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HEXAGON THEATRE    2012
  1. Christmas and all that Jazz

    The Hexagon staff are taking a well deserved break. Thank you to all our loyal patrons for a wonderfull year of theatrical events and we look forward to seeing you all in the new year.

     

    For some news of events in and arround Pietermaritzburg and Durban visit these websites:

    Music Revival

    Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre

  2. The Snowman

    The Snowman

     

    The SnowmanHexagon Theatre
    Saturday 8th December and Sunday 9th December
    at 10am

    "The Snowman" is a delightful tale, based on the children's book by Raymond Briggs, which tells the story of a young boy who builds a Snowman who magically comes to life. Together they have an amazing midnight adventure, which includes a fantastic motorbike ride through the forest, and a magical flight to the North Pole, where they meet Father Christmas and have a party with all the other snowmen. The music of Howard Blake, performed by the Pietermaritzburg City Orchestra, provides an epic, yet charming underscore for this enchanting story, and it is brought to life in the form of a puppet-show. The beautiful puppets and sets were constructed by Peter Court and Bryan Hiles of Creative Madness, and manipulated by the members of the Actors Unemployed Company, Marc Kay, Adam Doré and Clinton Small. Clare Mortimer lends her wonderful voice as the Narrator, and the production is directed and conducted by David Plank. Bring your little people and introduce them to the wonders of the orchestra.

    The Snowman leaves kids spellbound at Arts Festival 
    24 Sep 2012

    Estelle Sinkins


    A MIX of puppets, storytelling and music performed by classically trained musicians held children in the Topsy Turvy at the Witness Hilton Arts Festival tent spellbound during the Pietermaritzburg City Orchestra’s performance of Raymond Briggs’ delightful children’s story, The Snowman.
    Conductor Dave Plank drew from the musicians a top notch performance of Howard Blake’s complex score, while the warm tone of narrator, Clare Mortimer, cocooned those watching in the story of a young boy who builds a snowman who miraculously comes to life.
    Adding to the charm of this work were the puppets created by Bryan Hiles and Peter Court of Creative Madness in Durban, actors, Marc Kay, Adam Dore and Clinton Small, who brought their creations to life, a storybook-style set showing a living room, kitchen and bedroom and a table which was by turns a bed, chair and deep freeze.
    The Snowman was a delight from start to finish and clearly captivated its young audience. If you didn’t get tickets to see the show at Hilton, you missed a real treat. 

  3. From Westend to Broadway and Beyond

     

    FROM WESTEND TO BROADWAY AND BEYOND -

    The Fabulous Voice of Cat Simoni.

     

    CatONE PERFORMANCE ONLY!

    Hexagon Dive, UKZN

    Saturday 1st December at 7.00 for 7.30pm (doors open at 6.45pm)

    Picnic Evening – bring your food, but no drinks, there is a cash bar.

    Tickets R80

    Tables seat 10

    To book e-mail hexagon@ukzn.ac.za or tel 033 260 5537

     

    From West End to Broadway and Beyond showcases the sublime voice and supreme artistry of gorgeous Cat Simoni; performer par excellence.

     

    With complete mastery of voice and song and equally at home in the stage musical, rock and pop environments, Cat’s extraordinary talent can transform well-worn numbers into new-minted gold. The show is trademark Cat. From West End to Broadway and Beyond tells the exhilarating story of how her life in London changed overnight from unknown ‘Westville girl’ pushing numbers in a City accountant's office, to a five-star ‘diva’, delivering top class, high-voltage performances at London's swanky venues; The Ritz, The Dorchester, The Park Lane Intercontinental and Berkeley Square Casino. Cat's hugely entertaining story of her crazy showbiz rollercoaster ride is at once spicy, irreverent and hilarious as she suddenly finds herself rubbing shoulders with high society's rich, eccentric and famous…!

     

    Cat's amazing personal odyssey is the platform from which she delivers some of the biggest showstoppers from some of the biggest shows of all time…For From West End to Broadway and Beyond is Cat's homage to the greatest songwriting partnerships ever to grace London's West End and New York's ‘Great White Way’.  Unforgettable, timeless show-songs from Rodgers & Hart's wartime Carousel, Lerner & Lowe's glorious My Fair Lady & Camelot, Kander & Ebb's Cabaret and Rice & Lloyd Webber's smash hits Evita, Jesus Christ Superstar, Cats, Phantom of The Opera and Sunset Boulevard are all given the extra-special, inimitable Cat treatment....With her fabulously flexible voice and magnetic stage presence, she performs the show-songs that shook the world with consummate ease.

     

    And Cat has some surprises in store...! She just can't resist tossing some of her personal all-time favorites into the 'showtime' mix.  Expect Cat's passionate take on iconic pop mega-hits like Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody and Killer Queen, The Eagles' Hotel California and Adele's Someone Like You…to name a few. These are the songs that turn Cat on… and guaranteed to turn audiences right on too!

     

    From West End to Broadway and Beyond in the divine company of Cat Simoni

    is world-class, thrilling entertainment and an evening to treasure.

    Quite simply… Nobody Does It Better.


  4. Ridge Nativity

    Ridge Nativity

    Ridge Junior Primary School presents their annual Nativity

    Hexagon Theatre
    20th to 22nd November
    at 6pm

    to book please phone the school on 033 386 2215

     


  5. Sunday Morning

    SUNDAY MORNING

     

     

    James CuninghamSunday Morning

    Hexagon Theatre
    15th 16th and 17th November
    7.30pm
    Bookings open 29th October
    to book email hexagon@ukzn.ac.za
    or phone the theatre on 033 260 5537

     

    Mat is a successful photographer who has his life exactly how he likes it - ordered, neat, and beautifully composed - until the day his girlfriend tells him she is pregnant. In an attempt to process this disturbing information he goes out for a run. Straying from his regular route, he ventures into a strange part of the city where he makes a gruesome discovery that changes everything. This fast-paced story is infused with the kind of aggressive wit, acute observation, real suspense, imminent danger, selfish need and poignant humanity that are the basic elements of urban life in contemporary South Africa.

    This one-man play, written by Nick Warren, directed by Jenine Collocott and performed by James Cuningham has garnered much praise.
    “Unstoppable. Sharp, sassy script. Deftly directed.” – Diane De Beer, Start Tonight
    “Virtually flawless performance.” – Steve Kretzmann, Artlink
    “The funniest, most enriching and most rewarding show I saw at festival this year.” - Christina Kennedy
    “This is not good. It is brilliant.” – Katharina von Ruckteschell (Goethe Institut Director)

    Sunday Morning was presented as part of the Solo Season by the Grahamstown Festival as part of their Main Programme in 2012.  The development of Sunday Morning was funded by the Goethe Institut and produced for a short run in their Gallery space, Goethe on Main, in 2011.Goethe Institut

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


  6. Dancing in the Desert

    Desert Rose Dance School presents

    Dancing in the Desert

    Hexagon Theatre
    10th November
    at 2.30pm and 6.30pm

    Bookings open on the 29th October
    to book email hexagon@ukzn.ac.za
    or phone the Theatre on 033 260 5537


  7. IN OTHER WORDS...

    IN OTHER WORDS...

    Maritzburg Singers Live at the Dive!
    The Hexagon Dive
    Friday 2nd November 7pm for 7.30pm (Doors open at 6.45pm)
    Picnic Evening - bring your food, but NO DRINKS, there is a cash bar.
    Tickets R60 (Tables seat 10)
    Bookings: hexagon@ukzn.ac.za
    Some of the Maritzburg Singers in rehearsal. From the left:Julie Young, Helen Vermaak, Nigel Fish, Joan Quayle and Sarie Hasell 
    Maritzburg's top choral group is back, fresh from a successful concert in aid of the SPCA, which received a standing ovation. With a selection of songs which will delight and entertain, Maritzburg Singers, under the baton of Helen Vermaak, are bringing their special brand of choral magic to the intimacy of the Hexagon Dive.
     
    This year's programme includes four sections: The Movies, The Musicals, Spirituals and The Seventies. From the swinging 'Fly Me to the Moon', through a beautiful Rodgers and Hammerstein medley, and a rousing arrangement of 'Down by the Riverside', to Abba and Simon and Garfunkel.  Other numbers include Wind Beneath My Wings, Oh Holy Night and You Raise Me Up.
     
    For lovers of good music in general and choral music in particular, this evening promises to be a highlight of the season as it joyfully ushers in the approaching festive season.
    7pm for a 7.30pm start
    Safe parking on the University grounds. entrance off Golf road, opposite Hutchinson road.


  8. HORN OF SORROW

    Horn Of SorrowHexagon Theatre

    Friday 19th October at 6.30pm

    Tickets R70 (R50 students/seniors)

     

    Fresh from the Hilton Arts Festival where it wowed audiences once again, comes HORN OF SORROW.

     

    Ubejane! He smells the wind.  Ubejane! He sees as if in the mist. Ubejane! He hears the air. Ubejane!

     

    Nicholas Ellenbogen’s  Horn of Sorrow is an extraordinary piece of physical theatre created in the mid 1980’s  with a cast of imaginative and dynamic actors in a workshopped environment.  It highlighted the plight of the rhino and the issue of poaching. Sadly, nothing could be more topical right now.  The current production is directed by Brendan Grealy who was part of the original production.

     

    The story is  narrated by the comical Vulture who follows the fortunes of a baby rhino, called Tembalethu. He sees  the game plan of  poachers and local communities who see poaching as a means to earn money to feed their families. But what of the survival of this ancient beast, what of  South Africa’s natural heritage, what of the fatal damage to the tourist industry?

     

     

    Horn of Sorrow has an illustrious history.  Public and critical acclaim, as well as countless performances world wide, have garnered it:

     

    - a Grahamstown Pick of the Fringe Award;

    - an FNB Vita Award for Best Playwright of the Year (Nicholas Ellenbogen);

    - a Scotsman Pick of the Fringe Award at the Edinburgh Festival.

     


  9. Hilton Arts Festival

    September is HILTON ARTS FESTIVAL month

    21st to 23rd September 2012

    Follow this link to the Hilton Arts Festival website.

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    Hilton College Theatre


  10. Sophiatown

    SophiatownThe Classic South African Play at the Hexagon Studio Theatre

     

    Hexagon Studio Theatre

    Tuesday 18th – Friday 21st  September at 7.30pm

    Tickets R40 (R25 students and seniors) available AT THE DOOR only.

     

    Directed by Ntokozo Madlala with 2nd and 3rd year drama students.

     

    Originally a workshop production by the Junction Avenue Theatre Company, Sophiatown has become one of South African classic texts, reflecting historical events that have shaped our nation. This play tells of the tragic tale of one of the cases of forced removals in South Africa in the 1950’s as ordered by the government of the time under the Natives Resettlement Act.

     

    The colourful characters include Mamariti,  a shebeen queen and  Drum magazine journalist Jakes, who dreams of telling interesting stories about the life of Sophiatown. Mamariti has a daughter Lulu, a cheeky 16 year old schoolgirl, and a son Mingus who is a notorious gangster who justifies his cruel habits by saying that he “steals from the rich and sells to the poor”.  His girlfriend Princess and sidekick Charlie, complete the characters living in Mamariti’s freehold house.

     

    This is a typical black township community whose normality gets interrupted by the arrival of a Jewish white girl Ruth, who responds to an advert in Drum magazine to come and live with black people in Sophiatown. Out of curiousity and without her parents’ consent she decides to step into the unknown.

     

    The journey of the play gives us insight into these characters lives and their opinions about education, politics, culture, and their possible removal from Sophiatown. The presence of the white girl makes for interesting dynamics in the house as they try and accommodate her curiosity and theirs without getting too suspicious!

     

    This is a story of a community by characterised by jazz, freehold title deeds, gangsterism, politics and the hub of black intellectualism. Though there is evidence of poverty they take pride in what they have because it is theirs. However there is looming danger of being forcefully removed from their pride and joy, Sophiatown, and being uprooted into the new township of Meadowlands, farthest from town where the white people live, but also where the government can ensure that black people and every other racial group remains separate from one another.

     

    Directed by Ntokozo Madlala of the Award winning Crush Hopper, this production is performed by 2nd and 3rd year drama students of UKZN Pietermaritzburg campus as part of their course requirements. This production has a chorus which functions as representative of the general population of Sophiatown and shares the responsibility of telling the story alongside the actors, through song and movement reminiscent of the era.

     

    The cast is joined by the young musicians of Platform, a student formed organisation that provides a ‘platform’ for artistically inclined students to explore and develop their musical talents, who will render some jazz tunes to accompany the performance.


  11. Andre The Hilarious Hypnotist

    Poster

    Andre The Hilarious Hypnotist heads back to Pmb

    Hexagon Theatre

    Tues 28th August – Sat 1st September at 7.30pm

    Tues SPECIAL R50 at the door ONLY. (Box office opens at 6.40pm)

    Wed R60, Thurs – Sat R70.

    Book on 033 260 5537 or email hexagon@ukzn.ac.za.

     

    Back by popular demand, Andre The Hilarious Hypnotist gets set for a long overdue return to the Hexagon Theatre from 28th August to 1st Sept

    .

    The man who set an eight-week sold-out attendance record at Durban’s  Sneddon Theatre and filled the Playhouse Opera to capacity, makes a welcome return to the province he was born in as he celebrates his 20th year on stage.

    If you have not heard of Andre The Hilarious Hypnotist, where have you been? Known for the ability to take members of the audience and get them to perform eccentric stunts while under his spell, Andre returns to The Hexagon Theatre next week, and with special prices for different nights, it's a show the entire family can enjoy.

    Suggestions range from the strange (playing in a band) to the somewhat outrageous (thinking you are a bee trying to work your way into a tin) and that is just the start of a two-hour orchestrated disaster under careful control of Andre's hypnotic talents.

     

    For those wishing to volunteer but not wanting to miss the show, Andre promises two free tickets if you were part of the action, and DVD's are available to the public after each performance.

     

    But the fun does not end there - this year sees Andre's brand new "Caught On Camera" viral video show, in which members from the audience are invited to join Andre for lunch (his treat) and you might just find yourself on the other side of an unexpected situation which will form part of Andre's new reality series featured on a Facebook channel near you.

     

    And nobody can be more excited than Andre himself. Promising a new look (no not just an older face but a slimmer figure as well), a fresh fast-paced show, and a number of new hilarious hypnotic routines that will have friends and family in stitches of laughter, Andre is ready to take on Pmb and invites you to join him in the journey.


  12. Magical Mystery Tour

    PosterMagical Mystery Tour

    A fabulously groovy 60's Beatles Show!

     

    Hexagon Theatre, UKZN Pietermaritzburg

    Tues 21st - Sat 25th August

    Tues to Fri at 7.30pm, Sat at 2.30 and 7.30pm.

    Tickets R70 (R50 for students and seniors)

    Bookings: email hexagon@ukzn.ac.za or tel 033 260 5537.

     

    The Hexagon presents a fabulous evening of nostalgia, history and good music in the form of Magical Mystery Tour, a groovy trip through the 60's which plots the meteoric rise of the Fab Four against the timeline of major world events. The Beatles’ music is ideally suited to a theatrical tribute because of the huge variety of styles their songs cover.

     

    Using some fifty Beatles’ songs (some complete and some shortened or just hinted at!) the show’s large ensemble cast takes a new and dynamic look at the era and their music, from ‘Love Me Do through to Let It Be, and provides an evening of sheer musical pleasure and delight. Directed by the veteran team of Peter Mitchell and Helen Vermaak, with choreography by Paul Datlen, and a band under the baton of Jeff Judge, the show brings together some of KZN’s top singing talent, and introduces some new voices to the Musical Theatre scene.

     

    Erin Fourie, of 2011 Idols fame, joins other established singers such as Sandra Styles, Caitlin Kilburn,  Tamlyn Calder, Daniel Rossouw, Lunga Msimang and Jon Branch. The rest of the cast is made up some seasoned theatre performers, as well as  fresh young talent, all ready to make their mark on the local music and theatre scene.

     

    The show is certain to appeal to all Beatles’ fans who can indulge in the nostalgia of a memorable era and great music, and will introduce a whole new generation to the pleasure and enchantment of Beatles’ songs. 


       

  13. The Journey

    PosterDomain Keiser School of Dance presents

    The Journey

    Hexagon Theatre
    Friday 3rd and Saturday 4th August at 7pm

    Tickets cost R45.00

     

    To Book, please email the Hexagon Theatre on hexagon@ukzn.ac.za
                                             or  phone 033 260 5537

     

     

     

     

  14. In Love Again

    In Love Again PosterIf you would like to support Project Gateway, why not book a ticket to our latest fundraiser, 'In Love Again... The Noel and Gertie Show'?

    The scene is a cocktail bar in Jamaica, in the 1960s.  A rather bored Noel Coward, ‘Master’ of English comedy, is unexpectedly reunited with his former co-star; the incomparable, gorgeous Gertrude Lawrence.

    In the brief, deliciously funny encounter that follows, Noel and his blithe spirit and divine muse, the mischievous Gertie, relive their greatest stage successes, reminisce about their glory days – and sing the songs that made them the toast of the West End, Broadway – and the entire theatre world.

     

    Unforgettable songs like A Room With A View, Mad About The Boy, I’ll See You Again, Some Day I’ll Find You, The Stately Homes of England, Don’t Let’s Be Beastly To The Germans, Mad Dogs and Englishmen, London Pride - and the wickedly funny ‘honeymoon scene’ from Noel’s smash hit, Private Lives.

     

    Dates:   26,27, 28 July

    Time:     7.00 for 7.30

    Venue: The Dive (Hexagon Theatre, UKZN)

    Cost:       R200 (50% donation to Project Gateway)

    Delicious 3-course meal included

    Tables seat 10

    Cash Bar

     

     

    To book, e-mail hexagon@ukzn.ac.za or tel: 033 260 5537... All proceeds to Project Gateway!

  15. Double Bill

     Mob Feel and Privy

    Hexagon Studio Theatre, UKZN

    Thursday 26th July at 6pm

    Tickets R50 (R25 for seniors/students)

    Tickets at the door only.

     

    The two National Arts Festival student shows from UKZN are to be staged as a double bill for one performance only in the Hexagon Studio Theatre on Thursday July 26th at 6pm. The award-winning Mob Feel from Pietermaritzburg and Privy from Durban were both well received at the festival, and director of Mob Feel, Kline Smith, won the awards for Best Director and Best Writer.

     

    MOB FEEL

    “In the soul of almost every being raved a seething madness, wild and passionate, with the causes lying deep. No cursory measures can remedy, no superficial explanation can illuminate. These jovial faces that can change into masks of bloodlust and destruction on smallest provocation”
    – Can Themba, Mob Passion (1953)

     

    Two robust Storytellers (TQ Zondi and Mpilo Nzimande) mesh the age-old traditions of storytelling with physical theatre to create an intimate revisiting of the incidences of gang violence and ethnic rivalry that took place in the township of Westbury, Johannesburg in the 1950s. A young girl (Pertunia Msani) carefully observes the Storytellers as they weave the narratives of the past. She attempts to speak but is restrained, until finally her silence is substituted with fury. Throughout, live music by Mércio Langa enhances the feel of the play.

     

    The performance is a love-story about violence and passion, about Linga, a Xhosa, and Mapula, a Sotho, (a Lethebele and a Russian!) forbidden by rival families to exchange even the slightest of glances.

     

    Evocative, vivid and poetic language and imagery is used to articulate the detrimental effects of mob mentalities and township violence, and the dangers of losing one’s sense of individual feeling and responsibility when caught up in a mob feeling.

     

     

    PRIVY

    In a country like South Africa, we negotiate our way through various cultures, languages, races and beliefs, but it is often difficult to find a common ground. One thing most of us share is our use of that most inconspicuous, yet highly private object, the toilet.

    Privy aims to explore South Africans in relation to the toilet, looking at how it can be used for recreation, oppression and alleviation of burdens.

    Using a range of performance styles and influenced by different genres, the show presents a part of the South African story as experienced by ordinary citizens.

    Written and directed by Bronwyn Botha and Jason Barber.


  16. Cirque Du soDancé

    B-rock Dance Studio is back, this time with 

    Cirque du soDancé!!!

     Hope you ready for another exciting dance show.
    This year our theme is the circus. So if you love dancing,
    and you love the circus, come and see how incorporate
    the two to bring you some entertaining dance routines! Date: 21st July Time: 1:30pm and 4:30pm Cost: R50 Venue: The Hexagone Theatre, Ukzn Pmb Hope to see you there and don't be shy to bring a friend or 5. Bookings phone the theatre on 033 260 5537

  17. CHANGING KEY

    Songs of Love and Hate and Everything in Between.
    Helen Vermaak, with Jeff Judge at the piano.
     
    Hexagon Dive, UKZN, Pmb.
    Thurs 5th, Fri 6th and Sat 7th July, 7pm for 7.30pm
    (Doors open at 6.45pm)
    Picnic evenings - bring your own food, but no drinks, there is a cash bar.
    Tickets R65pp (R60pp for a table of ten)
    Bookings: hexagon@ukzn.ac.za preferred
                   033 260 5537
     
    Helen Vermaak is no stranger to the Pietermaritzburg music and theatre scene, having been on stage (and offstage) since 1978 when she starred in Rodney Frankland's Little Sparrow  as Edith Piaf. After 35 years as singer, actress, musical director, choir mistress and accompanist, she has come up with a one-woman show of all her favourite songs.
     
    Her long-time collaboration with director Peter Mitchell, which started in 1980, has finally led to this show, in which she has chosen a delightful range of songs, some dramatic, some comic, and all memorable. A very personal journey in song, the show encompasses songs from musicals as well as popular adult contemporary music. Numbers include All by Myself, Until It's Time for You to Go, Mein Herr, No Regrets, Music of the Night and many more. Joining Vermaak on stage is local jazz legend Jeff Judge, who may, if we are lucky, be persuaded to do a few duets with her. Judge is currently touring with Rob Caldwell in the very funny musical revue, A Green Number.
     
    Vermaak and Mitchell have been responsible for most of the musicals produced in Pietermaritzburg over the last thirty years, including West Side Story, Nunsense, Godspell, Grease, and Cabaret. They are also responsible for many of the revues and tribute shows staged at the Hexagon.  
     
     
     
  18. MOBFEEL

    . Mpilo Nzimande (above) and TQ Zondi.
    Mpilo Nzimande (above) and TQ Zondi.MOB FEEL
    Devised and directed by Kline Smith.
    Hexagon Studio Theatre
    Mon 25th and Tues 26th June at 6pm
    Tickets R40 (R20 for students and seniors) available at the door only.
    Enquiries hexagon@ukzn.ac.za or tel 033 260 5537
     
    The show selected to represent UKZN Pietermaritzburg at this year's Student Festival at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown will have two preview performances at the Hexagon Studio Theatre at UKZN before leaving for the festival. Smith is one of the top Post-graduate students on the local campus, having won numerous certificates and awards, as well as being responsible for the University's new tagline, 'Inspiring Greatness'.
     
    “In the soul of almost every being raved a seething madness, wild and passionate, with the causes lying deep. No cursory measures can remedy, no superficial explanation can illuminate. These jovial faces that can change into masks of bloodlust and destruction on smallest provocation”
    – Can Themba, Mob Passion (1953)
     
    Two robust Storytellers (TQ Zondi and Mpilo Nzimande) mesh the age-old traditions of storytelling with physical theatre to create an intimate revisiting of the incidences of gang violence and ethnic rivalry that took place in the township of Westbury, Johannesburg in the 1950s. A young girl (Pertunia Msani) carefully observes the Storytellers as they weave the narratives of the past. She attempts to speak but is restrained, until finally her silence is substituted with fury. Throughout, live music by Mércio Langa enhances the feel of the play.
     
    The performance is a love-story about violence and passion, about Linga, a Xhosa, and Mapula, a Sotho, (a Lethebele and a Russian!) forbidden by rival families to exchange even the slightest of glances.
     
    Evocative, vivid and poetic language and imagery is used to articulate the detrimental effects of mob mentalities and township violence, and the dangers of losing one’s sense of individual feeling and responsibility when caught up in a mob feeling.
     
    Mob Feel will run at the Hexagon Studio Theatre on Monday 25th and Tuesday 26th June at 6pm  before it heads of to the chillier climes of the National Arts Festival. Tickets are R40 (R20 for students and seniors) and will be available at the door. Enquiries can be made to hexagon@ukzn.ac.za or tel 033 260 5537.
     
  19. Adapt or Fly

    F Uys offPieter-Dirk Uys presents
    ADAPT OR FLY
    Hexagon Theatre UKZN, 4 – 9 June @ 7.30pm

    Ticket Prices:
    Mon 4th R90  (student/senior special of R50)
    Tues 5th  - Thurs 7th R90 (student/seniors R80)
    Fri 8th & Sat 9th R110 (no concessions)
    Special Dinner and Show option on Friday R200pp
     
    Master satirist Pieter-Dirk Uys is doing a world tour of South Africa with his latest show, Adapt or Fly, which comes to the Hexagon Theatre on UKZN campus from 4 - 9 June. 
     
    Adapt or Fly! Mrs Evita Bezuidenhout, Kidi Amin, Pik Botha, Nowell Fine, Mrs Petersen, the old Krokodil, Madiba and the dancing DA are coming to the rescue! In a time of depression, recession, fear and anger, what is better and more healing than a good laugh at the expense of those who depress, recess, frighten and annoy us?
     
    Pieter-Dirk Uys celebrates 2012 as a year of radical change in South Africa through political paralysis. From the hundred million rand ANC centenary celebration in January, right up that long winding road to end up again in Mangaung for the ANC December Congress, the ruling party will be too busy fighting each other for personal wealth and political power to bother themselves about running a country up or down.
     
    Adapt or die was said by Prime Minister P. W. Botha, when he announced his proposed revisions of apartheid policies as a prelude to the 1981 General Election which was still for whites only. Uys started his onslaught against the politically-correct racist regime at the Market Theatre, then toured the entire country and overseas with his show.
     
    Adapt or Dye was the first local video – a recording of a Market Theatre performance in 1982 - to be introduced through hire-shops and those few outlets that had the courage to make the comedy available. That was its essence: humour.
     
    Thirty years ago Uys started his total onslaught against careless, corrupt and unacceptable politics. Apartheid might officially be dead today, but the careless, corrupt and unacceptable political crooks and clowns are still dancing centre-stage.
     
    His new show will be a personal political comedy-trek along a familiar long tiptoe to freedom, through the minefields of racism and sexism that have always made up the tarmac of our political freeway. Laughter at fear has always been Uys’s trademark, from the darkness of his first one-man show in 1982 Adapt or Dye, to the dazzling kaleidoscope of rainbow colours in his new 2012 show Adapt or Fly.
     
    Uys is joining his chorus-line of characters that include a motley medley of past National Party leaders (DF Malan, JG Strydom, HF Verwoerd, BJ Vorster, PW Botha and FW de Klerk), balanced with the more familiar quartet of ANC Presidents from Nelson Mandela, via Thabo Mbeki, through Khalema Motlanthe to Jacob Zuma and beyond. The Malema nickname ‘Kidi Amin’ does come to mind.
     
    Kugel Nowell Fine enjoys her 35 years as the ultimate Jewish African Princess with a look at her now in her seventies, as well as a glance back at the 1985 Nowell, young, blonde and deep in a liberal white struggle with her maid Dora. And then there is, of course, Evita Bezuidenhout waiting to embrace her new job as chairperson of the proposed Media Tribunal.
     
    It is said when history repeats itself, it can take tragedy and turn it into farce. So banish the blues. Come and enjoy the blacks, whites, browns, yellows and ‘others’ that make up this unique country of our dreams. As long as we can laugh at our fear, we are still in charge of our future.
     
    Adapt or Fly was also inspired by politics. At the height of the Malema-speak of nationalization of mines and land-grabs of farms which frightened many people into near-panic, a spokesperson for the ANC Youth League was heard to suggest that if whites did not like the fact that the youth would take over South Africa, then they could go somewhere else:  ‘Adapt or fly!’
     
    ADAPT OR FLY - 30 years after Adapt or Dye
     
    Ticket Prices:
    Mon 4th R90  (student/senior special of R50)
    Tues 5th  - Thurs 7th R90 (student/seniors R80)
    Fri 8th & Sat 9th R110 (no concessions)
    Special Dinner and Show option on Friday R200pp
     


  20. The Bats

    Batty Logo The Bats will be with us from the 25th to the 26th May

     

     

     THE BATS - ALL ROCKED OUT

    The BatsBatty KeyboardAhhh Bats

     

     

      

     

    Hexagon Theatre

    Friday 25th - Saturday 26th May at 7.30pm

     

    Bookings email hexagon@ukzn.ac.za or tel 033 260 5537

     

    It all started in 1964 when the bats, Eddie Eckstein, Paul Ditchfield, Pete Clifford and the late Barry Jarman, burst onto the local scene and became, to many ardent followers, south africa's answer to the beatles. They toured extensively, both locally and internationally, wowing audiences here and in the United Kingdom, Zimbabwe (then Rhodesia) and Germany with their brilliant music and hilarious comedy show. More than just great musicians, they were also great entertainers, and it was this that kept them at the top of their game for 16 years, an amazing achievement for any band.

    In the early 70's they won a Sarie award for 'Song of the year' with 'Who's that girl', and in 1972 Paul's composition 'Oh God it's beautiful' was chosen to represent south africa at the Tokyo world song festival. Paul took Eddie with him to Tokyo to perform the song and they reached the finals.

    In 1980, with many hit singles, including 'In a shabby little hut' and 'Vat hom dawie' and a whole bunch of long playing vinyls under their belts, they decided to go their separate ways to pursue solo careers. This break just seemed to hone their talents because after a break of 21 years, they are better musicians now than they were then!!

    After constant pressure from their fans to get back together again, Eddie, Paul & Pete, minus the late Barry who had decided to retire, were joined by Derek Gordon and got back on the road for what they thought would be a short 'come back'. Little did they know that 10 years later they would still be on the road, delighting audiences young and old.

    "ALL ROCKED OUT"...........  NOT ON YOUR LIFE...


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