Signature Stories Issue 12 | Page 8

S: This is your second play featuring an Outsider Artist. What do you find so dramatically compelling about these characters? AF: I’m an Outsider Artist. The Outsider Artist is defined very simply and accurately as someone (right): Athol Fugard at the first rehearsal of Blood Knot, 2012. who has created something significant or beautiful with no formal training in any artistic discipline – (below): Sam Waterson and Liza Colón-Zayas in Have You Seen Us? at Long Wharf Theatre, 2009. as was the case with Helen Martins [whose life and work inspired Fugard’s The Road to Mecca] in the little village of Nieu Bethesda. In the case of Helen, it was sculpture. She crowded a backyard with these amazing statues of wise men and camels and a mythical journey to Mecca; for her that was the source of all light. And she was so motivated by a very specific vision. And when I happened Athol Fugard’s 2012 Residency One season was one of firsts for Signature—the first in the new Pershing Square Signature Center, and the first featuring an international playwright. Here, we look back at highlights from that groundbreaking year. to stumble on Nukain Mabusa, I was immediately In Blood Knot, two brothers— one dark-skinned, the other light—dream of a better future, only to find that the deep racial divisions tearing their country apart extend into their own home. Scott Shepherd and Colman Domingo played the roles originated by Athol Fugard and Zakes Mokae a half century earlier. was two years of college, after which I hitchhiked In a high school classroom, an idealistic teacher challenges apartheid by sponsoring a mixed-race academic quiz team, but the radical upheavals of 1980s South Africa threaten to overtake his vision. Directed by Ruben Santiago-Hudson, My Children! My Africa! posed powerful questions about race, revolution, and the possibility of change. struck by the fact that here again, with no training whatsoever, he painted all the rocks on this one little hill on the farm where he worked as a laborer. The only education I’ve had in terms of college through Africa, because I realized I wasn’t made to be a teacher or an academic. My life had to be about words on paper. So being an Outsider Artist in a sense myself, I naturally respond to somebody like Nukain Mabusa or Helen Martins. S: Act One of the play takes place in the early 1980s, near the end of Mabusa’s life. Why did you decide to set Act Two several decades later? AF: When I first started thinking about Nukain Mabusa, I imagined a play that just dealt with the living Mabusa. But then my partner, Paula Fourie, said, “You know, ‘81 is fine, that’s a very important moment because the whole of South Africa was under a state of emergency, and we lived within the confines of that until ‘91. But you’re not