Final call for applications for the 2015 Baxter Dance Festival in October

Following the success of the 10th anniversary of the hugely popular annual Baxter Dance Festival last year, the organisers are now calling for entries for 2015 from dance studios, schools, companies, groups and independent dance-makers, as well as proposals from choreographers (including a DVD of recent work).

The closing date for applications to participate in this year’s event is Monday, July 6, at 5pm and choreographers are strongly encouraged to send in their submissions as early as possible. Continue reading

KZN student productions at the National Arts Festival

DURBAN University of Technology will present Behind Closed Minds at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown.

Written and directed by Farrell Drew, the play offers a dramatic and emotionally powerful story. It is a dark and soul-questioning piece that touches on issues such as loyalty, injustice and the misuse of power.

Behind Closed Minds is centred on the lives of Dr Victor Duval, his wife and assistant Anita, and the patients who were released into their care. The play seeks to examine a side to hypnotherapy that has yet to be explored, while revealing how the selfishness of one man destroyed the lives of all those who trusted him.

The play will be staged in the Rehearsal Room at 11.30 am on July 7 and 2.30 pm on July 8. Tickets are R45 (concessions R35).

Also staging a work in the student drama festival is the University of KwaZulu-Natal Durban. Ashes to Ashes, written and directed by Camilla Rogers, is a political satire that ridicules the actions of our political leaders and law enforcers, while acting out a robbery.

The play will be staged in the Rehearsal Room at 5 pm on July 6 and 8 pm on July 7. Tickets are R45 (R35 concessions).

Bookings are open and can be made via the website:http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za. Ticketing call centre: 0860 002 004

Pick up a Festival programme and booking kit from selected Standard Bank and Exclusive Books. The full programme is online athttp://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za

A look at Alan Paton’s life and works in ‘A Voice I Cannot Silence’

DURBAN actors Ralph Lawson, Clare Mortimer and Menzi Mkhwane will be starring in Greg Homann and Ralph Lawson’s A Voice I Cannot Silence.

The play, which is based on the life and work of Alan Paton, highlights the invaluable contribution made by the author of Cry, The Beloved Country who was, in the words of Douglas Livingstone, a “lighthouse in the South African twilight” during the dark decades leading up to the country’s constitutional democracy.

Paton’s internationally recognised gifts of lyric verse, evocative prose and vibrant story telling are combined to create a richly dramatic portrait.

The play focuses on his years as principal of Diepkloof Reformatory, the “toughest black borstal in the Southern Hemisphere”, where he introduced daring reforms that brought him into conflict with the architect of apartheid Hendrik Verwoerd, his position as president of the Liberal Party that led to harassment and a 10-year period during which his passport was taken away by the apartheid government, his indomitable belief in and daunting struggle for human rights, and the complexities of his personal relationships.

These weighty themes are explored through Paton’s interaction with Anne Hopkins, whom he employed in 1968 as a secretary shortly after the death of his wife Dorrie.

While trying to come to terms with his loss, the memories of his wife and their love for each other are set in contrast to his difficult days spent at the reformatory some 20 years earlier where he remembers vividly a curious young man called Sponono.

A Voice I Cannot Silence is being staged at the Rhodes Box Theatre at noon and 8.30 pm on July 10 and July 11, and at noon on July 12.

Tickets are R70, with concession tickets at R65.

A post-performance discussion with the director and cast, moderated by an arts journalist from City Press, will take place after the noon performance on July 10.

Bookings are open and can be made via the website:http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za. Ticketing call centre: 0860 002 004

Pick up a Festival programme and booking kit from selected Standard Bank and Exclusive Books. The full programme is online athttp://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za

Ewok delivers a visceral experience

DURBAN actor, poet and spoken-word artist Iain “Ewok” Robinson will star in Yobo: You’re Only Born Once in the Thomas Pringle Hall at 3 pm on July 8, 4 pm on July 9, 4 pm on July 10 and noon and 9 pm on July 11.

Yobo is a spoken-word, audio-visual experience created by Robinson and his wife Karen Logan. It delivers a highly visceral theatre experience using live video projection and an original score created across continents.

Set against the backdrop of the constant construction that is contemporary South Africa, Yobo draws us into the world of a solitary white man living camped beneath a national highway.

Tickets are R70 (concessions R65).

Bookings are open and can be made via the website:http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za. Ticketing call centre: 0860 002 004

Pick up a Festival programme and booking kit from selected Standard Bank and Exclusive Books. The full programme is online at http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za

Iain ' Ewok' Robinson.

Iain ‘ Ewok’ Robinson.

KwaZulu-Natal Philharmonic Orchestra to delight classical music fans

THE KwaZulu-Natal Philharmonic Orchestra will be performing a number of concerts at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown.

At 6 pm on July 4, the orchestra will present a Symphony Concert, conducted by Bernhard Gueller and featuring soloist, Joanna Franklin (violin), in the Guy Butler Theatre at Monument.

The programme includes: Hendrik Hofmeyr’s Preludio e Umsindo; Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35; and Dvorak’s Symphony No. 8, in G major, Op. 88. Tickets range from R70 to R100.

At 2 pm and 7.30 pm on July 5, in the Guy Butler Theatre, the orchestra will present The (He)art of the Matter.
The concert will be conducted by Richard Cock and features soloists, Magdalene Minnaar (soprano), Timothy Moloi (tenor) and Nicholas Nicolaidis (tenor). The programme includes a tribute to Frank Sinatra, Gershwin’s S’Wonderful, S’Marvellous, A Whole New World, Unforgettable, What A Wonderful World and The Lady is a Tramp.

Tickets are R70 (R65 concessions). A percentage of proceeds from this concert will be donated to the Theatre Benevolent Fund, a charity which provides care and comfort to performers who find themselves incapacitated and destitute through illness.

Cock will also conduct the orchestra in a Gala Concert in the Guy Butler Theatre at 3 pm on July 5.
The soloists are Musa Ngungwana (baritone), this year’s Standard Bank Young Artist for Music, Sorin Osorean (horn), Boris Kerimov (cello) and Magdalene de Vries (marimba). The programme will include Peter Klatzow’s I am an African and Tiniyane — a story for orchestra. Tickets are R70 to R100.

At 5 pm on July 5 the orchestra will be performing Heroes and Villains, a children’s concert, in the Monument Fountain Foyer. This interactive educational concert will feature popular music and famous themes from TV and the silver screen, including Pirates of the Caribbean, James Bond, Star Wars and Superman. Admission is free.

Members of the KwaZulu-Natal Philharmonic — Frankel, Violeta Osorhean (violin), David Snaith (viola), Kerimov, Annelize de Villiers (clarinet) and percussionists, Stephane Pechoux, Jorge Renes Lopez, Joshua Kim and Thando Nkangana — will give a concert celebrating the music of the 20th and 21st centuries. The programme will include Ravel’s String Quartet in F major, Steve Reich’s Drumming (1st movement), and David Bruce’s Clarinet Quintet Gumboots.

The recital will take place in the Rhodes Chapel at 7 pm on July 5 and 3 pm on July 7. Tickets are R70 (R65 concessions).

Bookings are open and can be made via the website:http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za. Ticketing call centre: 0860 002 004

Pick up a Festival programme and booking kit from selected Standard Bank and Exclusive Books. The full programme is online at http://www.nationalartsfestival.co.za

The KZN Philharmonic Orchestra is performing several concerts at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown.

The KZN Philharmonic Orchestra is performing several concerts at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown.

Twin Atlantic heading to SA for Oppikoppi and they have a new album out

Scottish rock band Twin Atlantic will be performing at Oppikoppi -The Fantastic Mr. VosVos in August.

The band has had a busy year – they have been on an extensive tour of the United Kingdom, performing to full houses and getting rave reviews for their latest album release Great Divide (Red Bull Records). Q magazine said of the album: “Scottish next big things step it up with an arena-rock-sized swagger” and Kerrang! commented: “If their ascent over the past years has shown us anything, they’ll soon be plunging their flag into the summit of British rock.”

Twin Atlantic singer Sam McTrusty says the band is looking forward to their time in South Africa. “It’s going to be a trip of a lifetime for us and something we never realised we could achieve with this band. Now that it’s just around the corner, we are really excited about getting to meet new people and cultures at the same time as playing our songs for music lovers in South Africa. We have been playing major festivals in the UK, North America, Europe and Australia so it’s with big smiles and pride that we can now say we have been to a whole new continent and rocked with people so far from home. See you soon!”

Since the release of Great Divide the album has produced three hit singles Heart and Soul; Brothers and Sister and Hold On. The fourth single off the album Fall into the Party will be released to SA Radio stations this month. Listen to the single here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5kr_nQsPlSA

That much of Great Divide was written in the back of tour buses, late at night, after Twin Atlantic had stepped off yet another festival stage is evident from the first listen. McTrusty said: “Our adrenaline was through the roof because, for the first time, thousands of people had come to see us. I’d be in the lounge, unable to sleep, recording ideas on my phone, trying to make sense of the reaction we’d had to our songs. You can’t hear 10,000 people singing a chorus back at you and not be changed by it.”

“We’ve been through our punk rock rebellion phase and come out the other side,” laughs McTrusty. “We’ve all grown up being in this band. Dare I say it, we’re finally fully-formed adults. Since Free, some of us have got married and bought our own places and I’ve spent time in Canada because my girlfriend lives there. When the four of us got back together to work on this album, there was no bullshit. With our own lives sorted, it was easier to see the point of the songs and how we wanted them to sound. And, definitely, part of that was embracing pop.”

The bulk of Great Divide was recorded in Rockfield in Wales with producer Gil Norton (Foo Fighters, Pixies), who also helmed Free. Additional songs were recorded in the States with Jacknife Lee (Snow Patrol, U2, R.E.M.).

Twin Atlantic formed in 2007 when McTrusty and bassist Ross McNae, a friend from school, joined forces with drummer Craig Kneale and lead guitarist and occasional cello player Barry McKenna. All four had been in previous bands on the Glasgow scene. They bonded over a shared love of alternative rock, punk-pop and the city’s skate and street art scene, as well as a determination to make music their day jobs.

Their ferocious shows soon saw them booked to support Smashing Pumpkins, Biffy Clyro and their teen idols Blink 182. Within two years, they had played most major UK festivals and been signed, following a tip-off from Alan McGee, to American label Red Bull Records.

Twin Atlantic will be on stage at Oppikoppi -The Fantastic Mr. VosVos on Sunday, August 9. Tickets for the festival at https://plankton.mobi/Home/Index

Social media links:
http://www.twinatlantic.com/
https://www.facebook.com/twinatlantic
https://twitter.com/twinatlantic
https://instagram.com/twinatlantic/
https://www.youtube.com/user/twinatlantic

Twin Atlantic will be in SA in August. Photo: Dean Chalkley

Twin Atlantic will be in SA in August. Photo: Dean Chalkley

Great Divide is the new album from Twin Atlantic.

Great Divide is the new album from Twin Atlantic.

Flemish productions to be staged in Africa

The Dog Days are Over and Another Great Year For Fishing are to be staged at the National Arts Festival.

Two celebrated Flemish productions will have their African premiere at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown. This showcase of Flemish culture and talent is brought to South African audiences thanks to the Government of Flanders and the Flemish-Dutch House deBuren.

“We are proud to bring two incredibly talented artists to South Africa’s premier celebration of creative and artistic talent,” says Dr Geraldine Reymenants, General Representative of the Government of Flanders in South Africa.

Acclaimed choreographer Jan Martens is bringing his production The Dog Days are Over to the festival and producer Tom Struyf will be staging Another Great Year for Fishing.

Jan Martens, born in Belgium in 1984, studied at the Fontys dance academy in Tilburg (Netherlands) and graduated at the Artesis Conservatory for Dance in Antwerp (Belgium) in 2006. In 2009 he began developing his own choreographic works and quickly received critical and popular acclaim. The high energy dance productions grew in popularity and were initially performed mainly in the Netherlands and Belgium before spreading quickly around Europe.

He debuted formally as a choreographer in 2010 with the highly praised i can ride a horse whilst juggling so marry me, a work focusing on a group of women living in a world dominated by social networks.

In 2011 he created two ‘love duets’, both investigating the clichéd portrayal of a male-female relationship: a small guide on how to treat your lifetime companion and sweat baby sweat. The first one was selected for Aerowaves, a European network supporting young choreographers. The work has been performed more than 80 times

The Dog Days Are Over, to be performed at the National Arts Festival on 9 and 10 July, centres on the idea that when a person is asked to jump, they lose focus on the façade they project and the real person behind the mask is exposed.

In the performance Martens forces his audience to reflect on contemporary dance, culture policy, the difference between art and entertainment, as well as why they would want to witness an intensity that is not revealed in daily life.

“The show attempts to put its audience in a trance, yet simultaneously create the aesthetic distance necessary to question why they are in the theatre right at that moment,” says Martens.

All Martens’ works explore the possibility of a perfect balance and symbiosis between story-telling and conceptualism. He does not try to create a new movement language, but instead moulds and recycles existing idioms and places them in a different setting, so a new idea emerges. He maintains that, in his work, the beauty of the incomplete human being is revealed over complex choreography or physical virtuosity.

Tom Struyf was born in 1983, and graduated in 2007 as an actor at the Maastricht Theatre Academy (Netherlands).

His work has won him acclaim and seen him perform at many of the great theatres in Belgium and the Netherlands. His performances The Tatiana Aarons Experience and Act to forget were selected by the jury of the Flemish-Dutch Theatre Festival for Circuit X.

Another Great Year for Fishing, staged at the National Arts Festival on 11 and 12 July, is a performance about the power of stories and images, mass communication and indoctrination. “It’s a play about the question of how to lead a normal life in an ever-changing society and thus constantly requiring a great deal of adoption power. But the show must go on,” says Struyf.

During the show Struyf and dancer Nelle Hens are looking for the fire exit. With the help of a wide range of spin doctors, psychiatrists, journalists, and philosophers they try to unravel what happens in the backrooms of the rat race.

Both Jan Martens and Tom Struyf have recently been acknowledged for their major contribution to the arts. On 2 July, Martens will be awarded the 2015 Charlotte Köhler Prize – a prize that aims to encourage and develop young talent – by the Netherlands’ Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds. In May, Stuyf’s Another Great Year for Fishing was also selected for the Berlin 2015 Theatertreffen Stückemarkt – a festival of discovery for young European theatre makers who develop a new theatrical language.

“We are delighted to bring something new to festival goers, and we invite them to explore all forms of art while they are at the festival, such as this mini-Flemish season when it debuts in Africa,” says Ismail Mahomed, Artistic Director of the National Arts Festival. “We are really very proud to bring this standard of performing arts to South Africa.”

Flanders is the Dutch-speaking autonomous region in the north of Belgium, with Brussels as it is capital. The General Representation of the Government of Flanders in Southern Africa is committed to showcasing the diversity and innovative creativity of Flemish arts and culture.

View video clips of the productions here: www.tomstruyf.be and www.janmartens.com

Fantastic family theatre at National Arts Festival

The ASSITEJ Family Fare Platform returns to the National Arts Festival for a 4th consecutive year to promote rich and diverse theatre for young audiences and their families.

Since its inception, ASSITEJ Family Fare has provided a unique platform dedicated entirely to the needs of families experiencing the festival. The venues provide theatre which caters to the whole family, while Oatlands Prep, where the ASSITEJ Family Fare Platform has its base, specifically provides interactive, creative and stimulating Family Fare activities run by artists and ASSITEJ staff. ASSITEJ has built relationships within the Grahamstown family community, with local families returning each year. Denese Palm, a local mom and entrepreneur, has for the last three years provided wholesome and nutritious catering for audiences visiting the Oatlands venue.

The Family Fare Platform has successfully gained recognition within the framework of the National Arts Festival. Of the handful of prestigious Silver Ovation Awards issued at National Arts Festival since 2012, the ASSITEJ Family Fare programme has already been awarded two: the first for Jori Snell’s critically acclaimed “Kitchen Fables in a Cookie Jar” in 2012 and the second to international ASSITEJ theatre company, Batida from Denmark, whose production “A Man Called Rolex” heralded in a new category of award for Family Fare in 2014. Many other productions on the platform have been awarded Ovation awards in recognition of their quality.

The ASSITEJ Family Fare Platform has now extended across the festival, with performances at Oatlands Prep, Memory Hall, Glennie and Centenary Halls. 2015 presents a rich diversity of 14 productions – entertaining, thought provoking and engaging – giving families the opportunity of “growing up and growing together through theatre”.

On the Main Programme, two international collaborations are featured – “Red Earth Revisited” and “True Confusion”:

  • ‘Red Earth Revisited’ by Speelteater Holland and ASSITEJ SA is a re-imagining of the events around the Xhosa prophetess Nongqawuse, seen through the eyes of a migrant stork, and will follow its appearance on the National Arts Festival Main Programme with a tour of the Eastern Cape. The production stars local actors Macebo Mavuso, Thami Mbongo and Roshina Ratnam as well as a chorus of South African and Netherlands-based artists, and uses puppetry, movement and song in vibrant and interesting ways.
  • True Confusion’ by ZeBu (Denmark), aimed at ages 8 to 13, is a physical interpretation of the situation where children find themselves paradoxically accepting their reality while bombarding it with hundreds of questions. It is playful, challenging and interactive. This dance production has toured extensively internationally and is now on South African soil for the first time.

The theme of Dance for Young Audiences is continued with an exciting local productions

  • ‘Once upon a Fire’ by Briony Horwitz, co-directed by Nkosinathi Gaar and choreographed by David Matamela (South African “So You Think You Can Dance” Judge), is aimed at audiences aged 5 – 11. ‘Once Upon a Fire’ revives the ancient art of story-telling, celebrated in dance and punctuated by enchanting shadow puppetry. This production is the very first dance for young audiences production created under ASSITEJ South Africa mentorship, through the director’s involvement in the Inspiring a Generation programme, which gives emerging South African artists opportunities for international collaboration and exchange in order to develop their craft.

There are also a number of performances which address issues like social injustice, crimes against humanity, disability and inclusivity in exciting and challenging ways, providing the opportunity for starting conversations with young people around important issues:

  • The Orphan of Gaza’ by Eliot Moleba performed by Nidaa Hussein and Megan van Wyk, tells the story of a young girl in Gaza. After a rocket attack, she is told that her parents have gone to a better place. Armed with a makeshift aircraft, helmet, GPS and a cockpit full of courage, she and her pet, plot a journey to search for them.
  • ‘Warrior on Wheels’ presented by the Chaeli Campaign, directed by Jayne Batzofin. The Chaeli Campaign is one of the few local Non-Profit Organisation’s which has been founded by children who are active members of the Management Committee. “Warrior on Wheels”, based on Deidre Gower’s book, aims to engage and enliven the imagination and encourage a more accepting society, especially for those with disabilities. This production was specifically created for children aged 7 – 15.
  • ‘Mirrored Flaws’ by Thando Baliso, tells the story of three teenagers embroiled in social ills. This production aimed at teenagers is told through movement, spoken word and dance.
  • ‘The Rise and Fall’ presented by Sisonke Art Productions, directed by Herbert Mokoena, (Winner of the 2014 SANCTA Awards, nominated for 8 SANCTA Awards) was developed through the ASSITEJ South Africa’s mentorship programme. ‘At age 13 Sarah is kidnapped by Ugandan rebels and forced to become a soldier in the Lord’s Resistance Army. Four years later, with General on the run, Sarah attempts to returning to her childhood village, nervous about the reception she will receive after her role in terrorizing her own people’.

Clowning for Young Audiences:

  • ‘Double the Fun’ – with decades of experience, veteran Durban clown Adi Paxton returns with ‘Double The Fun’, a production made up of magic, clowning and puppetry for ages 3 and up.

Visual Theatre for Young Audiences:

  • ‘Making Mandela’ – written by Nick Warren and Jenine Collocott, directed by Jenine Collocott “Soars with clean narrative lines, superb physical theatre, humour and pathos … it will wow not only festival goers, but the world.” – Robyn Sassen, The Arts at Large. An imaginative journey through the childhood of Nelson Mandela featuring colourful characters, vividly portrayed in beautiful masks, with physical performances supported by emotive sound design and theatrical styling. This is the story of what influenced the rural boy to become the global legend.
  • ‘Florence and Watson’ written and directed by Rob van Vuuren and Dani Bischoff (married): Says Rob van Vuuren ‘We wanted to put together a show that our own daughter would love. So we’ve created a magical mountain full of fairies, dragons, giants and talking animals and found the best most versatile actors and musicians we could with Fleur du Cap Award Winner Dean Balie (Kat and the Kings, Blood Brothers, Orpheus in Africa) and Fleur Du Cap and Standard Bank Ovation Award Winner Sne Dladla (Fergus of Galloway, Betty and the Yeti, Orpheus in Africa) to infuse it with great comedy, awesome music and beautiful performances’.
  • One of Mail and Guardian’s Top 200 Young South Africans in 2013, Rhodes graduate Richard Antrobus of Oddbody Theatre returns to the Festival with his highly successful mime comedy solo: ‘Being Norm’ ideal for anyone 10 and over.
  • ‘Lake’ directed by Daniel Buckland, performed by Ryan Dittman and Jaques de Silva –returning to Festival of the second time; ‘Lake’ is a delight for the whole family, and addresses issues human issues friendship and societal issues around water conservation through warm, funny physical theatre, clowning and puppetry.
  • ‘The Incredible Journey’ directed by Tara Notcutt performed by Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi, Stefan Erasmus and Luke Brown. ‘The Incredible Journey’ was invited to and premiered at the Perth International Fringe Festival in 2015. ‘Once upon a time, a boy named Tommy who lived an unadventurous life was presented by a challenge from the new kid at school – join us on an adventure of the imagination and magic: Come see Tommy’s journey to becoming a hero.’

Music for Young Audiences:

  • The Keiskamma Academy presents “Indalo” directed by Mojalefa Mokanya, which is performed by a 22 piece orchestra band and 10 storytellers. The story is set in the Eastern Cape unpacking the deep and magical relationship between animals and the amaXhosa, and weaves together different strands of artistic expression: music, storytelling, physical performance and visual art.

For more information visit www.assitej.org.za or visit www.nationalartsfestival.co.za for bookings.