Angelique Rockas

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Angelique Rockas is a stage and film actress, practitioner and producer.

She has also performed under the names Angeliki and Anjelique Rockas.


Biography

Baptised Angeliki Rockas, she was born and raised in Boksburg, South Africa, to immigrant Greek parents, and had her early education at St Dominic's Catholic School for Girls in Boksburg, Transvaal, where the activist and later ANC cabinet minister, Barbara Hogan was one of her contemporaries. Her own activist beliefs began at school and were originally inspired by the prejudice shown her brother, who had been born misformed, while her participation in school plays and local eistedfords and so on sparked an early interest in the theatre. She is multi-lingual, speaking English, Greek, Afrikaans, French, and what she refers to as pidgin Italian.

She and Hogan would get to know each other better when they both went on to study at the University of the Witwatersrand, where Angelique did a BA, beginning with a focus on politics, but later taking English literature and Philosophy as her majors. She continued her studies there with an Honours degree in English Literature, while doing drama in an extra curricular course. She was also influenced in this time by the human rights lawyer George Bizos, friend and attorney of Nelson Mandela and one of the framers of the constitution of the new South Africa.

After graduating with her BA degree, Angelique's parents sent her on a tour of Europe's cultural capitals.

She then went to the University of Cape Town to complete a Performers Diploma at the Drama Department, under the direction of Robert Mohr, and started an MA thesis on Restoration comedy, but this was not finished. Among her contemporaries there were the South African actress and playwright Reza de Wet and the actor Vincent Ebrahim.

On completion of the course however, she soon realised that there was no place for her given her belief in a just non-racial society and the equality for women. So, after a brief stint as actress in Cape Town, she moved to London with a letter of introduction from CAPAB actor Cobus Rossouw. Her first audition in the UK was with the RSC, and initially worked there for a marxist Greek Cypriot theatre company called Theatro Technis in North London, before branching out on her own.

She has lived there since, though she works in the UK, Greece, has a Paris and USA agent, and also has a base in Eastern Europe, where there is a burgeoning film renaissance.

Inherently a socio-political activist, she has over the years created two groups on LinkedIn: Global Greek Women, to promote Greece's interests and another called Women International - a discussion forum on peace, justice, education and culture.

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

Besides appearances in school plays, activist performances at Wits, and some student work at UCT, her brief South African professional career included narrating a passage in Middle English from the Morte D'Athur on the SABC in Cape Town (her first job), .


the only professional South African production she appeared in was Die Effek van Gammastrale op Goudgeel Afrikaners, an Afrikaans version of The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-moon Marigolds (Zindel), produced by CAPAB and under the direction of Robert Mohr and performed in the Little Theatre, Cape Town, and the H.B. Thom Theatre, Stellenbosch, in April 1973. In the production Angelique and Reza de Wet shared the role of "Nenna", performing on alternate nights - De Wet performing in Afrikaans, Rockas performing in English.

Later career in theatre, film and TV

As noted above, her London career began with performances for Theatro Technis, before she took her first tentative efforts in creating her own kind of new theatre company by mounting John Ford's 'Tis Pity She's a Whore, which had inspired her during her Honours studies in South Africa.

Thus it came about that Angelique founded the Internationalist Theatre[1] (initially known as New Theatre ) in London in September 1980, with Athol Fugard as one of its patrons. It aimed at pursuing an internationalist approach in its choice of plays and a multi-racial policy, seeking an even mix of performers drawn from different cultural groups. In November 1980, Rockas produced and financed a performance of 'Tis Pity She's a Whore by John Ford, performing the lead part of "Annabella" herself. She would thereafter perform in several productions by Internationalist Theatre in London from 1981 to 1985, among them "Carmen" in The Balcony (Genet), "Yvette" in Brecht`s Mother Courage and Her Children and "Tatiana" in Gorky`s Enemies, Medea (1982), "Miriam" in the London premiere of Tennessee Williams`s In the Bar of a Tokyo Hotel and "Julie" in Strindberg`s Miss Julie (1984).

In 1986 the theatre received charity status in England and it continued into the 1990s.

She has since worked internationally on stage, film and TV (e.g. Emmones Idees, the 1989 Greek language TV Series) and has own film company called Contemtptus Mundi Films, with which she develops film projects.

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelique_Rockas

https://af.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelique_Rockas#cite_note-14

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0734214/bio

https://www.flickr.com/photos/angelique_rockas/albums/72157673394034113]

https://www.flickr.com/photos/angelique_rockas/albums

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internationalist_Theatre

Personal correspondence from Sonia Hopkins (9-10 February, 2019)

Personal correspondence with Angelique Rockas(17 February, 2019)

The Complete Unpublished Extract Of Angelique Rockas` South African Journey, Used As Basis For Interview With The South African , Internet Archive[2]

https://eu.greekreporter.com/2012/05/21/angelique-rockas-strong-bold-and-unafraid/

https://www.thesouthafrican.com/angelique-rockas-bold-theatre-pioneer/


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