20 Years of Democracy

New Plays from South Africa: After 20 Years of Democracy Top / Details
Mon 12 May - Sat 17 May 2014

On the 20th anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s inauguration, the Royal Court will stage a series of readings, offering an insight into South African life today and the urgent concerns of a younger generation two decades after the end of apartheid.

After a year-long workshop led by British playwrights Leo Butler, Winsome Pinnock and International Director, Elyse Dodgson, these six plays, presented at the Royal Court as works-in-progress, look at absent fathers, political corruption, sexuality, race and religion in contemporary South Africa and the legacy of the new generation of children, growing up as ‘born frees’.

The project is part of the British Council’s Connect ZA programme, a line-up of events which will run alongside the week of readings, including a panel discussion, a live poetry evening, featuring top spoken word artists from South Africa and a late night music event.

Mon 12 May, 7pm
A New Song
By Napo Masheane
Directed by Richard Twyman
Thokoza is a domestic worker who persuades her sister workers to get involved in the Anti Pass Book campaign of the 1950s. The women whose voices took centre stage in the “struggle” are vividly brought to life in this celebration of political action, song and friendship.
Cast: Naana Agyei-Ampadu, Noma Dumezweni, Eleanor Fanyinka, Natasha Gordon, Charlotte Lucas, Tamarin McGinley, Ony Uhiara

Tue 13 May, 7pm
NewFoundLand
By Neil Coppen
Directed by Simon Godwin
Jacques is an anaesthetist working in a hospital in a rural community. Sizwe is a dancer who is connecting with his ancestors. When they meet for casual sex, memory and tradition collide. A hallucinatory exploration of sexuality, race and religion in contemporary South Africa.
Cast: Kieran Bew, Gary Carr, Sope Dirisu, Prudence Jezile, Glynnis Masuku, Cecilia Noble, Maggie Steed, Chinna Wodu

Wed 14 May, 7pm
Fana Le Fale (Here and There)
By Omphile Molusi, translated from Setswana by the playwright
Directed by Dawn Walton
Street clown Wilfred and his girlfriend Cindy live in a shack of corrugated iron. Joined by their young relatives, “born frees” with very different dreams, they start a fight against a corrupt housing system to drag themselves out of life in the slums.
Cast:Michelle Asante, Noma Dumezweni, Sibusiso Mamba, Simon Mokhele, Isaac Ssbandeke

Thu 15 May, 7pm
Brave
By Mongiwekaya
Directed by Phyllida Lloyd
Ben and Skinn are out on a joint run. With the weed still burning a hole in their pockets they’re stopped by the police. The drive home from a night out turns into a brutal journey which leaves the accused and his accuser changed forever. A suspense drama that looks at old divisions in a new country.
Cast: Jordan Baker, Obi Abili, Gary Carr, Farzana Dua Elahe, Austin Hardiman, David Harewood, Joseph Mydell

Fri 16 May, 7pm
All Who Pass
By Amy Jephta
Directed by Caroline Steinbeis
District 6, Cape Town, 1974. The inner-city neighbourhood is being forcibly cleared by the apartheid regime. 2013, a daughter returns to claim her inheritance and exorcise the ghosts of what took place there. A journey to a landscape of memories past and present.
Cast: Lorraine Burroughs, Jaz Deol, Thusitha Jayasundera. Shaheen Khan, Richard Riddell, Nav Sidhu, Thalissa Teixeira

Fri 16 May, 8.45pm – FREE but ticketed
Performance Poetry from South Africa
Curated by poet, singer, spoken word artist and writer, Leeto Thale, the night includes a guest slot from Thabiso Mohare (aka Afurakan) ‘the crown prince of Johannesburg’s underground slam poetry scene.’

Fri 16 May, 10pm ’til late – FREE not ticketed
Join us in the Royal Court Bar & Kitchen for music from South African DJ Esa Williams . This event is not ticketed to just rock up!

Sat 17 May, 3pm
The Last MK Fighter
By Simo Majola
directed by Ola Animashawun
Mshiyeni lives with the nightmares of his comrades who were left behind in Angola fighting for South Africa’s freedom. He fights with his son, who blames him for the years he was absent as a father. A heartbreaking story searching for a new understanding of the sacrifices made for one’s country.
Cast: Noma Dumezweni, Nathaniel Martello-White, Joseph Mydell, Joe Speare, Leo Wringer

Sat 17 May, 4pm – FREE but ticketed
Panel discussion, New Writing in South Africa, with playwrights Simo Majola, Mongiwekaya, Amy Jephta, Omphile Molusi, Neil Coppen and Napo Masheane, hosted by the Royal Court’s International Director Elyse Dodgson.
The Panel Discussion will focus on The Last MK Fighter
By Simo Majola.

New Plays from South Africa is presented as part of International Playwrights: A Genesis Foundation Project and this project was undertaken in partnership with the British Council’s Connect ZA programme.

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