Difference between revisions of "Lena Farugia"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 4: Line 4:
 
== Biography ==
 
== Biography ==
  
Nicolina Elizabeth Farruggia was born in the United States, where her father Giuseppe Farruggia was a supervisor for the Penn Central railroad company and her mother, Grazia (Grace) Grassi, a designer with a fashion house.  She grew up in Westchester County north of New York City, studied dance, obtained a BA at Fordham University and then an MA in history at Columbia University.  She is said to acted in various university productions, studied briefly with Lee Strasberg and then with Uta Hagen and Herbert Berghof.  She also followed courses in film editing at the New School in Greenwich Village and acted in off-off-Broadway and dinner theatre productions.
+
Born Nicolina Elizabeth Farruggia in New York on 19 October, 1949. Her father Giuseppe Farruggia was a supervisor for the Penn Central railroad company and her mother, Grazia (Grace) Grassi, a designer with a fashion house.  She grew up in Westchester County north of New York City, studied dance, obtained a BA at Fordham University and then an MA in history at Columbia University.  She is said to acted in various university productions, studied briefly with Lee Strasberg and then with Uta Hagen and Herbert Berghof.  She also followed courses in film editing at the New School in Greenwich Village and acted in off-off-Broadway and dinner theatre productions.
  
In 1976 she was offered a role in a French television series entitled ''Les Diamants du Président'' to be filmed in Nelspruit. The following year she returned to South Africa to act in the film ''Sharpies'' (released as ''[[Mister Deathman]]'') and married South African actor [[Robert Davies]], whom she had met on the set of the French series.  Together they formed a company called [[Davnic Productions]] that made a number of films and documentaries, primarily for television, though their most prestigious production, a version of [[Paul Slabolepszy]] award-winning drama ''[[Saturday Night at the Palace]]'' (1987) directed by Davies, was released in the cinemas. Amongst her best-known appearances were in [[Jamie Uys]]’s film ''[[The Gods Must Be Crazy II]]'' (1989) and the first two seasons of the television series [[Westgate]], directed by [[Edgar Bold]].  Also highly regarded was the documentary called ''[[An African in Paris]]'' (2005), about the painter Gerard Sekoto, which she scripted, directed and edited and which was photographed by her husband.  The plays in which she appeared included ''[[Cat on a Hot Tin Roof]]'' (1982), ''[[Agnes of God]]'' (1983) and ''[[Extremities]]'' (1984).  In addition she wrote and starred in ''[[We and Them]]'' (1989), the story of Mrs. Wallis Simpson and her relationship with the Duke of Windsor.  This was a two-hander, with [[Robert Davies]] playing her taciturn and faithful butler in a 2010 revival at the Old Mutual [[Theatre on the Square]].  In 2009 it also has a successful run at the Finborough Theatre in London.
+
In 1976 she was offered a role in a French television series entitled ''Les Diamants du Président'' to be filmed in Nelspruit. The following year she returned to South Africa to act in the film ''Sharpies'' (released as ''[[Mister Deathman]]'') and married South African actor [[Robert Davies]], whom she had met on the set of the French series.  Together they formed a company called [[Davnic Productions]] that made a number of films and documentaries, primarily for television, though their most prestigious production, a version of [[Paul Slabolepszy]] award-winning drama ''[[Saturday Night at the Palace]]'' (1987) directed by Davies, was released in the cinemas.  
  
(Note: Though she married Robert Davies in 1977, they were subsequently divorced and then remarried on 28 August 1996.)  
+
Amongst her best-known appearances were in [[Jamie Uys]]’s film ''[[The Gods Must Be Crazy II]]'' (1989) and the first two seasons of the television series [[Westgate]], directed by [[Edgar Bold]].  Also highly regarded was the documentary called ''[[An African in Paris]]'' (2005), about the painter Gerard Sekoto, which she scripted, directed and edited and which was photographed by her husband. 
 +
 
 +
The plays in which she appeared included ''[[Cat on a Hot Tin Roof]]'' (1982), ''[[Agnes of God]]'' (1983) and ''[[Extremities]]'' (1984). 
 +
 
 +
In addition she wrote and starred in ''[[We and Them]]'' (1989), the story of Mrs. Wallis Simpson and her relationship with the Duke of Windsor.  This was a two-hander, with [[Robert Davies]] playing her taciturn and faithful butler in a 2010 revival at the Old Mutual [[Theatre on the Square]].  In 2009 it also has a successful run at the Finborough Theatre in London.
 +
 
 +
(Note: Though she married [[Robert Davies]] in 1977, they were subsequently divorced and then remarried on 28 August 1996.)  
  
 
== Credits ==
 
== Credits ==

Revision as of 07:09, 29 March 2023

Lena Farugia (b. New York, 19/10/1949 – d. South Africa, 18/01/2019 was an actress, editor, television producer and playwright. Also credited as Nicolena Farugia.

Biography

Born Nicolina Elizabeth Farruggia in New York on 19 October, 1949. Her father Giuseppe Farruggia was a supervisor for the Penn Central railroad company and her mother, Grazia (Grace) Grassi, a designer with a fashion house. She grew up in Westchester County north of New York City, studied dance, obtained a BA at Fordham University and then an MA in history at Columbia University. She is said to acted in various university productions, studied briefly with Lee Strasberg and then with Uta Hagen and Herbert Berghof. She also followed courses in film editing at the New School in Greenwich Village and acted in off-off-Broadway and dinner theatre productions.

In 1976 she was offered a role in a French television series entitled Les Diamants du Président to be filmed in Nelspruit. The following year she returned to South Africa to act in the film Sharpies (released as Mister Deathman) and married South African actor Robert Davies, whom she had met on the set of the French series. Together they formed a company called Davnic Productions that made a number of films and documentaries, primarily for television, though their most prestigious production, a version of Paul Slabolepszy award-winning drama Saturday Night at the Palace (1987) directed by Davies, was released in the cinemas.

Amongst her best-known appearances were in Jamie Uys’s film The Gods Must Be Crazy II (1989) and the first two seasons of the television series Westgate, directed by Edgar Bold. Also highly regarded was the documentary called An African in Paris (2005), about the painter Gerard Sekoto, which she scripted, directed and edited and which was photographed by her husband.

The plays in which she appeared included Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1982), Agnes of God (1983) and Extremities (1984).

In addition she wrote and starred in We and Them (1989), the story of Mrs. Wallis Simpson and her relationship with the Duke of Windsor. This was a two-hander, with Robert Davies playing her taciturn and faithful butler in a 2010 revival at the Old Mutual Theatre on the Square. In 2009 it also has a successful run at the Finborough Theatre in London.

(Note: Though she married Robert Davies in 1977, they were subsequently divorced and then remarried on 28 August 1996.)

Credits

Theatre

1982 – Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (actress) (Directed by Aubrey Berg for PACT at the State Theatre in Pretoria and the Alexander Theatre in Johannesburg), 1983 – Agnes of God (actress) (Directed by Nikolas Simmonds for Pieter Toerien at the Baxter Theatre in Cape Town, the Alhambra Theatre in Johannesburg, the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown and the Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre in Durban), 1984 – Extremities (actress) (Produced by Hugh Wooldridge for Pieter Toerien at the Alhambra Theatre in Johannesburg and the Baxter Theatre in Cape Town), 1989 – We and Them (playwright & actress) (Directed by Ingrid Sonnichson for Davnic Productions in association with Pieter Toerien at the Leonard Rayne Theatre in Johannesburg and the Theatre on the Bay in Cape Town), 1995 – The Sisters Rosensweig (actress) (Directed by Alan Swerdlow for Pieter Toerien at the Alhambra Theatre in Johannesburg and the Theatre on the Bay in Cape Town).

Film

1977 – Mister Deathman / Sharpies (actress) (Director: Michael D. Moore), 1978 – The Pawn (adapted from the TV series Les Diamants du Président) (actress) (Director: Claude Boissol), 1987 – Saturday Night at the Palace (associate producer + supervising editor) (Director: Robert Davies), 1989 – The Gods Must Be Crazy II (actress) (Director: Jamie Uys), 1990 – The Sandgrass People (actress) (Director: Koos Roets).

Television

1977 – Les Diamants du Président (French TV series) (actress) (Director: Claude Boissol), 1979 – Land of the Thirst King (TV documentary series) (writer & editor) (Director: Robert Davies), 1981 – Westgate (TV series) (actress) (Director: Edgar Bold), 1981 – So Reg na my Smaak (TV documentary) (hosted by Pieter-Dirk Uys), 1982 – Westgate II (TV series) (actress) (Director: Edgar Bold), 1986 – The Fiddler (TV series) (actress) (Director: Ken Leach), 1988 – Double Shift (TV series) (producer with Nomsa Nene) (Director: Robert Davies), 1993 – Tropical Heat / Sweating Bullets (Canadian/American TV series – Episode: May Divorce Be with You) (actress) (Director: Clay Borris), 1995 – Tales of Mystery and Imagination (TV series – Episode: The Oval Portrait) (actress) (Director: Bill Hays), 1996 – Tarzan: the Epic Adventures (TV series – Episode: Tarzan and the Reflections in an Evil Eye) (actress) (Director: George Keith), 2000 – Brothers, Sisters and Strangers (TV documentary) (director & editor), 2000 – Jika Jika (TV series) (writer with David Newton John) (Director: Robert Davies), 2004 – Faith in Resistance (TV documentary series) (director, editor & scriptwriter with Seth Mazibuko), 2005 – An African in Paris (TV documentary) (director, script & editor), 2008 – Diamonds (TV movie) (actress) (Director: Andy Wilson).

Sources

Agnes of God programme notes, 1983.

We and Them programme notes, 1989.

Rand Daily Mail, 26 August 1982 (and other issues)

The Star, 28 September 2010.

Die Burger, 22 January 2019.

https://www.thesouthafrican.com/backstage-with-lena-farugia/

http://janiallan.com/2019/01/29/lena-farugia-taken-young/

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0268602/

Go to South African Theatre/Bibliography

Return to

Return to ESAT Personalities F

Return to South African Theatre Personalities

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page