Nomhle Nkonyeni

Last updated • 2 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia

Nomhle Nkonyeni
Born(1942-04-09)April 9, 1942
DiedJuly 10, 2019(2019-07-10) (aged 77)
NationalitySouth African
OccupationActor
Years active19612019
ChildrenThabang Nkonyeni (daughter)
Tebogo Nkonyeni (son)

Nomhle Nkonyeni (9 April 1942 – 10 July 2019 [1] ) was a South African actress who has appeared in television series such as Mzansi, Tsha Tsha and the 2007 mini-series Society, as well as feature films such as Of Good Report (2013). [2]

Contents

Career

Starting in the 1961 during apartheid, Nkonyeni and others who wanted to change their lives using the stage met with Athol Fugard and formed the Serpent Players. [3] [4] In 1981, she played the lead role in Die Swerfjare van Poppie Nongena (The Long Journey of Poppie Nongena), at the CAPAB (Cape Performing Arts Board) theatre in Cape Town. [5] She said, “I was the first black person to perform on that stage and when that door opened, I never shut it.” [6]

Nkonyeni received a Diploma in Conflict Management from Lewisham College in London, England, in 1999. [7]

In 2002, she also received her Master's degree in Theatre for Development from King Alfred's College (now University of Winchester). [8]

Nkonyeni was in the international films Red Dust (2004) with Hilary Swank, Catch A Fire (2006) with Tim Robbins, and as Forest Whitaker's mother in Zulu (aka City of Violence, 2013). [9] Her last film, Knuckle City (2019), is South Africa’s official submission for the Academy Awards. [10]

She was also in many soap operas and dramas on television. In 2017, she joined Scandal! in the role of Lulama Langa, mother to Siseko Langa, played by Hlomla Dandala. She was scheduled to film more of "her much-loved and feisty character" when she suddenly died. [11]

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
2019 Knuckle City Ma BokwanaCrime
2019The Space: Theatre of SurvivalherselfDocumentary
2018 Sew the Winter to My Skin Old MatriarchAction / Adventure
2013 Of Good Report LandladyCrime / Drama / Thriller
2013 Zulu Josephinaas Nomhle Nkoyeni
2012 Angus Buchan's Ordinary People Mariaas Nomhlé Nkyonyeni
2010ThembaMa Zaneleas Nomhlé Nkyonyeni
2008 Skin Jenny ZwaneBiography / Drama
2006 Catch a Fire Mama DorothyBiography / Drama / History
2004 Red Dust Mrs. Sizelaas Nomhle Nkyonyeni
2004 Gums & Noses Mrs. KleynhansComedy
2003 The Wooden Camera ServantFamily drama
2000Christmas with GrannyGrannyShort
1999 Chikin Biznis ... The Whole Story! MamketeDirected by Ntshaveni Wa Luruli

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
2017 Scandal! Lulama Langa
2007SocietyMa Moloi
2016IgaziQueen Mother
2006Tsha tshaLwazi's Auntas Nomhlé Nkyonyeni
2005 Mzansi Granny(2005)
2005Gaz'lamKim's MomSeason 4 [12]
2004Zero Tolerance
2003Scout's Safari2 episodes as Nomhlé Nkyonyeni
1997Les enfants du Karoo Television film as Nomhlé Nkyonyeni

Awards

In 2016 she was awarded the South African Film and Television Awards (SAFTAs) Lifetime Achievement Award. [13] [14] And in 2018, she also received the Lifetime Achievement Award in the Eastern Cape cultural awards. [2]

She received the Order of Ikhamanga in Silver in 2019 for her contribution in arts and culture. [6] [2]

New Brighton, Eastern Cape renamed Aggrey Road after her. The Arthur Wellington Church was on that road, and she spent much of her childhood there. [2]

Personal life and death

Nkonyeni had a son, Teboho Nkonyeni, [15] and a daughter Thabang Nkonyeni, who was murdered on August 11, 2009. [16] [17]

Nkonyeni died in hospital on 10 July 2019 after a short illness aged 77. [18] President Cyril Ramaphosa declared a Special Provincial Funeral Category Two for her because of her outstanding work in the arts and culture in South Africa. Eastern Cape Premier Oscar Mabuyane said, “She has played quite a huge significant role in social cohesion. We really appreciate it and are hugely indebted to people of her calibre and the role that she has played under very difficult conditions, sometimes using art to communicate a message and also to fight the injustice of the then government of the day." [19]

Following her death, a Google Doodle of her life and work was published. [1] [20]

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References

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