logo
Spoil the family with frikkadel penne pasta bake

Spoil the family with frikkadel penne pasta bake

The Citizen2 days ago
GET IT MAGAZINE
I'm an experienced writer, sub-editor, and media & public relations specialist with a demonstrated history of working in the media industry – across digital, print, TV, and radio. I earned a diploma in Journalism and Print Media from leading institution, Damelin College, with distinctions (Journalism And Print Media, Media Studies, Technical English And Communications, South African Studies, African & International Studies, Technology in Journalism, Journalism II & Practical Journalism). I also hold a qualification in Investigative Journalism from Print Media SA, First Aid Training from St John's Ambulance, as well as certificates in Learning to Write Marketing Copy, Planning a Career in User Experience, and Writing a Compelling Blog Post.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Breakfast With Mugabe — laying a ghost to rest, awakening a monster
Breakfast With Mugabe — laying a ghost to rest, awakening a monster

Daily Maverick

timean hour ago

  • Daily Maverick

Breakfast With Mugabe — laying a ghost to rest, awakening a monster

At a time when authoritarians are having a global moment, Calvin Ratladi, 2025's Standard Bank Young Artist for Theatre, directs a slow-burn psychological thriller about a liberation hero with a deeply contested legacy. The stage is a divided realm, its representation of Harare State House, circa 2001, visually emerging from the raw earth, bursting up through the rubble and detritus of an African wasteland. The presidential living room, where most of the play's intrigue unfolds, is surrounded by a landscape that's been literally and metaphorically pillaged. First the colonisers came, and then something else: each, in turn, have infiltrated the earth, dug into it, taken from it, poisoned it, left bodies and other secrets buried beneath it. It's in the privileged setting of Robert Mugabe's domestic quarters that we first meet his wife, the malicious and manipulative 'First Shopper', played by Gontse Ntshegang as a woman you don't want to mess with. Slippery, full of machinations, used to getting her way, she struts around the furniture, bending the ear of a white psychiatrist and tobacco farm owner named Peric (Craig Jackson), who has been summoned and is waiting to conduct his initial consultation with the Zimbabwean leader. Grace Mugabe's initial niceties – offering Peric a beverage as she talks him through the president's disturbing visitations by an ngozi, the malevolent spirit of a fallen comrade – unsubtly hints at her own ever-burgeoning self-interest. Along with expensive taste in clothes, she has an instinct for survival and every chance she gets unabashedly tries to persuade the doctor to see her point of view – she needs her husband cured of whatever affliction ails him. Peric, who has treated other Zimbabweans afflicted by unwelcome spirits, is reverential, respectful, polite. Whether or not he recognises his hostess for the viper she is, is unclear. When Mugabe finally enters, you're left with little doubt that this is both a man assailed by some unnatural force – and a tyrant to be feared. 'I have been informed that I will not live forever,' he tells Peric. It's a joke delivered deadpan, but it's also possible to detect in Themba Ndaba, who plays the titular despot, a menacingly unironic desire to rule forever. Also on stage is Zimbabwean-born Farai Chigudu as the bodyguard/secret policeman, Gabriel, who like some well-attired bouncer seems to be forever lurking on stage. His role? Well, he's a bit like 'Chekhov's gun' – if you introduce a musclebound thug in the first scene, there should be thuggish violence somewhere down the line. The production is Breakfast With Mugabe, first directed for the Royal Shakespeare Company by Sir Antony Sher in 2005. It's now playing at the Market Theatre after a brief debut at Makhanda's National Arts Festival. Directed by Calvin Ratladi, this year's Standard Bank Young Artist for Theatre, it was penned by the Cambridge-based playwright Fraser Grace, who came across a 2001 newspaper report about the Zimbabwean president receiving treatment from a white psychiatrist. While reports suggested he was being treated for depression, the play imagines that Mugabe was in fact battling a malevolent spirit. The playwright, after watching a performance of Ratladi's production, wrote in the UK's Guardian newspaper that he'd been interested in what might have been at the root of Mugabe's transition from revolutionary hero to dictatorial monster. The play is wordy, dense and fraught with the strangest sort of tension. And, despite the title, breakfast never comes. Cue, instead, a succession of lengthy conversations unpacking not only what might have led to this supernatural stalking, but an unravelling of history with some of the unwritten bits coloured in. While it leaves little doubt as to the rot of paranoia and corruption that's infected Mugabe's regime, it's also a reminder of the colonial context from which that regime emerged. Rather than a one-sided condemnation, the dialogue also digs into Mugabe's bitter memories – such as being refused permission by Ian Smith, in the course of his 11-year imprisonment, to bury his young son. Ratladi, who is 34, was born in Limpopo and grew up in Witbank, the son of a miner, says that 'over the years, as I have been finding myself as an artist, what seems to recur in my work and which I found them paralleled in the play are issues of land, and issues of memory and power'. Those issues are deeply mired in the dialogue, but they are also conveyed in the design. For one thing, Ratladi's own past is right there on the stage, represented by the shattered landscape. 'I grew up in the mines,' he says, 'so what you see is the landscape of my childhood.' Indeed, the representation of the land, this violated earth, in Ratladi's rendition of the play is of something forlorn, quite sombre. Never mind the various people and factions involved, it is the silent earth that has been witness to everything we have done to it in its name: acquiring it, fighting over it, digging it up, drilling into it, taking from it, burying our secrets and the bodies of the dead in it. 'The ground also has its own vibrations,' Ratladi says. 'But there's also violence that's being done on this thing called land. For me, it's a kind of penetration, a violation. And the question arises: how deep into the earth does the system in fact go?' Ratladi says he was drawn to the play by themes close to his heart, fascinated with the idea that 'what this figure of Robert Mugabe was actually grappling with might in fact have been a spiritual issue'. He also wanted to reveal the human side of its characters who are larger-than-life historic figures. He says he had wanted – as a director – to be able to enter into a dialogue with the work and with its author. 'Deciding on this play was a matter of discovering what sits in the body as important knowledge and figuring out how to work collaboratively with someone else's writing – to have a conversation with the work and also include the interests and embodied experiences of the performers.' The play does not pander, nor does it give any easy answers. 'I'm trying to open a conversation,' Ratladi says. 'As much as we can discuss Mugabe's passionate rhetoric about the land and his insistence on taking things back, this is the same man who earned seven degrees while in prison, and who embraced Western ways of thinking. And there's the fact that he sought medical help in Europe, rather than in the people around him.' And so questions as to Mugabe's true beliefs – and his motivations – remain. 'When I look into the story, I think there was a spiritual awakening, perhaps a calling, that wasn't fully embraced,' says Ratladi. 'And it caused a lot of suffering.' Like several Shakespearean antiheroes, most notably Macbeth, evidence of Mugabe's autocratic self-delusion is everywhere in this play. He possesses an ability to terrify that he wields with frightening calm. When he initially meets Peric, his first test is to demand that the psychiatrist puts on a different necktie, an act of supplication for which the white doctor has a lengthy, feasible excuse. Peric's apparent bolshiness – psychiatric professionalism tinged by thinly disguised colonial patronage – is something Mugabe seems to let slide. First it's the refusal of a necktie that would render him a member of Mugabe's staff, and then it's the manner in which Peric lays down the ground rules for the therapy sessions as though he were talking to just another patient. What's perhaps most frustrating about Peric is his blind refusal to recognise just how dangerous the man he's treating is. At various points, you might suspect it's naiveté, perhaps pompousness. Through a certain lens, it's evidence of deeply rooted colonialism, an assumption of some unstated privilege so engrained he's not even aware it exists. Peric, despite his relative position on the social rung, refuses to bend to Mugabe's small tests, and it's no accident that Grace Mugabe tells him that he and her husband are 'so much alike'. The two men lock horns in a weirdly convivial manner. Theirs is an unspoken conflict that drives the play's underlying tension, unease and menace, a feeling that anything can – and is likely to – happen. Whatever its cause, the audience senses the friction and feels the under-the-surface power struggle implicitly. 'When I direct, I always tell my actors that if someone deaf were to watch, they'd still follow the story,' Ratladi says. 'So, if you were to watch my show with earplugs, you would still 'hear' the production. If you are blind, you would still follow. That's how I approach the work: with a desire to cater for more 'other' audiences.' This idea of widening the audience is a metaphor, too, for Ratladi's belief that 'the South African conversation needs to be far more inclusive, to welcome to the table a wider range of people'. 'Right now, as theatre-makers, we're not listening enough,' he says. 'Theatre made during apartheid had a clear 'state of advocacy'. These days, we're all over the place. Under apartheid, the status quo that needed to be defeated was very clear. But what is our status quo today? What are we currently critiquing? What are we challenging? I think we're all over the place. 'After the centuries of coloniality, we should as a nation be asking ourselves more fundamental questions: 'Where are we as the people?' and 'Where do we go from here?' I think those are the stories we, as theatre-makers, should be telling, the ones that pose questions, stories that dare to ask, 'Where in actual fact we are as a nation?'' These are not questions that are answered in Breakfast With Mugabe. The play does not try to patch up the past by offering a theory about the future. Ratladi's hope, though, is that it will perhaps help you to recognise that your perceived reality is a kind of acquiescence to the status quo; if you let it wash through you, it might just wake you up, encourage you to get involved in a consequential conversation that desperately needs to happen. DM Breakfast With Mugabe is a co-production of the National Arts Festival, The Market Theatre and Festival Enterprise Catalyst, in association with the Calvin Ratladi Foundation, with contributing funding from Standard Bank South Africa. It is playing at the Market Theatre until 10 August.

AfriCAN Honoree Authors' Awards returns to Sandton
AfriCAN Honoree Authors' Awards returns to Sandton

The Citizen

time18 hours ago

  • The Citizen

AfriCAN Honoree Authors' Awards returns to Sandton

The 8th AfriCAN Honoree Authors' Awards has returned to Sandton under the powerful banner of No Borders, a call to unite the African continent through storytelling, soul, and shared heritage. The event took place at Sandton Library, Nelson Mandela Square and brought together authors from across the continent, including Namibia, Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Botswana, Cape Town, Durban and Limpopo. Organiser and founder of AfriCAN Child Your Time is Now, Anthea Thyssen-Ambursley, described the awards as a spiritual and cultural homecoming. Also read: Award celebrates bold women driving change in SA 'I don't see colour. I see soul. I wear all the colours, because I believe in one race, the human race. This event is about reconnecting with who we are, before we were divided by borders, race, or tribes.' A self-published poet and activist, Thyssen-Ambursley said the Pen Legends gathering is an act of resistance, memory, and prophecy. 'If you are roaming this earth and you are not changing anything, it means you have not paid your rent. Writers and creators are prophets; we are here to make people feel, think and act.' She pointed out that the event was entirely self-funded and has become a vibrant platform for authors across Africa to celebrate, network, and build bridges across nations. Also read: The 2025 Veuve Clicquot Bold Woman Awards winners announced 'Tomorrow, the sun will shine on all of us. The rain will fall on all of us. So what makes us different? Nothing. What connects us is much more powerful,' she concluded. Follow us on our Whatsapp channel, Facebook, X, Instagram and TikTok for the latest updates and inspiration!

The AVBOB Poetry Competition opens for a ninth year
The AVBOB Poetry Competition opens for a ninth year

The South African

time18 hours ago

  • The South African

The AVBOB Poetry Competition opens for a ninth year

The AVBOB Poetry Competition will return for its ninth year on 1 August 2025. The competition encourages South Africans, young and old, to put pen to paper and share words of love, hope, and healing. This year's theme is 'I wish I'd said…'. Poets may enter up to 10 poems. They can also choose from any of the nation's 11 official written languages. Entries are open until 30 November. Carl van der Riet, AVBOB CEO, expresses the competition's mission simply. 'We want to give every South African a chance to find and share their best words. Each poem adds to an ongoing conversation, drawing us closer to understanding ourselves and each other.' He adds, 'Poetry helps us when we are lost for words. At those moments, it offers images and gestures to steady us.' This year, the stakes are high. The first-place winner in each language will receive a total of R 12,500. This includes R 10,000 in cash, a R 2,500 book voucher, and the coveted AVBOB Poetry Trophy. Poets whose work is published in the AVBOB Poetry Library will also receive a R300 publication fee. Competition guidelines are straightforward. Submit your poems through the online dashboard at A panel of judges will select the strongest entries in each language. The top three poems per language will be featured in the annual printed anthology. All shortlisted poems will be translated into English. 'Translation brings voices together – it encourages understanding and fellow-feeling among South Africans,' says a member of the organising team. New and aspiring poets can take advantage of the AVBOB Poetry website's free resources. Expert advice, guidance from editors, and stories about past winners can help entrants polish their submissions. Judges share tips and pointers, and the social media channels provide updates about free online workshops. These workshops, running throughout the submission period and beyond, are a platform for learning and growth. 'It's wonderful to see participants coming with their own stories and leaving with new skills and inspiration,' says a workshop facilitator. The AVBOB Poetry Competition has become a staple in the country's cultural calendar. It stands as a testament to the healing and unifying force of poetry. Carl van der Riet sums up its impact, saying, 'Every year the generosity of entries moves us.' Entrants share themselves with honesty and courage. The competition archives poems from across South Africa and creates a living record. It is an open invitation to continue the conversation together.' Entries are open now until 30 November. All South Africans are welcome to find a voice, write, and share their words. You could be the next winner. Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1. Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store