Charles Etienne Boniface
Charles Etienne Boniface (1787 – 1853) was an enormously talented, intelligent and abrasive dramatist, actor, theatre director, dancing instructor, linguist, language teacher, sworn translator, fencing teacher, choreographer, composer and guitarist, music teacher.
Often referred to as C.E. Boniface or simply as Boniface, and in at least one instance as Ignace Boniface. Over the years he also worked under a number of pseudonyms, especially for his more polemical writing, or his efforts at gaining publicity and self-promotion for himself and his works. These include: Mr C.B., Vyfstar of Wraak and (possibly) Clavigo.
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Biography
Born in Paris on 2 February 1787, the son of a prison warder, he grew up a precocious child who, at "the age of twelve had a grounding in French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Latin, Greek, had written short dramas in the style of Molière, played the guitar and had learned to dance" (Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[1])
In 1798 Sir Sidney Smith, who had apparently been helped by Boniface's father to escape French imprisonment, assisted the Boniface family to resettle in the Seychelles, where Boniface enrolled in as a cadet in the Royal Navy. When the Cape Colony was annexed once more by the British, Boniface made his way to Cape Town via Mozambique on board a Portuguese slave ship, arriving on 10 February 1806.
In the period 1807 to 1840 he lived and worked in Cape Town, where - due to his amazing aptitude for languages - he managed to learn enough German, Dutch and English to work as a language and music teacher. He was the first person in the Cape Colony known to have noted down the local music. He would also play an enormous role in the development of journalism, theatre, and Dutch and Afrikaans theatre in particular, in Cape Town.
He married Maria Geertruida Heyneman in Cape Town, and had a number of children over the years. She died in 1835.
A key element in his make-up was the dangerous combination of a satiric bent, and a quick and unforgiving temper, which not only lent fire to much of his journalistic and theatrical output, but led to his uncompromising and vicious feuds with a number of Capetonians, most notably with his former friend and colleague J. Suasso de Lima.
In 1844 he fled to Pietermaritzburg, to help Cornelis Moll start the first newspaper in Natal (De Natalier) and practise as an advocate at law, although it is not known of he was involved in theatre whilst resident there.
Never really financially successful, he died in Durban on 10 December 1853, having committed suicide by taking laudanum.
His contribution as journalist
He was a fiery journalist, who was the first writer to use Afrikaans for journalistic purposes when he co-founded and was the first editor of De Zuid-Afrikaan in Cape Town in 1830. He later also was briefly the first editor of De Natalier (which he had co-founded with Cornelis Moll) in Pietermaritzburg in 1844. He used his journalistic writing to attack various social, political and personal targets and raise many issues, an approach he also carried over into his theatrical work, much of which was published in the journals of the day. For a while his feud with De Lima played a cardinal role in firing up his satiric imagination in poetry, journalism and drama, while his societal targets included the many fanatical philanthropic movements of the time.
He also produced a historical account of the shipwreck of the French vessel L’Eole, on its way from Bourbon (Réunion) to France in 1829, ostensibly based on the narratives of some of the survivors. The book, entitled Relation du Naufrage du Navire Français L’Eole sur la Côte de la Caffrerie, en Avril 1829, was published in Cape Town by Bridekirk in 1829. It has been newly edited D. J. Culpin and published in the series MHRA Critical Texts (Vol. 37) in 2013[2].
His contribution to South African theatre and performance
As producer and director
Although he had been writing and performing before his arrival, Boniface started out his theatrical career in Cape Town by joining the French Amateur Company (or Het Fransche Liefhebbery Geselschap), taking on a central role by 1809, and then became an active founding member of the multilingual (French/Dutch/English) company Honi Soit qui Mal y Pense from 1814-18. In 1823 he revived the company, now under his own formal management, and once more performing as Honi Soit qui Mal y Pense. The company was later also referred to as Het Zuid-Afrikaansche Tooneel Gezelschap or The South African Amateurs in most adverts. "Honi" became Door Yver Bloeit de Kunst in 1833 and eventually Vlyt en Kunst in 1834-1837. All in all had an enormous impact on both the development of Boniface's art and on South African theatre, Afrikaans theatre in particular.
As dramatist
As a dramatist he wrote a number of plays in Dutch, Afrikaans and even English, many of them produced in Cape Town, as well as translating and adapting works from other languages. Being of a temperamental and somewhat choleric nature, and F.C.L. Bosman (1928, p. 118) claims that he was the first to really make the Cape theatre a site for political, social and personal vendettas.
He produced a number of "firsts" in the Cape theatre, including the first ballet in South Africa: Sapho(1815), the first known South African play in English: Kockincoz, or The Pettifogging Lawyer's Plot (1843) and De Nieuwe Ridderorde of De Temperantisten (also known simply as De Nieuwe Ridderorde or De Temperantisten - 1832), said to be the first true play in Afrikaans-Dutch and possibly his best work.
His original plays include:
L'Enragé (1807). Translated into Dutch by J. Suasso de Lima as De Dolzinnige, of De Gewaande Dolleman (1823)
Het Beleg en het Nemen van Troyen, 1813
Sapho (1815)
De Nieuwe Ridderorde of De Temperantisten (1832)
Clasius, of Het Proces om een Komedie-Lootje (1834)
Kockincoz, or The Pettifogging Lawyer's Plot (1843)
Bluettes Franco-Nataliennes (1846-1849*??) (also given as De Natal Bluetts in Dutch, and The Natal Bluetts or The Natal Bluettes in English).
As translator and adaptor
He also translated and reworked plays by others, including:
Robert, Chef de Brigands (from Lamartélière)
Dago, of De Spaansche Bedelaars (from De Trye, adapted and new music composed)
De Burger Edelman (from Moliere),
Limaçon de Dichter (based on Von Kotzebue)
Pygmalion (from Rousseau)
None of these translations were printed and De Burger Edelman is the only manuscript preserved.
As ballet master and musician
He wrote, choreographed and composed music for a number of ballet's with his children's company.
Besides the work he did on his own productions, he apparently also on occasion choreographed, composed and arranged the dances and music for some other production companies.
E.g.: A production of Frederik de Groote te Spandau, of Het Lasterschrift (Dorvo) and Meester Vink, of De Vermiste Diamant (Desaugiers and Gentil) in 1834.
[TH, JH]
Sources
F.C.L. Bosman, 1928. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel I: 1652-1855. Pretoria: J.H. de Bussy. [3]: pp. 5, 8, 44, 50-59, 84-92, 118-145, 163-179, 201, 233-4, 246-7, 257-267, 274-3339, 343-6, 351, 359-375, 392, 441, 452, 488-496, 510.
Mona de Beer, 1995
P.J. du Toit, 1988
Jill Fletcher, 1994;
J.C. Kannemeyer, 1978
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Etienne_Boniface
http://www.mhra.org.uk/Publications/Books/culpin.html
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