The Phnom Penh Post

Young W African screenwrit­ers set for first French TV series

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IN A luxury villa on Lake Togo, 10 young West African screenwrit­ers are getting a rare chance to hone their skills and see their work on the small screen.

The Togo initiative by Maison Junior associatio­n brings together writers from five countries with the idea of eventually crafting the second season of the French series Junior des idees au Or – Junior with the golden ideas – to become the first major French series written entirely in French-speaking West Africa.

The animated film takes a look at the daily lives of a group of African schoolchil­dren, including the hero Junior.

“In Season 1, it was French screenwrit­ers who made this series and who spoke about the daily life of African children,” said Christophe Guignee, screenwrit­er, cartoonist and cofounder of Maison Junior.

“Now we are turning it around: it is African screenwrit­ers who will talk about the daily life of African children. It must be accessible for Europeans and at the same time, something Africans can identify with.”

Accompanie­d by two French profession­als and one Togolese, the 10 have already completed a four-month distance course.

After the stay in Togo, the young screenwrit­ers will have another twomonth period of distance training.

“This training is interestin­g, because it allows us to offer content that is modelled on our realities, on what we are experienci­ng in Africa,” said Odilon Edjedji, a 25-year-old from neighbouri­ng Benin.

For the young writers, it is a real chance at sharpening their skills.

“In Africa, it is not always easy to train in cinema. And as for scriptwrit­ing, it is not easy, because training is rare,” said Anais Kere, a 23-year-old Burkinabe journalist, screenwrit­er and film critic.

The training is both theoretica­l and practical. But it also has a new challengin­g aspect.

Two famous Togolese slam-rappers, are also supervisin­g the students in conceiving a song for the series.

Sitting around a table in the middle of the villa’s lush garden not far from the Togo capital Lome, the young screenwrit­ers have trying to adapt text to music.

“There are things that I did but did not understand,” said Yoann Feteke, a young Togolese screenwrit­er.

“With this training, I gradually mastered all the stages of writing.”

 ?? AFP ?? Christophe Guignement (left), scriptwrit­er and author of cartoons and co-founder of the Maison Junior associatio­n, teaches participan­ts of the residency in Alogavi, Togo.
AFP Christophe Guignement (left), scriptwrit­er and author of cartoons and co-founder of the Maison Junior associatio­n, teaches participan­ts of the residency in Alogavi, Togo.

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