Difference between revisions of "Dimpho di Kopane"

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Also found as '''[[Dimpho di Kopane Lyric Theatre Company]]''' or referred to by its acronym, '''[[DDK]]'''
 
Also found as '''[[Dimpho di Kopane Lyric Theatre Company]]''' or referred to by its acronym, '''[[DDK]]'''
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Originally known as [[South African Academy of the Performing Arts]].
  
 
==The company==
 
==The company==

Revision as of 19:02, 26 February 2025

Dimpho di Kopane is a South African theatre cooperative.

Also found as Dimpho di Kopane Lyric Theatre Company or referred to by its acronym, DDK

Originally known as South African Academy of the Performing Arts.

The company

In 1999, Charles Hazlewood and Mark Dornford-May were invited to create a new opera company in Cape Town. After auditioning in the townships and villages of South Africa, the mostly black lyric-theatre company DDK (Dimpho di Kopane – Sotho for “combined talents”) was formed in 2000. Of the 40 members chosen then, only three had professional training as opera singers.

In January 2001, the company made its debut with Bizet’s Carmen (as U-Carmen) at the Spier Amphitheatre, Stellenbosch. They later also co-produced the film version, U-Carmen eKhayelitsha (as Spier Films).

The produced a South Africanised production of The Beggar's Opera in Cape Town and London in 2002.

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimpho_di_Kopane

https://www.charleshazlewood.com/ucarmen

Ivan Meredith. 2006. 'Opera in South Africa during the first democratic decade'. Unpublished Masters thesis. University of Cape Town.

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