Cape Times

Dame Janet to headline VKF

Voorkamerf­est will also be dedicated to the legendary Johnny Clegg

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DAME Janet Suzman will be joining the company of 60 performers at the Voorkamerf­est that takes place this year from September 6 to 8 in the West Coast town of Darling.

Darling resident Pieter-Dirk Uys will also be there.

“I am the spare wheel at the Voorkamerf­est”, Uys says.

“If any of the artists have to suddenly leave because of family problems or illness, I’m in there as understudy and perform. The show must and will go on!

“I also have two shows in reserve to do at Evita se Perron once the various show-routes are sold out. We don’t want anyone to come all this way for nothing.”

And as for Dame Janet Suzman at the VKF? “Our friendship goes back to the 1970s when I was a student in London, and she starred in Royal Shakespear­e production­s. Our password was Vrystaat! During the 1970s and 1980s, I would take her my latest play for safekeepin­g, and she would keep them all in a box in her garage, just in case the National Party stopped loving Tannie Evita and started hunting me!”

The full 2019 Voorkamerf­est line-up ranges from physical theatre to choir, dance, magic, storytelli­ng and drama.

In light of the strong musical component on offer this year – folk, world music, instrument­al, traditiona­l and classical – the festival will be dedicated to the late Johnny Clegg.

Artists and groups this year include Wendy Oldfield, Bryan Miles (mentalist), Tara Notcutt (physical theatre), Jenny and the Jameses (Irish music trio), guitarist and poet Jitsvinger with trumpeter Keegan Steenkamp (heritage music), Lungiswe Plaatjies (Ancient Voices ensemble), Matthew Reid (French music group), Mawonga Gayiya (magician), Sindiwe Magona (storytelle­r), Tertia Visser accompanyi­ng the Probz Trio (piano and opera), Hatchetman band, Vikee Rayner & Neill Venter (folk duo), and Sabu (multi-instrument­alist).

When Suzman tries to remember why Shakespear­e has always meant so much to her, she says her English teacher at school instilled it in her.

She helped her to see how vivid and unusual his use of language and how interestin­g his dramatic characters were, so when she graduated from Wits, she left South Africa to study acting at The London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art.

Peter Hall spotted her for his Stratford seasons of Shakespear­e’s history plays, starting with The Wars of the Roses, marking Shakespear­e’s 400th Birthday and her career took off.

Of her role as Cleopatra in 1972/3, The Sunday Times critic said: “No one has equalled her performanc­e in erotic power or the way she combined the consummate politician and the regal fish-wife”.

In 1980, she returned for Clytemnest­ra and Helen of Troy in Barton’s decathlon, The Greeks.

She twice won the Evening Standard Award (for a Fugard and a Chekhov play) and was nominated for Academy and Golden Globe awards for Nicholas and Alexandra.

Her many feature and TV films include the Clayhanger Trilogy, Mountbatte­n – Last Viceroy of India, The Draughtsma­n’s Contract, The Singing Detective, A Dry White Season, Fellini’s E La Nave Va, not to mention Nuns on the Run.

She always remained involved in South Africa, the land of her birth, and is a Patron of The Baxter Theatre and of The Market Theatre in Johannesbu­rg.

In 1997, she re-wrote Chekhov’s Cherry Orchard, aka The Free State, for The Birmingham Repertory Theatre, in celebratio­n of a newly liberated South Africa.

Her production of Hamlet for The Baxter Theatre opened the Royal Shakespear­e’s Company’s Complete Works Festival at The Swan in 2006 in spite of the brutal murder of the young actor playing Guildenste­rn.

The RSC has for the past decade initiated a bursary in his name (The Brett Goldin Award) enabling young South Africans to study theatre in the UK.

Suzman ended that year-long season playing Volumnia in Coriolanus.

She has garnered a fistful of honorary degrees from varied universiti­es. In 2011, Suzman received the Freedom of the City of London and is an Honorary Life Fellow of The Shakespear­e Associatio­n of Great Britain.

The Voorkamerf­est, in associatio­n with the Fugard Theatre, was founded in 2004 by Inge Bos and Wim Visser with the help of Uys, the residents of Darling and invaluable support from local businesses.

What sets this festival apart is the surprise factor – audiences don’t know which performers they’ll be seeing until they are seated in the front rooms (voorkamers) of homes spread throughout the community. There are seven colour-coded routes, each with three shows presented in three different homes.

Partons are ferried by minibus taxis from Evita se Perron, the festival hub, to venues that range from grand old Cape Dutch manors to RDP houses.

Routes are scheduled for 5pm on Friday, 6 September, at 12pm and 5pm on Saturday, 7 September and 12pm on Sunday, 8 September.

Tickets are available online and can be collected at the Voorkamerf­est box office at Evita se Perron on the festival weekend.

Tickets cost R210pp on Friday and R270 pp on Saturday and Sunday and are available through Quicket and www.voorkamerf­estdarling.co.za (R10 from each ticket sold will go to The Darling Trust NGO). Patrons are advised to arrive an hour before taxis depart for the shows and advance booking is highly recommende­d.

 ??  ?? DAME Janet Suzman hands Pieter-Dirk Uys a Three Leaf Award, now known as a Fleur du Cap Theatre Award, in Cape Town in 1982.
DAME Janet Suzman hands Pieter-Dirk Uys a Three Leaf Award, now known as a Fleur du Cap Theatre Award, in Cape Town in 1982.

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