Difference between revisions of "National Documentation Centre for the Performing Arts"

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Founded as part of the [[Institute for Languages, Literature and Arts]] at the [[Human Sciences Research Council]], Pretoria in 1971 by [[P.J. Nienaber]] and [[P.P.B. Breytenbach]]  as an archive of documents relating to theatre and performance in South Africa it was originally housed in the SAAU Building on the corner of Andries and Schoeman Streets, Pretoria. In 1973 [[Rinie Stead]] became head of the centre, with Mr Breytenbach as honorary curator, while Nienaber left the HSRC to found a literary museum in Bloemfontein ([[NALN]]).   
 
Founded as part of the [[Institute for Languages, Literature and Arts]] at the [[Human Sciences Research Council]], Pretoria in 1971 by [[P.J. Nienaber]] and [[P.P.B. Breytenbach]]  as an archive of documents relating to theatre and performance in South Africa it was originally housed in the SAAU Building on the corner of Andries and Schoeman Streets, Pretoria. In 1973 [[Rinie Stead]] became head of the centre, with Mr Breytenbach as honorary curator, while Nienaber left the HSRC to found a literary museum in Bloemfontein ([[NALN]]).   
  
The archival staff at that stage included [[Rosalie Botha]], Coetser, [[Wilma Viljoen]] and [[Joey Fourie]].  
+
The archival staff at that stage included [[Rosalie Botha]], [[Lina Coetser]], [[Wilma Viljoen]] and [[Joey Fourie]].  
  
 
In the mid 1970s the Institute and its various documentation centres moved to the President Centre, President Arcade, Pretoria.
 
In the mid 1970s the Institute and its various documentation centres moved to the President Centre, President Arcade, Pretoria.

Revision as of 09:31, 18 August 2023

Origins and structure

Founded as part of the Institute for Languages, Literature and Arts at the Human Sciences Research Council, Pretoria in 1971 by P.J. Nienaber and P.P.B. Breytenbach as an archive of documents relating to theatre and performance in South Africa it was originally housed in the SAAU Building on the corner of Andries and Schoeman Streets, Pretoria. In 1973 Rinie Stead became head of the centre, with Mr Breytenbach as honorary curator, while Nienaber left the HSRC to found a literary museum in Bloemfontein (NALN).

The archival staff at that stage included Rosalie Botha, Lina Coetser, Wilma Viljoen and Joey Fourie.

In the mid 1970s the Institute and its various documentation centres moved to the President Centre, President Arcade, Pretoria.

On Rinie Stead's retirement in 1979, the HSRC appointed Temple Hauptfleisch as head and the centre with the commission to change the focus slightly, in order to include active theatre research as part of its mandate. The name, was changed to the Centre for South African Theatre Research (CESAT) at that time. Astrid Schuler was appointed as curator of the archive shortly afterwards. as

The material

The core of the original theatre collection was Mr Breytenbach's own collection and the collection of documents from the National Theatre Organisation. Soon the collection encompassed numerous other collections of performers, directors and managements. The Centre also published a series of Source Books on Drama, Dance and Musical Theatre?* in South Africa between 1972?* and 19**. Close links were maintained over the years with the National English Literary Museum (NELM) in Grahamstown and the Nasionale Afrikaanse Letterkundige Museum en Dokumentasiesentrum (NALN) in Bloemfontein, both of which had developed out of the original HSRC Documentation centres and have in their turn also amassed substantial holdings of theatre materials over the years.

Sources

For more information

See also related institutions such as the Institute for Languages, Literature and Arts, national Documentation Centre for Afrikaans Literature Centre for South African Theatre Research, the National English Literary Museum and the Nasionale Afrikaanse Letterkundige Museum en Dokumentasiesentrum)

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