Marigolds in August
Marigolds in August | |
---|---|
Written by | Athol Fugard |
Characters | Daan Melton Paulus |
Date premiered | 1980 |
Place premiered | South Africa |
Marigolds in August is a play by South Africa's Athol Fugard.
Plot
The play portrays the tension between three people (two black – one white) trying to make out a living.
The play takes place near Port Elizabeth. Daan (a resident in a nearby township where malnutrition and unemployment are rife) is walking to work at an apartheid whites-only resort where he works as a gardener. He encounters another unemployed black man – Melton – who is desperately looking for work. Daan is worried that Melton's presence will draw attention to him which is a problem as his passbook is no longer valid.
The pair struggle and argue and the appearance of a white man – Paulus (a snake catcher) – acts as a catalyst.
Daan realises that the apartheid system is often responsible for black-on-black violence. The only way to fight this is solidarity and compassion towards each other.
Film
In 1980, the play was adapted into a film directed by Ross Devenish, with Melton played by John Kani, Athol Fugard as Paulus, and Winston Ntshona as Daan.
Books
- Marigolds in August and The Guest: Two Screenplays, Athol Fugard, Theatre Communications Group Inc., 1992, ISBN 1-55936-059-3
Awards
In 1980, it won the Berlin Bear Anniversary Prize at the 30th Berlin International Film Festival.[1][2]
Notes
External links
- IMDb entry for 1980 film
- NY Times review of the film
- v
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- Hello and Goodbye (1965)
- Boesman and Lena (1969)
- Sizwe Bansi Is Dead (1972)
- The Island (1972)
- A Lesson from Aloes (1978)
- Marigolds in August (1980)
- "Master Harold"...and the Boys (1982)
- The Road to Mecca (1984)
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