African Theater I INTRODUCTION African Theater, traditional, historical, and contemporary dramatic forms in Africa south of the Sahara.
Publié le 12/05/2013
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The period after World War II ended in 1945 led to the struggle for and achievement of independence in many African countries.
The new nation-states were oftenestablished along colonial boundaries and power was handed over to a bourgeois class who had been educated in Europe.
The epoch-making era of nationalismproduced a number of African playwrights who merged African theatrical traditions with European forms.
These plays are still widely performed and read in many partsof the continent.
Nigerian playwright Wole Soyinka wrote his first plays in the late 1950s.
Soyinka’s versatility can be seen in his prodigious output of plays from 1957 on.
A Dance of the Forests was written for the Independence Day celebrations in Africa in 1960.
It was officially banned for its veiled prophecy of internecine conflict.
The Lion and the Jewel (1959) is a witty comedy set in rural Nigeria, while The Road (1965) explores the mystical connections between Yoruba and Christian religions.
The Universities of Ibadan and Ife fostered a generation of playwrights, including John Pepper Clark, who was the first to make explicit connections between Greek tragedy and Africanritual in Song of a Goat (1963), and Ola Rotimi, who dramatized a Yoruba version of the Oedipus myth called The Gods Are Not to Blame (1968).
In some countries independence spawned efforts towards radical social reform into which playwrights were (and still are) sometimes co-opted.
In others, the newregimes soon inspired playwrights to use theater as a vehicle for political opposition and in some cases mobilization.
Ghanaian playwright Efua Sutherland wasassociated with the socially reformist government of Kwame Nkrumah.
She founded the Ghana Drama Studio and modernized the traditional form of Anansesem (spider stories) as a form of Everyman in Foriwa (1962) and the Marriage of Anansewa (1975).
Her political leanings were followed by two other important Ghanaian playwrights, Joe de Graaft and Ama Ata Aidoo.
Raymond Sarif Easmon of Sierra Leone scathingly attacks ethnic prejudice and power mongering in his play The New Patriots (1966).
Ugandan playwrights Robert Serumaga ( A Play, 1967) and Byron Kawadwa sought symbolic, mythical, and abstract forms in which to express their opposition to the regimes of Milton Obote and Idi Amin.
Serumaga founded the first professional theater group in Uganda and achieved international success with his play Renga Moi (1972).
Contemporary Ugandan dramatists such as Alex Mukulu continue in this political “art theater” tradition.
The 1950s was a period of relative cultural freedom in South Africa and a number of successful collaborations between black and white artists and producers took place.White South African playwright Athol Fugard founded The Rehearsal Room, where he worked with a number of black intellectuals—including Bloke Modisane, LewisNkosi, and Nat Nakasa—on No Good Friday (1958) and King Kong (1961).
The Union of South African Artists founded by Es’ kia Mphahlele produced both these plays.
V FRANCOPHONE AFRICAN THEATER
Francophone Africa consists of the French-speaking former colonies, of which there are 16 in Africa.
The common colonial experience of these countries has led to someparallel cultural developments as well as the use of French as opposed to indigenous languages in literature.
The French colonial policy of assimilation has hadrepercussions in contemporary theater; performers and playwrights are frequently Paris-based, while the Festival Internationale des Francophonies in Limoges providesa regular platform for world theater in French.
The most prevalent topics in French-speaking African plays are historical.
The reasons for this are as much due to traditional aesthetics of griot (professional bard) performance as they are to the need to reassert cultural identity in the years leading up to and following independence.
Shaka, by Senegalese president Léopold Sédar Senghor, is an epic poem based on the life of Shaka, the Zulu chief; Seydou Badian Koyate from Mali wrote La Mort de Chaka (1962) and Cheik N’Dao wrote L’Exil d’Albouri ( 1967).
Ivory Coast playwright Bernard Dadie satirizes the social anomalies of post-colonial society in Monsieur Thogô-Gnini. The Cameroon writer Guillaume Oyôno Mbia diligently examines the conflict of traditional and modern values in Trois Pretendeurs, un Mari (1964).
In recent decades a more radical approach has emerged through the incorporation of pidgin languages and slang as well as traditional forms of theater.
Sony LabouTansi, from the Republic of the Congo, produced grotesque satires of dictators in Qui a Mangé Madame D’Avoie Bergota? (1988), while Werewere Liking deploys traditional ritual forms in her new plays.
Senouvo Agbota Zinsou uses the concert-party style, complex narrative technique, and mythical plots in La Tortue qui Chante (1987).
VI POPULAR, POLITICAL, AND DEVELOPMENT THEATER
Athol FugardMany of South African playwright Athol Fugard’s plays focus on apartheid, the system of racial separation that existed inhis country until 1994.
His works have been produced in the United Kingdom and the United States.The Everett Collection, Inc.
During the 1970s a number of military and discriminatory regimes held power, among them the dictatorship of Idi Amin in Uganda and the apartheid government inSouth Africa.
In opposition to these regimes, playwrights turned to radical and propagandist forms of theater.
Tanzanian playwright Ebrahim Hussein produced plays inSwahili, such as Kinjeketile (1970), which focused on the ideological struggle for a just society.
Simultaneously there was a reaction against bourgeois literary drama; theater companies increasingly sought to speak to the urban and rural poor and to include them in their activities by moving out of national theater buildings and intothe local areas.
The techniques of “Forum Theatre” of Augusto Boal and Paulo Freire in Brazil have inspired international aid agencies and theater practitioners to helpthe understanding of issues such as AIDS, gender, and development.
One of the most powerful and effective pieces of political theater to be produced during this period was I Will Marry When I Want (1977), a play commissioned by the villagers of Kamiriithu in Kenya from two playwrights, Ngugi wa Thiong'o and Ngugi wa Miri.
The play focuses on indigenous exploitation and was performed in Kikuyu by.
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