Peter Ngwenya

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Peter Ngwenya (1956-2009). Playwright, director.

Biography

He was born in Soweto and lived and worked there. He died, aged 53, in May 2009.

Training

He dropped out of school after 16 June 1976 and joined Sam Mhangwane's People's Theatre Association.

His theatre mentors included James Mthoba, Corney Mabaso, David Phetoe and Benjy Francis.

A scholarship at the Yale Repertory Theatre in the US, in 1988, reinforced his belief in the power of drama to develop the mind of a child.

Career

He was a selfmotivated playwright, who started out writing for radio.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

Peter Ngwenya was active in children’s theatre in the township from the 1970s. Ngwenya believed that children’s theatre was integral to developing culture in the Soweto community. He produced plays at various venues in Soweto from 1984 to 1991. Ngwenya used performances to raise funds for organisations working with vulnerable children in Soweto.

Ngwenya formed the Student/Youth Drama Society. The aim of the organisation was to foster drama and music at black schools.

His first stage production was Who’ll Regret, which he wrote for a church youth guild. His first notable production was Save the Child, which toured nationally. This play, performed by children, launched his Soweto Youth Drama Society (SYDS), in 1987, with the aim of giving young people an opportunity to express themselves creatively. That same year it was presented at the Culture in Another South Africa (Casa) festival in Amsterdam, Holland.

His play Qinisela was intended to highlight the plight of underprivileged children.

Have Strength was directly aimed at children as an audience.

He wrote Where is my son?, about children in detention, was performed at the National Arts Festival, 1991 under his direction.

A popular hit was The Toilet, which toured from 2002. At one point it featured Oscar-winning Tsotsi actress Terry Pheto with other notable performers.

His last production was Take Me Home.

Awards, etc

Winner of the Standard Bank Young Artist Award, 1991.

Soweto’s first theatre complex was named after him.

Sources

National Arts Festival programme, 1991. p. 53.

Tribute by Adrienne Sichel published in The Star, 26 May 2009.

Xaba, Andile. 2021. 'Collective memory and the construction of a historical narrative, analysis and interpretation of selected Soweto-based community plays (1984–1994)'. Unpublished PhD thesis.

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