Chicago Sun-Times

Ntokozo Fuzunina Kunene is putting her stamp on design

- BY MARY HOULIHAN For the Sun-Times Mary Houlihan is a local freelance writer.

Ntokozo Fuzunina Kunene would most likely be a lawyer working in her homeland, South Africa, if not for a bug that bit her as a preteen. Like most young girls that age, she became excited about expressing herself through clothing.

“My parents used to travel and would being me back American teen magazines,” Kunene recalls. “I started trying to re-create outfits I saw in them using my own clothes.

That creative expression eventually grew (more about that almost-lawyer detour later) into a career as an up-and-coming costume designer for the stage.

Kunene most recently created the costumes for Danai Gurira’s comedy-drama “Familiar” at Steppenwol­f Theatre, which stars a powerhouse cast of Chicago actresses — Cheryl Lynn Bruce, Jacqueline Williams, Ora Jones, Celeste M. Cooper and Lanise Antoine Shelley.

It’s a story about “coming to America and living here and navigating the culture,” Kunene says, adding, “It’s something I could closely relate to.”

Gurira, who is best known as an actor (the warrior General Okoye in “Black Panther” and zombie killer Michonne on “The Walking Dead), also is an accomplish­ed playwright and has said she likes to “focus on stories that need to be told and are not told enough.”

Her Tony Award-nominated play “Eclipsed” is a searing drama about captive women in the Liberian civil war. Her more recent work is “Familiar,” which takes place during a Minnesota winter as a Zimbabwean-American family prepares for the wedding of its eldest daughter. As tensions explode, the tight-knit family must find a way to preserve their past while building a new future.

“Danai shows us a different way of saying what it means to be American,” director Danya Taymor says. “She has written a story that is so African but also so American and so familiar.”

For Kunene, her dive into costumes always starts with a reading of the play and some general research. She also spends time in rehearsals to observe what the actors are discoverin­g about their character.

“I’m designing in support of their performanc­e. The sketches and research are not set in stone. Things can change and develop from my observatio­ns and seeing the clothes in the space, in movement.”

In the past, Kunene has designed costumes ranging from the avant-garde to period styles to the modern everyday. It’s the latter of these that she says can often be the most challengin­g. “Familiar,” set in 2011, fits right into this category.

“We’re not dealing with something set in the 1950s or an 18th-century farce,” Kunene, 34, says. “So the question is how do you create something interestin­g with clothes that people are used to seeing.”

Kunene’s designs for “Familiar” include profession­al dresses, high-end couture looks, traditiona­l African dresses and t-shirts and slouchy pajama pants. She also set the styles for the women’s hair, which range from sleek hairdos and natural styles to box braids and weaves.

“Every character in this play is wrestling with their relationsh­ip with their American and African identities,” director Taymor says. “And through the clothes and hairstyles we see that struggle externaliz­ed.”

Kunene grew up in South Africa where both her parents were medical doctors and like most parents wanted their children to choose profession­s that would set them up in life. After designing clothes for high school plays, she wanted to study fashion design but her father wanted her to study “something real,” which led to a degree in economics and finance which had her headed to law school.

But surprising­ly, her father realized her passion had not died and offered her the chance to study fashion design instead, which she did at London’s Istituto Marangoni and New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. Now based in New York City, she is building a resume that includes production­s at Atlantic Theatre Company, The Public Theatre and Round House Theatre as well as working with Spike Lee on his short film “Brave.”

A busy Kunene also teaches costume and set design at Colgate University in upstate New York and next year hopes to re-launch her clothing line, which got derailed when she began graduate school at Tisch. She also has a growing interest in theater set design and film production design.

“I like the idea of having control of the whole world,” she says, laughing. “Playing around with space is fun.”

 ?? JAMES FOSTER/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Costumer Ntokozo Fuzunina Kunene is photograph­ed amid her costumes for Steppenwol­f Theatre’s production of “Familiar.”
JAMES FOSTER/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Costumer Ntokozo Fuzunina Kunene is photograph­ed amid her costumes for Steppenwol­f Theatre’s production of “Familiar.”

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