Difference between revisions of "The Fugard"

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A 270-seat theatre named in honour of South African playwright [[Athol Fugard]] opened in 2010.
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[[The Fugard]]  (2010-2021) was a theatre venue in Cape Town named in honour of South African playwright [[Athol Fugard]]
  
See '''[[Fugard Theatre]]'''
+
(Also referred to as '''[[The Fugard Theatre]]''' by some sources.)
  
 +
==The building==
  
 +
A National Heritage Site today, it is located in the historic Sacks Futeran building in Cape Town’s District Six, a former textile and soft goods supplier in the early twentieth century, frequented by generations of [[District Six]] seamstresses and tailors. This is owned by and forms part of the [[District Six Museum]]'s Homecoming Centre and it has incorporated the renovated Congregational Church Hall in Caledon Street as its entrance.
  
== For more information ==
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Construction of [[The Fugard]] theatre was underwritten by its founding producer [[Eric Abraham]], and is named in honour of [[Athol Fugard]], South Africa's internationally renowned playwright and director. The architect was [[Shaun Adendorff]] of Rennie Scurr Adendorff, and care has been taken to preserve this [[National Heritage]] Site.  [[Eric Abraham|Abraham]] continued to underwrite the operational costs of the venue till its closure in 2021.
  
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== Management ==
  
See '''The Fugard''' website at http://www.thefugard.com/
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At the helm was South African born and UK based producer [[Eric Abraham]], who heads up '''Portobello Pictures''', an independent film, television and theatre production company with its head office in London. He became involved with theatre in South Africa again through his collaborations with  the [[Isango Portobello]] company, along with [[Mark Dornford-May]] en [[Pauline Malefane]].
and the '''Isango Portobello''' website at http://www.portobellopictures.com/Isango-Portobello
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 +
[[Mannie Manim]] joined '''The Fugard''' team on a full-time basis in January 2010 to work with [[Georgina Rae]] (General Manager), [[Shamila Rahim]] (theatre manager)  and the company in developing The Fugard and the local and international profile of the [[Isango Portobello]] Company. 
 +
 
 +
At the end of 2010 the relationship between Abraham and his partners in the [[Isango Portobello]] company deteriorated and the theatre manager and company were evicted. In January 2011 Manim also retired  and [[Daniel Galloway]] was appointed General Manager.
 +
 
 +
By 2015 the management team consisted of [[Eric Abraham]] (Founding and Executive Producer),
 +
[[Daniel Galloway]] (Executive Director), [[Stephen Sacks]] (Financial Director), [[Lamees Albertus]] (Theatre Manager and Associate Producer), [[Greg Karvellas]] (General Manager and Associate Producer), [[Ronel Botha]] (Financial Manager), [[Iris Bolton]] (Front of House Manager), [[Ingrid Stemmert]] (Box Office Manager) [[Benjamin du Plessis]] (Technical Manager), [[Roberto Grové]] (Production Manager), [[James Cooke]] (Graphic Designer), [[Elizabeth Ridgway]] (Office and Events Assistant) and [[Juanita van Wyk]] (Resident Stage Manager).
 +
 
 +
== Venues ==
 +
 
 +
===[[The Fugard Theatre]] ===
 +
 
 +
The main venue in the complex, the 335-seater [[Fugard Theatre]] is located within the historic Sacks Futeran building in Cape Town’s District Six, with the renovated Congregational Church Hall in Caledon Street as its entrance.
 +
 
 +
=== [[The Fugard Studio]] ===
 +
 +
A smaller rehearsal and performance space.
 +
 
 +
=== [[The Fugard Bioscope]] ===
 +
 
 +
In 2011 the main [[Fugard Theatre]] was fitted with state-of-the-art cinema equipment to transform the space into a fully functioning [[Bioscope]] (cinema) when required. Along with the annual ''World Cinema Season'' screenings and various in-house film festivals, the [[Fugard Bioscope]] is made available for corporate and private rental and has hosted several world premieres.
 +
 
 +
=== [[The Fugard Annexe]] ===
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 +
Opened in 2015 across the road from [[The Fugard]] ,  at 23 Harrington Street., this is intended as a multipurpose space suitable for corporate meetings and networking sessions, rehearsal space, film shoot base camps, studio space and pre show hospitality events.
 +
 
 +
== Productions ==
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2010: Opened 12 February 2010 with [[Isango Portobello]]'s ''[[The Magic Flute – Impempe Yomlingo]]''; followed by an opening season of ''[[The Mysteries – Yiimimangaliso]]'' and a world premiere on March 19 of [[Athol Fugard]]’s new play, especially written for the opening, ''[[The Train Driver]]'', directed by [[Athol Fugard]]; ''[[London Road]]''; ''[[Aesop's Fables]]''; ''[[Waiting for Godot]]''; ''[[As Die Broek Pas]]''/''[[Man to Man]]''; ''[[Pieter-Dirk Uys: F.A.K Songs and Other Struggle Anthems]]''; ''[[The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists]]''
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 +
2011: ''[[Die Kaptein se Tier]]''; ''[[Broken Glass]]''; ''[[The Bird Watchers]]''; ''[[Shakespeare’s R&J]]''; ''[[A Number]]''; ''[[Klaasvakie]]''
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2012: ''[[Statements After An Arrest Under The Immorality Act]]''; ''[[The Matrix of the Madrigal]]''; ''[[Kat and the Kings]]''; ''[[The Blue Iris]]'' (by [[Athol Fugard]], directed by [[Janice Honeyman]]); ''[[Trouble in Tahiti]]''; ''[[Santa’s Story]]''; ''[[Protest]]''; ''[[Heart/Attack]]''
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 +
2013: ''[[Die Laaste Karretjiegraf]]''; ''[[“Master Harold”…and the Boys]]''; ''[[Champ]]''; ''[[The Rocky Horror Show]]''; ''[[Vigil]]''; ''[[50 Shades of Bambi]]''; ''[[Bench]]''; ''[[Anticipating the Apocalypse]]''
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 +
2014: ''[[Playland]]''; ''[[Blood Brothers]]''; ''[[A Human Being Died That Night]]''; ''[[Same Time Next Year]]''; ''[[The Shadow of the Hummingbird]]'' ([[Fugard Theatre]]); ''[[Venus and Adonis]]''
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2015: ''[[Orpheus in Africa]]''; ''[[Cabaret]]''; ''[[The Pervert Laura]]''; ''[[West Side Story]]'' (in [[ArtsCape]]); ''[[Wie’s Bang vir Virginia Woolf]]''; ''[[Heart of Redness]]''; ''[[Bad Jews]]''
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 +
2016: ''[[District Six – Kanala]]''; ''[[The Kingmakers]]''; ''[[Kristal Vlakte]]''; ''[[I See You]]''; ''[[Dido and Aeneas]]''; ''[[A Voice I Cannot Silence]]''; ''[[Clybourne Park]]''; ''[[The Painted Rocks at Revolver Creek]]''; ''[[A Steady Rain]]''; ''[[The Father]]''
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 +
2017: ''[[The Mother]]''; ''[[So Ry Miss Daisy]]''; ''[[Funny Girl]]''; ''[[Hemelruim]]''; ''[[The Eulogists]]''; ''[[King Kong]]''; ''[[Shakespeare in Love]]''; ''[[Die Reuk Van Appels]]''; ''[[Moedertaal]]''
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2018: ''[[The Road to Mecca]]''; ''[[The Demon Bride]]''; ''[[Significant Other]]''; ''[[When In Doubt Say Darling]]''; ''[[Oleanna]]''; ''[[Afrique mon désir]]''; ''[[Langarm]]''
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 +
2019: ''[[Happy New Year]]''; ''[[Kunene and the King]]''; ''[[The Snow Goose]]''; ''[[Kinky Boots]]''; ''[[The Old Man and the Sea]]''; ''[[Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act]]'' ([[The Fugard Studio]]); ''[[Vaslav]]''
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 +
2020: ''[[“Master Harold”…and the Boys]]''; ''[[Shakespeare Schools Festival 2020]]''
 +
 
 +
== Fugard's plays at The Fugard==
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 +
South African premiéres of Fugard plays at the [[Fugard Theatre]], include:
 +
* ''[[The Train Driver]]'' (2010)
 +
* ''[[The Bird Watchers]]'' (2011)
 +
* ''[[The Blue Iris]]'' (2012)
 +
* ''[[Die Laaste Karretjiegraf]]'' (2013)
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* ''[[The Shadow of the Hummingbird]]'' (2014)
 +
 
 +
The venue also hosted the world premiéres of the [[Afrikaans]] versions of ''[[Die Kaptein se Tier]]'' (2011) and ''[[Playland]]'' (2014).
 +
 
 +
==Other facilities==
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 +
===''[[The Fugard Theatre Newsletter]]''===
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 +
A regular newsletter sent out to regular patrons by e-mail.
 +
 
 +
E-mail address: The Fugard Theatre <newsletter@thefugard.com>
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 +
 
 +
==Closure in March 2021==
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 +
After a year of closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic (2020-2021),  [[Eric Abraham]] announced on Tuesday 16 March, 2021, that [[The Fugard Theatre]] would close permanently with immediate effect. His announcement appeared on the theatre's website, saying: "We are not persuaded that it will be COVID safe or financially viable to reopen as a theatre in the foreseeable future. The theatre will be handed back to the owner of the freehold of the building – the board of [[The District 6 Museum]] – as a working theatre and we hope that they will be able to use it for the benefit of the Museum and the District 6 community".
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 +
 
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The theatre reopened in 2024 as '''[[The Homecoming Centre]]'''
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== Sources ==
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[[Mariana Malan]], Die [[Burger]],  23 November 2010),
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[[Cape Argus]]  (23 November 2010)
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[[Artslink]].co.za <news0115@artslink.co.za>
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Personal communication from [[Claire Taylor]], PR Liaison, [[The Fugard]] (19 May 2015).
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[[The Fugard]] website at http://www.thefugard.com/
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[[Isango Portobello]] website at http://www.portobellopictures.com/Isango-Portobello
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 +
''[[The Fugard|The Fugard Newsletter]]'', 8 August, 2019.
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 +
https://ewn.co.za/2021/03/17/cape-town-s-fugard-theatre-becomes-the-latest-covid-19-casualty
  
 
== Return to ==
 
== Return to ==

Latest revision as of 19:31, 15 December 2024

The Fugard (2010-2021) was a theatre venue in Cape Town named in honour of South African playwright Athol Fugard

(Also referred to as The Fugard Theatre by some sources.)

The building

A National Heritage Site today, it is located in the historic Sacks Futeran building in Cape Town’s District Six, a former textile and soft goods supplier in the early twentieth century, frequented by generations of District Six seamstresses and tailors. This is owned by and forms part of the District Six Museum's Homecoming Centre and it has incorporated the renovated Congregational Church Hall in Caledon Street as its entrance.

Construction of The Fugard theatre was underwritten by its founding producer Eric Abraham, and is named in honour of Athol Fugard, South Africa's internationally renowned playwright and director. The architect was Shaun Adendorff of Rennie Scurr Adendorff, and care has been taken to preserve this National Heritage Site. Abraham continued to underwrite the operational costs of the venue till its closure in 2021.

Management

At the helm was South African born and UK based producer Eric Abraham, who heads up Portobello Pictures, an independent film, television and theatre production company with its head office in London. He became involved with theatre in South Africa again through his collaborations with the Isango Portobello company, along with Mark Dornford-May en Pauline Malefane.

Mannie Manim joined The Fugard team on a full-time basis in January 2010 to work with Georgina Rae (General Manager), Shamila Rahim (theatre manager) and the company in developing The Fugard and the local and international profile of the Isango Portobello Company.

At the end of 2010 the relationship between Abraham and his partners in the Isango Portobello company deteriorated and the theatre manager and company were evicted. In January 2011 Manim also retired and Daniel Galloway was appointed General Manager.

By 2015 the management team consisted of Eric Abraham (Founding and Executive Producer), Daniel Galloway (Executive Director), Stephen Sacks (Financial Director), Lamees Albertus (Theatre Manager and Associate Producer), Greg Karvellas (General Manager and Associate Producer), Ronel Botha (Financial Manager), Iris Bolton (Front of House Manager), Ingrid Stemmert (Box Office Manager) Benjamin du Plessis (Technical Manager), Roberto Grové (Production Manager), James Cooke (Graphic Designer), Elizabeth Ridgway (Office and Events Assistant) and Juanita van Wyk (Resident Stage Manager).

Venues

The Fugard Theatre

The main venue in the complex, the 335-seater Fugard Theatre is located within the historic Sacks Futeran building in Cape Town’s District Six, with the renovated Congregational Church Hall in Caledon Street as its entrance.

The Fugard Studio

A smaller rehearsal and performance space.

The Fugard Bioscope

In 2011 the main Fugard Theatre was fitted with state-of-the-art cinema equipment to transform the space into a fully functioning Bioscope (cinema) when required. Along with the annual World Cinema Season screenings and various in-house film festivals, the Fugard Bioscope is made available for corporate and private rental and has hosted several world premieres.

The Fugard Annexe

Opened in 2015 across the road from The Fugard , at 23 Harrington Street., this is intended as a multipurpose space suitable for corporate meetings and networking sessions, rehearsal space, film shoot base camps, studio space and pre show hospitality events.

Productions

2010: Opened 12 February 2010 with Isango Portobello's The Magic Flute – Impempe Yomlingo; followed by an opening season of The Mysteries – Yiimimangaliso and a world premiere on March 19 of Athol Fugard’s new play, especially written for the opening, The Train Driver, directed by Athol Fugard; London Road; Aesop's Fables; Waiting for Godot; As Die Broek Pas/Man to Man; Pieter-Dirk Uys: F.A.K Songs and Other Struggle Anthems; The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists

2011: Die Kaptein se Tier; Broken Glass; The Bird Watchers; Shakespeare’s R&J; A Number; Klaasvakie

2012: Statements After An Arrest Under The Immorality Act; The Matrix of the Madrigal; Kat and the Kings; The Blue Iris (by Athol Fugard, directed by Janice Honeyman); Trouble in Tahiti; Santa’s Story; Protest; Heart/Attack

2013: Die Laaste Karretjiegraf; “Master Harold”…and the Boys; Champ; The Rocky Horror Show; Vigil; 50 Shades of Bambi; Bench; Anticipating the Apocalypse

2014: Playland; Blood Brothers; A Human Being Died That Night; Same Time Next Year; The Shadow of the Hummingbird (Fugard Theatre); Venus and Adonis

2015: Orpheus in Africa; Cabaret; The Pervert Laura; West Side Story (in ArtsCape); Wie’s Bang vir Virginia Woolf; Heart of Redness; Bad Jews

2016: District Six – Kanala; The Kingmakers; Kristal Vlakte; I See You; Dido and Aeneas; A Voice I Cannot Silence; Clybourne Park; The Painted Rocks at Revolver Creek; A Steady Rain; The Father

2017: The Mother; So Ry Miss Daisy; Funny Girl; Hemelruim; The Eulogists; King Kong; Shakespeare in Love; Die Reuk Van Appels; Moedertaal

2018: The Road to Mecca; The Demon Bride; Significant Other; When In Doubt Say Darling; Oleanna; Afrique mon désir; Langarm

2019: Happy New Year; Kunene and the King; The Snow Goose; Kinky Boots; The Old Man and the Sea; Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act (The Fugard Studio); Vaslav

2020: “Master Harold”…and the Boys; Shakespeare Schools Festival 2020

Fugard's plays at The Fugard

South African premiéres of Fugard plays at the Fugard Theatre, include:

The venue also hosted the world premiéres of the Afrikaans versions of Die Kaptein se Tier (2011) and Playland (2014).

Other facilities

The Fugard Theatre Newsletter

A regular newsletter sent out to regular patrons by e-mail.

E-mail address: The Fugard Theatre <newsletter@thefugard.com>


Closure in March 2021

After a year of closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic (2020-2021), Eric Abraham announced on Tuesday 16 March, 2021, that The Fugard Theatre would close permanently with immediate effect. His announcement appeared on the theatre's website, saying: "We are not persuaded that it will be COVID safe or financially viable to reopen as a theatre in the foreseeable future. The theatre will be handed back to the owner of the freehold of the building – the board of The District 6 Museum – as a working theatre and we hope that they will be able to use it for the benefit of the Museum and the District 6 community".


The theatre reopened in 2024 as The Homecoming Centre

Sources

Mariana Malan, Die Burger, 23 November 2010),

Cape Argus (23 November 2010)

Artslink.co.za <news0115@artslink.co.za>

Personal communication from Claire Taylor, PR Liaison, The Fugard (19 May 2015).

The Fugard website at http://www.thefugard.com/

Isango Portobello website at http://www.portobellopictures.com/Isango-Portobello

The Fugard Newsletter, 8 August, 2019.

https://ewn.co.za/2021/03/17/cape-town-s-fugard-theatre-becomes-the-latest-covid-19-casualty

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