Difference between revisions of "Horn of Sorrow"
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==The original text== | ==The original text== | ||
− | An improvised play utilizing mime, mimetic sounds, dance, songs, storytelling and minimalist techniques to address the extinction of the white rhino. First performed at *1989, then toured the country. The performance text is contained in Volume Two of ''The Complete Plays of Nicholas Ellenbogen and Theatre for Africa'' (privately published by [[Theatre for Africa]]) and has been formally | + | An improvised play utilizing mime, mimetic sounds, dance, songs, storytelling and minimalist techniques to address the extinction of the white rhino. First performed at *1989, then toured the country. The performance text is contained in Volume Two of ''The Complete Plays of Nicholas Ellenbogen and Theatre for Africa'' (privately published by [[Theatre for Africa]]) and has been formally published in ''Plays for a New South Africa'' (Ed [[David Graver]]) by Indiana University Press in 1999. |
==Translations and adaptations== | ==Translations and adaptations== |
Revision as of 06:15, 6 October 2022
Horn of Sorrow is an ecological play by Nicholas Ellenbogen and Theatre for Africa.
Contents
The original text
An improvised play utilizing mime, mimetic sounds, dance, songs, storytelling and minimalist techniques to address the extinction of the white rhino. First performed at *1989, then toured the country. The performance text is contained in Volume Two of The Complete Plays of Nicholas Ellenbogen and Theatre for Africa (privately published by Theatre for Africa) and has been formally published in Plays for a New South Africa (Ed David Graver) by Indiana University Press in 1999.
Translations and adaptations
Translated into Afrikaans as Horing van Hartseer by Frans Swart and Christien Coetzee, and published by Theatre for Africa in Horing van Hartseer en Olifant van Afrika, a collection compiled for Western Cape schools, edited with notes by Anina Joubert.
Performance history in South Africa
Sources
Nicholas Ellenbogen. 2003. Horing van Hartseer en Olifant van Afrika. Theatre for Africa
Go to ESAT Bibliography
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