Craig Higginson

Craig Higginson (born 1971) is a renowned novelist, playwright and theatre director based in Johannesburg, South Africa. He has written and published several international plays and novels and won and been nominated for numerous awards in South Africa and Britain.

Life

Craig Higginson was born in Harare, Zimbabwe, in 1971 (formerly Salisbury, Rhodesia). Due to the escalating situation during the Rhodesian Bush War, he moved with his mother and sister to Johannesburg in 1976, the year of the Soweto Uprisings. At the age of ten, he attended boarding school in KwaZulu-Natal at Clifton Nottingham Road and Michaelhouse. The Midlands landscape would later feature strongly in his novels and plays. In 1990, in the weeks that saw the release of Nelson Mandela from prison and the unbanning of the African National Congress, Higginson went to the University of the Witwatersrand to study Fine Art, but he later moved to a BA (Honors) in English and European Literature. In 1995, he worked as the Assistant to the director Barney Simon at the Market Theatre. Following Simon’s death, he moved to England, where he would remain for ten years. There he worked at the Young Vic Theatre with Tim Supple and at the Royal Shakespeare Company with Michael Attenborough. He was also a theatre critic for some years at Time Out magazine. He published his first novel, Embodied Laughter, at the age of twenty-six in South Africa and England[1] and adapted Laughter in the Dark for the Royal Shakespeare Company and BBC Radio 3 shortly afterwards. He returned to live and work in South Africa in 2004.[2] Since then Higginson has taught at the University of the Witwatersrand and been the Literary Manager of the Market Theatre. He has published several novels and plays and worked in South African television as a writer.[3] He has a MA in Creative Writing. Craig Higginson is married to the actress Leila Henriques and they have one daughter. He lives in Johannesburg.

Career

Craig Higginson is an internationally acclaimed writer and theatre director. His plays (see listing below) have been produced at the Grahamstown National Arts Festival, the Market Theatre (Johannesburg), the Royal Shakespeare Company (Stratford-upon-Avon), The National Theatre (London), the Finborough Theatre (London), the Trafalgar Studios (London’s West End), the Baxter Theatre (Cape Town), the Traverse Theatre (Edinburgh), Live Theatre Company (Newcastle), the Citizens Theatre (Glasgow), the Stockholm City Theatre, the Salisbury Playhouse, Theatre 503 (London), and Next Theatre (Chicago) amongst others. His plays have been published by Methuen (London), Oberon Books (London) and Wits Press (Johannesburg).[4] Several of his plays are university setworks in South Africa and abroad. His play Dream of the Dog, starring Dame Janet Suzman, transferred to the West End after a sold out run at the Finborough Theatre. Dominic Cavendish in The Telegraph wrote, “The Finborough has a massive, unmissable hit on its hands with Dream of the Dog … An evening fit to grab you by the throat.”[5] Higginson was one of ten playwrights from around the world to be commissioned by the National Theatre, London, for the Connections Festival 2012 to coincide with the Olympics.[6] For this event he wrote the youth play Little Foot. He is currently under commission by The Ink Factory and Headlong to adapt John le Carre’s novel The Mission Song for production in 2018. It will be directed by acclaimed UK director Jeremy Herrin. A new play The Red Door will be produced in South Africa in 2017.[2]

Higginson’s novels include Embodied Laughter (Pan Macmillan), The Hill (Jacana), Last Summer (Picador Africa, Mercure de France), The Landscape Painter (Picador Africa) and The Dream House (Picador Africa, Mercure de France). The Landscape Painter and The Dream House both won the prestigious UJ Award for South African Literature[7] and The Dream House was recently shortlisted for the Sunday Times Barry Ronge Fiction Award.[8]

He has also directed a range of theatre in the United Kingdom and South Africa, including Laughter in the Dark (Royal Shakespeare Company), Blood Wedding (Pegasus Theatre, Oxford), Grimm Tales and The Jungle Book (both Market Theatre, Johannesburg), The Perfect Circle (Wits Theatre) and Dream of the Dog (SAFM, Hilton Arts Festival).[3]

Much of Higginson’s writing explores different perspectives on the truth. His work increasingly explores character, plot and relationships to be sites for ambiguity and dialogue. He uses techniques from the theatre in his fiction such as differing perspectives and dramatic irony to represent the complexity of post-apartheid South African society – extending these themes to a global context in several instances. The Girl in the Yellow Dress, one of his best known works, dramatises a dialogue between Africa and Europe – the ‘Third’ World with the ‘First’ World. He uses his experience of growing up in war-torn Zimbabwe and apartheid and post-apartheid South Africa to speak back at the complacencies of contemporary America and Europe. Mary Corrigall in the Sunday Independent stated, “Higginson has crafted a complex and sophisticated piece of work that will become a new benchmark for South African theatre.”[9]

Higginson has been celebrated by novelists Nadine Gordimer and Andre Brink. Shortly before her death, Gordimer stated about The Dream House, “The Dream House is an open and frank exploration of human life that resonates beyond race. Looksmart is a welcome new kind of character in the constantly evolving reality of African literature.”[10]

And Andre Brink wrote, “Craig Higginson is in the vanguard of the latest and most exciting novelists in South Africa, both robust and sensitive, offering a barometer of the best to be expected from the newest wave of writing in the country”[10]

Works[4]

Original plays

2006: Truth in Translation (co-writer)

2007: Dream of the Dog (published Wits Press 2009 (in At This Stage) and 2015 (in Three Plays), Oberon Books 2010 and 2015 (in Three Plays))

2008: Ten Bush (co-writer with Mncedisi Shabangu)

The Perfect Circle (monologue published in SA Monologues Vol. I, Junket Press 2015)

2009: The Table (co-writer with Sylvaine Strike and the Cast)

2010: The Girl in the Yellow Dress (published Oberon Books 2010, 2015 (in Three Plays))

2012: Little Foot (UK version published by Methuen in National Theatre Connections 2012, and South African version published by Oberon Books).

2015: The Imagined Land (published by Wits Press and Oberon Books under the title Three Plays).

Novels

1998: Embodied Laughter (PanMacmillan, Minerva Press)

2005: The Hill (Jacana)

2010/ 2013/ 2017: Last Summer (Picador Africa, Mercure de France respectively)

2011/2013: The Landscape Painter

2015/ 2016: The Dream House (Picador Africa, Mercure de France respectively)

Adaptations

2000, 2003: Laughter in the Dark (Royal Shakespeare Company, BBC Radio 3)

2005: Lord of the Flies

2008: The Jungle Book

2009: Brer Rabbit (co-writer)

Translations

2016: Maison de rêve (The Dream House, novel)[11]

2017: L’ete dernier (Last Summer, novel)[11]

Selected essays by Craig Higginson

  1. A Triangle of Thought: Side One with Joanna Laurens and Caridad Svich in Performance Research, Vol 9 issue 1.[12]
  2. The State of Writing in SA , The Sunday Independent Books, 11 July 2013[13]

Awards

2004: Laughter in the Dark winner of the Sony Radio Academy Gold Award as a radio play on BBC Radio [4]

2007: Truth in Translation (co-writer) Edinburgh Fringe First, nominated Naledi Award Best South African Play.

2008: Dream of the Dog nominated Naledi Award Best South African Play. Nominated for Naledi Award Best Director, Grimm Tales.

2009: Ten Bush (co-writer) nominated Naledi Award Best South African Play.[14]

2011: Last Summer shortlisted for M-Net Literary Award

The Girl in the Yellow Dress won Naledi Award for Best New South African Play.[15] Nominated for Best South African Play - Fleur du Cap Awards.[16]

Brer Rabbit (co-writer) nominated Naledi Award Best New South African Children’s Production.

Beautiful Creatures (co-writer) won Naledi Award Best New South African Children’s Production.[15]

2012: The Landscape Painter won UJ Award Main Prize for South African Literature in English,[7] shortlisted for M-Net Literary Award.[17]

2016: The Dream House won the UJ Award Main Prize for South African Literature in English, shortlisted for SundayTimes Barry Ronge Fiction Award[8]

The Imagined Land nominated Naledi Award Best New South African Play[18]

Interviews

  1. Turning the Farm Novel Inside Out: Michele Magwood Interviews Craig Higginson on The Dream House, Sunday Times Magazine
  2. 5 Minutes with Author Craig Higginson, Lauren McComb. O-The Oprah Magazine South Africa
  3. Author Interview: Subverting the Farm Novel Tradition, Sue Grant-Marshall- Business Day
  4. Interview with Craig Higginson, Author of The Dream House, Alexander Matthews. Wanted Online
  5. A Rising Star: Craig Higginson, Karina Magdalena Szczurek – Itch- The Creative Journal

Reviews

Novels

  1. Review of The Dream House by Craig Higginson, Beverly Jane Cornelius. KZN Literary Tourism
  2. Kate Turkington Reviews The Dream House by Craig Higginson, Sunday Times Books LIVE
  3. Into The Gloom – Review of The Dream House by Craig Higginson. By Alexander Matthews, Aerodrome
  4. SA book review: The Landscape Painter by Craig Higginson, Marianne Gray, The South African
  5. Review of Maison de Rêve by Craig Higginson in Le Monde
  6. Last Summer by Craig Higginson, Review. Caroline Smart, Artslink

Plays

  1. Dream of the Dog at the Finborough Theatre, Review. Dominic Cavendish, The Telegraph
  2. Dream of the Dog review - British Theatre Guide
  3. Review : The Girl in The Yellow Dress, Exeunt Magazine
  4. Review ; The Girl in The Yellow Dress, Edinburgh Festival
  5. Review of The Imagined Land. Nigel Vermaas, Cue Magazine
  6. Review of The Jungle Book, adapted by Craig Higginson. Chris Thurman

Further reading

Published Essays or citations on the work of Craig Higginson include:

  1. Attwell, David, Attridge, David, The Cambridge History of South African Literature[19]
  2. Blumberg, Marcia, ‘South African theatre beyond 2000: Theatricalising the Unspeakable[20]
  3. Bystrom, Kerry, Democracy at Home in South Africa: Family Fictions and Transitional Culture[21]
  4. Cole, Catherine, 'The Blanket of Reconciliation in South Africa'[22]
  5. Cornwell, Gareth, Klopper, Dirk, McKenzie, Craig, The Columbia Guide to South African Literature in English Since 1945[23]
  6. Homann, Greg (Editor), At This Stage: Plays from Post-apartheid South Africa[24]
  7. Homann, Greg, Maufort, Marc (Editors), New Territories: Theatre, Drama and Performance in Post-apartheid South Africa[25]
  8. Kreuger, Anton A Heritage of Violence: Paradoxes of Freedom and Memory in Recent South African Play-Texts[26]
  9. Middeke, Martin and Schniere, Peter Paul The Methuen Drama Guide to Contemporary South African Theatre[27]
  10. Stobie, Cheryl, 'Postcolonial homosexuality: queer/ alternative fiction after Disgrace'[28]
  11. National Theatre Connections : Monologues.[29]

References

  1. Szczurek, Karina Magdalena. "ITCH - A Rising Star: Craig Higginson". www.itch.co.za. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  2. 1 2 Tourism, KZN Literary. "Craig Higginson". www.literarytourism.co.za. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  3. 1 2 "Craig Higginson | Who's Who SA". whoswho.co.za. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  4. 1 2 3 LUKE. "Craig Higginson (South Africa) - Centre for Creative Arts". www.cca.ukzn.ac.za. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  5. "Dream of the Dog at the Finborough Theatre, review". Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  6. "Little Foot at The Market Theatre".
  7. 1 2 "Artslink.co.za - Craig Higginson wins UJ Main Prize". Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  8. 1 2 "The 2016 Sunday Times Barry Ronge Fiction Prize shortlist". Sunday Times Books LIVE @ Sunday Times Books LIVE. Retrieved 2016-09-07.
  9. "The Girl in The Yellow Dress at The Market Theatre".
  10. 1 2 "Turning the Farm Novel Inside Out: Michele Magwood Interviews Craig Higginson on The Dream House". Sunday Times Books LIVE @ Sunday Times Books LIVE. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  11. 1 2 "Craig Higginson's The Dream House and Last Summer to be Published in France". Pan Macmillan @ Sunday Times Books LIVE. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  12. Higginson, Svich, Laurens (2009). "A Triangle of Thought: Side One". Performance Research. 9 (1).
  13. "The Sunday Independent Books: The State of Writing in SA". sundayindybooks.blogspot.co.za. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  14. "Artslink.co.za - 2008 Naledi Theatre Awards - nominees announced". Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  15. 1 2 "Naledi Theatre Awards - South Africa's Premier Theatre Awards System". www.naleditheatreawards.org.za. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  16. "Fleur du Cap Awards: The nominees". Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  17. "Shortlists Announced for 2012 M-Net Literary Awards". Sunday Times Books LIVE @ Sunday Times Books LIVE. Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  18. reporter, Citizen. "2016 Naledi Theatre awards nominees are...". Retrieved 2016-07-01.
  19. Attwell, Attridge (2012). The Cambridge History of South African Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521199285.
  20. Blumberg, Marcia (2009). "South African theatre beyond 2000: Theatricalising the Unspeakable". Current Writing: Text and Reception in Southern Africa. 21 (1–2).
  21. Bystrom, Kerry. Democracy at Home in South Africa: Family Fictions and Transitional Culture. ISBN 9781137561985.
  22. Cole, Catherine (2012). "The Blanket of Reconciliation in South Africa". Dissidences: Hispanic Journal of Theory and Criticism. 4 (8).
  23. Cornwell, Klopper, MacKenzie (2009). The Columbia Guide to South African Literature in English Since 1945. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 9781868886647.
  24. Homann, Greg (2009). At This Stage: Plays from Post-apartheid South Africa. Johannesburg: Wits University Press.
  25. Homann, Maufort. New Territories: Theatre, Drama and Performance in Post-apartheid South Africa. ISBN 9782875742537.
  26. Krueger, Anton (2014). Syncretic Arenas, Essays on Postcolonial African Drama and Theatre for Esiaba Irobi, edited by Isidore Diala.
  27. Middeke, Schniere, Paul. The Methuen Drama Guide to Contemporary South African Theatre. Methuen. ISBN 9781408176702.
  28. Stobie, Cheryl (2009). "'Postcolonial homosexuality: queer/ alternative fiction after Disgrace'". Current Writing: Text and Reception in Southern Africa. 21 (1–2): 320. doi:10.1080/1013929X.2009.9678324.
  29. National Theatre Connections : Monologues. Methuen. 2016. ISBN 9781472573131.
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