Difference between revisions of "Die Breytenbach Sentrum"
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=[[Die Breytenbach Sentrum]], Pretoria= | =[[Die Breytenbach Sentrum]], Pretoria= | ||
+ | [[Die Breytenbach Sentrum]] (or The [[Breytenbach Centre]]) was the name at one time used to refer to the complex which housed the original [[Breytenbach Theatre]] in Pretoria. Named after [[P.P.B. Breytenbach]], the first director of the [[National Theatre Organisation]] (NTO), this facility was - or almost three decades - a crucial venue in the evolution of South African theatre. | ||
+ | <big>'''See [[The Breytenbach Theatre]]'''</big> | ||
=[[Die Breytenbach Sentrum]], Wellington= | =[[Die Breytenbach Sentrum]], Wellington= | ||
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A book discussion group organized by ==Die Breytenbach Sentrum]]== | A book discussion group organized by ==Die Breytenbach Sentrum]]== | ||
− | + | = Sources = | |
http://www.breytenbachsentrum.co.za/ | http://www.breytenbachsentrum.co.za/ | ||
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Go to [[ESAT Bibliography]] | Go to [[ESAT Bibliography]] | ||
− | + | = Return to = | |
Return to [[ESAT Venues B]] | Return to [[ESAT Venues B]] |
Latest revision as of 07:32, 3 May 2019
There have been two venues by this name:
Contents
Die Breytenbach Sentrum, Pretoria
Die Breytenbach Sentrum (or The Breytenbach Centre) was the name at one time used to refer to the complex which housed the original Breytenbach Theatre in Pretoria. Named after P.P.B. Breytenbach, the first director of the National Theatre Organisation (NTO), this facility was - or almost three decades - a crucial venue in the evolution of South African theatre.
Die Breytenbach Sentrum, Wellington
Officially known in Afrikaans as Die Breytenbach Sentrum (the Breytenbach Centre in English) is today home to a multicultural cultural centre, providing training in and exposure to fine arts, music, drama and literature.
The buildings used for the Centre, at 14 Burger Street in the Western Cape town of Wellington, were once home to the well-known Breytenbach family, including painter, poet and playwright Breyten Breytenbach, military officer and author of military books, Jan Breytenbach, and photographer Cloete Breytenbach, and was named after the family.
The first renovations to the buildings were completed in early 2007 and the Centre was officially opened on 26 February 2007. A second restoration initiative was launched in 2019.
The Centre now also includes an art gallery (the Breytenbach Galery), a theatre venue (the Bôrdienghuis Teaterkafee) and a bookshop (The Book Traders)
For more information (in Afrikaans) go to the Centre's website at http://www.breytenbachsentrum.co.za/.
The venues in the Centre
The Bôrdienghuis Teaterkafee
The Bôrdienghuis Teaterkafee ("boarding house theatre café") is an intimate venue at the Breytenbach Sentrum and offers regular performances, ranging from music to cabaret and drama. Die venue is also rented out for weddings, birthday celebrations, small conferences and product launches. Several book-launches have taken place in the venue over the years.
The Book Traders
The bookshop had been an independent bookshop in Wellington for 6 years before it was incorporated into the Breytenbach Centre in 2008.
Selling fiction and non-fiction, both second-hand and new, it has five rooms filled with a wide variety of genres, including an extensive children's section. Today it also hosts an Africana room.
The Breytenbach Boekklub
A book discussion group organized by ==Die Breytenbach Sentrum]]==
Sources
http://www.breytenbachsentrum.co.za/
Go to ESAT Bibliography
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