Difference between revisions of "Randlords and Rotgut"

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by the [[Junction Avenue Theatre Company]] (JATC). The second play by the JATC, and its first with an integrated cast, it opened the second ''[[South African History Workshop]]'' at the [[University of the Witwatersrand]] in 1978. Based on a like-named paper by [[Charles van Onselen]] and utilizing Brechtian techniques, the play offers an exposé of the hypocrisy of mining capitalists who profited from the sale of liquor to the workers while denouncing drunkenness. Revived at the University of the Witwatersrand/JATC(*?) in 1989 by [[Malcolm Purkey]], with women in some of the male roles. First published in ''[[Theatre One]]'' (ed [[Stephen Gray]]) by [[Ad Donker]], 1981. Republished in Junction Avenue Theatre Company: ''[[At the Junction]]'' ([[University of the Witwatersrand Press]]) in 1995. [Kruger 1999: 96; JATC, 1995: 78].
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''Randlords and Rotgut'' is a play by the [[Junction Avenue Theatre Company]] (JATC). The second play by the JATC, and its first with an integrated cast, it opened the second ''[[South African History Workshop]]'' at the [[University of the Witwatersrand]] in 1978. Based on a like-named paper by [[Charles van Onselen]] and utilizing Brechtian techniques, the play offers an exposé of the hypocrisy of mining capitalists who profited from the sale of liquor to the workers while denouncing drunkenness.  
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Revived at the University of the Witwatersrand/JATC(*?) in 1989 by [[Malcolm Purkey]], with women in some of the male roles.  
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First published in [[ESAT Bibliography Gra|''Theatre Two'']], edited by [[Stephen Gray]], 1981. Republished in Junction Avenue Theatre Company: ''[[At the Junction]]'' ([[University of the Witwatersrand Press]]) in 1995. [Kruger 1999: 96; JATC, 1995: 78].
  
  

Revision as of 16:42, 20 November 2015

Randlords and Rotgut is a play by the Junction Avenue Theatre Company (JATC). The second play by the JATC, and its first with an integrated cast, it opened the second South African History Workshop at the University of the Witwatersrand in 1978. Based on a like-named paper by Charles van Onselen and utilizing Brechtian techniques, the play offers an exposé of the hypocrisy of mining capitalists who profited from the sale of liquor to the workers while denouncing drunkenness.

Revived at the University of the Witwatersrand/JATC(*?) in 1989 by Malcolm Purkey, with women in some of the male roles.

First published in Theatre Two, edited by Stephen Gray, 1981. Republished in Junction Avenue Theatre Company: At the Junction (University of the Witwatersrand Press) in 1995. [Kruger 1999: 96; JATC, 1995: 78].


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