Theatre News South Africa

Award-winning productions for Grahamstown's Festival Arena

The 2012 National Arts Festival Arena programme will feature new productions presented by winners of the 2011 Standard Bank Ovation Awards. The festival runs from 28 June to 8 July 2012 in Grahamstown.

Also on this platform, will be two award-winning productions invited from World Fringe Alliance member festivals.

From the Perth Fringe World Festival and with support from the Australian High Commission, "Hope is the Saddest", devised and directed by Jeffrey Jay Fowler is a bittersweet story of falling in love, bicycles, death and Dolly Parton. Hope is a childlike, eternally optimistic young woman who takes all her life lessons from Dolly Parton's lyrics and is not afraid to go to extreme measures when fate makes true love land/collapse at her feet.

The Amsterdam Fringe's winning 2011 production will be presented with support from the Royal Netherlands Embassy. Performers Anne Gehring and Vera Ketelaars reconstruct an upheaval in the perfectly normal lives of two ordinary women in "Bye Bye World!" - a transparent parable about living today.

Written and directed by Janna Ramos-Violante, "Callum's Will" by the Thin Skin Collective takes the audience on an almost filmic journey, offering a quiet window into the tiny intricacies of human behaviour as they watch the unlikely relationship between two men evolve from an awkward first encounter to a deep and lasting friendship that neither expects nor understands.

A taut psychological thriller

"The Three Little Pigs" is a taut psychological thriller set in a world in which Animal Farm meets Reservoir Dogs to deliver a dark and unexpected take on a classic children's story. A delightfully twisted collaboration between multi-award-winning artists Tara Notcutt (.miskien, Mafeking Road), James Cairns (Dirt, Sie Weis Alles), Albert Pretorius (.miskien) and Rob van Vuuren (Rob van Vuuren - Live!, The Most Amazing Show).

Sylvaine Strike-Nakar directs Greg Melvill-Smith and Craig Morris in "ReVerse" - an intricate interdisciplinary exploration of the evolution of homo sapiens and the complex interaction between words, mind and body. A visual/verbal interpretation of humankind's ascent, descent and the complex interactions between modern people and their divergent beliefs.

Inspired by Claudio Stellato's "L'Autre", choreographer Nicola Elliot's "Fragile" explores performer presence and the performance of the moment; combining theatre and dance, realism and abstraction into philosophical collage.

The sounds of traditional instruments re-invented

Under the musical direction of SAMA award-winning musician Tlale Makhene, the Sibikwa Indigenous Orchestra re-invents the sounds of traditional instruments for the 21st century, in Ekugaleni.

Durban's Flatfoot Dance Company will offer a double bill of resident choreographer Lliane Loot's most recent two works - a solo work that takes a look at contemporary black womanhood, which still bears the definitions of paternal culture; and Mapping Nostalgia - a journey into a remembered South Africa, almost 18 years after the turn to democracy.

Bookings for this year's "11 Days of Amaz!ng" have opened. Tickets are available through Computicket. Booking kits will be available from selected Standard Bank branches, selected Exclusive Books and Computicket branches from May. For more information on the programme, accommodation and travel options, go to www.nationalartsfestival.co.za.

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