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Athol Fugard |
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Born
in the remote village of Middleburg, Cape Province,
Fugard grew up in Port Elizabeth, the setting for most
of his plays. His full name is Harold Athol Lanigan
Fugard and as a child he was known as Hally before he
decided he wanted to be called Athol. His parents were
English and Afrikaans, with English as his mother tongue
(he describes himself as an Afrikaner writing in
English). Fugard went to the University of Cape Town but
dropped out just before the exams to hitchhike through
Africa. He then became a deck hand on a ship and sailed
the world for two years, before returning to South
Africa. In 1958, he moved to Johannesburg where he worked as a court clerk, an experience that made him keenly aware of the injustices of Apartheid. That became the theme of many of his plays. In that same year, he organized a multiracial theater - "The Rehearsal Room" - for which he wrote, directed, and acted. He soon became the country's premier playwright whose works, many which were banned, deal with contemporary South Africa and the psychological and physical barriers confronted in trying to overcome Apartheid. His plays are almost always set in South Africa and steeped in the politics of the day. However, the politics never affects his insight into people. Like Tennessee Williams, Fugard creates characters with strengths and weaknesses which make them unable to fit into what society requires. And like Williams the plays often have dominant women. Fugard says:
Fugard started working in the late 1950´s with a group
of actors in Johannesburg, including Zakes Mokae, who
were influenced by Strasberg´s method acting. Fugard
wrote his first play No Good Friday, which was performed
in "The Rehearsal Room". In the early 1960´s Fugard
returned to Port Elizabeth and worked with The Serpent
Players (their first performance was in the former snake
pit of a zoo, hence the name).
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