Difference between revisions of "Skrapnel"
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
=''[[Skrapnel]]'' by [[Hannes Spangenberg]] (2008)= | =''[[Skrapnel]]'' by [[Hannes Spangenberg]] (2008)= | ||
− | In 2022 a prompt copy and Stage Manager's file for a text called ''[[Skrapnel]]'' by [[Hannes Spangenberg]] was accidentally discovered in the archives of the [[Stellenbosch Drama Department]], apparently one used by the stage manager ([[Naomi Slabber]]) in what appears to have been an earlier (preliminary? workshopped?) Stellenbosch student production/exercise. This text differs considerably from the later published version, containing 9 characters (instead of the three in the final text) for example, with metaphoric names like "Kenner", "Nuwe", "Diener", "Orde", "Chaos", etc. There is also a sound disc dated 1995. Was this early piece done in 1995? | + | In 2022 a prompt copy and Stage Manager's file for a text called ''[[Skrapnel]]'' by [[Hannes Spangenberg]] was accidentally discovered in the archives of the [[Stellenbosch Drama Department]], apparently one used by the stage manager ([[Naomi Slabber]]) in what appears to have been an earlier (preliminary? workshopped?) Stellenbosch student production/exercise. This text differs considerably from the later published version, containing 9 characters (instead of the three in the final text) for example, with metaphoric names like "Kenner", "Nuwe", "Diener", "Orde", "Chaos", etc. There is also a sound disc dated 1995. Was this early piece done in 1995? |
=''[[Skrapnel]]'' by [[Willem Anker]] (2009)= | =''[[Skrapnel]]'' by [[Willem Anker]] (2009)= |
Revision as of 05:07, 29 November 2022
Skrapnel ("Shrapnel") is the name of two Afrikaans plays.
Contents
Skrapnel by Hannes Spangenberg (2008)
In 2022 a prompt copy and Stage Manager's file for a text called Skrapnel by Hannes Spangenberg was accidentally discovered in the archives of the Stellenbosch Drama Department, apparently one used by the stage manager (Naomi Slabber) in what appears to have been an earlier (preliminary? workshopped?) Stellenbosch student production/exercise. This text differs considerably from the later published version, containing 9 characters (instead of the three in the final text) for example, with metaphoric names like "Kenner", "Nuwe", "Diener", "Orde", "Chaos", etc. There is also a sound disc dated 1995. Was this early piece done in 1995?
Skrapnel by Willem Anker (2009)
The original text
A play about two young South Africans in London: a girls working as a carer for old people and a man working as a security guard at a shopping centre. They meet in a youth hostel and become involved. On 7 Jul7 2005 the man dies in a suicide bombing in the London Underground. The play begins shortly after the attack, and their story is told in flashbacks, that include insights into the religiuous fundamentalism of the yough Moslem suicide bomber, and the unfocussed and uncertain lives of the two young South Africans regarding identity, beliefand culture.
The play was first performed in Potchefstroom in 2009 and published by Protea Boekhuis in 2011.
Translations and adaptations
Performance history in South Africa
2009: First presented at the Aardklop festival in Potchefstroom, directed and designed by Jaco Bouwer, with lighting design by Michael Maxwell and sound design by Braam du Toit. The cast consisted of Marcel van Heerden, Andrew Thompson and Jenine Groenewald.
2010: The same production was presented at the Woordfees in Stellenbosch on 4 and 6 March and at the National Arts Festival in July.
2019: Performed by VNA Productions for the South African State Theatre's school set works program.
Sources
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/27759376-skrapnel
Weekend Post 20 June 2010.
https://journals.co.za/doi/pdf/10.4314/tvl.v49i1.27
http://news.artsmart.co.za/2010/06/naf-skrapnel.html
http://stellenboschwriters.com/trofees.pdf
The stage manager Naomi Slabber's prompt copy for a teks called Skrapnel, found in the archives of the Stellenbosch Drama Department in 2022.
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