Difference between revisions of "Dié kant dáái kant"

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(Created page with "("This Side, That Side" - Afrikaans) by Melvin Whitebooi. A play about murder, rape, alcohol abuse and suicide that is ascribed to the Apartheid regime/ According to Braaf...")
 
 
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("This Side, That Side" - Afrikaans) by [[Melvin Whitebooi]]. A play about murder, rape, alcohol abuse and suicide that is ascribed to the Apartheid regime/ According to Braaf: A play about the divisions in the black sports organisations, with the outspoken anti-apartheid body SACOS on the one side, and the more moderate and flexible SA Sports Federation on the other
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("This Side, That Side" - Afrikaans) by [[Melvin Whitebooi]]. A play about the divisions in the black sports organisations in the 1980s, with the outspoken anti-apartheid body SACOS on the one side, and the more moderate and flexible SA Sports Federation on the other).   
 
 
First performed by [[Cape Flats Players]] in 1984,  then again at the [[Kellerprinz Dramafees]] in 1986.   
 
  
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First performed by [[Cape Flats Players]] in 1984 in the [[Baxter Theatre|Baxter Studio]], starring [[Ivan Sylvester]], [[Sandra Braaf]], [[Colleen Cupido]], [[Peter Braaf]], [[Paul Cookson]], [[Bertram Adams]] and [[Phlancia Adams]], then again at the [[Kellerprinz Dramafees]] in 1986. 
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
  
  
[[Melvin Whitebooi]] An obituary by [[Peter Braaf]] in [[Tydskrif vir Letterkunde]] 49 (1) 2012
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[[Melvin Whitebooi]] An obituary by [[Peter Braaf]] in ''[[Tydskrif vir Letterkunde]]'', 49 (1) 2012.
  
  

Latest revision as of 08:46, 1 March 2017

("This Side, That Side" - Afrikaans) by Melvin Whitebooi. A play about the divisions in the black sports organisations in the 1980s, with the outspoken anti-apartheid body SACOS on the one side, and the more moderate and flexible SA Sports Federation on the other).

First performed by Cape Flats Players in 1984 in the Baxter Studio, starring Ivan Sylvester, Sandra Braaf, Colleen Cupido, Peter Braaf, Paul Cookson, Bertram Adams and Phlancia Adams, then again at the Kellerprinz Dramafees in 1986.

Sources

Melvin Whitebooi An obituary by Peter Braaf in Tydskrif vir Letterkunde, 49 (1) 2012.


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