Charles Pillai
Charles Pillai (1953-2010) was a lawyer, actor and playwright.
Contents
Biography
Pillai studied at the University of Durban-Westville, majoring in both Speech and Drama and Private Law and attaining a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1975. This was followed with a B.Proc degree from the University of South Africa in 1979 while he was completing his clerkship. In 2001 he graduated with an LLB from the University of South Africa. This was followed by an LLM in Administrative and Constitutional Law at the University of Pretoria in March 2004.
He started his legal career in the early 80s in Chatsworth, south of Durban, with a general law practice which included litigation, property and commercial law. In the later 90s he joined the Legal Resources Centre, a public interest law firm, where he was director of the Pretoria office. In 2004 he became the country's first Ombud for Financial Services Providers and on 1 April 2010 was made Pension Funds Adjudicator. Sadly, Pillai passed away of cancer on 6 November 2010. He had at one time been married to the actress and playwright Saira Essa.
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
On addition to his professional career in the law, Pillai was also a part-time actor and a playwright.
As a playwright he wrote The James Commission and co-wrote Steve Biko - The Inquest with his then wife, Saira Essa. Both plays were based on actual court records. Pillai himself played Amichand Rajbansi in the first production of James Commission. He also helped to devise a musical on the life of Mahatma Gandhi.
He had also acted in several films, including A Dry White Season a film based on the book with a similar title by Andre Brink and The Making of the Mahatma, a film based on the life of Mahatma Gandhi, whilst he was in South Africa.He had also acted in several films, including “A Dry While Season” a film based on the book with a similar title by Andre Brink and “The Making of the Mahatma”, a film based on the life of Mahatma Gandhi, whilst he was in South Africa.
Other professional roles include At the Edge (1990), Christie in Love, Canterbury Tales, The Primary English Class and a musical on the life of Mahatma Gandhi which he helped to devise.
Awards, etc
Sources
Steve Biko: The Inquest programme notes, circa 1986.
Sunday Independent, 7 November 2010.
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