The Citizen (KZN)

Winnie waits for ‘real freedom’

MADIKIZELA-MANDELA: PRAISES MUSICAL SARAFINA!

- Virginia Keppler virginiak@citizen.co.za

Struggle stalwart Winnie Madikizela-Mandela says true freedom is still coming to South Africa.

Playwright reveals inspiratio­n for musical.

Struggle stalwart Winnie Madikizela-Mandela says real freedom is still coming. She was speaking after Mbongeni Ngema’s musical, Sarafina!, at the State Theatre in Pretoria.

“For me, it was very nostalgic and I think the performanc­e was absolutely wonderful, stunning,” said Madikizela-Mandela.

“I cannot believe that anyone can recreate something to this extent.

“It is as relevant today as it was all those years ago and the songs are so relevant.

“Real freedom is still coming,” she said, with hope in her eyes.

Madikizela-Mandela was among the ANC leaders to reportedly push for President Jacob Zuma’s resignatio­n last year.

Others included the late ANC heavyweigh­t Ahmed Kathrada.

The new Sarafina is played by the talented 23-year-old Noxolo Dlamini, who holds a BA in dramatic arts from the University of Pretoria.

She has a striking resemblanc­e to the original Sarafina, played by Leleti Khumalo.

The talented crew is energetic and they manage to take the audience back to those dark years when the majority of South Africans were oppressed.

You see the hurt and destructio­n, you feel the pain and you experience the joy. But most of all, you believe in the hope of a free future.

So it was natural when the audience sang Freedom is Coming Tomorrow, along with the crew.

Ngema said it was Madikizela-Mandela who inspired him to write Sarafina! following a conversati­on one night between the two of them.

“That evening, I was standing in Winnie Mandela’s kitchen as she was busy preparing supper for her children,” Ngema told The Citizen.

Ngema asked her: “Mama, what do you think would happen when we finally face the boere army … the SA Defence Force?”

She replied: “Mbongeni, I wish I had a big blanket to cover the faces of the little ones, so that they do not see the bitter end.”

Ngema said that as he drove home that evening, those words echoed in his mind and he started hearing voices of students singing Freedom is Coming Tomorrow.

“That became the centrepiec­e for my work. From that day, I started writing the script and composing music.

“The results became the blockbuste­r musical Sarafina!,” Ngema said.

Thakgatso Setseta, marketing manager at the State Theatre, said Sarafina! would be the longest African musical run in the history of the State Theatre. –

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? AMANDLA! Nelson Mandela walks out of Victor Verster prison in February 1990, accompanie­d by his then wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela .
Picture: Reuters AMANDLA! Nelson Mandela walks out of Victor Verster prison in February 1990, accompanie­d by his then wife Winnie Madikizela-Mandela .

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