Difference between revisions of "Mzwandile Maqina"

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==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
His first musical, ‘’[[Give Us This Day]]’’ (written and performed 1974-1976, published 1975, banned May 1976), became the first theatrical production to be banned under the laws of apartheid.
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His first musical, ''[[Give Us This Day]]'' (written and performed 1974-1976, published 1975, banned May 1976), became the first theatrical production to be banned under the laws of apartheid.
  
 
Other plays - virtually all banned or leading to his detention, are ''[[The Trial]]'' (1977), ''[[The Crack]]'' (198*), and ''[[Dry Those Tears]]'' (1983).
 
Other plays - virtually all banned or leading to his detention, are ''[[The Trial]]'' (1977), ''[[The Crack]]'' (198*), and ''[[Dry Those Tears]]'' (1983).
  
 
== Awards, etc ==
 
== Awards, etc ==
 
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 13:03, 7 April 2018

Rev. Mzwandile Maqina (born 1937). Activist, playwright and preacher from New Brighton, near Port Elizabeth.

Biography

Born in Port Elizabeth's New Brighton township on October 2, 1937, Maqina is recognised as one of the South African pioneers of political theatre to come from Port Elizabeth.

It is the same area from where John Kani, Winston Ntshona and Nomhle Nkonyeni hail.

Maqina was put under house arrest for five years after he wrote ‘’The Crack’’. The house arrest was only lifted in 1983.

Training

Maqina never studied formally to become a playwright and theatre director.

Career

Since democracy, Maqina has been involved in helping establish youth theatre around the Nelson Mandela Bay Metro, and setting up his own production company. New Generation. In 2005 he retired from running the company. and it became defunct.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

His first musical, Give Us This Day (written and performed 1974-1976, published 1975, banned May 1976), became the first theatrical production to be banned under the laws of apartheid.

Other plays - virtually all banned or leading to his detention, are The Trial (1977), The Crack (198*), and Dry Those Tears (1983).

Awards, etc

Sources

Article by Thabo Jijana published in The NewAge, 2 October 2015. Page: 27.


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