Isililo

ISILILO

“Nothing lasts long enough to have been. These fragments of everything descend upon us haphazardly. Only rarely do we see the immanence of wholes. And that is the beginning of art”.(Dambudzo Marechera, House of Hunger)

ISILILO is a mix of comedy, absurdism, physical theatre and dramatic prose. It is an extraordinary example of contemporary  South African theatre and the dynamism with which our local practitioners treat their narrative and performative responsibilities. It is also a deeply South African story in form and content.

The Life Esidimeni tragedy rocked our consciousness as a nation.

The rainbow nation had again faltered and instituted unbelievable suffering and pain on the lives of its citizens. Siyambonga Mdubeki  has been able to recount the collective traumas of all the families who lost their lives in the height of this investigation. Through delicate story-telling, beautiful prose and truly dynamic scenes and prop-work, the cast of ISILILO has gifted the victims of the tragedy their humanity.

1) A word from the playwright:

It is 2016 when I came across a news headline saying “At least 144 mentally ill patients died during Life Esidimeni”.

Now this is obviously how the Journalists write headlines to attract readers and make people curious to read what comes after the headline, but for me, I knew there and then that there is really no way that, this can sound right to someone reading, not the headline itself but the actual thing carried by the headline, “At least 144 mentally ill patients died during Life Esidimeni”.

Even though I had had an interest in what was happening with the Life Esidimeni incident, that headline incited something in me and that is when I started reading more about it.

At this point I was not even sure yet that I wanted to do a play about it but I was just a concerned citizen. Upon reading articles about Life Esidimeni, I  learnt that the victims were being compensated R1.2 million for the loss of their loved ones. This, I thought, was not the justice the families were looking for ;but I was looking at it from the outside, without the knowledge of how they felt at the time.

I continued to wonder “How does one put a price on someone’s life?” “Does money take away the pain?”.

Of course there was no way I would have had answers to these questions from the outside.

I decided to approach a journalist by the name of Suzanne Venter, who worked for Rapport. Suzanne was the one who helped me with the articles she wrote and any information she had about the Life Esidimeni incident as well as the arbitration process.

After going through those gruesome stories she shared, I wondered how the victims were and what their thoughts were, especially that even after all that has been said. No one had been held accountable for what happened, let alone being imprisoned.  Suzanne then directed me to Mrs Christene Nxumalo who was the leader of the family committee and who had also lost her sister during the Life Esidimeni transfers.

Mrs Nxumalo is the one who then made it possible for me to meet with other direct family members who lost their loved ones during the Life Esidimeni incident. From then on I would meet up with those families and have a conversation with them, trying to understand and get their side of the story as well as what it is they wish could have been done to avoid the incident that happened. I recorded everything I heard and listened to it again when I was home by myself to make sense of everything.

The families recounted  how their loved ones were ill treated in the different NGOs that they were moved to. They spoke about  the conditions in which they lived under with some instances of patients being given the wrong medication.

At this point I knew that I needed to do something.

@TheMarketTheatre ·
markettheatre

As a qualified writer, actor and director, I thought that telling this  a story was a no brainer.

2) About ISILILO

ISILILO is a look into the state of health institutions in South Africa through the life of a young boy whose dreams are deferred because of his father’s deteriorating health. As the story unfolds, we encounter young Gcina Mabitsela, the protagonist, having to choose between his career as a soccer star, the love of his life and caring for his father.

The Market Theater Laboratory is honoured to present ISILILO again to Gauteng audiences as part of the human rights program on the 17,18,19,20,21 March 2023.

This play first debuted at the Market Theatre in 2020, but was only open to the Media as well as the Life Esidimeni family Committee.

In 2021 it had its run at The Forge in Braamfontein.

Written by:

Siyambonga Mdubeki

Developed by the Cast:

Zanele Mthombeni

Tsegofatso Masekwameng

Siyambonga Mdubeki Directed By:

Ncumisa Ndimeni

Baleni Ernest

3) Comments and Testimonials

“I am watching this play for the second time now. This will be a mouthpiece for Life Esidimeni families, as our government looks down on us. They think that since they have compensated us, everything is alright. We still need justice for our own lost families. I think this play will give us justice”. Mrs Jabulile Hlatshwayo

“I lost my younger sister who had a disability, she was epileptic and she was lost into the system, I would like to put it, because she was sent to hospital and she never came back. There was never an explanation from the hospital as to what happened, but her body was bruised, with blood veins all over her, but no one explained what was going on. So the family just concluded that clearly she was given wrong medication because, how does someone go to hospital and just die without any explanation?.” Zanele Mthombeni

” What a beautiful story, beyond the Activism, beyond the story. What an honor and a privilege to be part of that room and to witness all that. You know when you think of people from Life Esidimeni, you think of them from a state of, when they are already born, that they suffered from a mental health issue, but to go through the timeline of this man, for me it just hits home. It is so relatable, I could empathize. I left saying ‘what if this was my father?, what if? ” Chris Djuma.

ISENYUSO

CONCEPT & CHOREOGRAPHY: THAMI TSHABALALA ISENYUSO

ISENYUSO

THE MESMERIZING ISENYUSO RETURNS TO THE MARKET THEATRE

After a successful premiere at the Kucheza Afrika Festival in April of 2022 and The Soweto Theatre, Naledi Award Nominee Thami Tshabalala returns his dance offering in January 2023 at the Ramolao Makhene Theatre from 27 till 28 January 2023.  

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Tshabalala has proved to be a tour de force, since matriculating from the National School of the Arts in 2009 and attaining a National Diploma in Dance/Choreography from the Tshwane University of Technology in 2013, he has been afforded tremendous opportunities to choreograph and dance for some of the industry’s top theatre and dance doyens like Kelsey Middleton, Willie Venter and Dada Masilo to name a few.

After tremendous success of his first choreographed solo- work, ‘Simon’, which received critical acclaim at the relaunch of the Dance Umbrella in 2019 and at several dance national festivals like the PACE Festival in Bloemfontein and the Solo & Duet Festival at the Soweto Theatre, it was nominated in the Best Contemporary/Ballet Production 2019 category at the Naledi  Theatre Awards 2020.

ISENYUSO details the injustice, propaganda and toxic representation implicated upon the African tale. Told through the lens of a contemporary queer man of colour, supported by history the work further explores issues of spirituality, lineage and impact caused by Christianity and missionaries on the African culture.

Isenyuso a noun derived from isiZulu language:  meaning ASCENSION.

The work is inspired by the well- known African novel titled ‘Things Fall Apart’ by acclaimed Nigerian author Chinua Achebe published in 1958 chronicling the life of Okonkwo, an Igbo man and local wrestling champion in the fictional clan of Umuofia. He was empowered by the notion of superiority and justice, driven to reclaim the toxic representation of the African diaspora and retain dignity.

With an extensive career in the performing arts as a dancer and choreographer- he has graced home ground stages co-choreographing SINS, NO AIR which are Standard Bank Ovation award winning works at National Arts Festival with the acclaimed theatre practioner and artistic director of Kmad Dance Company-Kelsey Middleton. He further flourished with the incomparable Dada Masilo  in New York, Italy, Singapore, Paris and Sweden to name a few with her re-imagination of Swan Lake and Giselle and The Sacrifice which premiered in Vienna in August of 2021.

‘I was thrilled, anxious and yet very driven to re-stage my work again’ says Tshabalala. As a producer and storyteller of my time, predominantly post the peak of the pandemic I have yearned to heal, reflect and restart from a place of understanding, acknowledgement and desire to fulfil the purpose of being an artist and grab all opportunities that come my way and create opportunities for myself. KNOCK ON THOSE DOORS. Always seeking platforms to display me- Me is my Art. Global narratives told through the lens of the African child.’

Says Tshabalala ‘Others will kneel for answers, others will help themselves for breakthroughs. Either way we’re not stepping on toes. Let us hand over an untainted baton!

‘A pandemic that’s on its knees begging for acknowledgement in a world that guarantees life through sacrificing the other. Unpacking this crippling and barring suitcase unroots the tainted crop that has partially terminated the other story.

A war to be collectively combated’

Watch Isenyuso at the Market Theatre-Ramolao Makhene Theatre on the 27th of January and the 28th. Both shows start at 19:30. Tickets are R150 and can be purchased through Webtickets or at Pick n Pay.

Creative Team:

 

Choreographer:                   Thamsanqa ‘Thami’ Tshabalala

Performers:                            Thamsanqa Tshabalala & Khaya Ndlovu

Technical Director:             Wilhelm Disbergen

Music Composition:           Siya ‘Umlilo’ Ngcobo’ & Nik Sakellarides

Art Work:                                  Nicholas de Vries- Original image by Graham de Lacy

Follow Thami Tshabalala on all Social Media platforms.

ENDS.

For any further queries and interviews, please contact Thami on 066 248 6335 or via email on ttshabz@gmail.com

GET RICH OR DIE DRY

GET RICH OR DIE DRY

About

The TenderCats are planning their annual “business trip” to Budai, this trip entails that a group of girls between the ages of 16 to 22 under the weight of 80kgs are taken to Budai for a once in a lifetime opportunity. The TenderCats consist of Lwazi Mali: a flashy forex trader, Pastor Goodwill Patrick TosoOmo: a so-called servant of God with a huge following, lastly Bhekisile Sele: a sharp, foul mouthed Minister of Police. What these three have in common is greed and their love for money and they’ll stop at nothing to obtain it.

Dates:

8 – 11 December 2022

Venue

Ramolao Makhene,Market Square, Johanneburg 

Actor Wena Part-Time Acting Classes Cycle 1

Actor Wena Part-Time Acting Classes Cycle 1

28 January 2023 – 22 April 2023

spaces are limited to the first 85

R2750

This course is an introduction to acting for people who have no previous experience, or for people who want to practise and hone their existing skills. Students meet over 12 classes on a Saturday morning from 9:00 to 12:00, from 28 January 2023 – 22 April 2023 Students explore acting concepts of character, relationship, objective and environment, through the selection and rehearsal of a monologue, which they perform for a public audience at the end of the cycle.

For registration and bookings for Actor Wena Part-Time Acting Classes Cycle 1 visit www.marketlab.co.za or click on the following below:

The Drowning Eye

After sold out performances at National Arts Festival, Frantz Fanon's The Drowning Eye bring revolutionary love to Joburg

The South African debut of Frantz Fanon’s love play, The Drowning Eye comes to Joburg 

Frantz Fanon’s play invites audiences to reignite their belief in the possibility of love 

Frantz Fanon’s play explores the edge between love, shadow and violence

Revolutionary Love is a new artistic project that looks at love and revolution in all their intertwining. Its first artistic ventures, a production of Frantz Fanon’s play, ‘The Drowning Eye’, premiered to critical acclaim and full houses at this year’s National Arts Festival (NAF) in Makhanda and will now open at The Ramolao Makhene Theatre in Johannesburg on October 7, 2022.  

Written in 1949, when the young Martiniquan author was just 24 and a student in Paris, ‘The Drowning Eye’ is part love poem, part surrealist narrative, part philosophical treatise, and a powerful testimony to the power and possibilities of love as an act of resistance.  

This contemporary reimagining of the text, sets the play in the aftermath of revolution and entangles fiction and poetry with Fanon’s biography to explore the edge between love, shadow and violence. Tamara Guhrs and Stacy Hardy join forces with KwaSha Theatre Company, the Market Theatre Lab and Windybrow Arts Centre, with music by Tumi Mogorosi, to present this work at a time when Fanon’s writing has new relevance for a generation of young South Africans questioning the limits and possibilities of revolution today.

‘The Drowning Eye’ is performed in the midst of an exhibition which combines archival material with poetic lines of flight and philosophical questions, and features voice by Lesego Rampolokeng, as well as film and music to explore revolutionary love in all its guises – revolutionary manifestations of love, love as a revolutionary force and the historic role of love and lovers within liberation movements (from Frantz and Josie Fanon to Che Guevara and Aleida March Torre, Winnie and Nelson Mandela, Miriam Makeba and Stokely Carmichael, and many more.)

For audiences unfamiliar with Fanon’s work, the play and accompanying exhibition serve as a potent introduction to the life and work of one of the most important anti-colonial thinkers. For readers of Fanon it’s an opportunity to engage the complex interplay between poetry, psychology, philosophy, and political theory that came to define his oeuvre. For lovers it’s an invitation to reignite their passion at a time when love is too often caught between consumer culture, popularist narcissism and casual sexual encounters. 

As Nkgopoleng Moloi wrote in her review of the production at NAF, “the play reads as a surrealist offering whose goal is to free language, thought and human experience from despotic boundaries of rationalism. Here is Fanon, endlessly (re)creating himself. “

Directed by Tamara Guhrs, The Drowning Eye features performances by the Market Theatre Foundation’s dynamic youth theatre company, KwaSha! This company has, in the last five years, become an important platform in Joburg’s cultural landscape, where up-and-coming performers receive a year-long contract, the opportunity to work with various directors and an artistic home at the Windybrow Arts Centre. This year’s iteration – “KwaSha the 5th” is made up of Moagi Kai, Mongezi Ntukwana, Mncedisi Hadebe, Nonhlanhla Sidiki and Sivuyise Kibido. With dramaturgy by Stacy Hardy and Kaushik Sunder Rajan, and design by Megan Miller, the production promises a visual, emotional and thought-provoking journey into what ‘love in all its forms’ can mean for us today.  It is made possible with the support of the National Arts Festival (NAF), French Institute South Africa (IFAS), Bolloré and Mazarz, with research facilitated by the Neubauer Collegium for Culture & Society, at the University of Chicago. 

PRODUCTION INFORMATION CREATIVE TEAM

Conceptualised                                 Stacy Hardy and Tamara Guhrs

Directed                                             Tamara Guhrs

Performed by KwaSha Theatre Company in association with the Market Theatre Laboratory and the Windybrow Arts Centre, IFAS, Mazars, Bolloré

Performers: Moagi Kai, Mongezi Ntukwana, Mncedisi Hadebe, Nonhlanhla Sidiki, Sivuyise Kibido.

Music and sound design:      Tumi Mogorosi

Featuring          Lesego Rampolokeng as “The Voice”  

Stage Manager        Tshepo Matlala

Performance:      6 October 2022 – 23 October 2022

Previews:               6 October Preview @ 7pm

Season Dates & times     Tuesday – Saturday 19h00 and Sunday 15h00

Tickets: R100

Student Price: R70

To make block bookings and discounts please contact Anthony Ezeoke 011 832 1641ext 203/ 083 246 4950 or Bandile Luvalo 078 4344 860

For further information, interviews and images, contact:

Lusanda Zokufa 072 367 7867 or lusandaz@markettheatre.co.za and Desmond Mathebula 062 329 4741 or desmondm@markettheatre.co.za

Introduction to Screen Acting Cycle 2

Introduction to Screen Acting Cycle 2

_R1800_

_Is dancing your passion? Do you want to brush up on those moves? Well get those dancing shoes on and get ready to sweat! This course will introduce students to the world of Footwork Fusion Dance. Students meet over 10 classes on a Thursdays afternoon (6pm – 8pm), from 1 September 2022 to 3 November 2022 You don’t have to be a seasoned dancer to apply for this one, anyone with the passion to move and the dedication to learn is welcomed._

*_Feel like joining the Jiva Wena Dance Classes: Part-time? Tickets are sold through Webtickets_*

To Apply please email your CV to courses@marketlab.co.za or Whatsapp 063 361 1211

Jiva Wena Dance Classes: Part-time

Jiva Wena Dance Classes: Part-time

_R1800_

_Is dancing your passion? Do you want to brush up on those moves? Well get those dancing shoes on and get ready to sweat! This course will introduce students to the world of Footwork Fusion Dance. Students meet over 10 classes on a Thursdays afternoon (6pm – 8pm), from 1 September 2022 to 3 November 2022 You don’t have to be a seasoned dancer to apply for this one, anyone with the passion to move and the dedication to learn is welcomed._

*_Feel like joining the Jiva Wena Dance Classes: Part-time? Tickets are sold through Webtickets_* 

Opportunity for emerging theatre-makers at the Market Theatre Laboratory!

Opportunity For Emerging Theatre-Makers at the Market Theatre Laboratory!

Applications for the Market Theatre Laboratory’s renowned Theatre and Performance full-time course open from 1 August – 30 September 2022, for study in 2023. We are looking for talented, determined young people who are passionate about the performing arts to become part of the next generation of artistic innovators, change-makers and storytellers.

The Market Lab is a multi-award-winning arts incubator, with a reputation for facilitating the development of exceptional young theatre-makers, facilitators, actors, writers and directors, and for creating innovative and relevant new plays

Our students have the opportunity to work and learn with some of the country’s most iconic theatre practitioners, while creating a diverse range of work both individually and within an ensemble.

With multiple local, African and global partners, the Lab strives to create enriching experiences that contribute to the personal and artistic growth of each person who participates in our programmes. Alumni have gone on to excel on stage and screen, from established stalwarts such as Warren Masemola, to relative newcomers such as Mathews Rantsoma, who has just been nominated for the SAFTA award for Best Actor in a TV Soap. Others have chosen to apply their skills in several other industries, including publishing, radio, event management and marketing. Many are playing leadership roles in arts institutions and other contexts, and remain committed to working in the communities that nurtured their growth as young artists.  

The Market Lab’s full-time theatre and performance course, which runs from January to November each year, offers intensive training in a laboratory environment for emerging theatre practitioners to develop to a professional standard. The programme focuses on practical experience, and learning through experimentation, exchange, research and making. Each year, twenty first years are selected, a small group that allows for each students’ creative journey to be mentored. The Lab invests in ensuring that the curriculum continues to serves the interests and needs of young creatives in a rapidly evolving industry. Most importantly, we teach young artists to adapt, to experiment, and to think of themselves as entrepreneurs. In these challenging times, we aim to think expansively about the relevance of theatre and live performance, and to find language that articulates what theatre-makers know how to do and where the current need for these skills is situated. The ways in which theatre-making skills help make sense of being human, teach us how to be with people, how to hold space, how to participate in community, how to approach change, and how to solve problems creatively, are needed now more than ever.

The high quality of artistic engagement between students, collaborators, audiences and theatre practitioners happening in the space is evident in the impressive array of awards that the productions created through or with the Market Theatre Laboratory have won – this year, the Market Lab was the only institution nominated in the Naledi Award category for Best Tertiary or Incubator production, winning for Peeling Shadows.

When the Market Theatre Laboratory opened its doors in 1989, the intention of its founders, Dr John Kani and Barney Simon, was to provide opportunities to talented youth from disadvantaged backgrounds who would not otherwise be able to pursue their passion for the arts or study further. This remains an integral part of the Lab’s purpose, along with a determination to assist young artists to build sustainable careers, and to create space and visibility for subaltern experiences, voices and identities.

Applicants are encouraged to  Apply Here 

 Alternatively application forms can be fetched from the Market Theatre Laboratory offices:

For Queries contact:           

courses@marketlab.co.za 

Whatsapp: 063 361 1211

 011 838 7498

Twitter: @Themarketlab

Instagram: Market laboratory

Facebook:  The Market Theatre Laboratory

You Tube: Market Theatre Laboratory Official

For further information, interviews and images, contact:

Lusanda Zokufa 072 367 7867 or lusandaz@markettheatre.co.za and Desmond Mathebula 062 329 4741 or desmondm@markettheatre.co.za

 

KwaSha Theatre Company Tours The Kids of Amandla Street to Schools In August

KwaSha Theatre Company Tours The Kids of Amandla Street to Schools In August

KwaSha Theatre Company is delighted to present a new production for young audiences, The Kids of Amandla Street, which will tour to primary schools from 18 August – 3 September. The play, written by Lereko Mfono, explores themes of friendship, xenophobia, and identity. It invites the audience into the world of Obi, Jimmy, Palesa and Lillian, four youth living in Amandla Street in inner city Johannesburg, navigating their way through an environment that offers comfort and joy, but also quickly becomes a place full of prejudice, racism and fear. Within the complexity of the street they think of as home, the kids who live there seek to lead whole-hearted lives and dream big dreams. They are put in a situation where they must come up with their own solutions and decide on their personal values and actions, even when these are at odds with the authority figures in their lives.

The Kids of Amandla Street was originally developed through ASSITEJ SA’s African Youth Theatre and Dance Festival programme, in association with New Visions New Voices at the John F. Kennedy Centre, the University of Maryland, Artscape Theatre and Soweto Theatre. The subject matter resonates with the experiences of young people living in present day South Africa, and there will be a post-performance discussion aligned with the Life Orientation curriculum, to engage the audience in a conversation about who they are and how they see others. On this fresh staging, playwright Lereko says, “I am so moved to hear the talented KwaSha team will be staging the work especially in this current climate we’re in. I started developing the play in 2015 when there were xenophobic attacks that broke out in Durban and parts of Johannesburg, and in many ways it’s so disheartening to see that some 7 years later we are still dealing with the same issue in this country. My hope is that the play will resonate with young audiences in such a way that they would be convinced to break the cycle of hatred wherever they are”.

The play is brought to life by a talented team of young theatre-makers, led by up and coming director, performer and facilitator, Sibahle Mangena, a past member of KwaSha and current facilitator of the Windybrow Arts Centre after school arts programme. Sibahle co-created and performed in the Naledi-nominated productions Text Me When You Arrive and Currently Gold, and has worked on various programmes at the Centre for the Less Good Idea. However, this is her first professional play as a director. She will be joined by young designer, Megan Miller, a recent graduate from Wits University who has assisted with productions at the National Children’s Theatre, and who has a whimsical and innovative approach to theatre design. This young and exciting creative team will be mentored and supported by the incredibly experienced theatre-maker Gina Shmukler, who worked with similar themes in her acclaimed production, The Line. During the process the team will also be engaging with tweens in the inner-city who participate in the Windybrow’s arts programmes, to ensure that the subject matter, characters, and story are compelling, relevant and resonant for the play’s target audience.

Now in its fifth year, KwaSha, a theatre company run collaboratively by Windybrow Arts Centre and the Market Theatre Laboratory, are coming to this production fresh from a tour to Makhanda where they presented Franz Fanon’s The Drowning Eye on the curated programme. This diversity of programming reflects the extraordinary range of experiences that KwaSha members are able to participate in during their year in the company, to give them work experience which helps launch their professional careers. This is the second play by Lereko Mfono staged by KwaSha, who also presented the wonderful Little Fists; Big Heart last year. Lereko has written extensively for young audiences, and is passionate about inspiring young Africans to dream confidently and expansively.

For further information or to request a performance of The Kids of Amandla Street at your school, please contact Zintle at zintler@markettheatre.co.za or call 082 880 8691.

Author: Lereko Mfono

Director: Sibahle Mangena

Mentor: Gina Shmukler

Set and Costume Designer: Megan Miller

Production Manager & Producer: Rudy Motseatsea

Performed by KwaSha The 5th

 

Schools Tour: 18 August – 3 September

Age Range: 10 – 12 years, Grades 4 – 6

Duration: 50 minutes

For further information, interviews and images, contact:

Lusanda Zokufa 072 367 7867 or lusandaz@markettheatre.co.za and Desmond Mathebula 062 329 4741 or desmondm@markettheatre.co.za

Whistleblowers

Whistleblowers at Ramolao Makhene Theatre for Two Performances

Continuing its recent successful run at National Arts Festival (NAF), where it won a Standard Bank Silver Ovation Award and was the talk of the town, Whistleblowers, directed by Rob Murray and Quintijn Relouw, will have two performances at the Ramolao Makhene Theatre on Saturday 23 July at 19.00 and Sunday 24 July at 15.00.

Whistleblowers tackles the themes of Gender-Based Violence (GBV) and sexual assault through the lens of a high school girls’ hockey match. It is the final game of the season, and the championship title is on the line. But the stakes are much higher than that, as the play reveals back-stories and situations that the young women have been experiencing. As the lines between the game and social commentary start blurring, and the team finds a collective voice of anger and frustration at the plight of women in this country, the team needs to make a vital choice: attack or defend.

Shifting between physical and visual performance, searing storytelling, and surrealist dream sequences, Whistleblowers is an honest and tragicomic call to action. A war cry for the soul.

It has been created and performed by Reabetswe Gaentswe, Boitshepo Maile, Kgaogelo Makgoba, Modipadi Mokgohloa, and Phindiwe Qakoshe, with a special appearance by Quintijn Relouw.

Whistleblowers premiered at the AFDA JHB Experimental Festival, where it had an immediate impact. This was carried through to its NAF run, which saw weeping audiences, standing ovations, and the production hailed as one of the most talked-about shows at the festival.

Steve Kretzmann, veteran journalist and arts critic, and this year’s editor in chief of The Cue, writes: “So many women killed, raped, mutilated, left for dead. We know their names, some of them, most we don’t, or forget. They are all here, legions of our guilt and our ghosts, all murdered by men. These five performers bring them to raging life, with the desire for vengeance only the living can give to the dead. They are in your face, blood pumping through their veins. The energy is at cup fever pitch. This is a game that has to be won…None of this is played out directly, yet the message seeps through, becoming louder and clearer as the often dreamlike sequences layer upon each other. It is a solid team, well directed with touches of physical comedy reining in the didactic, with imaginative use of set and wonderful touches of mask work…Whistleblowers is a winning work.” (see the full review here)

The performances at the Ramolao Makhene Theatre see the first push of the show before its Gauteng and KZN festivals and schools’ tour for this year and next. It is a show that should be seen by every high school learner – male or female.

Tickets range from R90 with special prices for schools, students, and block bookings, and can be booked here: https://www.webtickets.co.za/v2/Event.aspx?itemid=1516983492

For more information, please contact Rob at rob@afda.co.za

Whistleblowers  is presented by AFDA JHB and Verity Productions.