Difference between revisions of "Barry Ronge"

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==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
  
Ronge wrote about and commented on South African literature, theatre, dance, culture and film for over three decades.  He initially wrote as a free-lance journalist, later as a full time one at ''[[The Star]]'', e.g. as the first male journalist reporting for the "women’s page" (1980-1982) and the first editor of the entertainment supplement, ''[[The Star|The Star Tonight!]]'' and wrote a long-running column called ''Spit 'n Polish'' for the ''[[Sunday Times]]''. (He collated his musings as a book of the same title, whcih was publsihjed by [[Penguin Publishers]] in 2006.) In the late 1980s, he also did a stint as a food critic, writing under the pseudonym of [[Rebecca Parker]].
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Ronge wrote about and commented on South African literature, theatre, dance, culture and film for over three decades.  He initially wrote as a free-lance journalist, later as a full time one at ''[[The Star]]'', e.g. as the first male journalist reporting for the "women’s page" (1980-1982) and the first editor of the entertainment supplement, ''[[The Star|The Star Tonight!]]'' and wrote a long-running column called ''Spit 'n Polish'' for the ''[[Sunday Times]]''. (He collated his musings as a book of the same title, whcih was publsihjed by [[Penguin]] Publishers in 2006.) In the late 1980s, he also did a stint as a food critic, writing under the pseudonym of [[Rebecca Parker]].
  
 
He was also a well-known radio and TV personality, e.g. he had a Sunday-night radio show on [[Radio 702]] from 1989 to 2004, and participated on popular entertainment and magazine shows, which featured his insight into South African culture.  
 
He was also a well-known radio and TV personality, e.g. he had a Sunday-night radio show on [[Radio 702]] from 1989 to 2004, and participated on popular entertainment and magazine shows, which featured his insight into South African culture.  

Revision as of 07:47, 3 January 2023

Barry Ronge (1948?-2022) was a respected theatre and film reviewer, popular compére and columnist.

Biography

Born in Hillbrow, Johannesburg, he grew up on the West Rand, where he attended Florida Park High School.

He studied at the University of the Witwatersrand, completing a BA degree 1968 and a BA Hons degree in 1969. In 1970 he began a teaching career at St John’s College, after which he served as a lecturer in English literature at his alma mater for 10 years, before moving into journalism on a full-time basis.

Ronge passed away in Johannesburg on 3 July 2022, aged 74, survived by his partner of 45 years, Albertus van Dyk.

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

Ronge wrote about and commented on South African literature, theatre, dance, culture and film for over three decades. He initially wrote as a free-lance journalist, later as a full time one at The Star, e.g. as the first male journalist reporting for the "women’s page" (1980-1982) and the first editor of the entertainment supplement, The Star Tonight! and wrote a long-running column called Spit 'n Polish for the Sunday Times. (He collated his musings as a book of the same title, whcih was publsihjed by Penguin Publishers in 2006.) In the late 1980s, he also did a stint as a food critic, writing under the pseudonym of Rebecca Parker.

He was also a well-known radio and TV personality, e.g. he had a Sunday-night radio show on Radio 702 from 1989 to 2004, and participated on popular entertainment and magazine shows, which featured his insight into South African culture.

He often served as com[pere or public speaker. For example he delivered the 1978 André Huguenet Memorial Lecture at the Port Elizabeth Shakespearean Festival.

Ronge retired from public life in 2014 and dedicated himself to gardening.

Sources

University of the Witwatersrand, Alumni Relations: Obituaries 2022[1]

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