Playwright Van Graan scoops coveted R1m award
MULTI award-winning playwright Mike van Graan has done it again – this time scooping one of the world’s most coveted prizes worth R1-million.
Van Graan has won the 2018 Hiroshima Foundation for Peace and Culture‚ a biannual international award recognising those who “foster dialogue‚ understanding and peace in conflict areas”.
He is the second South African to scoop the accolade‚ following in the footsteps of playwright and theatre director John Kani.
The foundation praised Van Graan “for his contribution to the fight against apartheid‚ to building a postapartheid society and to the study of the interface between peace and culture both in his home country and across the African continent”.
It added: “In taking the decision to present Mike van Graan with the award‚ the board stressed both his impressive literary work‚ his important role in shaping and monitoring post-apartheid cultural policies and his policy‚ advocacy and capacitybuilding work in the field of culture and its contribution to development‚ human rights and peace in Africa.”
Van Graan is an associate professor of drama at the University of Cape Town‚ where he graduated in the 80s. He has distinguished himself as a talented playwright and arts activist‚ and once served as a special adviser to democratic South Africa’s first arts minister‚ Ben Ngubane. He is credited with helping to shape the country’s post-apartheid cultural policies.
He is a Unesco technical expert on the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions.
Van Graan has written 29 plays‚ the most recent being When Swallows Cry. — TimesLIVE