A philosophical Greg Norman returns this week to the Augusta course that broke his heart GOLF:Bill Elliott BY any of the usual standards applied to this varied life, Greg Norman should have been contemplating his arrival at Augusta in Georgia this week with all the rampant anticipation of a politician approaching his current mistress to […]
CRICKET: Pat McDermott MUCH has been said about the brittleness of the South African top order. It has assumed the proportions of a national crisis in the bars where the followers of cricket dissect the manner in which the touring Australians have shown such disdain for the best this country has to offer. It is […]
RUGBY: Mick Cleary RESPECT is not a concept which the Afrikaner has traditionally handed out with any great generosity to his fellow men. It took the profound dignity of Nelson Mandela, not to mention many years of incarceration, finally to prick the nation’s conscience into doing the decent thing. The British Lions have chosen a […]
SOCCER:Julian Drew FEW people gave Congo much of a chance against Clive Barker’s African Champions in last Sunday’s crucial world cup qualifier in Pointe Noire. Bafana Bafana were unbeaten in seven games and after holding the seeded Zambians in Lusaka, they were favoured to head the group and book their place in next year’s showpiece […]
The Lions squad has its flaws but the team isn’t clawless and there is no room for Springbok complacency RUGBY:Steve Morris SOMEHOW, in the next six or seven weeks, this country has to shake off the complacency that is starting to echo around the prospect of the arrival of the British Lions. There is the […]
JKL Walker THE FATAL ENGLISHMAN: THREE SHORT LIVES by Sebastian Faulks (Vintage, R57,95) AFTER the success of his Great War novel Birdsong, Sebastian Faulks has turned aside from fiction to present, in The Fatal Englishman, a biographical triptych of three young men of apparent brilliance and promise who met early deaths in mysterious and tragic […]
HAZEL FRIEDMAN reports on the controversial Section 13 clause and an outcry over control of state arts funding CULTURAL workers this week lashed out at the Department of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology (DACST) for trying to hijack the independence of the newly established National Arts Council (NAC), the non-governmental statutory body that holds the […]
JAZZ ON CD: Gwen Ansell THERE’S a crop of South African jazz releases, distributed by indie Sheer Sounds, this month. Paul Hanmer’s Trains To Taung is the pick, and not just because of the super-stylish liner notes printed on Chinese funeral money. Pianist Hanmer has taken a very different approach to creating an African sound […]
The latest SA/UK gospel choir collaboration is a sign of the rebirth of interest in local choral music. GWENANSELL looks at the state of songs of praise HIT parade trends may come and go, but South Africa’s love affair with gospel seems to go on forever. Its latest expression is an incandescent vocal collaboration between […]
CINEMA: Andrew Worsdale IAN KERKHOF is South Africa’s most radical and prolific film-maker. He has been resident in Amsterdam since the mid-Eighties, when he went into exile and worked for the Dutch anti- apartheid movement and South African War Resistance until 1986. Since then he’s made over 20 films, all of which push the envelope […]