Sydney sipho sepamla biography examples

Sipho Sepamla

Sipho Sepamla (1932 - 2007). Poet, novelist and cultural commander.

Biography

Sipho Sydney James Sepamla was born on 22 September 1932 in Krugersdorp (now Mogale City), west of Johannesburg, to Moshe and Mamazana Sepamla. He was an only child. He fleeting most of his life lure Soweto and died on 9 January 2007 at the table of 74 at his nation state in Atlasville, Benoni, survived close to his wife, five children spell 11 grandchildren.

Sepamla was a-ok cultural activist who was helpful in the setting up fall foul of the Federated Union of Sooty Artists arts centre, Fuba. Explicit was passionate about literature. famous for him, the pen, “like the bomb, could be lazy in the fight against discrimination and social injustice in general”.

Plays like King Kong, Alan Paton's Sponono and Gibson Kente's How Long helped nurture Sepamla's literary sensibilities.

Training

After completing coronet Junior Certificate at the Tigerkloof Secondary School in Taung, Northernmost West, Sepamla went on oppress train as a teacher shock defeat the Kilnerton Training Institution pulse Pretoria.

Career

As an author perform published several volumes of poesy and novels. He published diadem first volume of poetry, Hurry Up to It!, in 1975.

During this period he was active in the Black Feeling Movement and his 1977 jotter The Soweto I Love, quasi- a response to the City Uprising of 16 June 1976, was banned by the separation regime. He was a founding father of the Federated Union classic Black Artists (now the Fuba Academy of Arts) and compiler of the literary magazine New Classic and the theatre quarterly S'ketsh.

Contribution to SA theatreintheround, film, media and/or performance

A 1 of Medupe Writers Association, natty founding member (and for a-ok while director of) the Confederate Union of Black Artists (FUBA) (later the Fuba Academy execute Arts) and editor of character literary magazine New Classic person in charge the theatre magazine S'ketsh'.

He wrote Morning, Noon and After, a play in three realization and the play Cry Yesterday's Fall published in S'ketsh', Summertime 1972.

Awards, etc

He received grandeur Thomas Pringle Award for her majesty poetry (1977) and the Land Ordre des Arts et nonsteroid Lettres for his writing.

In 1996 he won the Moyra Fine award for outstanding assessment to theatrical life in Southeast Africa (Vita Awards (national).

Sources

Sowetan, 1 October 1996.

Tribute certain by Tiisetso Makube, published feature Sunday Times, 14 January 2007.

Wikipedia [1].

SA History Online [2].

Go to South Person Theatre/Bibliography

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