Difference between revisions of "Auditioning Angels"
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
''[[Business Day]]'', 2 & 11 July 2003. | ''[[Business Day]]'', 2 & 11 July 2003. | ||
− | '' | + | ''The Citizen'', 3 & 14 July 2003. |
''[[Sunday Independent]]'', 13 July 2003. | ''[[Sunday Independent]]'', 13 July 2003. |
Revision as of 10:52, 11 May 2017
Auditioning Angels is a 2003 play by Pieter-Dirk Uys, his first scripted play since 1991.
Contents
Subject
When a liberal white middle-class single mother’s eight-year old daughter is raped by their gardener who is HIV positive, she takes the child to hospital to be treated and tested. She believes so passionately in the promise of the new South Africa that she takes her daughter to a government hospital rather than a private one. She is joined there by her father, an ANC struggle veteran who now lives comfortably in Britain and her brother who fought for the apartheid regime in Angola and is now planning to emigrate to Australia. The vast hospital is chaotic, dysfunctional, poorly equipped, understocked and understaffed, but the family are reassured by a pragmatic, saintly black nurse whose matronly calling it is to nurture, comfort and care for a ward full of abandoned and mostly dying AIDS babies. [Van Heerden (2008)][1]. p 187.
Performance history
In South Africa
Premièred at the Grahamstown Festival on 27 June 2003, produced by Pieter Toerien Productions and directed by Blaise Koch, with Thoko Ntshinga, Jo da Silva, Nandi Nyembe, Paul du Toit, and Clive Scott. This production opened the new Pieter Toerien's Studio at Montecasino, Johannesburg, in July 2003 and moved to the Theatre on the Bay in Cape Town in August 2003.
Outside of South Africa
Staged at the La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club (La MaMa E.T.C.) [2], New York City, in October 2007, directed by George Ferencz, with Jenne Vath, Peter McCabe, Sheila Dabney, Sonja Perryman and Will Rhys.
Translations and adaptations
Sources
The Star, 1 & 3 July 2003.
Business Day, 2 & 11 July 2003.
The Citizen, 3 & 14 July 2003.
Sunday Independent, 13 July 2003.
The Cape Times, 19 August 2003.
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