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Speaking Out Against Apartheid: South African Theater


Article # : 14189 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 7 / 1988  1,065 Words
Author : Julius Eichbaum
Julius Eichbaum is the editor and publisher of Scenaria, a magazine devoted to the performing arts. He lives in Johannesburg.

       The performing and visual arts in South Africa have always been at the forefront in promoting social change and human awareness. In a land split asunder by apartheid, the arts have brought South Africans of all races together, and, as a result, they have promoted a greater degree of harmony and understanding than any other sphere of human activity. Coupled with this is the fact that a great deal of ignorance exists overseas regarding the arts in South Africa, their true position in South African society, and what the arts community has accomplished in improving the standard of life for South Africans of all population groups.
       
        At a time when genuine reform is beginning to emerge in South Africa at a political level, South Africans themselves tend to overlook the fact that the first cracks in the policy of apartheid occurred as long ago as 1971, through the efforts of the arts community in South Africa.
       
        Multiracial Status
       
        When the Nico Malan Opera House in Cape Town, the first of the four major new performing arts complexes, was opened on May 19, 1971, the government and local authorities that had funded the project announced that the complex was to be for the sole use of the white community. The furor that ensued, and in which the arts community played a leading role, soon forced the government to reconsider its stand, and the Nico Malan was duly accorded multiracial status.
       
        In the period that followed, several professional theater managements openly defied the law and staged productions using multiracial casts, which were performed for the ... (1999 of 6292 Characters)
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