When and where was the playwright of Sarafina born? Mbongeni Ngema (10 May 1955 – 27 December 2023) was a South African writer, lyricist, composer, director, choreographer and theatre producer best known for Sarafina, was born in Verulam, KwaZulu-Natal (near Durban). He started his career as a theatre backing guitarist. He wrote the multi-award-winning musical Sarafina! and co-wrote the multi-award-winning Woza Albert! He was known for plays that reflected the spirit of black South Africans under Apartheid. Ngema was once married to actress Leleti Khumalo, who received a 1988 Tony Award nomination for Best Actress in a Musical for Sarafina! (and who also starred in its 1992 film adaptation), as well as starring in the leading role in South Africa’s first Oscar-nominated film Yesterday. Early life Born in Verulam and raised in the heart of Zululand, at a place called Nhlwathi, in Hlabisa, (the area from which DJ Tira also originates) Mbongeni Ngema distinguished himself as a renowned playwright, screenwriter and librettist. Ngema prided himself on being from the lineage of the warriors Mbandama and Sigcwelegcwele kaMhlekehleke of the Ngema clan who led the Ingoba Makhosi regiment, a pivotal regiment that defeated the British armies at the Battle of Isandlwana in the Anglo-Zulu war, on 22 January 1879. Career Ngema was best known as the writer of the internationally acclaimed and award-winning musical Sarafina!, which was nominated for five Tony Awards, and later nominated for the prestigious Grammy Awards. The musical won 11 NAACP Image Awards enjoyed a two-year run on Broadway, toured the US, Europe, Australia and Japan and was later adapted into a feature film [3] starring Whoopi Goldberg, Leleti Khumalo and Miriam Makeba. Ngema had a string of blockbusters that included his award-winning and internationally revered Woza Albert, Township Fever (1990), which travelled from the Market Theatre to the USA’s Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Majestic Theatre; Mama (1995), Asinamali (1996), Maria Maria (1997), The Zulu – the musical (1999), 1906 Bhambada The Freedom Fighter, The House of Shaka (2005) and The Lion of the East (2006). In 1995, Ngema created Sarafina II, a musical addressing the AIDS epidemic in South Africa, which debuted in early 1996.[4] In 1997, Ngema was appointed a visiting lecturer at the University of Zululand to teach his unique artistic technique and subsequently produced the first CD released by the university’s music department. In 1998, Ngema was inducted in the New York “Walk of Fame” in front of the Lucille Lortel Theatre in Manhattan, New York City, as one of the revered writers of the 21st century. In 2001 during the African Renaissance festival, his name was engraved on the entrance of the City Hall in Durban alongside those of Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo, Miriam Makeba and other heroes of the liberation struggle. As a librettist, Ngema wrote the musical soundtrack for Sarafina – the movie (1992) and produced the movie’s soundtrack alongside Quincy Jones. He composed several music albums, including the famous and locally loved album Stimela SaseZola. Ngema wrote and arranged numerous songs as well as arranging music for artists such as Michael Bolton. He was also one of the vocal arrangers for The Lion King, Disney’s animated film. For this, Ngema received a multi-platinum award for sales in excess of 6 million copies. He subsequently won a Grammy Award for the movie adaptation. “Woza My Fohloza”, the new millennium song, and several albums of his musicals are on Ngema’s librettist list. In 2003, he was appointed artistic director for the 2003 Cricket World Cup and in 2004 appointed one of the organisers of the tenth anniversary celebrations of South Africa’s democracy. He was entrusted by the KZN Department of Arts, Sports and Recreation for establishing and managing the recording studio and record company, The KZN Music House is managed by his company Committed Artists. Several books and academic work have been written about Mbongeni Ngema and his celebrated works, including Nothing Except Ourselves by Laura Jones (USA), The Best of Mbongeni Ngema, The man and his music by Isabel Cooke (RSA), An investigation into the creation and interpretation in Mbongeni Ngema’s intra-cultural Theatre – N. O. Sabelo (UKZN Thesis). Ngema tapped into his own richly-nurtured background of traditional story-telling, learned as a small child from his great-grandmother, to create his spell-binding one-man show, which melded memories of his childhood, spent in the heart of Zululand, with the wealth of his heritage, bringing vividly to life the historic panoply of the Zulu nation. Featuring Mbongeni Ngema participated in a song called “Take This Song”, recorded with the reggae band Third World. Mbongeni Ngema released Freedom is Coming Tomorrow (Remix) with Emtee, Saudi, Gigi Lamayne, Tamarsha, Reason, Blaklez & DJ Machaba Third World.