Charles Fryer

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(1946-2014) Publisher, editor, author, playwright and critic.

Biography

Born on 5 Maart 1946 in Calvinia in what is today known as the Hantamhuis. He was one of five children. He later married Lorreine, a free lance editor and translator and two daughters Charleinne and Andrea, and a son, William.

Training

Having completed school, he went to the University of Stellenbosch, where he completed a BA degree in Afrikaans and Drama, being a member of D.J. Opperman's famous "letterkundige laboratorium" (a literary laboratory for aspiring authors). His drama lecturers included Fred Engelen and Rina Botha.

Career

Having finished his studies, he taught high school at the Hoërskool DF Malan in Bellville and in 1975joined the publishing firm Tafelberg Uitgewers, initially as a book editor and later as a publisher. In the 1980s he was also popular as a TV critic.

While he was primarily employed in the book publishing trade, he was also a creative writer who, in the course of his career, wrote and published one book of poems (Rooiwielwa, 1978), short stories and unpublished plays, and collated a number of collections, including a book of one-act plays.

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

He had a great love of theatre and performance, a passion engendered during his student days when he performed in dramatic readings of stories and poems, acted in student plays and began writing playtexts in the drama department.


As performer

Student roles included Macbeth (as Banquo) and Yerma.

As playwright

While none of his plays have been published, some of his student work gained legendary status in Stellenbosch. The most notable perhaps Die Vampier ("The Vampire").

His most notable plays is Só Moes die Liefde Ly ("Thus Love had to suffer"), the Passion Play he created in 1988 for Marina Rauch and the parish of the NG Kerk Panorama, near Cape Town, to be performed during Easter under the stars in Tygerberg. In 1989, he expanded the text and from 1991 onwards it was performed every second year in the Van Zyl Hall in the Kango Caves, the text constantly evolving and the cast increasing.

In October 1990 he wrote and directed Lig in die Swart Klooster, also for the NG Kerk parish of Panorama.

As editor

He edited a book of one-act plays called Kollig: vyf eenbedrywe ("Spotlight: five one-act plays") , published in Cape Town by Tafelberg Uitgewers in 1982, reprinted 1987.

As critic

Awards, etc

In 1997 he received the Piet Cillié medal for creative work.

In 2008 the Woordfees in Stellenbosch presented Rooiwielwa, a special program compiled by Alwena van der Vyver, dedicated to Charles Fryer, consisting of readings of selected compilation from his poems, prose and unpublished works.

In the same year he received aspecial award from the ATKV in recognition of his life-long contribution to Afrikaans literature.

Sources

Erika Terblanche: Charles Fryer (1946-2014), LitNet Skrywersalbum[1]

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