Difference between revisions of "Bacchus in die Boland"
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== Original text == | == Original text == | ||
− | An extensively localized adaptation of the [[Euripides]]'s ''[[The Bacchae]]'', in | + | An extensively localized adaptation of the [[Euripides]]'s ''[[The Bacchae]]'', set in the Cape winelands (the "Boland") during the Apartheid years. In the play the autocratic (white) wine farmer and his ([[coloured]]) foreman switch roles under the influence of Bacchus (or Dionysos[]), the Greek god of the grape-harvest, winemaking and wine, fertility, ritual madness, religious ecstasy and theatre, who arrives on the farm to become a character in the play. |
Revision as of 16:57, 18 April 2020
Bacchus in die Boland ("Bacchus in the Boland") is a play by Bartho Smit (1924–1986).
Original text
An extensively localized adaptation of the Euripides's The Bacchae, set in the Cape winelands (the "Boland") during the Apartheid years. In the play the autocratic (white) wine farmer and his (coloured) foreman switch roles under the influence of Bacchus (or Dionysos[]), the Greek god of the grape-harvest, winemaking and wine, fertility, ritual madness, religious ecstasy and theatre, who arrives on the farm to become a character in the play.
A first production by CAPAB cancelled two days before opening in the Nico Malan Theatre on 11 April 1975, substituted with Faan se Trein (Fourie).
The text was published by Perskor in 1974.
Performance history in South Africa
1975: A first production by CAPAB cancelled two days before opening in the Nico Malan Theatre on 11 April 1975, substituted with Faan se Trein (Fourie).
1976: The first "coloured" version of it was done by EPAC in 1976, directed by Hannes Horne and featuring Paul Jacobs.
1978: Presented by Die Geselskap (The Company) at the Market Theatre, directed by Hannes Horne, from March to April.
Sources
Theatre programme (1978 production) held by NELM: [Collection: KORT, Maurice]: 2012. 379. 4. 3.
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