Difference between revisions of "University of Natal, Department of Speech and Drama"

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
In 1949 the [[University of Natal]] was the first South African university to accept Speech and Drama for BA degree purposes.  Founded by [[Elizabeth Sneddon]], the Department enrolled 7 students in 1951.  Sneddon's syllabus, devised after research in Britain and America, was adopted by departments in other institutions. Alumni  who were to be appointed Professors and/or Heads include [[Roger Orton]], [[David Horner]], [[Devi Bughwan]], [[Lynn Dalrymple]], [[Ian Steadman]], [[Dennis Schauffer]], [[Francois Swart]], [[Gary Gordon]], [[Fred Hagemann]], [[Yvonne Banning]], [[Carel Trichardt]]  and, as successors to Sneddon, [[Pieter Scholtz]] (1973-1995) and [[Mervyn McMurtry]] (1996-).  In Canada, America, Britain and Australia, [[Azra Francis]], [[Peter Larlham]], Michael Barclay, Di James, [[Robert Gordon]] and David Ritchie hold similar positions.  Performers include [[Mary Peach]], [[Louis Burke]], Car[[el Trichardt]], [[Ann Wakefield]], [[Lyn Hooker]], [[Eckard Rabe]], [[Dorothy-Ann Gould]], [[Ellis Pearson]], [[Brenda Radloff]] and, for the Royal Shakespeare Company, [[Richard Haines]] and [[Paul Spence]].  After extensive revisions to the syllabus, the Department's designation became the [[Department of Drama and Performance Studies]] in 1996.  
+
In 1949 the [[University of Natal]] was the first South African university to accept Speech and Drama for BA degree purposes.  Founded by [[Elizabeth Sneddon]], the Department enrolled 7 students in 1951.  Sneddon's syllabus, devised after research in Britain and America, was adopted by departments in other institutions. Alumni  who were to be appointed Professors and/or Heads include [[Roger Orton]], [[David Horner]], [[Devi Bughwan]], [[Lynn Dalrymple]], [[Ian Steadman]], [[Dennis Schauffer]], [[Francois Swart]], [[Gary Gordon]], [[Fred Hagemann]], [[Yvonne Banning]], [[Carel Trichardt]]  and, as successors to Sneddon, [[Pieter Scholtz]] (1973-1995) and [[Mervyn McMurtry]] (1996-).  In Canada, America, Britain and Australia, [[Azra Francis]], [[Peter Larlham]], Michael Barclay, [[Di James]], [[Robert Gordon]] and David Ritchie hold similar positions.  Performers include [[Mary Peach]], [[Louis Burke]], [[Carel Trichardt]], [[Ann Wakefield]], [[Lyn Hooker]], [[Eckard Rabe]], [[Dorothy-Ann Gould]], [[Ellis Pearson]], [[Brenda Radloff]] and, for the Royal Shakespeare Company, [[Richard Haines]] and [[Paul Spence]].  After extensive revisions to the syllabus, the Department's designation became the [[Department of Drama and Performance Studies]] in 1996.  
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
  
(McM)
+
[[ESAT Bibliography Mcm-Mda|McMurtry]] 2002.
  
 
== For more information ==
 
== For more information ==

Latest revision as of 17:09, 7 February 2018

In 1949 the University of Natal was the first South African university to accept Speech and Drama for BA degree purposes. Founded by Elizabeth Sneddon, the Department enrolled 7 students in 1951. Sneddon's syllabus, devised after research in Britain and America, was adopted by departments in other institutions. Alumni who were to be appointed Professors and/or Heads include Roger Orton, David Horner, Devi Bughwan, Lynn Dalrymple, Ian Steadman, Dennis Schauffer, Francois Swart, Gary Gordon, Fred Hagemann, Yvonne Banning, Carel Trichardt and, as successors to Sneddon, Pieter Scholtz (1973-1995) and Mervyn McMurtry (1996-). In Canada, America, Britain and Australia, Azra Francis, Peter Larlham, Michael Barclay, Di James, Robert Gordon and David Ritchie hold similar positions. Performers include Mary Peach, Louis Burke, Carel Trichardt, Ann Wakefield, Lyn Hooker, Eckard Rabe, Dorothy-Ann Gould, Ellis Pearson, Brenda Radloff and, for the Royal Shakespeare Company, Richard Haines and Paul Spence. After extensive revisions to the syllabus, the Department's designation became the Department of Drama and Performance Studies in 1996.

Sources

McMurtry 2002.

For more information

Return to

Return to South African Theatre Venues, Companies, Societies, etc

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page