Difference between revisions of "Phyllis Konya"

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She met and married the architect [[Sandor Konya]] in Cape Town in 1928. Later they moved to Pretoria where she became a long time reviewer and later arts editor for the ''[[Pretoria News]]''
 
She met and married the architect [[Sandor Konya]] in Cape Town in 1928. Later they moved to Pretoria where she became a long time reviewer and later arts editor for the ''[[Pretoria News]]''
  
Writing under her maiden name of [[Phyllis Juby]], she published some books based on their travels in the East, including ''Chinese Fairy Tales'' (Newspaper Enterprise, 1934), ''Chinese Poetry. With An Essay'' ([[J. L. van Schaik]], Ltd, 1943
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Writing under her maiden name of [[Phyllis Juby]], she published some books based on their travels in the East, including ''Chinese Fairy Tales'' (Newspaper Enterprise, 1934), ''Chinese Poetry. With An Essay'' ([[J.L. van Schaik]], Ltd, 1943
  
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==

Revision as of 06:48, 4 October 2022

Phyllis Konya (19*-) was an arts journalist, reviewer and theatre historian.

Biography

Born Phyllis Juby (or found as Phyllis Jubyh in some sources),

She met and married the architect Sandor Konya in Cape Town in 1928. Later they moved to Pretoria where she became a long time reviewer and later arts editor for the Pretoria News

Writing under her maiden name of Phyllis Juby, she published some books based on their travels in the East, including Chinese Fairy Tales (Newspaper Enterprise, 1934), Chinese Poetry. With An Essay (J.L. van Schaik, Ltd, 1943

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

In 1980s she was sponsored by DALRO to write the history of FATSSA and amateur theatre. While this was not ever published, there is a manuscript in the National Archives (former CESAT Holdings). NELM also holds a copy of this work (When the Amateurs Stole the Show: the story of FATSSA: the Federation of Amateur Theatrical Societies of Southern Africa [1938]). She did publish an article on FATSSA for a book in honour of P.P.B. Breytenbach (The Breytie Book, edited by Temple Hauptfleisch, 1985).

Sources

https://www.artefacts.co.za/main/Buildings/archframes.php?archid=910&countadd=1

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