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Athol Fugard

Athol Fugard OIS HonFRSL (born 11 June 1932) is a South African playwright, novelist, actor, and director widely regarded as South Africa's greatest playwright.[1] He is best known for his political and penetrating plays opposing the system of apartheid and for the 2005 Oscar-winning film of his novel Tsotsi, directed by Gavin Hood.[2]

Athol Fugard

BornHarold Athol Lannigan Fugard
(1932-06-11) 11 June 1932 (age 91)
Middleburg, Cape Province, South Africa
Occupation
  • Playwright
  • novelist
  • actor
  • director
  • teacher
EducationUniversity of Cape Town (dropped out)
Period1956–present
GenreDrama, novel, memoir
Notable works"Master Harold"...and the Boys
Blood Knot
Spouse
ChildrenLisa, Halle

Acclaimed as "the greatest active playwright in the English-speaking world" by Time in 1985,[3] Fugard continues to write and has published more than thirty plays. Fugard was an adjunct professor of playwriting, acting and directing in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of California, San Diego.[4] He is the recipient of many awards, honours, and honorary degrees, including the 2005 Order of Ikhamanga in Silver "for his excellent contribution and achievements in the theatre" from the government of South Africa.[5] He is also an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.[6]

Fugard was honoured in Cape Town with the opening of the Fugard Theatre in District Six in 2010,[7] and received a Tony Award for lifetime achievement in 2011.[8]

Personal history edit

Fugard was born as Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard, in Middelburg, Eastern Cape, South Africa, on 11 June 1932. His mother, Marrie (Potgieter), an Afrikaner, operated first a general store and then a lodging house; his father, Harold Fugard, was a disabled former jazz pianist of Irish, English and French Huguenot descent.[2][9][10] In 1935, his family moved to Port Elizabeth.[11] In 1938, he began attending primary school at Marist Brothers College.[12] After being awarded a scholarship, he enrolled at a local technical college for secondary education and then studied Philosophy and Social Anthropology at the University of Cape Town,[13] but he dropped out of the university in 1953, a few months before final examinations.[2] He left home, hitchhiked to North Africa with a friend, and then spent the next two years working in east Asia on a steamer ship, the SS Graigaur,[2] where he began writing, an experience "celebrated" in his 1999 autobiographical play The Captain's Tiger: a memoir for the stage.[14]

In September 1956, he married Sheila Meiring, a University of Cape Town Drama School student whom he had met the previous year.[2][15] Now known as Sheila Fugard, she is a novelist and poet. Their daughter Lisa Fugard is a novelist.[16] In 2015, after almost 60 years of marriage, the couple divorced. In 2016, in New York City Hall, Fugard was married to South African writer and academic Paula Fourie.[17] Fugard and Fourie presently live in the Cape Winelands region of South Africa with their daughter, Halle Fugard Fourie.[18][19]

In 1958, the Fugards moved to Johannesburg, where he worked as a clerk in a Native Commissioners' Court, which "made him keenly aware of the injustices of apartheid."[2] His good friendship with prominent local anti-apartheid figures had a profound impact on Fugard, whose plays' political impetus brought him into conflict with the national government; to avoid prosecution, he had his plays produced and published outside South Africa.[15][20] A former alcoholic, Fugard has been a teetotaler since the early 1980s.[21]

For several years, Fugard lived in San Diego, California,[22] where he taught as an adjunct professor of playwriting, acting, and directing in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD).[4][20] For the academic year 2000–2001, he was the IU Class of 1963 Wells Scholar Professor at Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana.[23] In 2012, Fugard relocated to South Africa, where he now lives permanently.[24][25]

Career edit

Early period edit

In 1958, Fugard organised "a multiracial theatre for which he wrote, directed, and acted", writing and producing several plays for it, including No-Good Friday (1958) and Nongogo (1959), in which he and his colleague black South African actor Zakes Mokae performed.[2] In 1978, Richard Eder of The New York Times criticized Nongogo as "awkward and thin. It is unable to communicate very much about its characters, or make them much more than the servants of a noticeably ticking plot." Eder argued, "Queenie is the most real of the characters. Her sense of herself and where she wants to go makes her believable and the crumbling of her dour defenses at a touch of hope makes her affecting. By contrast, Johnny is unreal. His warmth and hopefulness at the start crumble too suddenly and too completely".[26]

After returning to Port Elizabeth in the early 1960s, Athol and Sheila Fugard started The Circle Players,[2] which derives its name from the production of The Caucasian Chalk Circle by Bertolt Brecht.[27]

In 1961, in Johannesburg, Fugard and Mokae starred as the brothers Morris and Zachariah in the single-performance world première of Fugard's play The Blood Knot (revised and retitled Blood Knot in 1987), directed by Barney Simon.[28] In 1989, Lloyd Richards of The Paris Review declared The Blood Knot to be Fugard's first "major play".[29]

Refusal to stage for "Whites Only" audiences edit

In 1962, Fugard found the question of whether he could "work in a theatre which excludes 'Non-Whites'--or includes them only on the basis of special segregated performance-- increasingly pressing". It was made more so by the decision of British Equity to prevent any British entertainer visiting South Africa unless the audiences were multi-racial. In a decision that caused him to reflect on the power of art to effect change, Fugard decided that the "answer must be No".

That old argument used to be so comforting; so plausible: 'One person in that segregated, white audience, might be moved to think, and then to change, by what he saw'.

I'm beginning to wonder whether it really works that way. The supposition seems to be that there is a didactic--a teaching through feeling element in art. What I do know is that art can give meaning, can render meaningful areas of experience, and most certainly also enhances. But teach? Contradict? State the opposite to what you believe and then lead you to accept it?

In other words, can art change a man or woman? No. That is what life does. Art is no substitute for life.[30]

Of the few venues in the country where a play could be presented to mixed audiences some, Fugard noted, were little better than barns. But he concluded that under these circumstances "every conceivable dignity--audience, producer, act, 'professional' etc.--" was "operative" in the white theatre except one, "human dignity".[31]

Fugard publicly supported the Anti-Apartheid Movement (1959–94) in the international boycott of South African theatres due to their segregated audiences. The results were additional restrictions and surveillance, leading him to have his plays published and produced outside South Africa.[20]

Lucille Lortel produced The Blood Knot at the Cricket Theatre, Off Broadway, in New York City in 1964, "launch[ing]" Fugard's "American career."[32]

The Serpent Players edit

In the 1960s, Fugard formed the Serpent Players, whose name derives from its first venue, the former snake pit (hence the name) at the Port Elizabeth Museum,[20] "a group of black actors worker-players who earned their living as teachers, clerks, and industrial workers, and cannot thus be considered amateurs in the manner of leisured whites", developing and performing plays "under surveillance by the Security Police", according to Loren Kruger's The Dis-illusion of Apartheid, published in 2004.[33] The group largely consisted of black men, including Winston Ntshona, John Kani, Welcome Duru, Fats Bookholane and Mike Ngxolo as well as Nomhle Nkonyeni and Mabel Magada. They all got together, albeit at different intervals, and decided to do something about their lives using the stage. In 1961 they met Athol Fugard, a white man who grew up in Port Elizabeth and who recently returned from Johannesburg, and asked him if he could work with them "as he had the know-how theatrically—the tricks, how to use the stage, movements, everything"; they worked with Athol Fugard since then, "and that is how the Serpent Players got together."[34] At the time, the group performed anything they could lay their hands on in South Africa as they had no access to any libraries. These included Bertolt Brecht, August Strindberg, Samuel Beckett, William Shakespeare and many other prominent playwrights of the time. In an interview in California, Ntshona and Kani were asked why they were doing the play Sizwe Banzi Is Dead, considered a highly political and telling story of the South African political landscape at the time. Ntshona answered: "We are just a group of artists who love theatre. And we have every right to open the doors to anyone who wants to take a look at our play and our work...We believe that art is life and conversely, life is art. And no sensible man can divorce one from the other. That's it. Other attributes are merely labels."[34] They mainly performed at the St Stephen's Hall – renamed the Douglas Ngange Mbopa Memorial Hall in 2013 – adjacent to St Stephen's Church, and other spaces in and around New Brighton, the oldest Black township in Port Elizabeth.

According to Loren Kruger, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Chicago,

the Serpent Players used Brecht's elucidation of gestic acting, dis-illusion, and social critique, as well as their own experience of the satiric comic routines of urban African vaudeville, to explore the theatrical force of Brecht's techniques, as well as the immediate political relevance of a play about land distribution. Their work on the Caucasian Chalk Circle and, a year later, on Antigone[20] led directly to the creation, in 1966, of what is still [2004] South Africa's most distinctive Lehrstück [learning play]:The Coat. Based on an incident at one of the many political trials involving the Serpent Players, The Coat dramatized the choices facing a woman whose husband, convicted of anti-apartheid political activity, left her only a coat and instructions to use it.[33]

Clive Barnes of The New York Times panned People Are Living There (1969) in 1971, arguing: "There are splinters of realities here, and pregnancies of feeling, hut [sic] nothing of significance emerges. In Mr. Fugard's earlier plays he seemed to be dealing with life at a proper level of humanity. Here—if real people are living there—they remain oddly quiet about it...The first act rambles disconsolately, like a lonely type writer looking for a subject and the second act produces with pride a birthday party of Chaplinesque bathos but less than Chaplinesque invention and spirit..[The characters] harangue one another in an awkward dislocation between a formal speech and an interior monologue."[35] Mark Blankenship of Variety negatively reviewed a 2005 revival of the same work, writing that it "lacks the emotional intensity and theatrical imagination that mark such Fugard favorites" as "Master Harold"...and the Boys. Blankenship also stated, however, that the performance he attended featuring "only haphazard sketches of plot and character" was perhaps the result of Fugard allowing director Suzanne Shepard to revise the play without showing him the changes.[36]

The Serpent Players conceptualised and co-authored many plays that it performed for a variety of audiences in many theatres around the world. The following are some of its notable and most popular plays:

  • Its first production was Niccolò Machiavelli's La Mandragola, directed by Fugard as The Cure and set in the township. Other productions include Georg Buchner's Woyzeck, Brecht's The Caucasian Chalk Circle and Sophocles' Antigone. When the group had turned to improvisation, they came up with classic works such as Sizwe Banzi Is Dead and The Island, emerging as inner experiences of the actors who are also the co-authors of the plays.
  • In The Coat, Kruger observes, "The participants were engaged not only in representing social relationships on stage but also on enacting and revising their own dealings with each other and with institutions of apartheid oppression from the law courts downward", and "this engagement testified to the real power of Brecht's apparently utopian plan to abolish the separation of player and audience and to make of each player a 'statesman' or social actor...Work on The Coat led indirectly to the Serpent Players' most famous and most Brechtian productions: Sizwe Banzi Is Dead (1972) and The Island (1973)."[33]

Fugard developed these two plays for the Serpent Players in workshops, working with John Kani and Winston Ntshona,[33] publishing them in 1974 with his own play Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act (1972). The authorities considered the title of The Island, which alludes to Robben Island, the prison where Nelson Mandela was being held, too controversial, so Fugard and the Serpent Players used the alternative title The Hodoshe Span (Hodoshe meaning "carrion fly" in Xhosa).

  • These plays "espoused a Brechtian attention to the demonstration of gest and social situations and encouraged audiences to analyze rather than merely applaud the action"; for example, Sizwe Banzi Is Dead, which infused a Brechtian critique and vaudevillian irony-–especially in Kani's virtuoso improvisation-–even provoked an African audience's critical interruption and interrogation of the action.[33]
  • While dramatising frustrations in the lives of his audience members, the plays simultaneously drew them into the action and attempted to have them analyse the situations of the characters in Brechtian fashion, according to Kruger.[33]
  • Blood Knot was filmed by the BBC in 1967, with Fugard's collaboration, starring the Jamaican actor Charles Hyatt as Zachariah and Fugard himself as Morris, as in the original 1961 première in Johannesburg.[37] Less pleased than Fugard, the South African government of B.J. Vorster confiscated Fugard's passport.[9][38]

Fugard's play A Lesson from Aloes (1978) was described as one of his major works by Alvin Klein of The New York Times,[39] though others have written more lukewarm reviews.

Yale Rep premieres, 1980s edit

 
The Fugard Theatre in District Six, Cape Town

"Master Harold"...and the Boys, written in 1982, incorporates "strong autobiographical matter"; nonetheless "it is fiction, not memoir", as Cousins: A Memoir and some of Fugard's other works are subtitled.[40] The play deals with the relationship between a 17-year-old white South African and two African men who work for the white youth's family. Its world premiere was performed by Danny Glover, Zeljko Ivanek and Zakes Mokae, at the Yale Repertory Theater in New Haven, Connecticut, in March 1982.[41][42]

The Road to Mecca was presented at the Yale Repertory Theatre, New Haven, Connecticut, in May 1984. Directed by Fugard, the cast starred Carmen Mathews, Marianne Owen, and Tom Aldredge. Along with Master Harold, it proved to be one of Fugard's most acclaimed works.[43][44] It is the story of an elderly recluse in a small South African town who has spent 15 years on an obsessive artistic project.[45]

Fugard appeared in his A Place With the Pigs at the Yale Rep in New Haven CT, in 1987. Inspired by the true story of World War II Soviet deserter, Fugard plays a paranoid who spent four decades hiding with his pigs. As with The Road to Mecca, Fugards critics readily appreciated the metaphor for a life of internal exile.[46]

Post-apartheid plays edit

The first play that Fugard wrote after the end of apartheid, Valley Song, was premiered in Johannesburg, in August, 1995, with Fugard in the role of both a white, and of a coloured, farmer. While they dispute property titles, both share a reverence for the land and fear change.[47] In October 1995, Fugard took the play to the United States with a production by the Manhattan Theatre Club at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey.[48]

In January 2009, Fugard returned to New Haven for the premiere in the Coming Home. Veronika, the granddaughter of Buk, the coloured farmer in Valley Song, leaves the Karoo to pursue a singing career in Cape Town but then returns, after his death, to create a new life on the land for her young son.[49]

The Fugard Theatre, in the District Six area of Cape Town opened with performances by the Isango Portobello theatre company in February 2010 and a new play written and directed by Athol Fugard, The Train Driver, played at the theatre in March 2010.[50]

In April 2014, returned to the stage in the world premiere of his The Shadow of a Hummingbird at the Long Wharf Theatre, New Haven. This short play was performed with an "introductory scene" compiled by Paula Fourie from Fugard's journal writings. With "the playwright digging through these diaries on a set which resembles an old, busy writer's workspace", the scene blends into the main play, which begins when Boba, the grandson of the story-telling grandfather character Oupa (played by Fugard) comes to visit.[51]

Film edit

Fugard's plays are produced internationally and have won multiple awards, and several have been made into films[52] (see Filmography below). Fugard himself performed in the first of these, as Boesman alongside Yvonne Bryceland as Lena, in Boesman and Lena directed by Ross Devenish in 1973.[53]

His film debut as a director occurred in 1992, when he co-directed the adaptation of his play The Road to Mecca with Peter Goldsmid, who also wrote the screenplay.[52] The film adaptation of his novel Tsotsi, written and directed by Gavin Hood, won the 2005 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2006.[52]

Outside of his own work, Fugard has a number of cameo film roles, most notably as General Smuts in Richard Attenborough's Gandhi (1982), and as Doctor Sundesval in Sydney Schanberg's The Killing Fields (1984).

Plays edit

In chronological order of first production and/or publication:[9][54][55][56][57]

Bibliography edit

Co-authored with John Kani and Winston Ntshona
  • Statements: [Three Plays]. 1974. By Athol Fugard, John Kani, and Winston Ntshona. Rev. ed. Oxford and New York: OUP, 1978. ISBN 0-19-281170-3 (10). ISBN 978-0-19-281170-7 (13). ["Two workshop productions devised by Athol Fugard, John Kani, and Winston Ntshona, and a new play"; includes: Sizwe Bansi Is Dead and The Island, and Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act.]
Co-authored with Ross Devenish
  • The Guest: an episode in the life of Eugene Marais. By Athol Fugard and Ross Devenish. Craighall: A. D. Donker, 1977. ISBN 0-949937-36-3. (Die besoeker: 'n episode in die lewe van Eugene Marais. Trans. into Afrikaans by Wilma Stockenstrom. Craighall: A. D. Donker, 1977. ISBN 0-949937-43-6.)

Filmography edit

Films adapted from Fugard's plays and novel[52]
Film roles[52]

Selected awards and nominations edit

Theatre[62]
Honorary awards
Honorary degrees

Reviews edit

  • Fullerton, Ian (1980), review of Tsotsi, in Cencrastus No. 4. Winter 1980–81, p. 41, ISSN 0264-0856

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Smith, David (12 August 2014). "Athol Fugard: 'Prejudice and racism are still alive and well in South Africa'". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i McLuckie, Craig (3 October 2003). "Athol Fugard (1932–)". The Literary Encyclopedia. from the original on 25 August 2008. Retrieved 29 September 2008.
  3. ^ Andie Miller (October 2009). "From Words into Pictures: In conversation with Athol Fugard". Eclectica. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  4. ^ a b . University of California, San Diego (UCSD). Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
  5. ^ a b . 2005 National Orders Awards. South African Government Online (info.gov.za). 27 September 2005. Archived from the original (World Wide Web) on 21 November 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  6. ^ . Royal Society of Literature. Archived from the original on 27 April 2015. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  7. ^ "The Fugard Theatre". Creative Feel. March 2019. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  8. ^ "Athol Fugard". Encyclopædia Britannica. 24 November 2019. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  9. ^ a b c Fisher, Iain. "Athol Fugard: Biography". Athol Fugard: Statements. iainfisher.com. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
  10. ^ Fisher gives Fugard's full birth name as "Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard", spelling Fugard's middle name as Lanigan, following Dennis Walder, Athol Fugard, Writers and Their Work (Tavistock: Northcote House in association with the British Council, 2003). It is spelled as Lannigan in Athol Fugard, Notebooks 1960–1977 (New York: Theatre Communications Group, 2004) and in Stephen Gray's Athol Fugard (Johannesburg and New York: McGraw-Hill, 1982) and many other publications. The former spelling (single n) seems more authoritative, however, as it is also used by Marianne McDonald, a close UCSD colleague and friend of Fugard, in "A Gift for His Seventieth Birthday: Athol Fugard's Sorrows and Rejoicings" 24 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Department of Theatre and Dance, University of California, San Diego, rpt. from TheatreForum 21 (Summer/Fall 2002); in Fugard's National Orders Award (27 September 2005) from the government of South Africa, presented to "Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard (1932 –)"; and in his "Full Profile" in Who's Who of Southern Africa (2007).
  11. ^ Fugard, Athol (2000). Dennis Walder, and introd (ed.). The Township Plays. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. pp. xvi. ISBN 978-0-19-282925-2. (Google Books limited preview.)
  12. ^ . St Dominic's Priory School. Archived from the original (World Wide Web) on 15 March 2009. Retrieved 5 October 2008.
  13. ^ "Boesman and Lena – Author Biography". Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  14. ^ Wertheim, Albert (2000). The Dramatic Art of Athol Fugard: From South Africa to the World. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 2000. pp. 215, 224–38. ISBN 978-0-253-33823-5. (Google Books limited preview.)
  15. ^ a b Fugard, Sheila. "The Apprenticeship Years: Athol Fugard issue". Twentieth Century Literature. findarticles.com. 39.4 (Winter 1993). Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  16. ^ Mudge, Alden (1 January 2006). . First Person: Interview. Bookpage.com. Archived from the original on 11 October 2008. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  17. ^ "Congratulations Athol Fugard & Paula Fourie". Creative Feel. 13 May 2016. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  18. ^ van der Merwe, Elna (7 October 2022). "Aangaande Athol, Paula en Babyboy Kleintjies". Vrye Weekblad (in Afrikaans). Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  19. ^ Fourie, Paula (6 October 2022). "'n Bedrywige Woordfees vir Paula Fourie met Taliep, Babyboy Kleintjies en Athol". LitNet. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
  20. ^ a b c d e McDonald, Marianne (April 2003). "Introd. of Athol Fugard" (YouTube Video clip). Times Topics, The New York Times. Retrieved 1 October 2008. [Times Topics menu includes link to UCSD YouTube clip of Athol Fugard's lecture, "A Catholic Antigone: an episode in the life of Hildegard of Bingen", Eugene M. Burke C.S.P. Lectureship on Religion and Society, University of California, San Diego (UCSD).]
  21. ^ Fugard, Athol (31 October 2010). "Once upon a life: Athol Fugard". The Guardian. London. from the original on 1 November 2010. Retrieved 31 October 2010.
  22. ^ Fugard, Athol & Serena Davies (8 April 2007). "My Week: Athol Fugard". Telegraph.co.uk. London. Retrieved 29 September 2008.[permanent dead link]
  23. ^ Fugard, Athol; Bruce Burgun (29 September 2000). . Indiana University at Bloomington. Archived from the original on 11 September 2008. Retrieved 29 September 2008. (RealAudio clip of interview.)
  24. ^ "Athol Fugard Gets Personal In 'Shadow of the Hummingbird' At Long Wharf". Hartford Courant. 23 March 2014. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  25. ^ Samodien, Leila (17 July 2014). "Athol Fugard wins prestigious award". Cape Times. Retrieved 24 October 2014.
  26. ^ Eder, Richard (4 December 1978). "'Nongogo,' a Drama". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  27. ^ Kruger, Loren (2004). "Chapter 5: The Dis-illusion of Apartheid: Brecht in South Africa". Post-Imperial Brecht Politics and Performance, East and South. Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 215–80. ISBN 978-0-521-81708-0. (Google Books.)
  28. ^ Gussow, Mel (24 September 1985). "Stage: 'The Blood Knot' by Fugard". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 October 2008.
  29. ^ Richards, Lloyd (1989). "Athol Fugard, The Art of Theater No. 8". The Paris Review. Interviews. Vol. Summer 1989, no. 111. ISSN 0031-2037. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  30. ^ Fugard, Athol (1984). Notebooks 1960–1977. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 59. ISBN 0-394-53755-6.
  31. ^ Fugard (1984), p. 60
  32. ^ . The Internet Off-Broadway Database. Archived from the original on 15 March 2009. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Kruger, Loren (2004). "Chapter 5: The Dis-illusion of Apartheid: Brecht in South Africa". Post-Imperial Brecht Politics and Performance, East and South. Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 217–18. ISBN 978-0-521-81708-0. (Google Books limited preview.)
  34. ^ a b "'Art is Life and Life is Art'. An interview with John Kani and Winston Ntshona of the Serpent Players from South Africa", in Ufahamu: A Journal of African Studies [Internet], 6(2), 1976, pp. 5–26. Available from: eScholarship, University of California. Retrieved 26 July 2017.
  35. ^ Barnes, Clive (19 November 1971). "Theater: People Are Living There'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  36. ^ Blankenship, Mark (17 June 2005). "People Are Living There". Variety. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  37. ^ Fugard, Athol (1983). Notebooks 1960–1977. Craighall: A. D. Donker, 1983. ISBN 0-86852-011-X. Back in S'Kop after five weeks in London for BBC TV production of The Blood Knot. Myself as Morrie, with Charles Hyatt as Zach. Robin Midgley directing. Midgley reduced the play to 90 minutes...Midgley did manage to dig up things that had been missed in all the other productions. Most exciting was his treatment of the letter writing scene – 'Address her' – which he turned into an essay in literacy...Zach sweating as the words clot in his mouth...
  38. ^ Dennis Walder, "Crossing Boundaries: The Genesis of the Township Plays", Special issue on Athol Fugard, Twentieth Century Literature (Winter 1993); rpt. findarticles.com. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  39. ^ Klein, Alvin (13 February 1994). "THEATER; 'Hello and Goodbye,' Early Fugard Play". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 10 May 2020.
  40. ^ Wertheim, Albert (2000). The Dramatic Art of Athol Fugard: From South Africa to the World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp. 225. ISBN 978-0-253-33823-5. (Google Books limited preview.)
  41. ^ "Yale to Stage Premiere of Fugard Play". The New York Times. 21 February 1982. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  42. ^ Rich, Frank (17 March 1982). "THEATER: WORLD PREMIERE OF FUGARD' NEW PLAY". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  43. ^ Arnott, Christopher (8 May 2018). "Fugard's 'A Lesson From Aloes' Ends Hartford Stage's 2017-18 Season". courant.com. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  44. ^ Rich, Frank. "Stage: 'To Mecca,' By Athol Fugard" The New York Times, 15 May 1984
  45. ^ Rich, Frank; Times, Special To the New York (3 April 1987). "STAGE: FUGARD'S 'PLACE WITH THE PIGS'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  46. ^ Rich, Frank (15 May 1984). "STAGE: 'TO MECCA,' BY ATHOL FUGARD (Published 1984)". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  47. ^ Valley Song Summary.
  48. ^ Valley Song Summary.
  49. ^ Gans, Andrew (11 August 2008). "Fugard's Coming Home Will Premiere at Long Wharf Theatre". Playbill.
  50. ^ Dugger, Celia W. (13 March 2010). "His Next Act: Driving Out Apartheid's Ghost". The New York Times. from the original on 24 March 2010. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  51. ^ "Fugard's Hummingbird Flies". New Haven Independent. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  52. ^ a b c d e "Filmography" in Athol Fugard at AllMovie. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  53. ^ . BFI. Archived from the original on 4 August 2021. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  54. ^ Fisher, Iain. "Athol Fugard: Plays" (World Wide Web). Athol Fugard: Statements. iainfisher.com. Retrieved 1 October 2008. Some of his plays are grouped together. Sometimes this is based on the subject matter (the Port Elizabeth plays), sometimes it is based on a period and style (the Statement Plays)..But no category is complete, and there is overlap (The Township and The Statement Plays) and some plays do not easily fit into any categories.
  55. ^ Fisher observes in the Fugard "Biography" section of Athol Fugard: Statements that South African writer and critic Gray, Stephen classifies many of Fugard's dramatic works according to chronological periods of composition and similarities of style: "Apprenticeship" ([1956–]1957); "Social Realism" (1958–1961); "Chamber Theatre" (1961–1970); "Improvised Theatre" (1966–1973); and "Poetic Symbolism" (1975[–1990]).
  56. ^ Stephen Gray, ed. (1991). File on Fugard. London: Methuen Drama. ISBN 978-0-413-64580-7.
  57. ^ Fugard, Athol (1990). Stephen Gray, and introd (ed.). My Children! My Africa! and Selected Shorter Plays. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press. ISBN 1-86814-117-9.
  58. ^ Master Harold...and the Boys at AllMovie. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  59. ^ The Guest at Steenkampskraal at AllMovie. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  60. ^ Meetings with Remarkable Men at AllMovie. Retrieved 3 October 2008.
  61. ^ "STIAS Fellow Athol Fugard receives prestigious 2014 prize". Stellenbosch University. 16 July 2014. Retrieved 17 July 2014.
  62. ^ A list of Fugard's Broadway theatre award nominations may be found at the IBDB. . Internet Broadway Database. Archived from the original on 4 March 2007. Retrieved 1 October 2008.
  63. ^ a b c d . The Internet Off-Broadway Database. Archived from the original on 15 March 2009. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  64. ^ . Lortel Archives. Archived from the original on 21 March 2009. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  65. ^ . Writers Write, Inc. Archived from the original (World Wide Web) on 2 May 1999. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  66. ^ "Athol Fugard Biography and Interview". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  67. ^ (PDF). Yale University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  68. ^ . Wittenberg University. Archived from the original on 14 August 2007. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  69. ^ "Honorary Graduates: 1920s to 2000s" (World Wide Web). University of the Witwatersrand. from the original on 3 August 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  70. ^ "News release 94–185" (World Wide Web) (Press release). Brown University News Bureau (Sweeney). 24 May 1995. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  71. ^ "Honorary Degrees Awarded by Princeton University: 1940s to 2000s" (World Wide Web). Princeton University. from the original on 21 September 2008. Retrieved 4 October 2008.
  72. ^ Enwemeka, Zeninjor (21 April 2006). "Stellenbosch honours Athol Fugard". IOL. Retrieved 23 September 2017.

References edit

  • The Amajuba Resource Pack 14 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. The Oxford Playhouse and Farber Foundry: In Association with Mmabana Arts Foundation. Oxford Playhouse, October 2004. Retrieved 1 October 2008. Downloadable PDF. ["Photographs by Robert Day; Written by Rachel G. Briscoe; Edited by Rupert Rowbotham; Overseen by Yael Farber." 18 pages.]
  • Athol Fugard. Special issue of Twentieth Century Literature 39.4 (Winter 1993). Index. Findarticles.com. <http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0403/is_n4_v39>. Retrieved 4 October 2008. [Includes: Athol Fugard, "Some Problems of a Playwright from South Africa" (Transcript. 11 pages).]
  • Blumberg, Marcia Shirley, and Dennis Walder, eds. South African Theatre As/and Intervention. Amsterdam and Atlanta, Georgia: Editions Rodopi B.V., 1999. ISBN 90-420-0537-8 (10). ISBN 978-90-420-0537-2 (13).
  • Fugard, Athol. A Lesson from Aloes. New York: Theatre Communications Group, 1989. ISBN 1-55936-001-1 (10). ISBN 978-1-55936-001-2 (13). Google Books. Retrieved 1 October 2008. (Limited preview available.)
  • –––, and Chris Boyd. "Athol Fugard on Tsotsi, Truth and Reconciliation, Camus, Pascal and 'courageous pessimism'...", The Morning After: Performing Arts in Australia (Blog). WordPress. 29 January 2006. Retrieved 4 October 2008. ["An edited interview with South African playwright Athol Fugard (in San Diego) on the publication of his only novel Tsotsi in Australia, 29 January 2006."]
  • –––, and Serena Davies. "My Week: Athol Fugard"[dead link]. The Telegraph, 8 April 2007. Retrieved 29 September 2008. [The playwright describes his week to Serena Davies, prior to the opening of his play Victory at the Theatre Royal, Bath (telephone interview).]
  • Gray, Stephen. Athol Fugard. Johannesburg and New York: McGraw-Hill, 1982. ISBN 0-07-450633-1 (10). ISBN 978-0-07-450633-2 (13). ISBN 0-07-450615-3 (10). ISBN 978-0-07-450615-8 (13).
  • –––, ed. and introd. File on Fugard. London: Methuen Drama, 1991. ISBN 0-413-64580-0 (10). ISBN 978-0-413-64580-7 (13).
  • –––. My Children! My Africa! and Selected Shorter Plays, by Athol Fugard. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 1990. ISBN 1-86814-117-9.
  • Kruger, Loren. Post-Imperial Brecht Politics and Performance, East and South. Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-521-81708-0 (10). ISBN 978-0-521-81708-0 (13). (Google Books; limited preview available.)
  • McDonald, Marianne. . Department of Theatre and Dance. University of California, San Diego. Rpt. from TheatreForum 21 (Summer/Fall 2002). Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  • McLuckie, Craig (Okanagan College). "Athol Fugard (1932–)". The Literary Encyclopedia. 8 October 2003. Retrieved 29 September 2008.
  • Morris, Stephen Leigh. "Falling Sky: Athol Fugard's Victory". LA Weekly, 31 January 2008. Retrieved 29 September 2008. (Theatre review of the American première at The Fountain Theatre, Los Angeles, California.)
  • Spencer, Charles. "Victory: The Fight's Gone Out of Fugard"[dead link]. The Telegraph, 17 August 2007. Retrieved 30 September 2008. [Theatre review of Victory at the Theatre Royal, Bath.]
  • Walder, Dennis. Athol Fugard. Writers and Their Work. Tavistock: Northcote House in association with the British Council, 2003. ISBN 0-7463-0948-1 (10). ISBN 978-0-7463-0948-3 (13).
  • Wertheim, Albert. The Dramatic Art of Athol Fugard: From South Africa to the World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-253-33823-9 (10). ISBN 978-0-253-33823-5 (13).
  • –––, ed. and introd. Athol Fugard: A Casebook. [Casebooks on Modern Dramatists]. Gen. Ed., Kimball King. New York: Garland Publishing, 1997. ISBN 0-8153-0745-4 (10). ISBN 978-0-8153-0745-7 (13). (Out of print; unavailable.) [Hardcover ed. published by Garland Publishing; the series of Casebooks on Modern Dramatists is now published by Routledge, an imprint of Taylor & Francis, and does not include this title.]

External links edit

  • . Faculty profile. Department of Theatre and Dance. University of California, San Diego. (Lists Athol Fugard: Statements: An Athol Fugard site by Iain Fisher as "Personal Website"; see below.)
  • Athol Fugard at AllMovie
  • Athol Fugard at the Internet Broadway Database  
  • Athol Fugard at IMDb
  • at the Internet Off-Broadway Database (IOBDb)
  • Athol Fugard at Times Topics in The New York Times. (Includes YouTube Video clip of Athol Fugard's Burke Lecture "A Catholic Antigone: An Episode in the Life of Hildegard of Bingen", the Eugene M. Burke C.S.P. Lectureship on Religion and Society, at the University of California, San Diego, introduced by Professor of Theatre and Classics Marianne McDonald, UCSD Department of Theatre and Dance, April 2003 [Show ID: 7118]. 1:28:57 [duration].)
  • Athol Fugard at WorldCat
  • "Athol Fugard Biography" – "Athol Fugard", rpt. by bookrags.com (Ambassadors Group, Inc.) from the Encyclopedia of World Biography. ("2005–2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.")
  • "Athol Fugard (1932– )" at Britannica Online Encyclopedia (subscription based; free trial available)
  • – Complete Guide to Playwright and Plays at Doollee.com
  • Athol Fugard: Statements: An Athol Fugard site by Iain Fisher. (Listed as "Personal Website" in UCSB faculty profile; see above.)
  • "Books by Athol Fugard" at Google Books (several with limited previews available)
  • in Who's Who of Southern Africa. Copyright 2007 24.com (Media24). (Includes hyperlinked "News Articles" from 2000 to 2008.)
  • "Interviews: South Africa's Fugards: Writing About Wrongs". Morning Edition. National Public Radio. NPR RealAudio. 16 June 2006. (With hyperlinked "Related NPR stories" from 2001 to 2006.)
  • Richards, Lloyd (Summer 1989). "Athol Fugard, The Art of Theater No. 8". Paris Review. Summer 1989 (111).
  • "Athol Fugard" in the Encyclopaedia of South African Theatre and Performance
  • Nancy T. Kearns collection of Athol Fugard materials, 1983–1996, held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts

athol, fugard, honfrsl, born, june, 1932, south, african, playwright, novelist, actor, director, widely, regarded, south, africa, greatest, playwright, best, known, political, penetrating, plays, opposing, system, apartheid, 2005, oscar, winning, film, novel, . Athol Fugard OIS HonFRSL born 11 June 1932 is a South African playwright novelist actor and director widely regarded as South Africa s greatest playwright 1 He is best known for his political and penetrating plays opposing the system of apartheid and for the 2005 Oscar winning film of his novel Tsotsi directed by Gavin Hood 2 Athol FugardOIS HonFRSLBornHarold Athol Lannigan Fugard 1932 06 11 11 June 1932 age 91 Middleburg Cape Province South AfricaOccupationPlaywrightnovelistactordirectorteacherEducationUniversity of Cape Town dropped out Period1956 presentGenreDrama novel memoirNotable works Master Harold and the BoysBlood KnotSpouseSheila Meiring Fugard m 1956 div 2015 Paula Fourie m 2016 ChildrenLisa HalleAcclaimed as the greatest active playwright in the English speaking world by Time in 1985 3 Fugard continues to write and has published more than thirty plays Fugard was an adjunct professor of playwriting acting and directing in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of California San Diego 4 He is the recipient of many awards honours and honorary degrees including the 2005 Order of Ikhamanga in Silver for his excellent contribution and achievements in the theatre from the government of South Africa 5 He is also an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature 6 Fugard was honoured in Cape Town with the opening of the Fugard Theatre in District Six in 2010 7 and received a Tony Award for lifetime achievement in 2011 8 Contents 1 Personal history 2 Career 2 1 Early period 2 2 Refusal to stage for Whites Only audiences 2 3 The Serpent Players 2 4 Yale Rep premieres 1980s 2 5 Post apartheid plays 2 6 Film 3 Plays 4 Bibliography 5 Filmography 6 Selected awards and nominations 7 Reviews 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksPersonal history editFugard was born as Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard in Middelburg Eastern Cape South Africa on 11 June 1932 His mother Marrie Potgieter an Afrikaner operated first a general store and then a lodging house his father Harold Fugard was a disabled former jazz pianist of Irish English and French Huguenot descent 2 9 10 In 1935 his family moved to Port Elizabeth 11 In 1938 he began attending primary school at Marist Brothers College 12 After being awarded a scholarship he enrolled at a local technical college for secondary education and then studied Philosophy and Social Anthropology at the University of Cape Town 13 but he dropped out of the university in 1953 a few months before final examinations 2 He left home hitchhiked to North Africa with a friend and then spent the next two years working in east Asia on a steamer ship the SS Graigaur 2 where he began writing an experience celebrated in his 1999 autobiographical play The Captain s Tiger a memoir for the stage 14 In September 1956 he married Sheila Meiring a University of Cape Town Drama School student whom he had met the previous year 2 15 Now known as Sheila Fugard she is a novelist and poet Their daughter Lisa Fugard is a novelist 16 In 2015 after almost 60 years of marriage the couple divorced In 2016 in New York City Hall Fugard was married to South African writer and academic Paula Fourie 17 Fugard and Fourie presently live in the Cape Winelands region of South Africa with their daughter Halle Fugard Fourie 18 19 In 1958 the Fugards moved to Johannesburg where he worked as a clerk in a Native Commissioners Court which made him keenly aware of the injustices of apartheid 2 His good friendship with prominent local anti apartheid figures had a profound impact on Fugard whose plays political impetus brought him into conflict with the national government to avoid prosecution he had his plays produced and published outside South Africa 15 20 A former alcoholic Fugard has been a teetotaler since the early 1980s 21 For several years Fugard lived in San Diego California 22 where he taught as an adjunct professor of playwriting acting and directing in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of California San Diego UCSD 4 20 For the academic year 2000 2001 he was the IU Class of 1963 Wells Scholar Professor at Indiana University in Bloomington Indiana 23 In 2012 Fugard relocated to South Africa where he now lives permanently 24 25 Career editEarly period edit In 1958 Fugard organised a multiracial theatre for which he wrote directed and acted writing and producing several plays for it including No Good Friday 1958 and Nongogo 1959 in which he and his colleague black South African actor Zakes Mokae performed 2 In 1978 Richard Eder of The New York Times criticized Nongogo as awkward and thin It is unable to communicate very much about its characters or make them much more than the servants of a noticeably ticking plot Eder argued Queenie is the most real of the characters Her sense of herself and where she wants to go makes her believable and the crumbling of her dour defenses at a touch of hope makes her affecting By contrast Johnny is unreal His warmth and hopefulness at the start crumble too suddenly and too completely 26 After returning to Port Elizabeth in the early 1960s Athol and Sheila Fugard started The Circle Players 2 which derives its name from the production of The Caucasian Chalk Circle by Bertolt Brecht 27 In 1961 in Johannesburg Fugard and Mokae starred as the brothers Morris and Zachariah in the single performance world premiere of Fugard s play The Blood Knot revised and retitled Blood Knot in 1987 directed by Barney Simon 28 In 1989 Lloyd Richards of The Paris Review declared The Blood Knot to be Fugard s first major play 29 Refusal to stage for Whites Only audiences editIn 1962 Fugard found the question of whether he could work in a theatre which excludes Non Whites or includes them only on the basis of special segregated performance increasingly pressing It was made more so by the decision of British Equity to prevent any British entertainer visiting South Africa unless the audiences were multi racial In a decision that caused him to reflect on the power of art to effect change Fugard decided that the answer must be No That old argument used to be so comforting so plausible One person in that segregated white audience might be moved to think and then to change by what he saw I m beginning to wonder whether it really works that way The supposition seems to be that there is a didactic a teaching through feeling element in art What I do know is that art can give meaning can render meaningful areas of experience and most certainly also enhances But teach Contradict State the opposite to what you believe and then lead you to accept it In other words can art change a man or woman No That is what life does Art is no substitute for life 30 Of the few venues in the country where a play could be presented to mixed audiences some Fugard noted were little better than barns But he concluded that under these circumstances every conceivable dignity audience producer act professional etc was operative in the white theatre except one human dignity 31 Fugard publicly supported the Anti Apartheid Movement 1959 94 in the international boycott of South African theatres due to their segregated audiences The results were additional restrictions and surveillance leading him to have his plays published and produced outside South Africa 20 Lucille Lortel produced The Blood Knot at the Cricket Theatre Off Broadway in New York City in 1964 launch ing Fugard s American career 32 The Serpent Players edit In the 1960s Fugard formed the Serpent Players whose name derives from its first venue the former snake pit hence the name at the Port Elizabeth Museum 20 a group of black actors worker players who earned their living as teachers clerks and industrial workers and cannot thus be considered amateurs in the manner of leisured whites developing and performing plays under surveillance by the Security Police according to Loren Kruger s The Dis illusion of Apartheid published in 2004 33 The group largely consisted of black men including Winston Ntshona John Kani Welcome Duru Fats Bookholane and Mike Ngxolo as well as Nomhle Nkonyeni and Mabel Magada They all got together albeit at different intervals and decided to do something about their lives using the stage In 1961 they met Athol Fugard a white man who grew up in Port Elizabeth and who recently returned from Johannesburg and asked him if he could work with them as he had the know how theatrically the tricks how to use the stage movements everything they worked with Athol Fugard since then and that is how the Serpent Players got together 34 At the time the group performed anything they could lay their hands on in South Africa as they had no access to any libraries These included Bertolt Brecht August Strindberg Samuel Beckett William Shakespeare and many other prominent playwrights of the time In an interview in California Ntshona and Kani were asked why they were doing the play Sizwe Banzi Is Dead considered a highly political and telling story of the South African political landscape at the time Ntshona answered We are just a group of artists who love theatre And we have every right to open the doors to anyone who wants to take a look at our play and our work We believe that art is life and conversely life is art And no sensible man can divorce one from the other That s it Other attributes are merely labels 34 They mainly performed at the St Stephen s Hall renamed the Douglas Ngange Mbopa Memorial Hall in 2013 adjacent to St Stephen s Church and other spaces in and around New Brighton the oldest Black township in Port Elizabeth According to Loren Kruger Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of Chicago the Serpent Players used Brecht s elucidation of gestic acting dis illusion and social critique as well as their own experience of the satiric comic routines of urban African vaudeville to explore the theatrical force of Brecht s techniques as well as the immediate political relevance of a play about land distribution Their work on the Caucasian Chalk Circle and a year later on Antigone 20 led directly to the creation in 1966 of what is still 2004 South Africa s most distinctive Lehrstuck learning play The Coat Based on an incident at one of the many political trials involving the Serpent Players The Coat dramatized the choices facing a woman whose husband convicted of anti apartheid political activity left her only a coat and instructions to use it 33 Clive Barnes of The New York Times panned People Are Living There 1969 in 1971 arguing There are splinters of realities here and pregnancies of feeling hut sic nothing of significance emerges In Mr Fugard s earlier plays he seemed to be dealing with life at a proper level of humanity Here if real people are living there they remain oddly quiet about it The first act rambles disconsolately like a lonely type writer looking for a subject and the second act produces with pride a birthday party of Chaplinesque bathos but less than Chaplinesque invention and spirit The characters harangue one another in an awkward dislocation between a formal speech and an interior monologue 35 Mark Blankenship of Variety negatively reviewed a 2005 revival of the same work writing that it lacks the emotional intensity and theatrical imagination that mark such Fugard favorites as Master Harold and the Boys Blankenship also stated however that the performance he attended featuring only haphazard sketches of plot and character was perhaps the result of Fugard allowing director Suzanne Shepard to revise the play without showing him the changes 36 The Serpent Players conceptualised and co authored many plays that it performed for a variety of audiences in many theatres around the world The following are some of its notable and most popular plays Its first production was Niccolo Machiavelli s La Mandragola directed by Fugard as The Cure and set in the township Other productions include Georg Buchner s Woyzeck Brecht s The Caucasian Chalk Circle and Sophocles Antigone When the group had turned to improvisation they came up with classic works such as Sizwe Banzi Is Dead and The Island emerging as inner experiences of the actors who are also the co authors of the plays In The Coat Kruger observes The participants were engaged not only in representing social relationships on stage but also on enacting and revising their own dealings with each other and with institutions of apartheid oppression from the law courts downward and this engagement testified to the real power of Brecht s apparently utopian plan to abolish the separation of player and audience and to make of each player a statesman or social actor Work on The Coat led indirectly to the Serpent Players most famous and most Brechtian productions Sizwe Banzi Is Dead 1972 and The Island 1973 33 Fugard developed these two plays for the Serpent Players in workshops working with John Kani and Winston Ntshona 33 publishing them in 1974 with his own play Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act 1972 The authorities considered the title of The Island which alludes to Robben Island the prison where Nelson Mandela was being held too controversial so Fugard and the Serpent Players used the alternative title The Hodoshe Span Hodoshe meaning carrion fly in Xhosa These plays espoused a Brechtian attention to the demonstration of gest and social situations and encouraged audiences to analyze rather than merely applaud the action for example Sizwe Banzi Is Dead which infused a Brechtian critique and vaudevillian irony especially in Kani s virtuoso improvisation even provoked an African audience s critical interruption and interrogation of the action 33 While dramatising frustrations in the lives of his audience members the plays simultaneously drew them into the action and attempted to have them analyse the situations of the characters in Brechtian fashion according to Kruger 33 Blood Knot was filmed by the BBC in 1967 with Fugard s collaboration starring the Jamaican actor Charles Hyatt as Zachariah and Fugard himself as Morris as in the original 1961 premiere in Johannesburg 37 Less pleased than Fugard the South African government of B J Vorster confiscated Fugard s passport 9 38 Fugard s play A Lesson from Aloes 1978 was described as one of his major works by Alvin Klein of The New York Times 39 though others have written more lukewarm reviews Yale Rep premieres 1980s edit nbsp The Fugard Theatre in District Six Cape Town Master Harold and the Boys written in 1982 incorporates strong autobiographical matter nonetheless it is fiction not memoir as Cousins A Memoir and some of Fugard s other works are subtitled 40 The play deals with the relationship between a 17 year old white South African and two African men who work for the white youth s family Its world premiere was performed by Danny Glover Zeljko Ivanek and Zakes Mokae at the Yale Repertory Theater in New Haven Connecticut in March 1982 41 42 The Road to Mecca was presented at the Yale Repertory Theatre New Haven Connecticut in May 1984 Directed by Fugard the cast starred Carmen Mathews Marianne Owen and Tom Aldredge Along with Master Harold it proved to be one of Fugard s most acclaimed works 43 44 It is the story of an elderly recluse in a small South African town who has spent 15 years on an obsessive artistic project 45 Fugard appeared in his A Place With the Pigs at the Yale Rep in New Haven CT in 1987 Inspired by the true story of World War II Soviet deserter Fugard plays a paranoid who spent four decades hiding with his pigs As with The Road to Mecca Fugards critics readily appreciated the metaphor for a life of internal exile 46 Post apartheid plays edit The first play that Fugard wrote after the end of apartheid Valley Song was premiered in Johannesburg in August 1995 with Fugard in the role of both a white and of a coloured farmer While they dispute property titles both share a reverence for the land and fear change 47 In October 1995 Fugard took the play to the United States with a production by the Manhattan Theatre Club at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton New Jersey 48 In January 2009 Fugard returned to New Haven for the premiere in the Coming Home Veronika the granddaughter of Buk the coloured farmer in Valley Song leaves the Karoo to pursue a singing career in Cape Town but then returns after his death to create a new life on the land for her young son 49 The Fugard Theatre in the District Six area of Cape Town opened with performances by the Isango Portobello theatre company in February 2010 and a new play written and directed by Athol Fugard The Train Driver played at the theatre in March 2010 50 In April 2014 returned to the stage in the world premiere of his The Shadow of a Hummingbird at the Long Wharf Theatre New Haven This short play was performed with an introductory scene compiled by Paula Fourie from Fugard s journal writings With the playwright digging through these diaries on a set which resembles an old busy writer s workspace the scene blends into the main play which begins when Boba the grandson of the story telling grandfather character Oupa played by Fugard comes to visit 51 Film edit Fugard s plays are produced internationally and have won multiple awards and several have been made into films 52 see Filmography below Fugard himself performed in the first of these as Boesman alongside Yvonne Bryceland as Lena in Boesman and Lena directed by Ross Devenish in 1973 53 His film debut as a director occurred in 1992 when he co directed the adaptation of his play The Road to Mecca with Peter Goldsmid who also wrote the screenplay 52 The film adaptation of his novel Tsotsi written and directed by Gavin Hood won the 2005 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2006 52 Outside of his own work Fugard has a number of cameo film roles most notably as General Smuts in Richard Attenborough s Gandhi 1982 and as Doctor Sundesval in Sydney Schanberg s The Killing Fields 1984 Plays editIn chronological order of first production and or publication 9 54 55 56 57 Klaas and the Devil 1956 The Cell play 1957 No Good Friday 1958 Nongogo 1959 The Blood Knot 1961 later revised and entitled Blood Knot 1987 Hello and Goodbye 1965 The Coat 1966 People Are Living There 1968 The Last Bus 1969 Boesman and Lena 1969 Friday s Bread on Monday 1970 Sizwe Banzi Is Dead 1972 developed with John Kani and Winston Ntshona in workshops The Island 1972 developed with John Kani and Winston Ntshona in workshops Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act 1972 Dimetos 1975 Orestes 1978 A Lesson from Aloes 1978 The Drummer 1980 Master Harold and the Boys 1982 The Road to Mecca 1984 A Place with the Pigs a personal parable 1987 My Children My Africa 1989 My Life 1992 Playland 1993 Valley Song 1996 The Captain s Tiger a memoir for the stage 1997 Sorrows and Rejoicings 2001 Exits and Entrances 2004 Booitjie and the Oubaas 2006 Victory 2007 Coming Home 2009 Have You Seen Us 2009 The Train Driver 2010 The Shadow of the Hummingbird 2014 The Painted Rocks at Revolver Creek 2016 Bibliography editStatements Three Plays Oxford and New York Oxford University Press OUP 1974 ISBN 0 19 211385 2 10 ISBN 978 0 19 211385 6 13 ISBN 0 19 281170 3 10 ISBN 978 0 19 281170 7 13 Co authored with John Kani and Winston Ntshona see below Three Port Elizabeth Plays Blood Knot Hello and Goodbye and Boesman and Lena Oxford and New York 1974 ISBN 0 19 211366 6 Sizwe Bansi Is Dead and The Island New York Viking Press 1976 ISBN 0 670 64784 5 Dimetos and Two Early Plays Oxford and New York OUP 1977 ISBN 0 19 211390 9 Boesman and Lena and Other Plays Oxford and New York OUP 1980 ISBN 0 19 570197 6 Selected Plays of Fugard Notes Ed Dennis Walder London Longman 1980 Beirut York Press 1980 ISBN 0 582 78129 9 Tsotsi a novel New York Random House 1980 ISBN 978 0 394 51384 3 A Lesson from Aloes A Play Oxford and New York OUP 1981 Marigolds in August A D Donker 1982 ISBN 0 86852 008 X Boesman and Lena Oxford and New York OUP 1983 ISBN 0 19 570331 6 People Are Living There Oxford and New York OUP 1983 ISBN 0 19 570332 4 Master Harold and the Boys New York and London Penguin 1984 ISBN 0 14 048187 7 Notebooks 1960 1977 New York Alfred A Knopf 1984 ISBN 0 394 53755 6 The Road to Mecca A Play in Two Acts London Faber and Faber 1985 ISBN 0 571 13691 5 Suggested by the life and work of Helen Martins of New Bethesda Eastern Cape South Africa Selected Plays Oxford and New York OUP 1987 ISBN 0 19 281929 1 Includes Master Harold and the Boys Blood Knot new version Hello and Goodbye Boesman and Lena A Place with the Pigs a personal parable London Faber and Faber 1988 ISBN 0 571 15114 0 My Children My Africa and Selected Shorter Plays Ed and introd Stephen Gray Johannesburg Witwatersrand UP 1990 ISBN 1 86814 117 9 Blood Knot and Other Plays New York Theatre Communications Group 1991 ISBN 1 55936 019 4 Playland and Other Worlds Johannesburg University of the Witwatersrand UP 1992 ISBN 1 86814 219 1 The Township Plays Ed and introd Dennis Walder Oxford and New York Oxford UP 1993 ISBN 0 19 282925 4 10 ISBN 978 0 19 282925 2 13 Includes No good Friday Nongogo The Coat Sizwe Bansi Is Dead and The Island Cousins A Memoir Johannesburg Witwatersrand UP 1994 ISBN 1 86814 278 7 Hello and Goodbye Oxford and New York OUP 1994 ISBN 0 19 571099 1 Valley Song London Faber and Faber 1996 ISBN 0 571 17908 8 The Captain s Tiger A Memoir for the Stage Johannesburg Witwatersrand University Press 1997 ISBN 1 86814 324 4 Athol Fugard Plays London Faber and Faber 1998 ISBN 0 571 19093 6 Interior Plays Oxford and New York OUP 2000 ISBN 0 19 288035 7 Port Elizabeth Plays Oxford and New York OUP 2000 ISBN 0 19 282529 1 Sorrows and Rejoicings New York Theatre Communications Group 2002 ISBN 1 55936 208 1 Exits and Entrances New York Dramatists Play Service 2004 ISBN 0 8222 2041 5 Co authored with John Kani and Winston NtshonaStatements Three Plays 1974 By Athol Fugard John Kani and Winston Ntshona Rev ed Oxford and New York OUP 1978 ISBN 0 19 281170 3 10 ISBN 978 0 19 281170 7 13 Two workshop productions devised by Athol Fugard John Kani and Winston Ntshona and a new play includes Sizwe Bansi Is Dead and The Island and Statements After an Arrest Under the Immorality Act Co authored with Ross DevenishThe Guest an episode in the life of Eugene Marais By Athol Fugard and Ross Devenish Craighall A D Donker 1977 ISBN 0 949937 36 3 Die besoeker n episode in die lewe van Eugene Marais Trans into Afrikaans by Wilma Stockenstrom Craighall A D Donker 1977 ISBN 0 949937 43 6 Filmography editFilms adapted from Fugard s plays and novel 52 Boesman and Lena 1974 dir Ross Devenish Marigolds in August 1980 dir Ross Devenish Master Harold and the Boys 1984 TV movie dir Michael Lindsay Hogg first broadcast on Showtime 58 The Road to Mecca 1991 co dir by Fugard and Peter Goldsmid screen adapt Boesman and Lena 2000 dir John Berry Tsotsi 2005 screen adapt and dir Gavin Hood 2005 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film 2 Master Harold and the Boys 2010 dir Lonny PriceFilm roles 52 Boesman and Lena 1974 as Boesman The Guest at Steenkampskraal 1977 59 as Eugene Marais Meetings with Remarkable Men 1979 60 as Professor Skridlov Marigolds in August 1980 as Paulus Olifant Gandhi 1982 as General Jan Smuts The Killing Fields 1984 as Doctor Sundesval The Road to Mecca 1991 as Reverend Marius ByleveldSelected awards and nominations editPraemium Imperiale 2014 61 Theatre 62 Obie Award 1971 Best Foreign Play Boesman and Lena winner 63 Tony Award 1975 Best Play Sizwe Banzi Is Dead The Island Athol Fugard John Kani and Winston Ntshona nomination 2011 Special Tony Award Lifetime Achievement in the Theatre winner New York Drama Critics Circle Awards 1981 Best Play A Lesson From Aloes winner 1988 Best Foreign Play The Road to Mecca winner 63 Evening Standard Award 1983 Best Play Master Harold and the Boys winner Drama Desk Awards 1982 Master Harold and the Boys winner Lucille Lortel Awards 1992 Outstanding Revival Boesman and Lena winner 63 1996 Outstanding Body of Work winner 64 The Audie Awards Audio Publishers Association 1999 Theatrical Productions The Road to Mecca winner 65 Outer Critics Circle Award 2007 Outstanding New Off Broadway Play Exits and Entrances nomination 63 Honorary awardsWriters Guild of America East Award 1986 Evelyn F Burkey Memorial Award along with Lloyd Richards National Orders Award South Africa 2005 The Order of Ikhamanga in Silver for his excellent contribution and achievements in the theatre 5 American Academy of Achievement s Golden Plate Award 66 2014 Golden Plate AwardHonorary degreesYale University 1983 67 Wittenberg University 1992 68 University of the Witwatersrand 1993 69 Brown University 1995 70 Princeton University 1998 71 University of Stellenbosch 2006 72 Reviews editFullerton Ian 1980 review of Tsotsi in Cencrastus No 4 Winter 1980 81 p 41 ISSN 0264 0856See also edit nbsp Novels portalSouth Africa under apartheidNotes edit Smith David 12 August 2014 Athol Fugard Prejudice and racism are still alive and well in South Africa The Guardian Retrieved 9 April 2020 a b c d e f g h i McLuckie Craig 3 October 2003 Athol Fugard 1932 The Literary Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 25 August 2008 Retrieved 29 September 2008 Andie Miller October 2009 From Words into Pictures In conversation with Athol Fugard Eclectica Retrieved 9 April 2020 a b Athol Fugard University of California San Diego UCSD Archived from the original on 15 May 2008 Retrieved 1 October 2008 a b Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard 1932 2005 National Orders Awards South African Government Online info gov za 27 September 2005 Archived from the original World Wide Web on 21 November 2008 Retrieved 4 October 2008 Fellows Royal Society of Literature Archived from the original on 27 April 2015 Retrieved 4 October 2008 The Fugard Theatre Creative Feel March 2019 Retrieved 9 April 2020 Athol Fugard Encyclopaedia Britannica 24 November 2019 Retrieved 9 April 2020 a b c Fisher Iain Athol Fugard Biography Athol Fugard Statements iainfisher com Retrieved 1 October 2008 Fisher gives Fugard s full birth name as Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard spelling Fugard s middle name as Lanigan following Dennis Walder Athol Fugard Writers and Their Work Tavistock Northcote House in association with the British Council 2003 It is spelled as Lannigan in Athol Fugard Notebooks 1960 1977 New York Theatre Communications Group 2004 and in Stephen Gray s Athol Fugard Johannesburg and New York McGraw Hill 1982 and many other publications The former spelling single n seems more authoritative however as it is also used by Marianne McDonald a close UCSD colleague and friend of Fugard in A Gift for His Seventieth Birthday Athol Fugard s Sorrows and Rejoicings Archived 24 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine Department of Theatre and Dance University of California San Diego rpt from TheatreForum 21 Summer Fall 2002 in Fugard s National Orders Award 27 September 2005 from the government of South Africa presented to Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard 1932 and in his Full Profile in Who s Who of Southern Africa 2007 Fugard Athol 2000 Dennis Walder and introd ed The Township Plays Oxford and New York Oxford University Press 1993 pp xvi ISBN 978 0 19 282925 2 Google Books limited preview History St Dominic s Prior School Marist Brothers College St Dominic s Priory School Archived from the original World Wide Web on 15 March 2009 Retrieved 5 October 2008 Boesman and Lena Author Biography Retrieved 31 October 2010 Wertheim Albert 2000 The Dramatic Art of Athol Fugard From South Africa to the World Bloomington Indiana UP 2000 pp 215 224 38 ISBN 978 0 253 33823 5 Google Books limited preview a b Fugard Sheila The Apprenticeship Years Athol Fugard issue Twentieth Century Literature findarticles com 39 4 Winter 1993 Retrieved 4 October 2008 Mudge Alden 1 January 2006 African Odyssey Lisa Fugard Explores the Moral Ambiguities of Apartheid First Person Interview Bookpage com Archived from the original on 11 October 2008 Retrieved 2 October 2008 Congratulations Athol Fugard amp Paula Fourie Creative Feel 13 May 2016 Retrieved 16 November 2017 van der Merwe Elna 7 October 2022 Aangaande Athol Paula en Babyboy Kleintjies Vrye Weekblad in Afrikaans Retrieved 9 February 2023 Fourie Paula 6 October 2022 n Bedrywige Woordfees vir Paula Fourie met Taliep Babyboy Kleintjies en Athol LitNet Retrieved 9 February 2023 a b c d e McDonald Marianne April 2003 Introd of Athol Fugard YouTube Video clip Times Topics The New York Times Retrieved 1 October 2008 Times Topics menu includes link to UCSD YouTube clip of Athol Fugard s lecture A Catholic Antigone an episode in the life of Hildegard of Bingen Eugene M Burke C S P Lectureship on Religion and Society University of California San Diego UCSD Fugard Athol 31 October 2010 Once upon a life Athol Fugard The Guardian London Archived from the original on 1 November 2010 Retrieved 31 October 2010 Fugard Athol amp Serena Davies 8 April 2007 My Week Athol Fugard Telegraph co uk London Retrieved 29 September 2008 permanent dead link Fugard Athol Bruce Burgun 29 September 2000 Conversation on line with South African Dramatist Athol Fugard Indiana University at Bloomington Archived from the original on 11 September 2008 Retrieved 29 September 2008 RealAudio clip of interview Athol Fugard Gets Personal In Shadow of the Hummingbird At Long Wharf Hartford Courant 23 March 2014 Retrieved 24 October 2014 Samodien Leila 17 July 2014 Athol Fugard wins prestigious award Cape Times Retrieved 24 October 2014 Eder Richard 4 December 1978 Nongogo a Drama The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 10 May 2020 Kruger Loren 2004 Chapter 5 The Dis illusion of Apartheid Brecht in South Africa Post Imperial Brecht Politics and Performance East and South Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press pp 215 80 ISBN 978 0 521 81708 0 Google Books Gussow Mel 24 September 1985 Stage The Blood Knot by Fugard The New York Times Retrieved 5 October 2008 Richards Lloyd 1989 Athol Fugard The Art of Theater No 8 The Paris Review Interviews Vol Summer 1989 no 111 ISSN 0031 2037 Retrieved 10 May 2020 Fugard Athol 1984 Notebooks 1960 1977 New York Alfred A Knopf p 59 ISBN 0 394 53755 6 Fugard 1984 p 60 Athol Fugard Biography The Internet Off Broadway Database Archived from the original on 15 March 2009 Retrieved 2 October 2008 a b c d e f Kruger Loren 2004 Chapter 5 The Dis illusion of Apartheid Brecht in South Africa Post Imperial Brecht Politics and Performance East and South Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press pp 217 18 ISBN 978 0 521 81708 0 Google Books limited preview a b Art is Life and Life is Art An interview with John Kani and Winston Ntshona of the Serpent Players from South Africa in Ufahamu A Journal of African Studies Internet 6 2 1976 pp 5 26 Available from eScholarship University of California Retrieved 26 July 2017 Barnes Clive 19 November 1971 Theater People Are Living There The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 10 May 2020 Blankenship Mark 17 June 2005 People Are Living There Variety Retrieved 10 May 2020 Fugard Athol 1983 Notebooks 1960 1977 Craighall A D Donker 1983 ISBN 0 86852 011 X Back in S Kop after five weeks in London for BBC TV production of The Blood Knot Myself as Morrie with Charles Hyatt as Zach Robin Midgley directing Midgley reduced the play to 90 minutes Midgley did manage to dig up things that had been missed in all the other productions Most exciting was his treatment of the letter writing scene Address her which he turned into an essay in literacy Zach sweating as the words clot in his mouth Dennis Walder Crossing Boundaries The Genesis of the Township Plays Special issue on Athol Fugard Twentieth Century Literature Winter 1993 rpt findarticles com Retrieved 4 October 2008 Klein Alvin 13 February 1994 THEATER Hello and Goodbye Early Fugard Play The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 10 May 2020 Wertheim Albert 2000 The Dramatic Art of Athol Fugard From South Africa to the World Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 225 ISBN 978 0 253 33823 5 Google Books limited preview Yale to Stage Premiere of Fugard Play The New York Times 21 February 1982 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Rich Frank 17 March 1982 THEATER WORLD PREMIERE OF FUGARD NEW PLAY The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Arnott Christopher 8 May 2018 Fugard s A Lesson From Aloes Ends Hartford Stage s 2017 18 Season courant com Retrieved 11 May 2020 Rich Frank Stage To Mecca By Athol Fugard The New York Times 15 May 1984 Rich Frank Times Special To the New York 3 April 1987 STAGE FUGARD S PLACE WITH THE PIGS The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Rich Frank 15 May 1984 STAGE TO MECCA BY ATHOL FUGARD Published 1984 The New York Times Retrieved 24 May 2022 Valley Song Summary Valley Song Summary Gans Andrew 11 August 2008 Fugard s Coming Home Will Premiere at Long Wharf Theatre Playbill Dugger Celia W 13 March 2010 His Next Act Driving Out Apartheid s Ghost The New York Times Archived from the original on 24 March 2010 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Fugard s Hummingbird Flies New Haven Independent Retrieved 24 May 2022 a b c d e Filmography in Athol Fugard at AllMovie Retrieved 3 October 2008 Boesman and Lena 1973 BFI Archived from the original on 4 August 2021 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Fisher Iain Athol Fugard Plays World Wide Web Athol Fugard Statements iainfisher com Retrieved 1 October 2008 Some of his plays are grouped together Sometimes this is based on the subject matter the Port Elizabeth plays sometimes it is based on a period and style the Statement Plays But no category is complete and there is overlap The Township and The Statement Plays and some plays do not easily fit into any categories Fisher observes in the Fugard Biography section of Athol Fugard Statements that South African writer and critic Gray Stephen classifies many of Fugard s dramatic works according to chronological periods of composition and similarities of style Apprenticeship 1956 1957 Social Realism 1958 1961 Chamber Theatre 1961 1970 Improvised Theatre 1966 1973 and Poetic Symbolism 1975 1990 Stephen Gray ed 1991 File on Fugard London Methuen Drama ISBN 978 0 413 64580 7 Fugard Athol 1990 Stephen Gray and introd ed My Children My Africa and Selected Shorter Plays Johannesburg Witwatersrand University Press ISBN 1 86814 117 9 Master Harold and the Boys at AllMovie Retrieved 3 October 2008 The Guest at Steenkampskraal at AllMovie Retrieved 4 October 2008 Meetings with Remarkable Men at AllMovie Retrieved 3 October 2008 STIAS Fellow Athol Fugard receives prestigious 2014 prize Stellenbosch University 16 July 2014 Retrieved 17 July 2014 A list of Fugard s Broadway theatre award nominations may be found at the IBDB Athol Fugard Awards Internet Broadway Database Archived from the original on 4 March 2007 Retrieved 1 October 2008 a b c d Athol Fugard Award Nominations Award s Won The Internet Off Broadway Database Archived from the original on 15 March 2009 Retrieved 2 October 2008 Lucille Lortel Awards Archive 1986 2000 Lortel Archives Archived from the original on 21 March 2009 Retrieved 2 October 2008 The Audie Awards 1999 Writers Write Inc Archived from the original World Wide Web on 2 May 1999 Retrieved 2 October 2008 Athol Fugard Biography and Interview www achievement org American Academy of Achievement Yale University Honorary Degree Honorands 1977 2000 PDF Yale University Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2008 Retrieved 4 October 2008 Honorary Degree Recipients 1948 2001 Wittenberg University Archived from the original on 14 August 2007 Retrieved 4 October 2008 Honorary Graduates 1920s to 2000s World Wide Web University of the Witwatersrand Archived from the original on 3 August 2008 Retrieved 4 October 2008 News release 94 185 World Wide Web Press release Brown University News Bureau Sweeney 24 May 1995 Retrieved 4 October 2008 Honorary Degrees Awarded by Princeton University 1940s to 2000s World Wide Web Princeton University Archived from the original on 21 September 2008 Retrieved 4 October 2008 Enwemeka Zeninjor 21 April 2006 Stellenbosch honours Athol Fugard IOL Retrieved 23 September 2017 References editThe Amajuba Resource Pack Archived 14 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Oxford Playhouse and Farber Foundry In Association with Mmabana Arts Foundation Oxford Playhouse October 2004 Retrieved 1 October 2008 Downloadable PDF Photographs by Robert Day Written by Rachel G Briscoe Edited by Rupert Rowbotham Overseen by Yael Farber 18 pages Athol Fugard Special issue of Twentieth Century Literature 39 4 Winter 1993 Index Findarticles com lt http findarticles com p articles mi m0403 is n4 v39 gt Retrieved 4 October 2008 Includes Athol Fugard Some Problems of a Playwright from South Africa Transcript 11 pages Blumberg Marcia Shirley and Dennis Walder eds South African Theatre As and Intervention Amsterdam and Atlanta Georgia Editions Rodopi B V 1999 ISBN 90 420 0537 8 10 ISBN 978 90 420 0537 2 13 Fugard Athol A Lesson from Aloes New York Theatre Communications Group 1989 ISBN 1 55936 001 1 10 ISBN 978 1 55936 001 2 13 Google Books Retrieved 1 October 2008 Limited preview available and Chris Boyd Athol Fugard on Tsotsi Truth and Reconciliation Camus Pascal and courageous pessimism The Morning After Performing Arts in Australia Blog WordPress 29 January 2006 Retrieved 4 October 2008 An edited interview with South African playwright Athol Fugard in San Diego on the publication of his only novel Tsotsi in Australia 29 January 2006 and Serena Davies My Week Athol Fugard dead link The Telegraph 8 April 2007 Retrieved 29 September 2008 The playwright describes his week to Serena Davies prior to the opening of his play Victory at the Theatre Royal Bath telephone interview Gray Stephen Athol Fugard Johannesburg and New York McGraw Hill 1982 ISBN 0 07 450633 1 10 ISBN 978 0 07 450633 2 13 ISBN 0 07 450615 3 10 ISBN 978 0 07 450615 8 13 ed and introd File on Fugard London Methuen Drama 1991 ISBN 0 413 64580 0 10 ISBN 978 0 413 64580 7 13 My Children My Africa and Selected Shorter Plays by Athol Fugard Johannesburg Witwatersrand University Press 1990 ISBN 1 86814 117 9 Kruger Loren Post Imperial Brecht Politics and Performance East and South Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press 2004 ISBN 0 521 81708 0 10 ISBN 978 0 521 81708 0 13 Google Books limited preview available McDonald Marianne A Gift for His Seventieth Birthday Athol Fugard s Sorrows and Rejoicings Department of Theatre and Dance University of California San Diego Rpt from TheatreForum 21 Summer Fall 2002 Retrieved 2 October 2008 McLuckie Craig Okanagan College Athol Fugard 1932 The Literary Encyclopedia 8 October 2003 Retrieved 29 September 2008 Morris Stephen Leigh Falling Sky Athol Fugard s Victory LA Weekly 31 January 2008 Retrieved 29 September 2008 Theatre review of the American premiere at The Fountain Theatre Los Angeles California Spencer Charles Victory The Fight s Gone Out of Fugard dead link The Telegraph 17 August 2007 Retrieved 30 September 2008 Theatre review of Victory at the Theatre Royal Bath Walder Dennis Athol Fugard Writers and Their Work Tavistock Northcote House in association with the British Council 2003 ISBN 0 7463 0948 1 10 ISBN 978 0 7463 0948 3 13 Wertheim Albert The Dramatic Art of Athol Fugard From South Africa to the World Bloomington Indiana University Press 2000 ISBN 0 253 33823 9 10 ISBN 978 0 253 33823 5 13 ed and introd Athol Fugard A Casebook Casebooks on Modern Dramatists Gen Ed Kimball King New York Garland Publishing 1997 ISBN 0 8153 0745 4 10 ISBN 978 0 8153 0745 7 13 Out of print unavailable Hardcover ed published by Garland Publishing the series of Casebooks on Modern Dramatists is now published by Routledge an imprint of Taylor amp Francis and does not include this title External links edit Athol Fugard Faculty profile Department of Theatre and Dance University of California San Diego Lists Athol Fugard Statements An Athol Fugard site by Iain Fisher as Personal Website see below Athol Fugard at AllMovie Athol Fugard at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Athol Fugard at IMDb Athol Fugard at the Internet Off Broadway Database IOBDb Athol Fugard at Times Topics in The New York Times Includes YouTube Video clip of Athol Fugard s Burke Lecture A Catholic Antigone An Episode in the Life of Hildegard of Bingen the Eugene M Burke C S P Lectureship on Religion and Society at the University of California San Diego introduced by Professor of Theatre and Classics Marianne McDonald UCSD Department of Theatre and Dance April 2003 Show ID 7118 1 28 57 duration Athol Fugard at WorldCat Athol Fugard Biography Athol Fugard rpt by bookrags com Ambassadors Group Inc from the Encyclopedia of World Biography 2005 2006 Thomson Gale a part of the Thomson Corporation All rights reserved Athol Fugard 1932 at Britannica Online Encyclopedia subscription based free trial available Athol Fugard 1932 Complete Guide to Playwright and Plays at Doollee com Athol Fugard Statements An Athol Fugard site by Iain Fisher Listed as Personal Website in UCSB faculty profile see above Books by Athol Fugard at Google Books several with limited previews available Full Profile Mr Athol Lanigan Fugard in Who s Who of Southern Africa Copyright 2007 24 com Media24 Includes hyperlinked News Articles from 2000 to 2008 Interviews South Africa s Fugards Writing About Wrongs Morning Edition National Public Radio NPR RealAudio 16 June 2006 With hyperlinked Related NPR stories from 2001 to 2006 Richards Lloyd Summer 1989 Athol Fugard The Art of Theater No 8 Paris Review Summer 1989 111 Athol Fugard in the Encyclopaedia of South African Theatre and Performance Nancy T Kearns collection of Athol Fugard materials 1983 1996 held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Athol Fugard amp oldid 1196404694, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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