Thuli Dumakude

Thuli Dumakude
Birth name Thuli Daisy Dumakude
Born 1949 (age 6667)
Origin Lamontville, South Africa
Occupation(s) Actress, singer, composer, vocal coach
Instruments Vocals
Associated acts The Lion King, Sarafina

Thuli Daisy Dumakude[1] (born 1949) is a South-African born singer-songwriter and Broadway actress. She is best known for having originated the title role in 1983's Poppie Nongena, for which she received the Laurence Olivier Award for Actress of the Year in a New Play in 1984.[2]

Theater life

Dumakude was born in Lamontville. Before moving to Broadway, she was an actress in South Africa. She performed as KaMadonsela (Lady Macbeth) in a Zulu adaptation of William Shakespeare's Macbeth, a show that also took her to Chicago. She moved to Broadway in the early 1980s, when she was cast as the title character in Elsa Joubert's Poppie Nongena, an English translation of her book Die swerfjare van Poppie Nongena. As Poppie, Dumakude traveled to London, Toronto, Australia and Chicago. She moved to America in 1979 with her husband, Welcome Msomi, where they formed the Izulu Dance Theater.

In 1988, Dumakude was part of the cast of Julie Taymor's Juan Darién: A Carnival Mass.[3]

In 1992, she took part in the creation of the one woman show Buya Africa, for which she was the winner of three AUDELCO Awards in New York for writing, directing and performing.[4] She also worked as a vocal coach for the original Broadway production of Sarafina!.

In 1993, Dumakude took part in the world premiere of Gary and Bécaud's Roza. She performed as Woman and as a stand-by for Madame Bouaffa.[5]

In 1998, she was cast as a replacement for Tsidii Le Loka's Rafiki in The Lion King, being once more directed by Julie Taymor. She stayed in the show for three years, leaving in 2001 and being replaced by Sheila Gibbs.

In 2009 she took part in the revival production of the Duma Ndlovu 1989 hit Sheila's Day, where she performed as Qeduszi. In this production she starred with some other cast members of The Lion King, such as Selloane Nkhela and Futhi Mhlongo.[6]

In 2014 she took part in debbie Tucker Green's generations.

Other work

A singer herself, Dumakude has released two studio albums: 1992's Senzeni na? and 2005's Thina Sobabili, performed with Mthakathi Ema.[7]

In 1987, she helped compose the soundtrack of the drama movie Cry Freedom. She was also part of the soundtrack of the 1992 movie The Power of One.

During the apartheid years, Dumakude traveled the world performing musical concerts to raise awareness about the plight of her fellow South Africans. She worked with the late South African singer Miriam Makeba and sang before President Nelson Mandela at his 80th birthday celebration.

She is often invited to tour schools teaching young people about the role of Africa in the world through music and dance.

Her charitable work includes Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS and the Lion King Companies in America, providing them with beaded merchandise to raise funds for HIV/AIDS. She has organized a group of 20 South African rural women to create beadwork, which is sold to theatre goers in New York to support South African AIDS organizations.

Awards

Year Award Category Nominated Work Result
1983 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Actress in a Play Poppie Nongena Nominated
1984 Laurence Olivier Award Actress of the Year in a New Play Won
1985 Dora Mavor Moore Award Outstanding Performance by a Female in a Principal Role Nominated
N/A Obie Award N/A Won

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.