Rob Amato
Rob Amato (1943-2006) was a lecturer, actor, playwright and director, and legal journalist.
Contents
Biography
Born Roberto Amato (but popularly known as Rob) in Johannesburg on 12 June 1943 and schooled at Marist Brothers.
He was married to Hildur Amato and they had three children Ben, Bianca, and Carlos.
He died tragically in a motor accident in 2006.
Training
He studied politics and English literature at the then University of Natal and as a Rhodes Scholar also studied at Oxford University.
Career
Until the 1970s, Amato worked in his family's Johannesburg textile business. In the 1980’s he turned to the world of academia, teaching English literature and theatre studies at the University of Natal, University of Cape Town, and Rhodes University in Grahamstown, though retaining his interest in theatre, but by the 1990s he moved to Cape Town to get involved in what he called "community politics", especially community policing. In 2000 he returned to Johannesburg to become a legal columnist for The Sunday Independent.
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
In 1970 became a co-founder (with Skhala Xinwa) of Imitha Players of East London, for whom he directed i.a. local adaptations of Oedipus Rex (1971), Molière's The Miser (1975), Wole Soyinka’s The Swamp Dwellers, and work by Jean-Paul Sartre. He was also founder of the Window Theatre in East London.
He later moved to Cape Town and worked at The Space Theatre. He took over The Space when Brian Astbury left for London in 1980 and – with Moira Fine - ran it as The People's Space. For them he directed work such as Sam Shepard’s Cowboy Mouth, David Hare’s Fanshen and Chris Barnard’s Die Rebellie van Lafras Verwey.
As actor
He acted in Female Transport (1975, Space Theatre) and his own play, The Mind Mirror (1975, Space Theatre).
As director
1971: Oedipus Rex (Imitha Players)
1975: The Miser (Imitha Players)
1976: The Sacrifice of Kreli (The Space Theatre)
1979: Matsemela Manaka’s Egoli (The Space Theatre)
1979: Dark Voices Ring and We Shall Sing for the Fatherland (co-directed with Nomhle Nkonyeni, People's Space)
1987: The Sacrifice of Kreli (co-directed with Makwedini Mtsaka, Market Theatre)
1989: The Road to Mecca (co-directed with Bo Petersen) for CAPAB , with Lida Meiring as “Helen Martins”.
1989: Dinner at the Monkey House (Utterly Splendid Productions)
As playwright
Some of the plays he wrote include:
- Baas Botha's Coming (1973)
- The Mind Mirror (1975)
- Not For The Deserving (1978)
- Gilette & Bertrand (a comedy with music, 2000)
- The Ecstatic Phantasmagoria of Doctor Fortunato
- The Eclipse (with Fatima Dike)
As pubisher
In 1972, Robert Mshengu Kavanagh and Amato started up a theatre and performance magazine which featured the non-segregated arts called S'ketsh'.
In 1977, he also founded the influential literary magazine, Speak, which unfortunately only existed for a few issues.
Awards
Sources
CAPAB Brochure, Aug-Nov 1989.
Sunday Independent, 29 July 2006.
Sunday Times, 30 July 2006.
Various entries in the NELM catalogue.
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