Difference between revisions of "Die Laaste Middagmaal"

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==The original text==
 
==The original text==
  
It is a play about lunch in an Afrikaner household, exploring the family complications that result from one child transgressing the [[immorality act]].  
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It is a play about lunch in an Afrikaner household, exploring the family complications that result from one child transgressing the South African [[Immorality Act]].  
  
 
Originally written as a one act play, it was the joint winner of a one-act play competition organised for the [[The Space]] (Cape Town) by the [[Foundation for Art and Theatre]] in 1974. (The other joint winner was [[Sheila Roberts]]’s ''[[My Weekend, Too]]''.)
 
Originally written as a one act play, it was the joint winner of a one-act play competition organised for the [[The Space]] (Cape Town) by the [[Foundation for Art and Theatre]] in 1974. (The other joint winner was [[Sheila Roberts]]’s ''[[My Weekend, Too]]''.)

Revision as of 08:59, 29 March 2022

Die Laaste Middagmaal (“The last midday meal”) is an one-act play by Wilma Stockenström (1933-).

The original text

It is a play about lunch in an Afrikaner household, exploring the family complications that result from one child transgressing the South African Immorality Act.

Originally written as a one act play, it was the joint winner of a one-act play competition organised for the The Space (Cape Town) by the Foundation for Art and Theatre in 1974. (The other joint winner was Sheila Roberts’s My Weekend, Too.)

The one act version was performed as Die Laaste Middagmaal in The Outer Space (at the The Space) in 1975.

The text was then expanded by the addition of a second act, and the text published as Laaste Middagmaal ("Last midday meal") by Taurus Publishers in 1978.

Translations and adaptations

Performance history in South Africa

1975: First staged as part of a double-bill in the Outer Space (Cape Town) in 1975, directed by Limpie Basson, with Danie Botha, Johan Burgher, Carina du Plessis, Faan Oosthuizen and Cornelia Stander. The stage managers were Bill Anderson and Fatima Dike.

1983: Performed by PACOFS, directed by Pierre van Pletzen with Anton Dekker as as "Andries",

1983: Performed by PATSO at the Kleinteater, Sunnyside, Pretoria, 25-28 May, directed by Johan van Rooyen.

Sources

Astbury 1979.

Material held by NELM: [Collection: SIEFF, Percy]: 2013. 25. 15. 4.


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