Difference between revisions of "Ek, Anna van Wyk"

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'''''Ek, Anna van Wyk''''' ("I, Anna van Wyk") is an [[Afrikaans]] play by [[Pieter Fourie]] (1940-).  
+
'''''Ek, Anna van Wyk''''' ("I, Anna van Wyk") is an [[Afrikaans]] play by [[Pieter Fourie]] (1940-2021).  
  
  
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A play about the disintegration of a marriage and a woman and a haunting exploration of the [[Afrikaner]] psyche, the play was technically was a significant move away from social realism towards a more expressionist mode of writing by the playwright. It is the first in what was to become a trilogy of plays about the [[Afrikaner]] by Fourie, together with ''[[Die Koggelaar]]'' and ''[[Donderdag se Mense]]'', which had a significant impact on the playwriting of the next generation of [[Afrikaans]] [[playmakers]].  
+
Like many of his plays, this was based on a real event and a real person, and it became a play about the disintegration of a marriage and the existential crisis of woman, in the process providing a haunting exploration of the core features of the broader [[Afrikaner]] psyche. Technically the play was a yet another move, even further away from the original social realism that characterizes Fourie's early days and the symbolic adaptations he introduced to his notion of [[volksteater]] in the 1970s,  to a far more theatrically expressionist mode of writing - yet rooted in the life of the rural [[Afrikaner]] throughout. It is the first in what was to become a trilogy of plays about the [[Afrikaner]] by Fourie, the others being ''[[Die Koggelaar]]'' and ''[[Donderdag se Mense]]'', which had a significant impact on the playwriting of the next generation of [[Afrikaans]] [[playmakers]].  
  
In 1993 Fourie wrote ''[[Post Mortem]]'' as a final piece ("sluitstuk") in what would thereafter become known as his quartet of "farm tragedies"  ("plaastragedies").
+
In 1993 Fourie also wrote ''[[Post Mortem]]'' as a final piece ("sluitstuk") in what would thereafter become known as his quartet of "farm tragedies"  ("plaastragedies").
  
 
First performed in  1984 and published by [[HAUM Literêr]] in 1986, the work became a standard prescribed work and was reprinted a number of times. A second, revised edition was published by [[Protea Boekhuis]] in 2002.
 
First performed in  1984 and published by [[HAUM Literêr]] in 1986, the work became a standard prescribed work and was reprinted a number of times. A second, revised edition was published by [[Protea Boekhuis]] in 2002.
Line 14: Line 14:
 
==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==
  
[[Marthinus Basson]] reworked the text into a singularly successful transgender version in 1999.  
+
[[Marthinus Basson]] reworked the text into a singularly successful transgender version in 1999 (see performances below).
  
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
  
1984: First performed to acclaim at the [[Kampustoneel]] Festival by students of the Drama Department of the [[University of Potchefstroom for CHE]], directed by *.
+
1984: First performed to acclaim at the [[Kampustoneel]] Festival by students of the Drama Department of the [[University of Potchefstroom for CHE]], directed by [[Peet van Rensburg]] with a cast that included [[Isabella Mostert|Isabel Mostert]] as "Anna", [[A.J. van der Merwe]] as "Senior" and [[Hannes Muller]] as his son.  
  
1984: The first professional production, featuring [[Petru Wessels]] as "Anna", created a furore, among other things for the prominent female nude scene.  
+
1984: Presented by [[CAPAB]] directed by [[Pieter Fourie]] at the [[H.B. Thom Theatre]], Stellenbosch, opening 1 November and at the [[Nico Malan Theatre]], opening 8 November 1984. The cast: [[Lida Meiring]] (Anna), [[Paul Lückhoff]], [[Louw Verwey]], [[André-Jacques van der Merwe]], [[Johan Esterhuizen]], [[Neels Coetzee]], [[Lynita Crofford]] and [[Chris Baatjies]]. Design by [[Dicky Longhurst]], lighting by [[Pieter de Swardt]].
  
1984: Presented by [[CAPAB]] directed by [[Pieter Fourie]] at the [[H.B. Thom Theatre]], Stellenbosch, opening 1 November 1984 and at the [[Nico Malan Theatre]], opening 8 November 1984. The cast: [[Lida Meiring]] (Anna), [[Paul Lückhoff]], [[Louw Verwey]], [[André-Jacques van der Merwe]], [[Johan Esterhuizen]], [[Neels Coetzee]], [[Lynita Crofford]] and [[Chris Baatjies]]. Design by [[Dicky Longhurst]], lighting by [[Pieter de Swardt]].
+
1985: Opening on 28 August at the [[Momentum Theatre]], presented by [[PACT]], directed by [[Dieter Reible]] starring [[Petru Wessels]] and [[Louw Verwey]]. Other members of the cast were [[Chris van Niekerk]], [[Kim de Beer]], [[Ilse van Hemert]], [[Eghard van der Hoven]], [[Schalk Schoombie]], [[Percy Pretorius]], [[Frans Kalp]], [[Dot Feldman]], [[Arthur Masekwameng]], [[Whinney-Isaiah Setimo]]. Designs and lighting by [[James MacNamara]] and [[Dieter Reible]]. The production created a furore, among other things for the prominent female nude scene.
 +
 
 +
1986: Staged by [[PACOFS]] at the [[André Huguenet Theatre]] 2-11 October, directed by [[Pierre van Pletzen]] assisted by [[Blaise Koch]], with [[Casper de Vries]], [[André-Jacques van der Merwe]], [[Hannes Muller]], [[Petru Wessels]], [[Gerrit Schoonhoven]], [[Pierre van Pletzen]], [[Michele Burgess]], [[Lulu Strachan]], [[Elzette Maarschalk]], [[Nico Luwes]] (as Die Stem), [[Johannes van Wyk]], [[Jakobus Minnie]], [[Blaise Koch]], [[Liz Botes]], [[Gert Campbell]], and [[Michael Davids]]. Decor design by [[Johan Badenhorst]], lighting design by [[Laddie Czerepowicz]], costume co-ordinator [[Josey Ferns]].
 +
 
 +
1988: Performing rights granted by [[DALRO]] to the [[A.F.T.O.M.]] for performances in Ladysmith during February.
 +
 
 +
1989: Performed by the [[Roodepoortse Uitvoerende Kunste Organisasie]] ([[Ruko]]) in the Roodepoort Theatre.
 +
 
 +
1994: Performing rights granted by [[DALRO]] to the [[Alphen Park High School]] for performances in Pretoria during June.
 +
 
 +
1996: Performing rights granted by [[DALRO]] to the [[Hoërskool Belville]] for performances in Belville during August.
 +
 
 +
1999: A transgender version of the play was produced collectively by [[PACOFS]], [[KKNK]], [[PACT]], [[CAPAB]] and [[The Playhouse]], directed and designed by [[Marthinus Basson]], toured the country. The cast included [[Antoinette Kellerman]], [[Dawid Minnaar]], [[Ben Kruger]], [[Jean Marais]], [[Nicola Hanekom]], [[Alyzzander Fourie]], [[Gabriël Campher]] and [[Brian Webber]]. Lighting by [[Bryan Mcneilage]]. [[Antoinette Kellermann|Kellerman]] won a [[Fleur du Cap Theatre Awards|Fleur du Cap]] Best Actress Award and [[Marthinus Basson|Basson]] a [[Fleur du Cap Theatre Awards|Fleur du Cap]] Award for Best Contribution to Stage Design for the production. This production It opened at the [[Momentum Theatre]], in the [[State Theatre Complex]], playing 5 to 31 July, then followed runs at the [[Sanlam Loft]] in Durban's [[The Playhouse]] (3 to 8 August), Bloemfontein's [[André Huguenet Theatre]] (12 to 14 and 18 to 21 August) and finally at the [[Nico Malan Theatre]] in Cape Town (26 August to 4 September).
 +
 
 +
2001: Performing rights granted by [[DALRO]] to the [[Cape Technikon]] for performances in Wellington during June.
 +
 
 +
2004: Performing rights granted by [[DALRO]] to the [[Alphen Park High School]] for performances in Pretoria during August.
 +
 
 +
2005: Performing rights granted by [[DALRO]] to the [[Cape Peninsula University of Technology]] for performances in Cape Town during March.
 +
 
 +
2006: Performing rights granted by [[DALRO]] to the [[Cape Peninsula University of Technology]] for performances in Cape Town during January and May.
  
1985: Opening on 28 August at the [[Momentum Theatre]], presented by [[TRUK]], directed by [[Dieter Reible]] starring [[Petru Wessels]] and [[Louw Verwey]]. Other members of the cast were [[Chris van Niekerk]], [[Kim de Beer]], [[Ilse van Hemert]], [[Eghard van der Hoven]], [[Schalk Schoombie]], [[Percy Pretorius]], [[Frans Kalp]], [[Dot Feldman]], [[Arthur Masekwameng]], [[Whinney-Isaiah Setimo]]. Designs and lighting by [[James MacNamara]] and [[Dieter Reible]].
 
  
1986: Staged by [[PACOFS]] at the [[André Huguenet Theatre]] 2-11 October, directed by [[Pierre van Pletzen]] assisted by [[Blaise Koch]], with [[Casper de Vries]], [[André-Jacques van der Merwe]], [[Hannes Muller]], [[Petru Wessels]], [[Gerrit Schoonhoven]], [[Pierre van Pletzen]], [[Michele Burgess]], [[Lulu Strachan]], [[Elzette Maarschalk]], [[Nico Luwes]] (as Die Stem), [[Johannes van Wyk]], [[Jakobus Minnie]], [[Blaise Koch]], [[Liz Botes]], [[Gert Campbell]], and [[Michael Davids]]. Decor design by [[Johan Badenhorst]], lighting design by [[Laddie Czerepowicz]], costume co-ordinator [[Josey Ferns]].
 
  
The play has often been produced since.  
+
2008: According to [[Nico Luwes]] (2012: p. 595) it was produced at the [[KKNK]] in April, directed by [[Marthinus Basson]], the production dedicated to [[Antoinette Kellerman]].  
  
1999: A transgender version of the play was produced collectively by [[PACOFS]], [[KKNK]], [[PACT]], [[CAPAB]] and [[The Playhouse]], directed and designed by [[Marthinus Basson]]. The cast included [[Antoinette Kellerman]], [[Dawid Minnaar]], [[Ben Kruger]], [[Jean Marais]], [[Nicola Hanekom]], [[Alyzzander Fourie]], [[Gabriël Campher]] and [[Brian Webber]]. Lighting by [[Bryan Mcneilage]]. [[Antoinette Kellermann|Kellerman]] won a [[Fleur du Cap Theatre Awards|Fleur du Cap]] Best Actress Award and [[Marthinus Basson|Basson]] a [[Fleur du Cap Theatre Awards|Fleur du Cap]] Award for Best Contribution to Stage Design for the production.  
+
2014: Performed May 28-30 in the [[Wynand Mouton Theatre]], Bloemfontein, directed by [[Nico Luwes]] with students from the Drama Department of the [[University of the Free State]].
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
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[[Nico Malan Theatre Centre]] pamphlet Aug-Nov 1999
 
[[Nico Malan Theatre Centre]] pamphlet Aug-Nov 1999
 +
 +
https://www.facebook.com/events/1411756822434546/?ref=22
 +
 +
Review by [[Jeanne Goosen]], ''[[Kwana]]'', 6-12 August 1999.
  
 
[[Petru Wessels|Petru]] & [[Carel Trichardt]] theatre programme collection.
 
[[Petru Wessels|Petru]] & [[Carel Trichardt]] theatre programme collection.
Line 48: Line 70:
 
[[Nico Luwes]] 2010. ''[[Pieter Fourie]] (1940-) se bydrae as Afrikaanse dramaturg en kunsbestuurder: 1965-2010''. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Bloemfontein: University of the Free State, pp.268-295 [http://etd.uovs.ac.za/ETD-db//theses/available/etd-08102012-152250/unrestricted/LuwesNJ.pdf]
 
[[Nico Luwes]] 2010. ''[[Pieter Fourie]] (1940-) se bydrae as Afrikaanse dramaturg en kunsbestuurder: 1965-2010''. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Bloemfontein: University of the Free State, pp.268-295 [http://etd.uovs.ac.za/ETD-db//theses/available/etd-08102012-152250/unrestricted/LuwesNJ.pdf]
  
Go to [[South African Theatre/Bibliography|ESAT Bibliography]]
+
Go to [[ESAT Bibliography]]
  
 
== Return to ==
 
== Return to ==
  
Return to [[ESAT Plays 1 E|E]] in Plays I Original SA Plays
+
Return to [[PLAYS I: Original SA plays]]
  
Return to [[South_African_Theatre/Plays]]
+
Return to [[PLAYS II: Foreign plays]]
 +
 
 +
Return to [[PLAYS III: Collections]]
 +
 
 +
Return to [[PLAYS IV: Pageants and public performances]]
 +
 
 +
Return to [[South_African_Festivals|South African Festivals and Competitions]]
  
 
Return to [[The ESAT Entries]]
 
Return to [[The ESAT Entries]]
 +
 +
Return to [[Main Page]]

Latest revision as of 17:33, 13 January 2023

Ek, Anna van Wyk ("I, Anna van Wyk") is an Afrikaans play by Pieter Fourie (1940-2021).


The original text

Like many of his plays, this was based on a real event and a real person, and it became a play about the disintegration of a marriage and the existential crisis of woman, in the process providing a haunting exploration of the core features of the broader Afrikaner psyche. Technically the play was a yet another move, even further away from the original social realism that characterizes Fourie's early days and the symbolic adaptations he introduced to his notion of volksteater in the 1970s, to a far more theatrically expressionist mode of writing - yet rooted in the life of the rural Afrikaner throughout. It is the first in what was to become a trilogy of plays about the Afrikaner by Fourie, the others being Die Koggelaar and Donderdag se Mense, which had a significant impact on the playwriting of the next generation of Afrikaans playmakers.

In 1993 Fourie also wrote Post Mortem as a final piece ("sluitstuk") in what would thereafter become known as his quartet of "farm tragedies" ("plaastragedies").

First performed in 1984 and published by HAUM Literêr in 1986, the work became a standard prescribed work and was reprinted a number of times. A second, revised edition was published by Protea Boekhuis in 2002.

Translations and adaptations

Marthinus Basson reworked the text into a singularly successful transgender version in 1999 (see performances below).

Performance history in South Africa

1984: First performed to acclaim at the Kampustoneel Festival by students of the Drama Department of the University of Potchefstroom for CHE, directed by Peet van Rensburg with a cast that included Isabel Mostert as "Anna", A.J. van der Merwe as "Senior" and Hannes Muller as his son.

1984: Presented by CAPAB directed by Pieter Fourie at the H.B. Thom Theatre, Stellenbosch, opening 1 November and at the Nico Malan Theatre, opening 8 November 1984. The cast: Lida Meiring (Anna), Paul Lückhoff, Louw Verwey, André-Jacques van der Merwe, Johan Esterhuizen, Neels Coetzee, Lynita Crofford and Chris Baatjies. Design by Dicky Longhurst, lighting by Pieter de Swardt.

1985: Opening on 28 August at the Momentum Theatre, presented by PACT, directed by Dieter Reible starring Petru Wessels and Louw Verwey. Other members of the cast were Chris van Niekerk, Kim de Beer, Ilse van Hemert, Eghard van der Hoven, Schalk Schoombie, Percy Pretorius, Frans Kalp, Dot Feldman, Arthur Masekwameng, Whinney-Isaiah Setimo. Designs and lighting by James MacNamara and Dieter Reible. The production created a furore, among other things for the prominent female nude scene.

1986: Staged by PACOFS at the André Huguenet Theatre 2-11 October, directed by Pierre van Pletzen assisted by Blaise Koch, with Casper de Vries, André-Jacques van der Merwe, Hannes Muller, Petru Wessels, Gerrit Schoonhoven, Pierre van Pletzen, Michele Burgess, Lulu Strachan, Elzette Maarschalk, Nico Luwes (as Die Stem), Johannes van Wyk, Jakobus Minnie, Blaise Koch, Liz Botes, Gert Campbell, and Michael Davids. Decor design by Johan Badenhorst, lighting design by Laddie Czerepowicz, costume co-ordinator Josey Ferns.

1988: Performing rights granted by DALRO to the A.F.T.O.M. for performances in Ladysmith during February.

1989: Performed by the Roodepoortse Uitvoerende Kunste Organisasie (Ruko) in the Roodepoort Theatre.

1994: Performing rights granted by DALRO to the Alphen Park High School for performances in Pretoria during June.

1996: Performing rights granted by DALRO to the Hoërskool Belville for performances in Belville during August.

1999: A transgender version of the play was produced collectively by PACOFS, KKNK, PACT, CAPAB and The Playhouse, directed and designed by Marthinus Basson, toured the country. The cast included Antoinette Kellerman, Dawid Minnaar, Ben Kruger, Jean Marais, Nicola Hanekom, Alyzzander Fourie, Gabriël Campher and Brian Webber. Lighting by Bryan Mcneilage. Kellerman won a Fleur du Cap Best Actress Award and Basson a Fleur du Cap Award for Best Contribution to Stage Design for the production. This production It opened at the Momentum Theatre, in the State Theatre Complex, playing 5 to 31 July, then followed runs at the Sanlam Loft in Durban's The Playhouse (3 to 8 August), Bloemfontein's André Huguenet Theatre (12 to 14 and 18 to 21 August) and finally at the Nico Malan Theatre in Cape Town (26 August to 4 September).

2001: Performing rights granted by DALRO to the Cape Technikon for performances in Wellington during June.

2004: Performing rights granted by DALRO to the Alphen Park High School for performances in Pretoria during August.

2005: Performing rights granted by DALRO to the Cape Peninsula University of Technology for performances in Cape Town during March.

2006: Performing rights granted by DALRO to the Cape Peninsula University of Technology for performances in Cape Town during January and May.


2008: According to Nico Luwes (2012: p. 595) it was produced at the KKNK in April, directed by Marthinus Basson, the production dedicated to Antoinette Kellerman.

2014: Performed May 28-30 in the Wynand Mouton Theatre, Bloemfontein, directed by Nico Luwes with students from the Drama Department of the University of the Free State.

Sources

CAPAB theatre programme, 1984.

PACT theatre programme, 1985.

PACOFS theatre programme, 1986.

PACOFS Drama 25 Years, 1963-1988

Nico Malan Theatre Centre pamphlet Aug-Nov 1999

https://www.facebook.com/events/1411756822434546/?ref=22

Review by Jeanne Goosen, Kwana, 6-12 August 1999.

Petru & Carel Trichardt theatre programme collection.

Nico Luwes 2010. Pieter Fourie (1940-) se bydrae as Afrikaanse dramaturg en kunsbestuurder: 1965-2010. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Bloemfontein: University of the Free State, pp.268-295 [1]

Go to ESAT Bibliography

Return to

Return to PLAYS I: Original SA plays

Return to PLAYS II: Foreign plays

Return to PLAYS III: Collections

Return to PLAYS IV: Pageants and public performances

Return to South African Festivals and Competitions

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page