Ashraf Johaardien

Last updated

Ashraf Johaardien
Born (1974-06-15) 15 June 1974 (age 50)
Cape Town, South Africa
OccupationPlaywright, actor, Producer
Alma mater United World College of the Atlantic
GenreDrama
Notable worksSalaam Stories
Happy Endings Are Extra
Spouse Pieter Jacobs

Ashraf Johaardien (born 1974) is a multi-award-winning playwright, actor, and producer. He was the recipient of the inaugural PANSA [1] Jury Award (2002), [2] was listed as one of Mail & Guardian's 'Top 200 Young South Africans' (2008) [3] and he received a Legends Award [4] (2012) for his achievements in arts and culture. [5]

Contents

Biography

He was born in Cape Town in 1974 and was schooled in South Africa and the UK. [6] He holds an International Baccalaureate from United World College of the Atlantic in Wales, a Bachelor of Arts Degree and an English Honors Degree from the University of Cape Town, a Postgraduate Diploma in Leadership from the University of Johannesburg and a Research master's degree from the University of the Witwatersrand.

His career in the arts encompasses professional and creative roles across a spectrum of disciplines. He has held senior management and leadership positions with key South African cultural and academic organisations (Iziko Museums of Cape Town, Baxter Theatre: University of Cape Town, Film & Publications Board, Centre for the Book: National Library, Arts & Culture Trust, [7] Wits Theatre: University of the Witwatersrand, UJ Arts & Culture: University of Johannesburg). He was the Executive Producer of the National Arts Festival and the Cape Town Fringe, from July 2016 to February 2019. [8] He took up the position of chief executive officer of Business and Arts South Africa (BASA) in March 2019. [9]

His plays include Coloured Son X, Salaam Stories/SALAAM, Happy Endings Are Extra, STRIPPED, Miracle*, Ecce Homo! adapted from Tim Miller's Body Blows and The Quiet Violence of Dreams based on the novel by K. Sello Duiker. [10] His work has been performed and produced at mainstream theatres and festivals in South Africa, Ireland, the UK, the Netherlands and the USA. He has been published by Compress, Just Done Productions Publishing, Oxford University Press, Waverly Books (Glasgow) and Umuzi (Random House). He is also the author of The Perfumed Closet, a monthly gay column published in The Pink Tongue (Independent Newspapers) and he went on to compile a collection of queer South African writing entitled "Yes, I am!" [11] with Robin Malan.

He played the title role in the film Sando to Samantha (Cape Town, Johannesburg, New York, Toronto, Paris, San Francisco, Chicago, Turin, Adelaide, Bologna, Brussels, Melbourne and Lisbon) directed by Jack Lewis. [12] Television credits include the role of Lucas in season 4 of the SABC 3 drama series Hard Copy produced by Quizzical Pictures. He originated the role of Boy in the devised play SUIP! as part of a student ensemble at the University of Cape Town (1993). He performed the role of Lawrence with two different casts in the South African and Irish productions of The Myth of Andrew and Jo by Gideon van Eeden (2010). He also originated the solo Hamlet of iHAMLET which was adapted specifically for him to perform by Robin Malan (2012). [13]

Plays and publications

Coloured Son X

Salaam Stories/SALAAM

Happy Endings Are Extra

Miracle*

STRIPPED

Yes, I Am!: Writing by South African gay men

Adaptations

Ecce Homo!

The Quiet Violence of Dreams

Based on the novel by K. Sello Duiker

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Artscape Theatre Centre</span> Performing arts centre in Cape Town, South Africa

Artscape Theatre Centre is the main performing arts centre in Cape Town, South Africa. It was opened in 1971 and is located on reclaimed land in the Foreshore area. The inaugural performance was scheduled to be Giuseppe Verdi's Aida but illness struck the title-role singer Emma Renzi and the production was replaced by CAPAB Ballet's Sylvia. Other productions in the opening season were Mozart's Die Zauberflöte in Afrikaans and Giacomo Puccini's Madama Butterfly. The complex includes:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Baxter Theatre Centre</span> Performing arts centre in Cape Town, South Africa

The Baxter Theatre Centre is a performing arts complex in Rondebosch, a suburb of Cape Town, South Africa. The Baxter, as it is often known, is part of the University of Cape Town; it is also the second largest performing arts complex in Cape Town, after the Artscape Theatre Centre.

The Cape Town City Ballet Company, formerly known as the CAPAB Ballet Company, is a dance company based in Cape Town, South Africa.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cape Performing Arts Board</span> Former theatre organisation in South Africa

The Cape Performing Arts Board (CAPAB) was a South African theatre organisation based in Cape Town, serving the former Cape Province. It was one of the four state-funded performing arts councils in the four former provinces of South Africa instituted in 1963.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Natalia da Rocha</span> South African actress and director

Natalia Da Rocha is a South African actress, director, youth activist and businesswoman. She can be remembered as being one of the few persons of colour to appear in entertainment media during the Apartheid-era. In 1981 she was the first Coloured to graduate with a Drama degree from the Afrikaans dominant Stellenbosch University. Beginning 1987 she was the first woman of colour along with Sam Marais to star in a Sun City Extravaganza. In 1992, she became the first South African star to perform publicly in Madagascar. She is well remembered for her roles in musicals such as Ain't Misbehavin'; Midnight Blues; Godspell and Vere . Natalia was one of 40 inducted into the S.A. Legends Museum on 26 January 2020 in Johannesburg.

Nadia Davids is a South African playwright, novelist, and author of short stories and screenplays. Her work has been published, produced, and performed in Southern Africa, Europe, and the United States. She was a Philip Leverhulme Prize winner in 2013. Her play What Remains won five Fleur du Cap Theatre Awards. In 2017, Davids was elected president of PEN South Africa.

<i>The Magic Flute</i> (musical) Musical by Mandisi Dyantyis, Mbali Kgosidintsi, Pauline Malefane, Nolufefe Mtshabe

The Magic Flute is a musical theatre work adapted from the Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart opera of the same title by Mark Dornford-May, with words and music by Mandisi Dyantyis, Mbali Kgosidintsi, Pauline Malefane and Nolufefe Mtshabe. Mozart's score is transposed for an orchestra of marimbas, drums and township percussion. The musical, set in contemporary South Africa, re-interprets the story from a South African perspective, telling of Prince Tamino's quest to rescue Pamina, daughter of the Queen of the Night, from the Priest of the Sun.

Brett Bailey is a playwright, artist, designer, play director, festival curator and the artistic director of the group Third World Bun Fight. He was the curator of South Africa's only public arts festival, Infecting the City, in Cape Town, South Africa, from 2008 until 2011. His works have played across Europe, Australia and Africa, and have won several awards, including a gold medal for design at the Prague Quadrennial (2007).

Deborah Bell is a South African painter and sculptor whose works are known internationally.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Craig Higginson</span>

Craig Higginson is a novelist, playwright and theatre director based in Johannesburg, South Africa. He has written and published several international plays and novels and won and been nominated for numerous awards in South Africa and Britain.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amy Jephta</span> South African playwright, screenwriter and theatre director

Amy Jephta is a South African playwright, screenwriter, theatre director, and teacher.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gopala Davies</span> South African actor and director

Gopala Davies is an actor and director. He is best known for his intermedial theatre production Barbe Bleue: A story about madness, which won a Standard Bank Ovation Award at The National Arts Festival in 2015, and the Best Student Director Award in 2014.

Marlene le Roux is a South African disability and women's rights activist. She is co-founder of the Women's Achievement Network for Disability, and CEO of the Artscape Theatre Centre in Cape Town.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lucas Malan</span> South African Afrikaans poet and academic

Lucas Cornelis Malan was a South African academic and writer of poetry, prose, plays, text books, literary reviews and other articles, principally in Afrikaans.

Andrew Frederick Buckland is a South African award-winning playwright, performer, film director, mime, and academic.

Kirvan Fortuin was a Khoikhoi First nation dancer, choreographer and LGBT activist, the child of Ms Charlotte Fortuin, a Khoikhoi community stripped of language, land and culture and who were erased as a people post-democracy South Africa

Marita Napier was a South African operatic soprano, known internationally as a performer of music by Strauss and Wagner. She performed in 19 productions of Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen. In 1989, a recording of Wagner's Die Walküre with her in a Metropolitan Opera production was awarded the Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording. Napier was considered one of the best Turandot, having performed the role for over 70 times including 1989 production by Franco Zeffirelli at the Met.

André Lötter, is a South African actor, MC and speaker. He is most notable for the roles in the films Actually Quite a Lot, As Jy Sing and Sterlopers and the soap operas Villa Rosa and 7de Laan.

Gerald Machona is a Zimbabwean contemporary visual artist. The most recognizable aspect of his work is his use of decommissioned Zimbabwean dollars. Machona works in sculpture, performance, new media, photography and film. In Machona's work, he explores issues of migration, transnationality, social interaction and xenophobia in South Africa.

Celeste Mitzi Karin Matthews is a South African actress, playwright, and former City of Cape Town local government official elected to the City Council in 2021. She is best known for her roles as Gertie Cupido in kykNET & kie's Arendsvlei and Auntie Hester in David Kramer and Taliep Petersen's award-winning 2002 revival of District Six: The Musical (1987). Vincent Colby of the District Six Museum cites the musical play as the material which steered a pivotal discussion held in 1994 at the 'old church hall' in former District Six to establish a dedicated museum.

References

  1. "PANSA – Performing Arts Network of South Africa". pansa.co.za. Archived from the original on 26 March 2018. Retrieved 22 June 2020.
  2. "PANSA NLDTF Festival of Reading of New Writing to take place regionally". Media Update. 22 May 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  3. Staff Writer (26 June 2008). "Young South Africans: Arts & Lifestyle". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  4. "Artslink.co.za – Legends Award for UJ Head of Arts". Artslink.
  5. Maputle, Precious. "Legends Award for UJ Head of Arts". Artslink.co.za. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  6. "ABOUT ASHRAF". ashraf.co.za. Retrieved 7 May 2015.
  7. du Toit, Steyn (28 December 2008). "Building Relationships". Sunday Independent. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  8. "New NAF exec to take festival into future".
  9. "Business and Arts South Africa appoints incoming CEO".
  10. "bol.com".
  11. Malan, Robin; Johaardien, Ashraf (2010). Yes I Am (First ed.). Cape Town: Junkets Publisher. p. 176. ISBN   9780620458283 . Retrieved 25 July 2014.
  12. Sando to Samantha. OCLC   551782100 via worldcat.org.
  13. "ashraf.co.za" . Retrieved 7 May 2015.

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Ashraf Johaardien at Wikimedia Commons