Difference between revisions of "Madiba Magic"

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== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
It was first staged at the [[Grahamstown Festival]] 2003 and in July 2003 at the [[Baxter Theatre]] in Cape Town, directed by [[Janice Honeyman]], with [[Sonia Esqueira]], [[Elton Landrew]], [[Dumisani-Sizwe Mbebe]], [[Bruce J. Little]], [[Sizwe Msutu]], [[Thando Mthi]], [[Irvine van der Merwe]], [[Zandile Msutwana]], [[Faniswa Yisa]] and [[Marco van der Merwe]].
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It was first staged at the [[Grahamstown Festival]] 2003 and in July 2003 at the [[Baxter Theatre]] in Cape Town, directed by [[Janice Honeyman]], with [[Sonia Esqueira]], [[Elton Landrew]], [[Dumisani-Sizwe Mbebe]], [[Bruce J. Little]], [[Sizwe Msutu]], [[Thando Mthi]], [[Irvine van der Merwe]], [[Zandile Msutwana]], [[Faniswa Yisa]] and [[Marco van der Merwe]]. Musical direction was by [[Camillo Lombard]], design by [[Sarah Roberts]] and lighting by [[Mannie Manim]],
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==

Revision as of 07:13, 5 March 2015

Madiba Magic is a 2003 play by Janice Honeyman based on the book of the same name.

The original text

The book Madiba Magic is a collection of 32 of Nelson Mandela's favourite stories for the children of Africa, published in an illustrated book by Tafelberg Publishers (SA) in 2002. It contains children's stories from South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Zambia, Tanzania, Malawi, Kenya, Nigeria and Morocco, as well as Malay/Indian stories brought to the Cape of Good Hope centuries ago by artisans and political exiles from the East.

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

It was first staged at the Grahamstown Festival 2003 and in July 2003 at the Baxter Theatre in Cape Town, directed by Janice Honeyman, with Sonia Esqueira, Elton Landrew, Dumisani-Sizwe Mbebe, Bruce J. Little, Sizwe Msutu, Thando Mthi, Irvine van der Merwe, Zandile Msutwana, Faniswa Yisa and Marco van der Merwe. Musical direction was by Camillo Lombard, design by Sarah Roberts and lighting by Mannie Manim,

Sources

Go to ESAT Bibliography

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