Difference between revisions of "A Worm in the Bud"
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2011: ''[[A Worm in the Bud]]'' performed [[Woordfees]] production directed by [[Gaerin Hauptfleisch]] with [[Stephanie Hough]] and [[Karolien van Zyl]]. | 2011: ''[[A Worm in the Bud]]'' performed [[Woordfees]] production directed by [[Gaerin Hauptfleisch]] with [[Stephanie Hough]] and [[Karolien van Zyl]]. | ||
− | 2014: ''[[Fever]]'' performed in London by Sian Clifford and Peta Cornish in June and July as part of South African Season at Jermyn Street Theatre. Directed by Anthony Biggs, designed by Victoria Johnstone and lighting design by Charlie Lucas. | + | 2014: ''[[Fever]]'' performed in London by Sian Clifford and Peta Cornish in June and July as part of the [[South African Season at Jermyn Street Theatre]]. Directed by Anthony Biggs, designed by Victoria Johnstone and lighting design by Charlie Lucas. |
== Sources == | == Sources == |
Revision as of 11:29, 22 March 2019
A Worm in the Bud is a play by Reza de Wet (1952-2012).
Also known as Fever
Contents
The original text
Written in 1988, it is cast in the form of a public lecture and utilising a correspondence between two sisters to explore an Englishwoman’s emotional experiences as the wife of an Afrikaner man in the late 19th century. In the play the philanthropic adventurer Emma corresponds with her sister Katy back in England, who learns the full and terrible extent of her sister's yearning and isolation when she discovers her sister's hidden diary.
First published in 1995 as A Worm in the Bud in the collection Open Space: Six Contemporary Plays from Africa edited by Yvette Hutchison and Kole Omotoso (Cape Town: Kagiso Publishers).
Translations and adaptations
At a later point in her career, De Wet reworked A Worm in the Bud, calling the new play Fever. In this version Emma Burnett is described more sympathetically by expanding her sister Katy's story to engage with the Victorian attitudes they had grown up with. Fever was subsequently published along with a contrasting play, Concealment, in the collection De Wet: Two Plays by Oberon Books in the series Oberon Modern Playwrights (2007).
Performance history
1990: A Worm in the Bud staged by PACT in the Windybrow Theatre, Johannesburg and the Momentum Theatre, Pretoria, directed by Denys Webb, with Embeth Davidtz (Emma) and Michelle Scott (Katy).
1991: A Worm in the Bud presented at the National Arts Festival Fringe under the direction of Denys Webb, starring Michelle Constant and Edwina Sherridan-Smith.
1996: Scenes from A Worm in the Bud were performed by seven final year University of Stellenbosch drama students in the Kellerteater at the University, directed by lecturer Shirley Johnston, with a cast including Paul du Toit, Angerie van Wyk, Martelize Kolver, Leanna Dreyer, Nicole Holm , Amelda Brand and Nico Dreyer. Set design and lighting by Kobus Rossouw. In a rare exchange, the production was also performed for and debated by the UCT drama staff and students, in the Drama Department of the University of Cape Town.
1998: A Worm in the Bud presented by the University of Stellenbosch Drama Department in the Kellerteater, 22-25 April, directed by Molly Mohr, starring Ruth Lavelle and Stephanie Hough.
2010: Various productions of Fever done at one act play festivals in the south of England.
2011: A Worm in the Bud performed Woordfees production directed by Gaerin Hauptfleisch with Stephanie Hough and Karolien van Zyl.
2014: Fever performed in London by Sian Clifford and Peta Cornish in June and July as part of the South African Season at Jermyn Street Theatre. Directed by Anthony Biggs, designed by Victoria Johnstone and lighting design by Charlie Lucas.
Sources
Pretoria News, 14 March 1990.
PACT theatre programme, 1990.
Yvette Hutchison and Kole Omotoso. 1995. Open Space: Six Contemporary Plays from Africa. Cape Town: Kagiso Publishers.
Petru & Carel Trichardt theatre programme collection.
Anton Krueger. 2009. Experiments in Freedom: Explorations of Identity in New South African Drama. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.[1]
Danie Stander. 2017. "Reza de Wet – Haar Lewe en Werke", In: Programme for KKNK Festival, 2017[2]
Gordon Dickerson. 2018. Personal correspondence with Temple Hauptfleisch.
https://www.amazon.com/Reza-Wet-Concealment-Oberon-Playwrights-ebook/dp/B01JMBPTU8
Marianne Gray. 2014. "Review: ‘Fever’ (Part of South African Season at Jermyn Street Theatre)" in The South African 2014-06-30[3]
Go to ESAT Bibliography
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