Mail & Guardian
Mail & Guardian
Faye Kabali-Kagwa

Creator

Faye Kabali-Kagwa

“And we remember what it feels like to begin a journey and the uncertainty that brings, as we move towards a destination that may or may not be welcoming,” says the author. (James Akena/Reuters)

Play about refugees fleeing as relevant today as it was 12 years ago

‘Every Year, Every Day I Am Walking’ has travelled to 25 countries and is back in Cape Town

Brain food: Love Generation Hub sessions start with a speaker talking about the journey of their career and ends with attendees exchanging something such as knowledge or craft

Luv hub for lonely Capetonians

Young black professionals have found a place that offers support, community and a network

Musonda Kabwe: Exploring existential and millennial angst

The chameleon: Musonda Kabwe

Musonda Kabwe’s graphics are bold and often include an interesting interplay between traditional and digital media.

Times gone by: Dutch and English ships sought safe harbour in the Cape’s Table Bay

Poets reclaim Cape Town’s historical narrative

A jamboree of poets traverses the city, feels it’s pain and emerges to restore what was taken

The community responded to the death by looting the shop and assaulting the owners. (Thulani Mbele/Timeslive)

Poets’ society revolution

The recognition garnered by young poets’ collections should make the publishing industry reflect on the state of South Africans’ poetic landscape

Faniswa Yisa plays Tseliso in Nwabisa Plaatjie’s adaptation of the 1983 play the Native Who Caused all the Trouble

Reimagining the lens of land

Shifting perspectives as well as transposing characters and concepts, Nwabisa Plaatjie gives a new spin to an old play

Baleka Mbete insists Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba would still deliver his budget speech on February 21.

We flew out of the creative nest

Cape Town’s Creative Nestlings and Boaston Society gave ­creative people of colour a taste of who they could be

Political satire: George Orwell’s Animal Farm is given a South African twist

Children’s theatre festival cradled creativity and encouraged empathy

"Theatre is often a space in which empathetic listening happens, and very often unknowingly"