Difference between revisions of "Die Skandaal"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
A 1997 play written and adapted by [[Deon Opperman]] and [[Lizz Meiring]], using ''[[The Country Wife]]'' by [[William Wycherley]] and ''[[The School for Scandal]]'' by [[Richard Brinsley Sheridan]] as source texts.
 
A 1997 play written and adapted by [[Deon Opperman]] and [[Lizz Meiring]], using ''[[The Country Wife]]'' by [[William Wycherley]] and ''[[The School for Scandal]]'' by [[Richard Brinsley Sheridan]] as source texts.
 +
 +
See: ''[[Die Skandaal 2]]''.
  
 
== Subject ==
 
== Subject ==
Line 5: Line 7:
  
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
Premièr production staged by the [[Independent Performance Trust]] ([[IPT]]) and directed by Opperman at the [[Grahamstown Festival]] in 1997, starring [[André Odendaal]], [[Hannes Muller]], [[Lizz Meiring]], [[Eric Nobbs]], [[Susan Danford]], [[David Clatworthy]], [[Wilmien Rossouw]], [[Stephen Jennings]]. Set designed by [[James MacNamara]], costumes by [[Thomas Thompson]]. The same production played in the [[Little Theatre]] in Pretoria later in 1997, in the [[Nico Malan Theatre]] in Cape Town in January 1998 and in the [[Civic Theatre]] in Johannesburg in February 1998.
+
1997: Premièr production staged by the [[Independent Performance Trust]] ([[IPT]]) and directed by Opperman at the [[Grahamstown Festival]] in 1997, starring [[André Odendaal]], [[Hannes Muller]], [[Lizz Meiring]], [[Eric Nobbs]], [[Susan Danford]], [[David Clatworthy]], [[Wilmien Rossouw]], [[Stephen Jennings]]. Set designed by [[James MacNamara]], costumes by [[Thomas Thompson]]. The same production played in the [[Little Theatre]] in Pretoria later in 1997, in the [[Nico Malan Theatre]] in Cape Town in January 1998 and in the [[Civic Theatre]] in Johannesburg in February 1998.
  
 
==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
National Arts Festival programme, 1997
+
[[National Arts Festival]] programme, 1997
  
''Cape Times'' 22 December 1997.
+
''[[Cape Times]]'' 22 December 1997.
  
 
Go to [[South African Theatre/Bibliography|ESAT Bibliography]]
 
Go to [[South African Theatre/Bibliography|ESAT Bibliography]]

Latest revision as of 08:24, 10 February 2018

A 1997 play written and adapted by Deon Opperman and Lizz Meiring, using The Country Wife by William Wycherley and The School for Scandal by Richard Brinsley Sheridan as source texts.

See: Die Skandaal 2.

Subject

Set in the present in a security complex in Centurion. It is a comedy about middle-class Afrikaans society, as the body-corporate members of a block of flats squabble, lie, cheat and adulterise while trying hard to keep up a facade of respectability.

Performance history in South Africa

1997: Premièr production staged by the Independent Performance Trust (IPT) and directed by Opperman at the Grahamstown Festival in 1997, starring André Odendaal, Hannes Muller, Lizz Meiring, Eric Nobbs, Susan Danford, David Clatworthy, Wilmien Rossouw, Stephen Jennings. Set designed by James MacNamara, costumes by Thomas Thompson. The same production played in the Little Theatre in Pretoria later in 1997, in the Nico Malan Theatre in Cape Town in January 1998 and in the Civic Theatre in Johannesburg in February 1998.

Translations and adaptations

Sources

National Arts Festival programme, 1997

Cape Times 22 December 1997.

Go to ESAT Bibliography

Return to

Return to S in Plays I Original SA Plays

Return to South_African_Theatre/Plays

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page