Difference between revisions of "Fordsburg's Finest"

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== Performance history in South Africa ==
 
== Performance history in South Africa ==
Premièred in 1998 at the [[Market Theatre]] in February 1998 with [[Marius Weyers]], African-American actress [[Dorcas Johnson]] and [[Paul Slabolepszy]], directed by [[Lara Foot-Newton]].
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1998: Premièred in 1998 at the [[Market Theatre]] in February 1998 with [[Marius Weyers]] as Foxy Freddie, African-American actress [[Dorcas Johnson]] and [[Paul Slabolepszy]], directed by [[Lara Foot-Newton]], assisted by [[Pule Hlatshwayo]]. [[Nadya Cohen]] (set), [[Sue Steele]] (costumes).
  
 
==Translations and adaptations==
 
==Translations and adaptations==
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
''Mail & Guardian'' 13-19 Feb 1998.
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''[[Mail & Guardian]]'' 13-19 Feb 1998.
 +
 
 +
''[[Pretoria News]]'', 10 February 1998.
 +
 
 +
Review by [[Paul Boekkooi]], ''[[Beeld]]'', 13 February 1998.
  
 
Go to [[South African Theatre/Bibliography|ESAT Bibliography]]
 
Go to [[South African Theatre/Bibliography|ESAT Bibliography]]

Revision as of 20:09, 20 April 2020

by Paul Slabolepszy (1997). A play about a young expatriate black woman who returns to Johannesburg to find her old home occupied by a retired white policeman. Unpublished.

Subject

The play is about reconciliation: the daughter of a black South African musician was taken by her parents to New York as an infant in the fifties. She lost them both at a young age, grew up to become a single, self-assured African-American and returns four decades later on a pilgrimage to her birthplace in Fordsburg, Johannesburg to find her roots. She finds the site of the house where she was born and it is now a rundown used car sales lot owned and occupied by a 50-year old Afrikaner ex-policeman whose son died in the border war, whose wife left him, and who has learnt to hide his pain behind the mask of a used car salesman. The encounter between these two damaged individuals provides the situation for painful self-discovery, for an exploration of the tensions existing in the new South African condition, and ultimately it leads to a kind of reconciliation brought about by a mutual recognition of suffering. “The play is about two people who, having long walked on firm ground, now find that they cannot take its firmness for granted. The old blacks and whites won't do anymore. The old baggage and clutter have to go” (Greig, 1998c). [Van Heerden (2008)][1] p.106

Performance history in South Africa

1998: Premièred in 1998 at the Market Theatre in February 1998 with Marius Weyers as Foxy Freddie, African-American actress Dorcas Johnson and Paul Slabolepszy, directed by Lara Foot-Newton, assisted by Pule Hlatshwayo. Nadya Cohen (set), Sue Steele (costumes).

Translations and adaptations

Sources

Mail & Guardian 13-19 Feb 1998.

Pretoria News, 10 February 1998.

Review by Paul Boekkooi, Beeld, 13 February 1998.

Go to ESAT Bibliography

[Van Heerden (2008)][2]

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