Sarafina! is a
South African musical by
Mbongeni Ngema depicting students involved in
the
Soweto Riots, in opposition to
apartheid. It was also adapted into the
1992 movie starring
Leleti Khumalo,
Whoopi Goldberg,
Miriam Makeba,
John
Kani and
Tertius
Meintjies.
Stage production
Sarafina! premiered on
Broadway
on January
28, 1988, at the Cort Theatre, and
closed on July 2, 1989, after 597 performances and 11
previews. The musical was conceived and directed by Mbongeni
Ngema, who also wrote the book, music, and lyrics.
The play was first
presented at The Market Theatre, Johannesburg
, South Africa, in June 1987. The cast
included Leleti Khumalo as Sarafina.
Leleti Khumalo received a
Tony Award
nomination, Best Featured Actress in a Musical, as well as a NAACP
Image Award for her Broadway theatre portrayal of the title
character. The production was also nominated for the Tony Award
for: Best Musical, Best Original Score, Best Choreography, and Best
Direction of a Musical
Film
The film version was released on
September
18,
1992.
The film was shot on location in Soweto
and
Johannesburg, South Africa. Darrell Roodt directed, with the
script by Mbongeni Ngema and William Nicholson. Leleti Khumalo
reprised her role as Sarafina, with Whoopi Goldberg as Mary
Masombuka and Miriam Makeba as Angelina.
Companies involved included the
British Broadcasting
Corporation.
In the United States
, the MPAA, rated the film
PG-13
for scenes of apartheid-driven
violence. The extended
version, released in 1993, was
rated
R for
strong scenes of
violence.
For Whoopi Goldberg, this was a project she was determined to be a
part of, and convinced the executives at Disney that if they agreed
to make this film, she would agree to reprise her role as Dolores
Van Cartier in
Sister Act 2: Back In The
Habit, which Disney was very keen to make since the
original had brought in many millions worldwide.
The film was screened out of competition at the
1992 Cannes Film Festival.
Plot
The plot centers on students involved in the
Soweto Riots, in opposition to the
implementation of
Afrikaans as the
language of instruction in schools. The stage version presents a
school uprising similar to the
Soweto
uprising on June 16, 1976. A narrator introduces several
characters among them the school girl activist Sarafina. Things get
out of control when a policeman shoots several pupils in a
classroom. Nevertheless, the musical ends with a cheerful farewell
show of pupils leaving school, which takes most of act two.
In the movie version Sarafina feels shame at her mother's (played
by
Miriam Makeba in the film)
acceptance of her role as domestic servant in a
white household in
apartheid
South Africa, and inspires her peers to
rise up in protest, especially after her inspirational teacher,
Mary Masombuka (played by
Whoopi
Goldberg in the film version) is imprisoned.
Director's cut
Sarafina! was re-released in
South Africa on 16
June 2006 to commemorate the 30th
anniversary of the Soweto uprising
in Soweto
.The
re-mastered director’s cut is not very different from the original,
except for the inclusion of one scene that was cut from the
original, between
Leleti Khumalo
(Sarafina) and
Miriam Makeba
(Sarafina's mother), which includes a musical number
Thank You
Mama.
References
External links