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Urban Voices Poetry Festival 2009: Programme

Urban Voices International Poetry Festival 2009

Alert! The Urban Voices International Poetry Festival is just around the corner. It runs in Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban from Wednesday 22 July to Tuesday 28 July and features acclaimed local and international poets, including, from abroad, Staceyann Chin (Jamaica), Marc Bamuthi Joseph (USA), Abena Koomson (USA/Ghana) and Willie Perdomo (New York).

Here’s the programme, followed by the official press release:

2009 Urban Voices International Poetry Festival

MAIN EVENTS

Saturday 25 July

Bassline
Newtown, Joburg
8pm
R150

Sunday 26 July

Baxter Theatre
Cape Town
8pm
R150

Tuesday 28 July

Bat Centre
Durban
7.30pm
R110

WORKSHOPS, TALKS AND MASTER CLASSES

Wednesday 22 July

Master Class on Poetry/Movement/Performance In Partnership with the Dance Factory
Marc Bamuthi Joseph and Abena Koomson
2pm-4pm
The Dance Factory
Newtown, Johannesburg
FREE

Poetry Talk
Staceyann Chin and Abena Koomson
11am -12.30pm
Aurora School for Girls
Soweto, Johannesburg
FREE

Thursday 23 July

Poetry Talk
Abena Koomson
12pm – 1:30pm
Ennerdale High School
Johannesburg
FREE

Poetry Talk
Marc Bamuthi Joseph, In Partnership with Sibikwa
11am – 1pm
Sibikwa, Cnr Liverpool and Bolton Rd
Benoni, Gauteng
FREE

Monday 27 July

Master Class: Poetry/Movement/Performance, In partnership with Jazzart
Marc Bamuthi Joseph
10.30am – 12.30pm
Artscape Theatre, rehearsal room 351
FREE
(Limited seats: Please RSVP to zee@artsexchange.co.za)

Press release

Urban Voices International Arts Festival 2009 promises again to deliver the most original, diverse and cutting edge spoken word for the South African aficionados of the arts. ‘As always, the Southern African Arts Exchange has scouted far and wide across the world, searching for the most talented and relevant poets for the South African audiences’, says Roshnie Moonsammy, executive director and founder of Urban Voices and its mother body the Southern African Arts Exchange (SAAE). The Urban Voices Poetry Festival takes place in three cities, Joburg, Cape Town and Durban.

This year’s festival will feature dance, song and performance poetry eclectically influenced from Ghana, USA, Jamaica, Puerto Rico and South Africa. ‘Urban Voices 2009 continues with our programmes of mutual learning with Africans in the Diaspora talking with artists and people in South Africa. This is particularly important as we prepare for global events such as the 2010 FIFA World Cup, and others which present opportunities for people to connect, to enjoy and work together to building solidarity through culture and the arts for a just world and a vibrant and democratic Africa’ said Moonsammy.

Urban Voices 2009

Talented young and emerging South African poets from the three cities will show their mettle on stage and proudly display the diversity that has become synonymous with our country’s image. Local poets include Rite 2 Speak (Naima Mclean, Ameera Patel, and Mbali Kgosidintsi), Tsoana Nhlapo and many more.

Staceyann Chin (Asian/Jamaican) will no doubt be a big draw card this year. She performed at Urban Voices in 2003 to sold out audiences in all three cities. Staceyann Chin has been an ‘out poet and political activist’ since 1998 and returns to our shores with her vibrant poetry that always push boundaries and challenge social norms through her work on sexuality, gender justice and against homophobia.

Chin will be sharing the stage with Ghanaian poet/singer and storyteller Abena Koomson; Mandla Langa, a South African award winning writer and accomplished poet; Willie Perdomo (USA/Puerto Rican) is an accomplished academic with a style that merges Hip-hop and Shakespeare; bringing a unique performance structure to the stage is the talented dancer, choreographer, poet, educator and community worker, Marc Bamuthi Joseph.

The Urban Voices International Arts Festival is a programme of the SAAE, and has been running since 2001 when it hosted amongst others, Tony Award winning poet/actor Sarah Jones and various other award winning poets, theatre performers and musicians. In addition, Urban Voices has since brought various national and international greats to grace the Urban Voices stage, and these included artists such as Linton Kwesi Johnson, Saul Williams, The Last Poets, Mutabaruka, Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze, Dr. Don Materra, Staceyann Chin, Prof Willie Kgotsisile, Lebo Mashile and Mak Manaka.

Workshopping our past and future

‘As with every annual Urban Voices programme, the workshops are an integral part of our learning and sharing as artists meet with aspirant writers and enthusiasts – in a free, secure and open learning space,’ said Moonsammy. Master class on performance/movement, lectures on poetry will be held in prisons, schools and at some select cultural community venues.

Ends

 

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