The 2013 edition of the National Arts Festival drew to a close with Festival award winners being announced on Sunday 7 July, the final day.
The 2013 edition of the National Arts Festival drew to a close with Festival award winners being announced on Sunday 7 July, the final day.
Convenor of the Standard Bank Ovation Awards Panel, Adrienne Sichel, described the work presented on the Fringe at this year’s Festival as “courageous and inventive”, explaining that themes of renegotiation of history and heritage, and remapping identity, featured as a strong thread through this year’s productions.
The only Gold Ovation awarded this year was to musician Dan Patlansky. Patlansky’s acoustic performances at the Festival played to both critical and audience acclaim while his collaboration with Karen Zoid left the sold-out crowd mesmerized.
Silver Ovations were awarded to comedian Rob van Vuuren for pushing the boundaries of stand-up comedy in his show What What; musician Julian Redpath; The Bram Fischer Waltz; and The Things You Left Behind, directed by Kim Kerfoot and starring Jason Potgieter and Alicia McCormick.
Joanna Evans won a Silver Ovation for her production of The Year of the Bicycle – supported on the Fringe this year as part of her prize as Best Up and Coming Director of last year’s Student Festival.
A Special Silver Ovation Award presented to Steven van Wyk and Thalia Laric for the creation of Skoonveld, in the production Plastic.
Encore Awards were made to A Day in the Desert and Skierlik, recognising their potential for professional development.
Following the recognition of their production Wintersweet in 2012, an AHA Award was made to Horses Heads productions for Scrape, as a production that surprised and delighted the judges.
In recognition of their long standing and varied contributions to the industry, two Standing Ovation Awards were announced this year – to consumate performer and educator Andrew Buckland; and actress/director Nomhle Nkonyeni, both of whom have made invaluable contributions to industry internationally, nationally and though reinvestment in the Eastern Cape.
The Festival’s inaugural Short Sharp Stories competition has seen the publication of some of the best submissions in a crime anthology entitled Bloody Satisfied. The winner of this year’s competition for the best story was awarded to Dawn Garish.
The SA Post Office reaffirmed their investment in the culture and heritage of the country through their support of the Student Theatre Awards, through which winners receive various levels of support to present productions at next year’s Festival.
A panel of advisors comprising Gez Casey, Smal Ndaba, Christina Kennedy and Peter Terry recognised enormous potential in the next generation of professionals with two institutions featuring prominently on the awards front.
The Market Theatre Lab received kudos for the poster design and overall marketing campaign of their production of Milk and Honey, and UCT taking the honours for Most Promising Student Director (Mira Sydow), Most Promising Student Writer (Mathew Baldwin, Wynne Bredenkamp and Taryn Wyngaardt), Best Student Theatre Production, and the floating Cape Triangular Trophy for their production entitled Behind Every Yawn There is a Silent Shout.
Merit Awards were presented to Jess Harrison from Rhodes University, recognising promise in directorial conceptualisation and design; to The Market Theatre Lab’s production of Milk & Honey as the production with the greatest viability for a professional run; and to Oakfields College’s Journey, the SA Post Office choice for showcasing creativity and innovation.
It was also announced that some productions had been invited to participate in the Brighton, Prague, and Amsterdam Fringe Festivals, through the World Fringe Alliance network.
These include Crazy in Love, Three Little Pigs, Stuart Lightbody’s Unreal, Thom Pain (based on nothing) and The Epicene Butcher and other stories for consenting adults.
Julian Redpath was chosen as the singer/songwriter to be showcased this year through a new partnership between the National Arts Festival and Oppikoppi.
The Standard Bank Ovation Awards are decided by a panel after nominations are received by visiting critics and the media.
The panel included Adrienne Sichel, Lynette Marais, Phyllis Klotz, Smal Ndaba, Bridget van Oerle, Steve Kretzmann, Suzy Bernstein, Estelle Sinkins, Helen Herimbi, Mariana Malan, Debbie Hathway, Anneke Jansen, Julian Caddy, Jay Pather, Steve Gove, Gregory Maqoma, Juanita Finestone-Praeg, Eduard Greyling, Michelle Constant and Tony Lankester.
The 40th edition of the National Arts Festival, Grahamstown will take place from 26 June to 6 July 2014.
See www.nationalartsfestival.co.za, or the National Arts Festival Grahamstown on Facebook, or @artsfestival on Twitter, for more information.
The National Arts Festival is sponsored by Standard Bank, The National Lottery Distribution Trust Fund, Eastern Cape Government, Department of Arts and Culture, National Arts Council, City Press and M Net.