Showing posts with label Andrew Verster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Verster. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Short Story Time, Events and News from AFDA Durban



STRANGERS IN THE NIGHT by Andrew Verster
“Go right down to the bottom of  Uruguay, “ she said, “right to the tip and you can’t miss Montevideo.”
“And then, what?”
“That’s where my great-great Aunt Matilda was born. But of course, unless you speak the language you are, to use her phrase, “like a lost fart in a thunderstorm.”
“How, then, did she happen to be born there?”
“The Waratoga, it was a freighter that took a few passengers, stopped there as a Mrs. Roughead (unfortunate name), had had an attack of Angina and needed to see a doctor urgently. Touch and go, they said.  And Aunt Matilda’s father who was known for his curiosity, did a bit of wandering about to pass the time and got to the harbour to see the Waratoga sailing into the sunset.”
“So?”
“He shrugged his shoulders and made the best of it.”
“And?”
“He went to the Embassy and they put him in touch with a local businessman in the import/export business and before you could say Bob’s Your Uncle, he had made a fortune, married a local beauty queen, produced a handful of exquisite children, and then, in the dark of night, boarded a steamship and left for who-knows-where? Interpol could not trace him. His photo was on the Google for months. He simply vanished into thin air.”
“So what is the point of the story?”
“None that I can think of.”
“So why are you telling me this?”
“Can’t think.”
“Nice talking to you anyway. You said your name was?”
The End
Andrew Verster is a writer and artist - email: andrewverster784@gmail.com 


For more info and to register email news@mapit.co.za
New Faces at AFDA Durban Campus


 Joining the AFDA Durban Campus this year are a few new faces to boost the already impressive lecturing line up and a fusion of experience and youth.

Carmen Langston Mitchell; a well-respected and well-known television personality has recently just joined the Durban team with a wealth of experience where she will be lecturing and mentoring first and second year television students. Langston Mitchell has an impressive career in the media industry, where she has worked locally and internationally as a producer, director, scriptwriter and presenter for programmes including Top Billing” which airs on SABC 3,The Cosmo Show” and “Carte Blanche” on M-Net, “60 minutes”, BBC’s “Changing Rooms” and BBC’s “Newsround” as well as “BBC World News”. To top her list she has also worked as a social editor and features writer for Style Magazine and was the celebrity lifestyle columnist for Media 24’s YOU Magazine. AFDA Durban Campus’ students will be happy to have her by their side.

To give current AFDA Students hope for the future, a former AFDA Cape Town Campus student, Ashleigh Hart who obtained an AFDA Bachelor of Arts Honours in Motion Picture Medium has also joined the Screen Design Department in the school of film as a Costume, Make Up and Styling & Production Design Lecturer. Hart recently won Gold at the AFDA 2013 Awards for Costume, Make-up and Styling for the film The Other Woman (an Honours Graduation Film) directed by another former AFDA Cape Town Campus student; Thea Small where Hart was awarded Best Post graduate Film and the Critics Choice Award. During post graduate year at AFDA, Hart also worked on the feature film Die Windpomp, as well as a Ster-Kinekor Vision Mission commercial.

And last, but not least is New Marketing Assistant; Purity Shezi-Magaya who has joined the Marketing Department headed by Milena Gevers at the AFDA Durban Campus.  Magaya graduated with a National Diploma in Marketing Management, and also comes with a bag of experience having worked with the Vodacom KZN Regional offices and other various brands at The Creative Council promotions agency.

Franco Human, the Dean of the AFDA Durban Campus is very excited with the new team; “We welcome the new staff to the Durban Campus. I am sure that they will add much value to their respective departments. It’s our second year since our opening of this campus and we look forward to adding to the benchmark set by our first intake of students.”

For details on registration and general information, call (031) 569-2252 or e-mail milenag@afda.co.za
Article by Lauren Immelman

Edited by +Fred Felton 

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Friday, April 5, 2013

Pianist Urgently Needed for a Gig, Business News and a Photography Evening


Pianist Needed


Urgently looking for a FEMALE pianist who plays both piano and keyboard.
Rehearsals begin tomorrow in Johannesburg and will go on for the next 6 weekends.
Performances will be in Johannesburg on 3 nights per week and will last for a maximum of 3 months.
The show has a burlesque theme so she may need to wear theme-related outfits.
Anybody who fits the profile must please e-mail their details, photographs and rates to: Keke Chele via keke@schoolboy.co.za

(Source - Gig Grapevine) 


The China-Africa Business Summit will be happenning soon hosted by Frontier Advisory.
When: Wed 17th April
Time: 8 for 8h30



Sony Photography Evening 


sony photo


(Source - Sony) 



A Nursery Tale by Andrew Verster


NURSERY TALE
“You say a Blackbird came down and pecked off your nose?”
“Yes. It happened just like that.”
“What did you do?”
“I ran after it and got it back and stuck it on again.”
“Looks fine to me.”
“It will settle down when the glue dries.”

Andrew Verster is a World Famous Artist and Writer



















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Thursday, March 28, 2013

Events Around South Africa





For More Details Email chinaafrica@frontieradvisory.com

(Source - Frontier Advisory)




Please RSVP - 032-946-1937

(Source - imbizo gallery)


Auditions


PANSA/Rainbow Young Performers Project 2013

AUDITIONS
ON SATURDAY 13TH APRIL
AT UKZN (Howard College) DRAMA DEPARTMENT
For the original production
‘CAN YOU FEEL IT?’
Written and Directed by Peter Court and Charon Williams-Ros

Rehearsals: Every Weekend from 14th April – 23rd June
Full time 25th / 26th /27th June
Performances at the ELIZABETH SNEDDON THEATRE
from 28th June – 14th July 2013

REGISTRATION: 09h00 – 10h00
•Singers•Dancers [All Styles]
           
•Gymnasts/Acrobats•Physical Actors

•Mime Artists•Magicians

•Special Skills [Skateboarding/Trick cycling/Parkour/Free running, Juggling/Diablo/Baton twirling, etc.]

•Musicians [portable instruments only – must be your own]

NB: Audition is open to High School learners only
Enquiries: PANSA Tel: 031 201-4750 /email: kzn@pansa.org.za

If you are considering a career in theatre, this is your chance!

(Source - Pansa) 


CHANT by Andrew Verster

Failures and dahlias
Kittens and mittens
Wimples and pimples
Writers and fighters
Layouts and payouts
Rattles and battles
Mothers and brothers
Hillocks and bullocks
Turners and burners
Tickles and pickles
Puppies and guppies
Flaming and gaming
Flowers and bowers
Planets and gannets
Mares and chairs
Lifting and drifting
Picking and choosing
Wishing and waiting
Loving and hating
Bidding and budding

Andrew Verster is a World Famous Artist and Writer based in Durban.


Enjoy the Long Weekend Everyone and for those of you Celebrating Easter have
a wonderful time.  
Please everyone drive safe on the roads.

- The Editor 










Tuesday, March 12, 2013

We have Theatre News, Art News and a short story and more




Catalina Theatre - Call for Proposals for 2014

Catalina UnLtd is calling for proposals for productions to be staged at the Catalina Theatre, Wilson’s Wharf, Durban for 2014.

The productions may be full theatre productions, children’s shows, music performances, dance, comedy, and the like. The aim is to get an interesting, innovative and eclectic mix while still focussing on good, solid mainstream theatre.

Please send a brief proposal consisting of:
·         Name and contact details
·         Type of show (e.g. music performance)
·         Synopsis or basic story line of the show
·         Number of cast members/performers
·         Brief director & actor/performer bios
·         Who would the show appeal to

Please email catalinasagm@gmail.com for more information or to submit your proposal.

Make 2014 your year to get on stage

(Source - Catalina Theatre)






(Source - A Word Of Art) 


Gruyere by Andrew Verster

“MY HANDKERCHIEF HAS MORE HOLES THAN A GRUYERE CHEESE closed after two performances at The Loft after tepid reviews.
 “The critics didn’t exactly rave about  AS YOU LIKE IT if you remember.”
 “I wasn’t there, so I’ll have to take your word for it,” John  Mault, the co-author said. “Joanna Ezard, my other half, has booked a ticket to Tasmania, she is so mortified.”  
“She has family there?”
“No. But TOURS INC were offering half price tickets to the first twenty takers. 
“Where’s Tasmania? She asked the clerk.
“Give me half a minute and I’ll look it up if I can find my pocket atlas. It must be around. I had to find Zimbabwe just last week. But, for the life of me, I couldn’t find it. It’s up north somewhere. I think they must have cancelled it.”
“Thank you. You’ve been wonderful.”
“No, problem. Pleased I could help.”

Andrew Verster is a world famous artist and writer based in Durban. 






Monday, March 11, 2013

The Meeting, The Speakers and a DVD Review




THE MEETING by Andrew Verster 

“I didn’t see your mother at church this morning.”
“You didn’t see her last Sunday either.”
“You are right. Come to think of it.”
“Not surprising, she’s dead.”
“Who?”
“My mother.”
“That was sudden.”
“Not really. She died three years ago.”
“YOUR mother? Are you sure?”
“MY mother, of course.”
“My mind is playing tricks, Janet.”
“Josephine.”
“Of course. How silly of me.”
“And you are?”
“Michael.”
“Pleased to meet you.”
“Likewise.”

Andrew Verster is a World Famous Artist and Writer 


Book These Speakers For Your Next Event or Conference at great prices all for fundraising








A DVD Review of ‘Wonderwerker’-  A Film by Katinka Heyns by Timothy Sparks
A man is not idle because he is absorbed in thought, there is visible labour”.   Victor Hugo
The film ‘Wonderwerker ‘is set two years before the Union of South in 1910. It is a film of much introspection and the interior motivation of its characters play within themselves. Inward thinking is regarded as one of the defining aspects that define a poet.  It is in this wilderness that the Poet that Marais was able to write some of his finest poetry. Eugene Nielen Marais wrote the poem Winternag (Winternight) verses which echo through the years for almost every Afrikaner, “O koud is die windjie en skraal. En blink in die dof-lig en kaal, so wyd as die Heer se genade, le die velde in sterlig en skade…” one has a feeling for the greatness of the man, and of the Poet. Eugene Marais remains an enigma more than eighty years after his death.

In the film Marais inhabits a beautiful place in the imagination.
The old Poet, despite his problems with Morphine used to treat Malaria, nonetheless, finds love unexpectedly. The main story entices with its poignantly humane story. Science, Art, History are themes at the heart; they mould Marais’ identity and youthful longing, to reveal the wounds that lie unresolved through the passage of time. Appearing, partly as biography, it is also a meditation on time, but the story unfolds with the arrival of Eugene Marais on a farm in the Waterberge district in Northern Transvaal.
Dawid Minaar plays the sensitive poet who is taken in by the family. Always in the back of the mind, however is the recognition of fate and Marais’ violent death.  We see the many parts of this fascinating man. In my first years at University, I was drawn to the lewensverhaal (life-story) of one Eugene N. Marais. The flow of these pages in ‘The Dark Stream: The Story of Eugene Marais’ by Leon Marais read in English, is as moving as watching this remarkable two-hour voyage in the presence of this Volksbesit (loosely translates as-Nation’s treasure).

The affectionate relationship that unfolds between Jane Brayshaw (Anneke Weidemann), and Eugene Marais takes us into the world where science and passion meet. The plot drives us into this intriguing dance of a mind searching, and a soul grappling with love; his past and mortality. The acting of theatre and film legends Elize Cawood as Tante van Rooyen and Marius Weyers as Oom Gys van Rooyen provide the superb foil for the strange patient whose arrival changes the life of the young girl. The rite of passage of the Poet cut adrift in illness and inner tumult is intriguing as is the barren heart of the traditional Boer, represented by Gys van Rooyen which contradicts the sensual attitudes of the Poet. Elegy meets drama beautifully as van Rooyen’s wife adandons herself in heart and convenience to the dreams of reviving her patient, but also drawing inspiration from this contact. 

An important message of this film is lead by the ability of youthful passion to change a life. All these while regarding the poet in his native background. Doctor or Poet!? The voice that narrates from the beginning starts in 1932 recounting the meeting between the girl and the sick poet years earlier. The heroine tells the story as the arrival of Marais at the farm unfolds on the screen. Set in Flashback mode it is a perfect beginning of the story. Retreating back into the past, in this instance 1908 allows the young Jane Brayshaw to speak of this youthful fragment of her past. 

It is Interesting that two films have emerged in the past six months that show that Afrikaans cinema, against the odds, fortunately still has a strong presence in South Africa. ‘Verraaiers’ is showing at Gateway at the moment. 

Katinka Heyns, the famous director of ‘Paljas,’ made fifteen years ago, fills her film with subtle or speculative explorations of her characters. Loss, passion and the importance emotion plays in literature and love jolts the memory. Eugene Marais treats the young girl on the farm as his protégé, a young lady in the first blossom of youth: seemingly restless in her puzzled and youthful embrace of her mentor. Not since ‘Paljas’ (Katinka Heyn’s lovely film of 1998) have we seen the values of mature skill, rendered so magnificently by a prominent South African film director. ‘Wonderwerker’ reveal s the complexity of the man behind the poems.

The film unfolds in this beautiful landscape. Heyns manages to create an enchanting atmosphere in her films and she accords herself time to covey the depths that are hinted at in the poems of Eugene Marais.  
‘Wonderwerker’ compiles the history of the poet, gently weaving Marais’ fondness for natural history and scientific pursuits. Eugene Marais wrote the famous book ‘Die Siel van die Mier’ 1925: translated as ‘The Soul of the White Art’ 1937 which reveals his innate love of animals and his recovery of the farm are determined by the relationships he fosters and the study of the beautiful relationship between him and the young girl. The date of the film is not accidental coming six years after  die Tweede Vryheidsoorlog (The Second Boer War: 1899-1902) but the turmoil of the private world, especially Marais’ accounts of love’s won and lost make this a very original film. Science, reason and love all are heavily pitted against passion.  These dual parts in his nature are beautifully executed in the film. Marais seems haunted by his past. Morphine claims a part in the story and the enslavements that work upon us in daily life. Eugene’s Marais opium addition is second only to the sad and forlorn story of English Poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge whose bondage stirred both his poetry and genius but discoloured his life. It is important to acknowledge that Eugene Marais died, by his own hand, shooting himself on the farm of the writer Gustav Preller in March of 1936.

Memory plays a role, the memory of the desires of countrymen no longer with us. On the farm Marais and Oom van Rooyen’s characters talk about farms, their prospects and dreams of mining. Land and identity are strong themes. One of the most beautiful parts of the film is result of a hike in the mountains, when Dawid Minaar’s character and Weyers character look for seams in the lovely landscape of the Waterberge. ‘Wonderwerker’ is a hidden gem, almost with a feel of an eighties masterpiece like ‘Jean de Florette’ or the fine film adaptations of Marcel Pagnol’s rural fables ‘La Chateau de ma mere’,’ La gloire de mon pere’.
Cinematography, dialogue and direction are seamless (the delicious platteland plays a role of its own) as is the delicate portrayal of Eugene Marais’ life midst the emotional deliberations of Maria van Rooyen, and the goings on in family life. Weyers does a fine job in portraying the taciturn father of the wayward son, Adriaan van Rooyen. A subplot involves Jane Brayshaw being molested by the boy Adrian. Much of this is alluded to mysteriously without showing these scenes.  Dawid Minaar draws himself into this ceremony of convalescence but one notices his emotional healing has a price. The lasting impression is the steady portrayal of Marais and his sense of betrayal at the hands of his hosts. No bitterness clouds what is a beautiful tenderness in his relationship with Jane Brayshaw.  

‘Wonderwerker’ is a taste of the past, worth savouring. Told with humility and candour, not only is this film a master-class in acting but reveals some of the flaws of the heart of man, especially our place in this beautiful world.  Anneke Wiedemann   as Jane Brayshaw is very capable her role, almost carrying the entire film with the powerful gestures and lucid emotions that she weighs with a maturity beyond her years. Minaar in the role of the Poet creates a potent figure, and we assume the weaknesses become his strength as Marais accepts his fate. The figure that emerges is a worthy addition to both Afrikaans folklore and South African cinema.

It is Interesting that two films have emerged in the past six months; that fortunately show that Afrikaans cinema, against the odds, still has a strong presence in South Africa. ‘Verraaiers’ directed and written by Henk Pretorius is showing at Gateway at the moment. A copy of Katinka Heyn’s ‘Wonderwerker’ is available at Video Mogul in Musgrave Road.


Timothy Sparks is a freelance writer 


Monday, March 4, 2013

Read about Infecting the city, an Executive Breakfast and a Short Story.




Click here to view Infecting The City banner

The Africa Centre is proud to announce an astonishing array of over 54 dance, music, theatre, installation and other visual art forms that re-think our City in the sixth edition of Infecting The City Public Arts Festival.

The Festival Programme Launch is taking place at 4.00pm on Monday, 4th March in the St George's Room at the Taj Hotel (cnr. Adderley Street and Wale Street). If you are in Cape Town and can make it, please RSVP.

For those of you who cannot make the Programme Launch, join us from the 11-16th March to experience:

  • Catherine Henegan’s acclaimed Afro Galactic Dream Factory;
  • Mamela Nyamza’s triumphant return from sellout London shows;
  • 1000 paper jets of artworks released regally into the city skies by Jason Potgieter;
  • A “real-time” performance of daily news headlines by Jazzart;
  • The Cape Philharmonic Orchestra framed by Church Square;
  • A painstaking construction of a fragile wooden edifice inside the District Six Museum by Aeneas Wilder and Winnie Sze;
  • Sprawling glow stick installations across city pavements by Marcus Neustetter;
  • The 5 movement prayer, confession, mantra, manifesto and catharsis of Country of Grief and Grace performed by Neo Muyanga and the Siyaya Chorus;
  • The tragic and thought-provoking performance, Widow by Mandisi Shindo – exploring loss and triumph outside the St George’s Cathedral;
  • A Light Symphony by French artist Antoine Schmidt on Church Square; and
  • A Mask flashmob, a 40 strong Flute mob, gospel singers on bicycles and a mob of over 300 skateboarders cruising through the City.
Join us and hundreds of artists from the 11th March at 6.00pm in The Company's Gardens, in front of the Iziko South African Museum


(Source - Africa Centre) 




GIBS and East Coast Radio Executive Breakfast - Leading with Impact
Join GIBS, East Coast Radio and Trade and Investment KZN for the third annual and much anticipated executive business breakfast - Leading with Impact.
Confirmed speakers include:
  • Brian Molefe, CEO: Transnet;
  • Prof Nick Binedell, dean: GIBS;
  • Nicola Tyler, CEO: Business Results Group;
  • Norman Chorn, author: Future Builders; and
  • Buhle Dlamini, founder: Young & Able
Date:Thursday, 7 March 2013
Time:07:30 - 11:00
Venue:ICC, Durban, 45 Bram Fischer Road, Durban
Fees:R500 per person, R4 750 for a table of ten
Contact:Gloria Bokaba on 011 771 4229 or email bokabag@gibs.co.za

Title

(Source - East Coast Radio) 



A SHORT STORY by Andrew Verster 

The Wharmbys are a farming family from West Yorkshire who have a mill where others in the district bring their corn and millet.
“He’s not cheap, but he can ask what he likes as he has the monopoly.”  
It wasn’t always so. Jervis Downend was the other miller, but his unexplained death two and a half months ago when he fell under a bull-dozer driven by Maureen Bumcombe has raised eyebrows in the community.
The Reverend J Morice Stiff  said,  when interviewed by the Western Chronicle, “I am not one to cast aspersions, but I’ve known Maureen since she was a toddler at the Tiny Tots Nursery and she is the best bull-dozer driver we have.”
“Actually, the only one,” Polly Hudd corrected.
“Be that as it may, let’s not be diverted, it is whispered that there was something going on between the two of them.”
“Yes, they were engaged to be married.”
“That’s beside the point. We must wait for the autopsy before jumping to conclusions.”
As this story is going nowhere, this is a good place to stop.


Andrew Verster is a World Famous Artist and Writer Based in Durban, South Africa. 











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