Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)
African writers to pitch stories in France
A COHORT of African writers from the AuthenticA Series Lab are currently in Lille, France to pitch their stories at the Series Mania Forum, a major TV series market that attracts influential buyers, investors, funders, broadcasters and producers from around the globe.
The AutheticA Series Lab, now in its third year, is a programme that supports the professional development of creators of serial content. Designed in collaboration and presented in partnership with the StoryBoard Collective, with support of Series Mania Forum, the French Ministry of Europe and Foreign Affairs and the French Institute of South Africa.
The relationship between Realness and Series Mania has sparked a robust interest in authentic African content that can speak to global audiences.
This year’s writers include Kelly-Eve Koopman, representing South Africa with an urban fantasy, Facing the Mountain; Moreetsi Gabang from Botswana, with a crime drama, Outreach; Tiah Beye, representing Senegal/Ivory Coast with a comedy-drama, Brouteure (The Yahoo Girl); and Wanjiru Kairu (Kenya), with a political satire, Serikali Saidia!
Weekend Argus caught up with South African recipient Kelly-Eve Koopman on her experience of the programme.
Koopman, who is doing her masters in creative writing through UWC, is from Glenhaven. She shares what inspires her story, Facing the Mountain.
“It was inspired by the Cissie Gool community and my experience living in Woodstock, as well as supporting the land and housing struggle. I’ve always been interested in urban fantasy and telling stories relevant and uplifting to South African youth.
“To me it’s the Cissie Gool community and the generation of bold kids living in Mountain Road that just light up the neighbourhood and it felt pretty magical and therefore it’s the inspiration behind ‘city magic’ and kids being guardians of the city.
“Also I think gentrification and spatial apartheid extraction – green gas extraction at the moment and developers that make cities like Cape Town unbelievable for it’s people.
“They are the formidable enemies of our time; these structural threats were inspiration for the bad guys in the story. I feel we need to harness all our people’s power to take them on.
“So I want to represent that struggle through fantasy and with this show I also want to create something hopeful, something adventurous that captures our city’s magic, mythology, history of resistance and the bold and joyful spirit of our kids.
“I’ve always loved writing. As a kid, I used to fill up books with bad, overly emotive poetry. I explore different mediums. For me, I think the story guides the medium and I currently work in the literature and film/TV arena.”