Difference between revisions of "Equus"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(54 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
''Equus'' by Peter Schaffer. A powerful play about ***. First performed in ** by ** in 19**.
+
''[[Equus]]'' is a play by [[Peter Shaffer]](1926-2016)[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Shaffer].  
  
 +
== The original text ==
  
= South African productions =
 
  
 +
It is the story of Alan Strang, a stable boy whom a magistrate has sent to a busy, initially reluctant psychiatrist. The boy has been in court for putting out the eyes of five horses with a hoof-pick. The unfurling of the careful wrappings of the boy's mind is the essence of the play.
  
== Professional productions ==
+
 
 +
== Translations and adaptations ==
 +
 
 +
 
 +
With [[CAPAB]]'s new open racial policy it was at last possible for [[CAPAB]] and Toerien’s production company to obtain the rights to [[Peter Schaffer]]'s play and perform it in 1975, first in the [[Nico Malan Opera House]] and afterwards in the [[Nico Malan Theatre]], as well as the [[Johannesburg Civic Theatre]].
 +
 
 +
Shaffer adapted the play for a 1977 film starring Richard Burton, Peter Firth, Eileen Atkins, Colin Blakely, Joan Plowright, and Jenny Agutter, directed by Sidney Lumet.
 +
 
 +
Translated into [[Afrikaans]] by [[Evette Weyers]] in 1978.
 +
 
 +
== South African productions ==
 
   
 
   
First produced in South Africa by [[Pieter Toerien]]. Directed by [[Leonard Schach]] at the [[Nico Malan Opera House]], for the [[Pieter Toerien]] management in 1975. Schach had to meet with Publications Board about the nudity scene where the boy kills the horses. They objected to the boy's nudity, but not to the killing of the horses. Schach offered to compromise by lowering the lighting by a few degrees and the production went ahead. The production featured [[Dai Bradley]] and [[John Fraser]] as the psychiatrist, both of whom came from London to play the roles, alongside ;locals [[Robert Butler]] and the girl was played by ***. Performed at the [[Baxter Theatre]] in 1985 and again in 1991 and 1999 (with [[Sean Taylor]]).  
+
1975: First produced in South Africa by [[Pieter Toerien]]. Directed by [[Leonard Schach]] at the [[Nico Malan Opera House]], for the [[Pieter Toerien]] management in 1975. Schach had to meet with Publications Board about the nudity scene where the boy kills the horses. They objected to the boy's nudity, but not to the killing of the horses. Schach offered to compromise by lowering the lighting by a few degrees and the production went ahead. The production featured [[Dai Bradley]] and [[John Fraser]] as the psychiatrist, both of whom came from London to play the roles, alongside locals [[Robert Butler]], [[Kim Braden]], [[Anne Courtneidge]], [[Fiona Fraser]] as Hester, [[Michael Howard]] and [[Edwin van Wyk]]. Decor realised by [[Bill Smuts]]. This production was also staged in the [[Civic Theatre]], Bloemfontein and in the [[Civic Theatre]], and later [[His Majesty's Theatre]], Johannesburg.
 +
 
 +
1978: Staged in the [[Afrikaans]] translation by [[Die Geselskap]], directed by [[Mario Schiess]], featuring [[Marius Weyers]] (Martin Dysart), [[Jacques Malan]] (Alan Strang), [[Rika Sennett]] (Dora Strang), [[Abri le Roux]] (Frank Strang), [[Aletta Bezuidenhout]] (Hester Solomon), [[Bo Petersen]] (Jill Mason), [[Louw Odendaal]] (Harry Dalton), [[Marcel van Heerden]] (Nugget), [[Elize van Vuuren]] (Verpleegster) and others. Lighting by [[Mannie Manim]]. In Pretoria it was done at the Show Grounds theatre, as it was not allowed in any city theatre.  
  
 +
1982: The [[Afrikaans]] translation by [[Yvette Weyers]] was presented in the [[H.B. Thom Theatre]] by [[Universiteitsteater Stellenbosch]] in April, directed by [[Noël Roos]], with [[Johann van Heerden]] (Martin Dysart), [[Neels Engelbrecht]] (Alan Strang), [[Anton Smith]] (Frank Strang), [[Elzette Pretorius]]/[[Ilzebet Uys]] (Dora Strang), [[Isadora Verwey]] (Hester Salomon), [[Tossie van den Heever]]/[[Karen Usmar-Blake]] (Jill Mason & Verpleegster), [[Herman Pretorius]] (Harry Dalton), [[Albert Maritz]] (Ruiter & Nugget) and others.
  
== Translations ==
+
1985: Presented by [[Pieter Toerien]] at the [[Alhambra Theatre]] opening 10 August 1985 and at the [[Baxter Theatre]] in December 1985, directed by [[Rex Garner]] and [[Robert Whitehead]], starring New Zealand-born [[Darryl Forbes Dawson]], [[Jeremy Crutchley]] ("Alan Strang"), [[Christine le Brocq]], [[Joanna Palmer]], [[Norman Coombes]], [[Shelagh Holliday]], [[Paul Buckby]], [[Drummond Marais]], [[Merle Lifson]] and [[Robert Butler]]. Revived in 1991 and 1999 (the latter directed by [[Roy Sargeant]], with [[Sean Taylor]]).
  
 +
1988: Performed in [[Afrikaans]] (the translation by [[Yvette Weyers]]) by the [[University of Stellenbosch Drama Department]]. This was a fully nude student version of the play and was again directed by [[Noël Roos]], with [[Waldemar Schultz]] as Alan Strang, [[Perlé van Schalkwyk]] and [[Lin-y Kruger]] alternating as the girl and featuring [[Jannie Hofmeyr]] as the psychiatrist and [[Adri Aucamp]] as the mother.
  
 +
1990: Performed in the [[Afrikaans]] version by [[PACOFS]] with [[James van Helsdingen]], [[Blaise Koch]], [[Diane Olivier]], [[Hennie Baird]] and [[Ernst Eloff]]
  
An Afrikaans version of the play, translated by **,  was done by *** in 197*?, featuring **, ** and [[Bo Petersen]]. Also done in German in Windhoek by [[SWAPAC]] in 19*.
+
1990: Presented in Afrikaans by [[PEAAT]], with [[Noel Roos]].
  
== Student versions ==
+
1991: Presented by [[Pieter Toerien]] at the [[Alhambra Theatre]] opening 10 August 1985 and at the [[Baxter Theatre]] in December 1985, directed by [[Rex Garner]] and [[Robert Whitehead]], starring New Zealand-born [[Darryl Forbes Dawson]], [[Jeremy Crutchley]] ("Alan Strang"), [[Christine le Brocq]], [[Joanna Palmer]], [[Norman Coombes]], [[Shelagh Holliday]], [[Paul Buckby]], [[Drummond Marais]], [[Merle Lifson]] and [[Robert Butler]].
  
 +
1996: Presented by [[BAT]] at the [[KKNK]] Rimpelfees, 1996, directed by [[Tinus Meyer]].
  
In 1988/9?* the [[University of Stellenbosch Drama Department]] did a fully nude student version of the play, directed by [[Noel Roos]], with [[Waldemar Schultz]] as the boy, [[Perlé van Schalkwyk]] and Lené *** alternating as the girl, and featuring [[Jannie Hofmeyr]] as the psychiatrist. Done in 2013 by [[UJ Arts & Culture]], Directed by [[Alby Michaels]] at the [[Con Cowan Theatre]] at the University of Johannesburg April 2013. With [[Jeremy Richard]], [[Pieter Rossouw]] , [[Anton Dekker]],
+
1999: Performed at the [[Baxter Theatre]], directed by [[Roy Sargeant]] with [[Sean Taylor]], [[Christopher Duncan]], [[Ralph Lawson]], [[Terry Norton]], [[Lee-Ann van Rooi]].  
[[Lizelle de Klerk]], [[Isadora Verwey]] and [[Jonathan Taylor]].
 
  
= Sources =
+
2013: Performed by [[UJ Arts & Culture]] at the [[Con Cowan Theatre]] at the [[University of Johannesburg]] in April. Directed by [[Alby Michaels]], with [[Jeremy Richard]], [[Pieter Rossouw]], [[Anton Dekker]], [[Lizelle de Klerk]], [[Isadora Verwey]] and [[Jonathan Taylor]].
  
 +
== Sources ==
 +
 +
''Equus'' (play) in Wikipedia[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equus_(play)].
  
 
[[Artslink]][http://www.artlink.co.za/news_article.htm?contentID=32142]
 
[[Artslink]][http://www.artlink.co.za/news_article.htm?contentID=32142]
  
Go to [[South African Theatre/Bibliography]]
+
[[Mariana Malan]] 1999. "Ernstige teaterganger mag dié stuk nie misloop" ''[[Die Burger]]'' 22 December [http://m24arg02.naspers.com/argief/berigte/dieburger/1999/12/22/6/1.html]
 +
 
 +
[[Donald Inskip]], 1977. p 128.
 +
 
 +
[[UTS]] theatre programme, April 1982.
  
= Return to =
+
''[[The Argus]]'', Novenber 25 1985.
  
Return to [[ESAT Plays 1 B|B]] in Plays I Original SA Plays
+
[[Die Geselskap]] theatre programme (undated).
  
Return to [[ESAT Plays 2 B|B]] in Plays II Foreign Plays
+
[[Petru Wessels|Petru]] and [[Carel Trichardt]] theatre programme collection.
  
Return to [[ESAT Plays 3 B|B]] in Plays III  Collections
+
Photograph, [[NELM]] Collection: [[Performing Arts Council Orange Free State]] ([[PACOFS]]): 2009. 67. 1. 2. 11).
  
Return to [[ESAT Festivals  B|B]] in Plays  IV: Festivals and Pageants
+
[[Herman Lategan]]. 2016. "Shaffer se Dramas het SA beïnvloed" ''[[Rapport]]'' Weekliks 12 June, p. 2[http://www.netwerk24.com/Stemme/Profiele/n-lewe-shaffer-se-dramas-het-sa-beinvloed-20160612]
  
 +
Go to [[ESAT Bibliography]]
  
Return to [[South_African_Theatre/Plays]]
+
== Return to ==
  
Return to [[The ESAT Entries]]
+
Return to [[PLAYS I: Original SA plays]]
  
Return to [[Main Page]]
+
Return to [[PLAYS II: Foreign plays]]
  
 +
Return to [[PLAYS III: Collections]]
  
Return to [[ESAT Plays 1 E|E]] in Plays 1 Original SA Plays
+
Return to [[PLAYS IV: Pageants and public performances]]
  
Return to [[ESAT Plays 2 E|E]] in Plays 2 Foreign Plays
+
Return to [[South_African_Festivals|South African Festivals and Competitions]]
  
Return to [[South_African_Theatre/Plays]]
+
Return to [[The ESAT Entries]]
  
 
Return to [[Main Page]]
 
Return to [[Main Page]]

Latest revision as of 19:05, 31 July 2024

Equus is a play by Peter Shaffer(1926-2016)[1].

The original text

It is the story of Alan Strang, a stable boy whom a magistrate has sent to a busy, initially reluctant psychiatrist. The boy has been in court for putting out the eyes of five horses with a hoof-pick. The unfurling of the careful wrappings of the boy's mind is the essence of the play.


Translations and adaptations

With CAPAB's new open racial policy it was at last possible for CAPAB and Toerien’s production company to obtain the rights to Peter Schaffer's play and perform it in 1975, first in the Nico Malan Opera House and afterwards in the Nico Malan Theatre, as well as the Johannesburg Civic Theatre.

Shaffer adapted the play for a 1977 film starring Richard Burton, Peter Firth, Eileen Atkins, Colin Blakely, Joan Plowright, and Jenny Agutter, directed by Sidney Lumet.

Translated into Afrikaans by Evette Weyers in 1978.

South African productions

1975: First produced in South Africa by Pieter Toerien. Directed by Leonard Schach at the Nico Malan Opera House, for the Pieter Toerien management in 1975. Schach had to meet with Publications Board about the nudity scene where the boy kills the horses. They objected to the boy's nudity, but not to the killing of the horses. Schach offered to compromise by lowering the lighting by a few degrees and the production went ahead. The production featured Dai Bradley and John Fraser as the psychiatrist, both of whom came from London to play the roles, alongside locals Robert Butler, Kim Braden, Anne Courtneidge, Fiona Fraser as Hester, Michael Howard and Edwin van Wyk. Decor realised by Bill Smuts. This production was also staged in the Civic Theatre, Bloemfontein and in the Civic Theatre, and later His Majesty's Theatre, Johannesburg.

1978: Staged in the Afrikaans translation by Die Geselskap, directed by Mario Schiess, featuring Marius Weyers (Martin Dysart), Jacques Malan (Alan Strang), Rika Sennett (Dora Strang), Abri le Roux (Frank Strang), Aletta Bezuidenhout (Hester Solomon), Bo Petersen (Jill Mason), Louw Odendaal (Harry Dalton), Marcel van Heerden (Nugget), Elize van Vuuren (Verpleegster) and others. Lighting by Mannie Manim. In Pretoria it was done at the Show Grounds theatre, as it was not allowed in any city theatre.

1982: The Afrikaans translation by Yvette Weyers was presented in the H.B. Thom Theatre by Universiteitsteater Stellenbosch in April, directed by Noël Roos, with Johann van Heerden (Martin Dysart), Neels Engelbrecht (Alan Strang), Anton Smith (Frank Strang), Elzette Pretorius/Ilzebet Uys (Dora Strang), Isadora Verwey (Hester Salomon), Tossie van den Heever/Karen Usmar-Blake (Jill Mason & Verpleegster), Herman Pretorius (Harry Dalton), Albert Maritz (Ruiter & Nugget) and others.

1985: Presented by Pieter Toerien at the Alhambra Theatre opening 10 August 1985 and at the Baxter Theatre in December 1985, directed by Rex Garner and Robert Whitehead, starring New Zealand-born Darryl Forbes Dawson, Jeremy Crutchley ("Alan Strang"), Christine le Brocq, Joanna Palmer, Norman Coombes, Shelagh Holliday, Paul Buckby, Drummond Marais, Merle Lifson and Robert Butler. Revived in 1991 and 1999 (the latter directed by Roy Sargeant, with Sean Taylor).

1988: Performed in Afrikaans (the translation by Yvette Weyers) by the University of Stellenbosch Drama Department. This was a fully nude student version of the play and was again directed by Noël Roos, with Waldemar Schultz as Alan Strang, Perlé van Schalkwyk and Lin-y Kruger alternating as the girl and featuring Jannie Hofmeyr as the psychiatrist and Adri Aucamp as the mother.

1990: Performed in the Afrikaans version by PACOFS with James van Helsdingen, Blaise Koch, Diane Olivier, Hennie Baird and Ernst Eloff

1990: Presented in Afrikaans by PEAAT, with Noel Roos.

1991: Presented by Pieter Toerien at the Alhambra Theatre opening 10 August 1985 and at the Baxter Theatre in December 1985, directed by Rex Garner and Robert Whitehead, starring New Zealand-born Darryl Forbes Dawson, Jeremy Crutchley ("Alan Strang"), Christine le Brocq, Joanna Palmer, Norman Coombes, Shelagh Holliday, Paul Buckby, Drummond Marais, Merle Lifson and Robert Butler.

1996: Presented by BAT at the KKNK Rimpelfees, 1996, directed by Tinus Meyer.

1999: Performed at the Baxter Theatre, directed by Roy Sargeant with Sean Taylor, Christopher Duncan, Ralph Lawson, Terry Norton, Lee-Ann van Rooi.

2013: Performed by UJ Arts & Culture at the Con Cowan Theatre at the University of Johannesburg in April. Directed by Alby Michaels, with Jeremy Richard, Pieter Rossouw, Anton Dekker, Lizelle de Klerk, Isadora Verwey and Jonathan Taylor.

Sources

Equus (play) in Wikipedia[2].

Artslink[3]

Mariana Malan 1999. "Ernstige teaterganger mag dié stuk nie misloop" Die Burger 22 December [4]

Donald Inskip, 1977. p 128.

UTS theatre programme, April 1982.

The Argus, Novenber 25 1985.

Die Geselskap theatre programme (undated).

Petru and Carel Trichardt theatre programme collection.

Photograph, NELM Collection: Performing Arts Council Orange Free State (PACOFS): 2009. 67. 1. 2. 11).

Herman Lategan. 2016. "Shaffer se Dramas het SA beïnvloed" Rapport Weekliks 12 June, p. 2[5]

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