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Gossip and its discontents in Golgotha

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AFRIKAANS RADIO DRAMA: DIE LËE GRAF

NOT there, any longer. Photograph courtesy http://www.coasttocoast.com.

SOMETHING RATHER EXTRAORDINARY happens to the New Testament narrative around the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ under the pen of Helena Hugo and in an Afrikaans radio drama. Die Lëe Graf tells the story of Easter from the perspective of Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea, and with the sanction of the Bible Society, it is acceptable to the original yarn. However, articulated unabashed in beautiful Afrikaans without ponsy airs and graces or crass theatrical melodrama, the tale hits with a contemporaneity that will rock your sense of time.

Featuring everything from conspiracy theories and community scepticism to gossip shared behind the hands of the unbelievers, the work shimmers with relevance. It is handled with gentle charisma and an account of ritual details such as the washing of a body before its burial. And of course, you know how the story will end, but it is the gutsy texture in between which gives this Easter play the credibility of a Nikos Kazantzakis novel dealing with arguably the best known hero story in western culture, or that of Colm Tóibín’s astonishing play The Testament of Mary.

Without kowtowing to popular tricks, gimmicks or lurid tales of bloodshed and trauma, this is a play worthy of the religious holiday on which it broadcasts. It brings you the biblical tale to deftly told life and weaves between its interstices a healthy dollop of food for thought.

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