Behind the scenes of Lalela’s Romeo & Juliet play

April 14, 2023

Above: It’s a team effort! Young artists in our Masiphumelele programme painting the backdrop for the balcony scene in ‘Romeo and Juliet’.

The stage is (just about) set for Lalela actors, stagehands, up-and-coming producers and sound technicians, along with an enthusiastic support team, to reveal the fruits of their hard work over the past few months.

We’re so excited once again to be participating in the Shakespeare Schools Festival South Africa, now in its 13th year, and taking place at the Star Theatre, located in the District Six Homecoming Centre in the historical heart of Cape Town, this May.

Over a three-week period, 38 different school groups will be performing their half-hour rendition of a Shakespeare play at this beautiful venue – and Lalela’s performance is scheduled for 8 May!

Lalela students will be performing our own joyful version of ‘Romeo and Juliet’, and our young actors have been spending their Friday afternoons and weekends rehearsing for their big moment on stage.

In addition, Lalela learners in all our Western Cape programmes have been drawing, painting, cutting, gluing, and constructing away to create an array of delightful backdrops and props for the production.

Above: Even the little ones have been involved in making props, like these cuties from Sentinel Primary in Hout Bay.

It was a fitting way to ensure everyone felt included during the April holiday programme, and we think the results so far are too beautiful not to be shared ahead of the performance next month.

Each age group was assigned different props for the various scenes. Some of our younger artists created the magnificent flowers and vine leaves for Juliet’s balcony, swords for the fighting scenes, and masks for the ball.

It was left to the older groups to work on the backdrops as well as an impressive cardboard altar. We are deeply grateful to our friends at the incredible A4 Art Foundation in Cape Town for guiding our learners through the intricate process of making these amazing, detailed pieces. Not only was it a fun creative exercise for our students during the school holidays, but also an unforgettable experience to spend a few days at this exciting venue, being exposed to new artists, art forms and processes in a professional space.

Above: Learners from our Hout Bay programmes were treated to workshops at the A4 Art Foundation, where they got to make these (and more!) incredible props.

The Shakespeare Schools Festival South Africa is open to all Shakespeare lovers and we can’t wait to support our own young thespians on Monday, 8 May. We hope you’ll join us, too!

Please book your tickets here!

* The SSFSA has grown into Africa’s largest youth drama festival event with a purely Shakespeare focus. It’s a non-competitive, fully inclusive environment where school-going youth can build confidence, improve life skills and have their voices heard, acknowledged, encouraged, challenged and respected.

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Your generosity makes it possible for Lalela’s educational arts programmes to create meaningful change that affects thousands of at-risk children in Sub-Saharan Africa.

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2023-04-17T17:11:32+02:00
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