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BAM: Sizwe Banzi Is Dead
producer: Brooklyn Academy of Music
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At BAM, the original players in the legendary South African drama reprise their roles.
Closing Performance at BAM: April 19, 2008
From the theatre:
When South African actors John Kani and Winston Ntshona first put on Sizwe Banzi Is Dead in Cape Town in 1972, it was an act of artistic daring and personal bravery from two black men defying the rules of apartheid. Detained for their audacity, the pair was undeterred and in 1973 staged the epic The Island (performed at BAM in Spring 2003), a revelatory work set in the infamous Robben Island prison. Created with Afrikaner director Athol Fugard, the plays garnered the performers a Tony award and international recognition for their deeply nuanced portrayal of humanity that persists in spite of travel bans and iron bars.
Thirty-five years later, these celebrated creative partners reprise roles whose relevance only continues to deepen and evolve today. Delicately balancing humor and pathos, Sizwe Banzi Is Dead offers both a psychological history of the apartheid nightmare and a timeless parable of the dehumanizing paradoxes of power. Ordered to leave a district because he lacks the proper permit, Sizwe trades his name for a number and begins life as a dead man, wreaking havoc with his identity and sense of right and wrong.
RELATED EVENTS
BAMtalk Theater in South Africa: The New Millenium Apr 12 at 3pm ($10; $5 for Friends of BAM) Hillman Attic Studio
BAMdialogue with John Kani & Winston Ntshona Moderated by Anne Cattaneo, Dramaturg, Lincoln Center Theater Apr 10, post-show (Free for ticket holders )
Through 4/19.
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