Difference between revisions of "Joyce Bradley"

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== Career ==
 
== Career ==
She was actively involved in South African Theatre since before the days of the National Theatre. She worked for radio and virtually every theatre management in South Africa and acted with [[CAPAB]] since its inception.
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She was actively involved in South African Theatre since before the days of the National Theatre. She worked for radio and virtually every theatre management in South Africa and acted with [[CAPAB]] after its inception.
  
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==

Revision as of 10:13, 7 September 2024

Joyce Bradley (born circa 1909, died 1996) Actress.

Biography

She was born in Cape Town and died there in July 1996 at the age of 87.

Training

Career

She was actively involved in South African Theatre since before the days of the National Theatre. She worked for radio and virtually every theatre management in South Africa and acted with CAPAB after its inception.

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

November 1945: Joyce Bradley adapted and produced Silas Marner by George Eliot for broadcast by Cape Town "A" the SABC's station in Cape Town. For Brian Brooke she appeared in The Shining Hour (1946). Acted in numerous productions, often for Leonard Schach (between 1951 and 1964), notably Point of Departure (1952), Lady Windermere's Fan (1952), Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1956), Mornings at Seven (1959), The Miracle Worker (1961) and After the Fall (1964). Other productions include The Chalk Garden (1968), The Father (1969), Richard Gush of Salem (1970), The Way of the World, Enter a Free Man, Habeas Corpus, "Sister Godric" in Abelard and Heloise and "the Nurse" in Romeo and Juliet, The Seven Ages, .

Awards

In 1971 she won a Three Leaf Arts Award for best supporting player for Congreve's The Way of the World.

Sources

Radio Week magazine, 2nd November, 1945.

SACD 1973; Limelight 1975/76.

The Chalk Garden theatre programme, 1968.

Cape Times, 22 July 1996.

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