Difference between revisions of "The Dam"

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A commissioned work for the 1952 [[Tercentenary Van Riebeeck Festival]] and produced by [[NTO]] in 1952, directed by [[Marda Vanne]], starring [[Rolf Lefebvre]], [[Marcia Colville]], [[June Range]], [[Gerrit Wessels]], [[Noëlle Ahrenson]], [[Alan Chadwick]], [[Michal Grobbelaar]], [[Johan Malherbe]], [[Frank Wise]]. Decor by [[Geoffrey Long]]. A play about an English South African farmer’s relationships with his family and neighbours, and his vision of, yet doubts about, building a dam in the river. The dam and the implications of its building become a metaphor for Butler’s liberal view of the politics of the times. First published by [[A.A. Balkema]] in 1953.
 
A commissioned work for the 1952 [[Tercentenary Van Riebeeck Festival]] and produced by [[NTO]] in 1952, directed by [[Marda Vanne]], starring [[Rolf Lefebvre]], [[Marcia Colville]], [[June Range]], [[Gerrit Wessels]], [[Noëlle Ahrenson]], [[Alan Chadwick]], [[Michal Grobbelaar]], [[Johan Malherbe]], [[Frank Wise]]. Decor by [[Geoffrey Long]]. A play about an English South African farmer’s relationships with his family and neighbours, and his vision of, yet doubts about, building a dam in the river. The dam and the implications of its building become a metaphor for Butler’s liberal view of the politics of the times. First published by [[A.A. Balkema]] in 1953.
  
==by [[A.J.A. Wilson]]==  
+
==by [[Archibald J.A. Wilson]]==  
  
 
A one-act play. Published by DALRO in 1970.
 
A one-act play. Published by DALRO in 1970.

Revision as of 12:06, 18 January 2014

by Guy Butler

A commissioned work for the 1952 Tercentenary Van Riebeeck Festival and produced by NTO in 1952, directed by Marda Vanne, starring Rolf Lefebvre, Marcia Colville, June Range, Gerrit Wessels, Noëlle Ahrenson, Alan Chadwick, Michal Grobbelaar, Johan Malherbe, Frank Wise. Decor by Geoffrey Long. A play about an English South African farmer’s relationships with his family and neighbours, and his vision of, yet doubts about, building a dam in the river. The dam and the implications of its building become a metaphor for Butler’s liberal view of the politics of the times. First published by A.A. Balkema in 1953.

by Archibald J.A. Wilson

A one-act play. Published by DALRO in 1970.


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