Signature Stories Vol. 17 | Page 16

For more than 50 years, Legacy Playwright Athol Fugard has challenged the world’s conscience with his incisive portraits of individuals grappling with the intimate repercussions of systemic injustice. L EGACY P R O G RA M The Safest Place in the World AN INTERVIEW WITH Athol Fugard “How one human being deals with another remains the most critical fact in history,” he’s said of his dramatic worldview, “You can kill a man or you can bless him.” This distinct blend of the personal and political first brought him international acclaim with his groundbreaking 1961 play Blood Knot, and continues to motivate his work to the present day. It’s also a quality never more apparent than in “Master Harold” … and the boys, which Fugard has described as one of his most “nakedly autobiographical” plays. Athol Fugard in Port Elizabeth. Photo by Paula Fourie. 15 Harold Athol Lanigan Fugard was born in Middleburg, South Africa, in 1932. When he was three years old, his family moved to Port Elizabeth, the industrial city that would provide the setting for much of his work. There, Fugard’s mother ran a 16-room boarding house and later the St. George’s Park Tea Room, where “Master Harold” … and the boys is set. From his father—a “gentle but weak” jazz pianist permanently consigned to crutches due to a childhood injury—the young Fugard developed a love for both music and stories. Over the years, Fugard indulged his growing passion for books at the Port Elizabeth Library, where he would hide his favorite novels amidst the theology section lest someone else check them out before he was able. He also developed a lifelong interest in the world around him, whether it was the microbes he watched with fascination under his childhood microscope or the men and women he passed each day on Main Street and who would one day come to populate his plays. Fugard later described the relationship between “that one little corner of South Africa” and the inspira- tion for his characters: “I can stand on a street corner in Port Elizabeth, look at anybody and…know where they come from, where they’re going. I have a feel of the textures of their life.” As Fugard—then known as “Hally”—grew into a young man, South Africa began implementing its brutal racial regime of apartheid, or “separateness.” Fugard experienced firsthand the privileges conferred upon him by virtue of his white skin. He also learned from his mother, an Afrikaner “gifted with a natural sense of justice,” to question the profound inequities he witnessed daily. At the same time, he developed lifelong friendships with two of the black men who worked for his mother, Sam Semela and Willie Malopo. Semela in particular became a father-figure to the young boy. On rainy days in the tea room, the two discussed literature, science, philosophy, and sex. When Fugard found himself humiliated by his father’s public intoxication, it was Semela who cheered him up by constructing a make-shift kite. One day, however, after a rare argument Fugard spat in Semela’s face. This moment haunted Fugard for decades—and came to epitomize the confusion, helplessness, and misplaced anger experienced by Hally in “Master Harold” … and the boys. Fugard crafted “Master Harold” … and the boys from these myriad boyhood memories. First performed at Yale Repertory Theatre in 1982, the play has become one of the most performed, read, and taught plays in the world. It’s been seen twice on Broadway, across the U.S., in London, South Africa, and around the globe. Longtime Fugard collaborators Zakes Mokae and John Kani are just a few of the prominent actors to have brought the play’s characters to life. Now, it is being given a new production at Signature, directed by Fugard himself. Before rehearsals began, he spoke with Literary Associate Nathaniel French about the play’s inspiration, the challenges of the initial production, and returning to the rehearsal room 34 years later. 16