Daily Dispatch

Heart doctor Barnard’s story set for big screen

Screenplay’s core revolves around epic transplant

- By SHELLEY SEID

THE man who mended broken hearts is the subject of a new movie. South African doctor Professor Chris Barnard performed the world’s first heart transplant operation in December 1967.

In a heartbeat‚ the future of medicine was inexorably altered. Now a film which will feature an internatio­nal South African actor as Barnard will mark the 50th anniversar­y of what has been called the greatest medical achievemen­t of the 20th century. At the time the head of the Cardiothor­acic Surgery Department at Groote Schuur Hospital‚ Barnard performed the operation on 53-year-old Sea Point businessma­n, Louis Washkansky.

Washkansky died 18 days later but Barnard’s medical triumph turned him into an internatio­nal superstar.

Barnard’s personal life became the stuff of legends; he flirted with movie stars and princesses‚ engaged with politician­s and popes and‚ after divorcing his first wife‚ went on to marry twice more‚ each time to a glamorous and ever younger woman.

The film focuses on the period around the first human-to-human heart transplant. The original theatre at Groote Schuur in which the now famous operation took place has been restored to its original condition. Pivotal scenes will be filmed there.

Producer Robert dos Santos said that the project had been in developmen­t for the last four years. “We had multiple scripts. His life was so interestin­g that it became too much for any single screenplay so we decided to focus on the period around the transplant. It was the most tumultuous period of his life.”

Dos Santos said that Barnard was a rebel. “He went up against the powers that be to engage black staff and he was criticised for transplant­ing organs from “non-whites” into white patients saying that ‘we are all red on the inside’.”

The South African-owned internatio­nal production company Karoo Films‚ which worked on Jagveld written by Deon Meyer and released earlier this year as well as Durban Poison‚ will be shooting on location in and around Cape Town.

It has not yet been decided who will play the part of the famous professor but Dos Santos said that they were looking for an internatio­nally recognised South African.

“Because Karoo Films has secured worldwide distributi­on through a London-based company‚ we need actors with pull power.

“There are some potential roles for overseas actors but we are proud that this is a South African-made movie telling a South African story and we hope to keep it as South African as possible.”

The movie will be multi-lingual‚ using both English and Afrikaans

It is a little known fact that Barnard insisted on speaking English in the hospital setting. “He was known for that at work. Even when he spoke to his brother in theatre it would be in English‚” Dos Santos said.

“We have done an enormous amount of research‚ from interviewi­ng the nurses‚ technician­s and doctors who were with him during the historic transplant‚ to watching films of his work that are available at the Heart of Cape Town Museum’s archives.”

Shooting of Barnard: The Movie begins in September. — TimesLIVE

 ?? Picture: DON MCKENZIE / FILE ?? HISTORY-MAKING: Professor Chris Barnard, in 1967, with heart transplant patient Louis Washkansky, who died 18 days later
Picture: DON MCKENZIE / FILE HISTORY-MAKING: Professor Chris Barnard, in 1967, with heart transplant patient Louis Washkansky, who died 18 days later

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