Difference between revisions of "The Biko Inquest"
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==Translations and adaptations== | ==Translations and adaptations== | ||
− | The production at the Laager was based partly on the Blair/Fenton text and partly on [[Saira Essa|Essa]]'s own research and resulted in significant changes in the script. Due to contoversy over rights she has created her own adaption referring back to the original court transcripts and to amendments she had already made, resulting in the play ''[[Steve Biko: | + | The production at the Laager was based partly on the Blair/Fenton text and partly on [[Saira Essa|Essa]]'s own research and resulted in significant changes in the script. Due to contoversy over rights she has created her own adaption referring back to the original court transcripts and to amendments she had already made, resulting in the play ''[[Steve Biko: The Inquest]]''. |
== Performance history in South Africa == | == Performance history in South Africa == |
Revision as of 18:04, 28 July 2015
The Biko Inquest by John Blair and Norman Fenton. A documentary play based on the South African inquest into the death in prison of the black leader. Originally written for the stage The Biko Inquest (Published , Jon Blair and Norman Fenton. The Biko Inquest. Rex Collings: London, 1978.
Directed by Saira Essafor the Prithvi Festival in Bombay in 1985.
Contents
The original text
First performed by Blair Off Broadway directed by Blair and starring Fritz Weaver and Philip Bosco in 1978 and also by Wole Soyinka, who both directed and acted in the play in Ile-Ife, 1978 and which was then produced for stage (Riverside 1984, with Albert Finney), and on television directed by and starring Albert Finney (1985). The TV version was directed by Finney and broadcast in 1984/5.
Translations and adaptations
The production at the Laager was based partly on the Blair/Fenton text and partly on Essa's own research and resulted in significant changes in the script. Due to contoversy over rights she has created her own adaption referring back to the original court transcripts and to amendments she had already made, resulting in the play Steve Biko: The Inquest.
Performance history in South Africa
The play was first produced in South Africa by Saira Essa in the Abbey Theatre Durban and the Laager in 1985.
Sources
Steve Biko: The Inquest programme notes.
Go to ESAT Bibliography
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