Mariam Ndagire: A Full Career in Theatre, Music and Film
It is hard to remember the first encounter with Mariam Ndagire as an artist. It was probably...
Read MorePosted by Kaggwa Andrew Mayiga | 4th Apr 2024 | Acting, Essay, Uganda
It is hard to remember the first encounter with Mariam Ndagire as an artist. It was probably...
Read MorePosted by Kaggwa Andrew Mayiga | 16th Feb 2024 | Review, Theatre and Politics, Uganda
John Ssegawa’s Golden Calabash, Ekimala Ebita Embuga opened at the National Theatre in Kampala running during the Christmas season from 23rd to 26th December 2023. The theatre spent 2023 trying to find solutions to its...
Read MorePosted by Kaggwa Andrew Mayiga | 4th Feb 2024 | Directing, Essay, Uganda
Phillip Luswata – “the one from Uganda” The first time I learned about Phillip Luswata was on a black and white TV. Then, he was a guest on the South African evening daily soap, Egoli: Place of Gold. His cameo had received such...
Read MorePosted by Kaggwa Andrew Mayiga | 4th Jan 2024 | Festivals, News, Uganda
If there is one thing many theatre practitioners around the world seem to agree on, it is that the art seems threatened. Alternative entertainment options like cinema, television, bars, and the internet pose a threat to it. Most...
Read MorePosted by Kaggwa Andrew Mayiga | 28th Dec 2023 | Review, Theatre and Gender, Uganda
Nabaggala Lillian Maximilian has outdone herself by covering a lot of ground recently. A few months ago, she premiered a dance theatre production, Nambi, and exhibited a short film, Faded in Berlin. And barely a month after the...
Read MorePosted by Kaggwa Andrew Mayiga | 20th Nov 2023 | Festivals, News, Uganda
The Kampala International Theatre Festival (KITF) will open on November 22 in Uganda. This will be...
Read MorePosted by Kaggwa Andrew Mayiga | 29th Oct 2023 | Directing, Essay, Uganda
Leonard Okware has been making theatre companies at the national theatre in Uganda look good for the past 39 years. Theatre lighting design has a major influence on setting the tone and mood of any theatre production. It is what...
Read MorePosted by Trevor Mukholi | 22nd Aug 2023 | Adaptation, Review, Uganda
When considering Okot p’Bitek’s perspective on African tradition, it becomes evident that change is inevitable. If African tradition is lived in the midst of the battle of life, then Lawino is not the character to focus on, as she refuses to acknowledge the possibility of change. Similarly, Ocol negates everything about himself to accommodate the other, but his transformation is ultimately revealed to be superficial. Opio and Clementine, however, require a more nuanced examination, as their experiences shed light on the agency of individuals in this exchange of aesthetics and epistemology.
Read MorePosted by The African Theatre Magazine | 15th May 2021 | Gambia, Kenya, Malawi, News, Nigeria, South Africa, Theatre and Gender, Tunisia, Uganda, Zimbabwe
In most parts of Traditional Africa, theatre was a prerogative of the woman. Women were the...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 21st Dec 2020 | Essay, Theatre and Politics, Uganda
When Abafumi went on what would be their last tour, Robert Serumaga, who had not gone with his...
Read MorePosted by Sylver Kyagulanyi | 18th Oct 2020 | Essay, Theatre and Politics, Uganda
The entertainment or creative arts industry is as old as humanity. It is one of the ways through...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 13th Sep 2020 | Covid-19, Essay, Uganda
Moses Tumwebaze is a full-time actor in the Ugandan Theatre industry. He is a member of The...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 17th Aug 2020 | Interview, Transcultural Collaborations, Uganda, United Kingdom
John Rwoth-Omack is a Ugandan-born theatre artist, bred and based in the UK. A lover of African...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 13th Jul 2020 | Essay, Playwriting, Uganda
If you want to understand a nation and its people, look no farther than its art. Through a...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 29th Jun 2020 | News, Theatre for Young Audiences, Uganda
STEM, that Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics curricula obsession at the expense of...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 6th Jun 2020 | Interview, Playwriting, Uganda
Angella Emurwon is a playwright, theatre director and filmmaker. The name ‘Emurwon’ means seer,...
Read MorePosted by James Montaño | 4th Jun 2020 | Interview, Playwriting, Uganda
Lloyd Lutara (LL) is a multi-form storyteller writing and producing theatre, film, fiction and...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 4th May 2020 | Musical Theatre, Review, Uganda
It is a full house. Full house on a Friday? That’s rare here. Anyway, we’re almost packed like...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 23rd Apr 2020 | Acting, Interview, Uganda
The name ‘Rashida Namulondo’ will easily roll off any random tongue in the performing arts...
Read MorePosted by Ian Kiyingi Muddu | 17th Apr 2020 | Essay, Theatre and Art, Uganda
Rose Mbowa is an indubitable doyenne in Uganda’s theatre. At Makerere University, an ivy league of...
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