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Larger than life, Winnie Mandela turns opera heroine

PRETORIA — Her voice soaring over the stage, a soprano captures the rebellious, violent passion of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, in an opera devoted to the former wife of South African icon Nelson…


PRETORIA — Her voice soaring over the stage, a soprano captures the rebellious, violent passion of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, in an opera devoted to the former wife of South African icon Nelson Mandela."I know I will be demonised and hated in my day, but there is no other way," she proclaims, as the orchestra thunders from the pit. "With our rubber tires and our boxes of matches, we will liberate this land."Fist raised, standing in army fatigues before a cardboard township, singer Tsakane Maswanganyi rehearses her role ahead of the world premier of "Winnie the Opera", which opens April 28 at the State Theatre in Pretoria.The story begins in 1997, with Madikizela-Mandela testifying before the Truth and Reconciliation, the panel tasked with uncovering political crimes committed during white-minority apartheid rule.She's under the spotlight for the excesses of her young male entourage, the Mandela United Football Club, blamed for at least 18 deaths in the township of Soweto during the violent end the to the 1980s.The scene is a snapshot of the life of a woman harassed by the police, banished far from her home, held in solitary and repeatedly tortured, while her husband languished in an apartheid prison."Still she stands up and fights for what she believes," said co-producer and librettist Mfundi Vundla."That's inspiring. It makes for a great character to explore in any form," he said. "She has elements of Mother Courage, also Carmen."Her tumultuous life has already turned her into the heroine of a TV-movie on BBC and the Hollywood film "Winnie" starring Jennifer Hudson, currently in post-production.But composer Bongani Ndodana-Breen says only opera can capture the sheer scale of her life."Opera is the language of grand gesture. It can be a nuanced language, but it has grandeur in it," he said."Winnie Mandela is iconic, she is the most famous black woman in Africa of the 20th century," he said. "The statements she made, that itself would be lost in a piece of theater. Those powerful incendiary words, which a

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