Temple Hauptfleisch
Temple Hauptfleisch (1945-) is an academic theatre researcher, historian and archivist, as well as sometime critic, lecturer, dramatist and occasional actor and part-time front of house manager.
He has also written some plays under the nom de plume of Anton Haarhoff.
Contents
Biography
Born on 27 June 1945 in Bloemfontein, to George Stephanus Hauptfleisch and Katerina Dafina Hauptfleisch (néé Du Plessis). His cousin, the South African stage, radio and film actor Pieter Hauptfleisch, was an early inspiration for a career in theatre.
Married Karina Lou Bekker in 1968 and the couple have two children, IT Company director Anzel Mercker and playwright, director, and theatre practitioner Gaerin Hauptfleisch.
Training
He had his schooling at Grey College in Bloemfontein (1950-1962), where - remarkably - he was in the same class with a number of individuals who would make a mark for themselves in the performing arts, among them the theatre and film practitioners Johan Bernard and Johan Geyser, the journalists and critics John-Murray Viljoen and Braam Muller, and the playwright and script writer Kobus Louw.
After a year as American Field Service exchange student at Myrtle Point High in Oregon, USA (where he first tried his hand at poetry) - he went to the University of the Orange Free State (UOFS) to complete a BA in English and Latin, and a BA Hons in English (1963-1969). Here his interests were strongly stimulated by influential lecturers with an interest in theatre, such as the award-winning Afrikaans playwright Gerhard Beukes, the charismatic English lecturer Robert Wahl and the head of the new drama department, Jo Gevers. Further studies at the University of South Africa (UNISA) led to an M.A. in English in 1972 with the thesis Greek Dramatic Conventions in Modern Drama and a D.Litt. et Phil. in 1978 with the title The Play as Communication: A Study of the Language of Drama. His supervisors were Leon Hugo and Ian Ferguson.
Career
Became a teacher at Grey College, Bloemfontein, in 1968, where he co-founded the Grey College Dramatic Society with Charles Malan in 1969, and was a part-time actor and front of house manager for the Performing Arts Council of the Orange Free State (PACOFS).
In 1972 joined the Human Sciences Research Council in Pretoria as sociolinguist, from 1978 head of the National Documentation Centre for the Performing Arts, which he later re-focused and called the Centre for South African Theatre Research (CESAT). In this period his major mentors were Carlos Tindemans, J.L. Styan, P.P.B. Breytenbach, Rinie Stead, P.G. du Plessis and Stephen Gray.
From 1988-1994 senior lecturer and researcher at the University of Stellenbosch Drama Department, lecturing on theatre history and theory, and running workshops in playwriting. In 1994 founded the Centre for Theatre and Performance Studies and later became professor and elected Chair of the Department (1995-2005) and director of the H.B. Thom Theatre (1995-2003). After retiring as chair, served as research professor and Director of the Centre for Theatre and Performance Studies (2006-2009).
Retired from the university as Emeritus Professor in 2010 to devote his time to ESAT and other research and theatre projects.
In June 2022 appointed Honorary Professor in the Africa Open Institute for Music, Research and Innovation at the University of Stellenbosch for a period of 3 years.
Other academic positions
A member of numerous academic societies, he has held executive positions in a few, including:
Founding member and first secretary of the South African Association for Drama and Youth Theatre (SAADYT)
Founder and former chair of the South African Society Theatre Research (1999-2002)
Member of the executive of the International Federation for Theatre Research (1998-2007).
Member of the international advisory board for The Marvin Carlson Theatre Center at the Shanghai Theatre Academy (2016-)
Honorary Member of the African Theatre Association (2020-).
Editorial work
He was the founding editor of the SAADYT Journal and the co-founder, co-editor and publisher of the South African Theatre Journal (with Ian Steadman) (1987-1997), later became sole editor & publisher for 13 years (1998-2010), then co-editor again (with Petrus du Preez) (2011-2013), before stepping down from the editorial board in 2014.
He has also been a member of the editorial boards of the journals Critical Arts, Shakespeare in South Africa (1986-1990), African Performance Review (2006-), Perfformio (2008-), Critical Perspectives (2007-), and Critical Stages (2008-).
On the editorial board for the Rodopi book series Themes in Theatre: Collective Approaches to Theatre and Performance (Editor Peter Eversman) and the Transnational Theatre Histories Series published by Palgrave Macmillan (Editor Christopher B. Balme).
Publications
He has written over a wide spectrum over the years, both as academic and as creative writer.
As academic, researcher and commentator
Besides a number of publications on various aspects of the sociology of language (including a 4 volume report on Language Loyalty in South Africa), he has written and published more than eighty works on the history of South African theatre, research methodology and the sociology of theatre since 1978, including numerous encyclopaedia entries on aspects of theatre and performance in the country for international publishers, and 8 book-length publications on the history and sociology of South African and international theatre. (See South African Theatre/Bibliography for a full list of his publications.)
The most influential books have been Athol Fugard: A Source Guide (Co-authors: Wilma Viljoen and Celeste Van Greunen, Johannesburg: Ad Donker, 1982), South African Theatre - Four plays and an Introduction (Co-author & -editor with Ian Steadman, Pretoria: De Jager-HAUM 1984), The Breytie Book: Essays on South African Theatre. (Johannesburg: The Limelight Press, 1985), Theatre and Society in South Africa: Reflections in a Fractured Mirror (J.L. van Schaik, 1997), Festivalising! Theatrical Events, Politics and Culture (co-edited with Shulamith Lev-Aladgem, Jacqueline Martin, Willmar Sauter and Henri Schoenmakers, Amsterdam, Rodopi, 2007).
He has written more than eighty works on the history of South African theatre, research methodology and the sociology of theatre since 1978, including numerous encylopaedia entries on aspects of theatre and performance in the country for international publishers and 8 book-length publications.
Since his retirement from the University of Stellenbosch in 2010, he has undertaken ongoing research with The African Theatre and Performance Working Group of the IFTR, with an emphasis on the theatrical system and festival culture, and begun to devote his time to the online, open access archival/publication project entitled is the Encyclopaedia of South African Theatre, Film, Media and Performance (ESAT), which he first began in about 2000, but formally set up in 2010. He is the current project leader and chief editor.
In addition, after retirement, he has continued writing articles for various collections and edited and co-edited three books, an annotated text of Woza Albert! (Methuen, 2018), and (with Marisa Keuris) volumes on the playwrights Reza de Wet (2020) and Bartho Smit (in preparation for 2021)
As creative writer, playwright and compiler of play collections
He began by writing and publishing a few poems and a short story, before turning to playwriting, producing 15 plays and editing and publishing 11 play-collections for schools.
Prominent among his plays are Wie is Leopold?(written 1971, published 1980), Bloedlyn [Bloodline] (unpublished, performed 1974), Op Salvokop (1984?), André (1985?) and One for the Road to Damaskus (2002 - a play based on a fictional meeting between Mark Twain[1] and C.J. Langenhoven, developed with the aid of a National Arts Council grant).
He compiled and edited the following collections of plays:
As sole editor:
Boomhuis, Droomhuis en ander eenbedrywe (1982), Die Spieël en die Weerkaatsing (1985), .
With others:
With P.P.B. Breytenbach: Die Kleiner Kosmos (1980),
With P.J. du Toit: Voetlig 1 (1983), Voetlig 2 (1983)
With Ian Steadman: South African Theatre: Four Plays and an Introduction (1984)
With Ted Townsend: Players: A Collection of One-act Plays (1987)
With Ulla Wood: Storieboom (1989), ‘n Rooie met Ratte (1990)
With Herman Pretorius: Die Magiese Kring (1991)
Awards and distinctions
Winner, ATKV One-Act Playwriting Competition 1971 (for the play Wie is Leopold?).
Vita Award for Theatre Research (1982)
Rector’s Award for Outstanding Research, Stellenbosch University (1999)
Since 2002 has held a B-rating as researcher from the South African National Research Foundation (NRF).
In 2013 received the Kuns Onbeperk Toekenning ("Arts Unlimited Award") for services to the arts.
He was elected an Honorary Member of the African Theatre Association (AfTA) in 2020, for his contribution to the advancement of African theatre, performance and culture.
Other work in theatre
He was an amateur and semi-professional actor in Bloemfontein for a while, playing mostly (very) minor roles for the University of the Orange Free State Dramatic Society, the University's newly founded Drama Department, the Bloemfontein Repertory Society, the Bloemfontein Shakespeare Circle and the Performing Arts Council of the Orange Free State (PACOFS) in the years 1964-1971. Productions included The Dark Lady of the Sonnets (Shaw), Move Over Mrs. Markham (Ray Cooney and John Chapman), Playing with Fire (Strindberg), The Rivals (Sheridan), The Tempest (Shakespeare) and Richard III (Shakespeare).
He was appointed part-time front of house manager for PACOFS between 1969 and 1971, and also co-founded the Grey College Dramatic Society with Charles Malan in 1969, directing a few plays with the pupils. As chair of the Drama Department in Stellenbosch, he was also ex officio director of the H.B. Thom Theatre, but he later created the position of Director and appointed Johan Esterhuizen as first incumbent.
Sources
Curriculum Vitae of Temple Hauptfleisch
https://af.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaerin_Hauptfleisch
Go to South African Theatre/Bibliography
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