From as early as seven, Olwagen made his debut performance on stage when he was cast in the primary school biblical revue. His passion for the theatre meant dedicating his free time as a boy to after- school drama classes and when he reached High School he majored in the subject. It was there, at the age of 14, when he wrote and directed his first play. Olwagen went on to study Drama at Stellenbosch University after school and won the Fleur Du Cap Most Promising Student Award in 2008 for his portrayal of the “Emcee” in Marthinus Basson’s production of the Kander and Ebb musical Cabaret. Basson became his mentor as Olwagen completed his Honours in Acting and Directing.
Olwagen’s experience with the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown began in 2010 when he made waves with his first professional debut Woza Andries? – an appropriation of the play Woza Albert! Olwagen’s work gained national acclaim and won him a number of awards including the Rosalie van der Gught Award for Best Director. He was invited to stage the play at several venues in Cape Town, Aardklop Festival in Potchefstroom and the Vryfees Festival in Bloemfontein.
As an actor, writer and director, Olwagen has garnered experience in short plays, cabaret, comedy, drama, puppet theatre, musicals and physical theatre. He shares on the challenges saying- “Directing is a more natural process, writing is difficult, it’s a love hate relationship. I find a piece of classic theatre like The Seagull by Chekhov, and I love it so much, but a part of me wants to tailor it for our audience, to use that classical piece as a host, and then tell a version of it, setting it in a South African, or a very specific context, appropriating it.”
Theatre guru Olwagen co-founded a theatre collective with fellow post-graduate students, Polony, in 2012. The collective has staged five successful plays, with the most recent Wessel Pretorius’ Waterpas winning the Kanna for Best Comedy. Olwagen reflects “As a theatre maker, I have a responsibility to make a piece people want to watch but that is also interesting to me, it’s the balance between those two elements.”
When asked about the driving force behind communicating his message through his craft Olwagen says “originality or creativity is actually about the connection point – making a connection between things that normally wouldn’t have been next to each other – almost combining elements, collaging, always finding that balance. I am fascinated about the relationship between high art and low art. I try to make a piece of art that is relevant, and still find some kind of entry point between what you find interesting and what an audience finds interesting. It’s problematic too because it’s not about dumbing it down, it’s about combining those elements, making new hybrids, the high/low art form. We’re making theatre for people and we need to take that into consideration.”
More recently Olwagen has ventured into film. He directed and wrote the screenplay for the short film Toevlug in 2013. The film won Best Screenplay, Best Director and Best Short Film at the KykNet Silwerskermfees. Following this he directed Albee’s Whose Afraid of Virginia Woolf? He is currently working on Chekhov’s The Seagull starring Marius Weyers and Sandra Prinsloo.
Olwagen wrote Dogma in early 2014. The production is an autobiographical account of his parents’ personal struggle with organised religion when his father, a NG Kerk reverend, got diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. Dogma received 6 Kanna Award nominations and went on to win Best Production and Best Debut Production.
“As an artist winning this award means a great deal to me. To share the honour with artists whom I admire immensely, including my mentor Marthinus Basson. It’s a dream come true. The Standard Bank Young Artist Award has launched many careers. Not just locally but internationally. I think it is incredibly important to have a global artistic dialogue and for the longest time the South African voice has been lacking. It looks and feels like it’s starting to change. I think we owe institutions, like Standard Bank, who invest in art, a great deal of debt because where would we be without them? Thank you Standard Bank for this wonderful, life changing platform.”
The recipients of the 2015 Standard Bank Young Artist Award are Christiaan Olwagen (Theatre), Luyanda Sidiya (Dance), Musa Ngqunqwana (Music), Athi- Patra Ruga (Performance Art), Kemang Wa Lehulere (Visual Art) and Nduduzo Makhathini (Jazz).
Christiaan Olwagen’s Awards and Nominations:
Kanna Best Debut Production DOGMA (2014)
Kanna Best Production DOGMA (2014)
Afrikaans Onbeperk vir ‘n Jong Stem (2014)
Fleur du Cap RosalieVanderGught Young Director (2010)
Beeld Aardvark for Groundbreaking work at Aardklop (2012)
Fleur du Cap Most Promising Student EMCEE/CABARET(2008)
National Winner ATKV Tiener Toneelfees (2013 &2012)
Nominated for FIESTA Best New Afrikaans Production (2013)
Nominated for FIESTA Best New Emerging Artist (2013)
Nominated for FIESTA Special Achievement in Musical (2013)
Nominated for FIESTA Best Musical (2013)
Nominated Best Production & Director at Woordfees (2013)
Nominated Best Director at Clover Aardklop Festival (2012)
Nominated Best Production Clover Aardklop Festival (2012)
Nominated: Kanna Awards: Best Emerging Artist (2012)
Nominated 5 Kanna Awards for Vagina Dentata (2012)
Nominated Best Production at Woordfees (2012)
Fraserburg toneelfees: Best Director (2011)
University of Stellenbosch: Best Actor for VALERE in LA BETE
University of Stellenbosch: Best Director (Woza Andries?)
University of Stellenbosch: Best Actor for the EMCEE in CABARET