Pieter-Dirk Uys: Eish! Still a Struggle.

Article from Daily Maverick by  J Brooks Spector

We meet in a sunny, bustling eatery in the near-in suburbs. Pieter-Dirk Uys is back in Johannesburg again, preparing for performances in May at the Theatre on the Square. The man has already been an institution for 40 years and somehow his humour, his energy and his moral outrage never seem to flag. Today is no exception. By J BROOKS SPECTOR.

Speaking about his upcoming show, this time around, it seems a kind of theatrical interpretation of Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle – if the audience touches it, it changes. He explains that, traditionally, in his shows, he starts out wearing a jacket and trousers and ends up in a dress – a sly, sideways nod of recognition for one of his most enduring and best-loved stage characters – Evita Bezuidenhout. Evita is his alter ego, the former Ambassatrix to Bopetikosweti, who has, through all these years, spoken those uncomfortable, awkward truths to power in the most politically incorrect possible way.

But this time, Uys explains, the show is different. In was in an earlier version at the Grahamstown National Arts Festival last year, then it was performed in Cape Town, and now, finally, it is about to go on stage in Johannesburg. It is a risky project. Stacked on stage are 16 boxes. Each contains a different set of costumes and props while the accompanying stories and routines are locked away in Uys’s own fertile mind. As he describes the arrangement, he has three-and-a-half hours of show material potentially available on stage. But, it is up to the audience to decide which ones are picked and that he will perform – and in what order. Beyond picking the material, the audience is making Uys’s choices for him – and thus influencing how the show’s different elements will actually relate to each other for the 90 minutes he will perform each night. And each night will be different, depending on what the audience selects.

Then he explains how the name for this show came about. He was speaking on the telephone with someone at a theatre in Pretoria and he was having increasing difficulty getting his interlocutor to understand who was calling. The conversation began, “Hello, this is Pieter… P-I-E-T-E-R; Dirk… D-I-R-K; Uys…” “Eh? Who?” “Uys, U-Y-S…” And then from the other side slowly came: “Eish!” This simple bit of word play is truly funny when he tells it, but it is almost impossible to capture this precise delivery in print. It is a strange mix of crisp, lightly Afrikaans-accented English, a dash of RP, and more than a hint of an arched eyebrow and an eye rolled heavenward. To truly appreciate much of what Uys actually does with his voice and then render it in print would require a lexicon of diacritical marks for all of his many inflections, sustained phonemes and subtle pauses. Even Victor Borge’s audible phonetic punctuation wouldn’t be much help here.

We talk about how he achieves his characterisations. He explains that the face is important. When he does (or did) Margaret Thatcher, he sought what he called the lavatory face with its accompanying, extended vowels, a kind of “Ouuuwwwh!” Actually, he says, he prefers not to do actual current politicians. “I don’t want to come across as a second-hand Leon Schuster, he does that much better,” he says. Rather he likes to set out a more protean character, but one locked in a politically charged situation set up by the politicians. Having said that, he must surely realise, too, that his legions of fans still live for just one more repetition of PW Botha and his finger wag – even if the old “Groot Krokodil” has long since vanished from the political scene.

Uys adds that for him, doing current politicians means that “The red line of racism is close to the toe of my shoe. I have to be very careful not to cross that line.” And doing some scenes – and some people – as points of ridicule may well provoke the precisely wrong reaction on the part of people who have come to the theatre for the first time in their lives for his show.

The word “kaffir”, he says, is a particularly difficult word to deal with successfully – is a very fraught word for him. Yes, it fitted into a much older sketch with origins back in 1984 that portrayed an angry racist kicking and excoriating a black man on his bicycle. Now it has been updated, but the kicker in 2013 is that the racist has become the gardener for a black professional woman, a university professor. But the backdrop for the sketch is now more complicated. “I just don’t use that word in that sketch.” Pausing for a moment, Uys adds a verbal footnote. On the other hand, a word like that should be used so often that its power to hurt is drained right out of it. As a comic, a satirist and deliberate mirror to his society, the meaning and power of words remains central to his work and he wants to draw upon that power as a weapon against such words.

Speaking of symbols, he speaks about the DA’s appropriation of that still-politically potent old South African flag, with its orange, white and blue horizontal stripes, now married to the current ANC emblem as a weapon against the majority party by the DA. Uys is theatrically angry about this usage. Not solely because of what it means or says, but rather because he adds, “They’re using my material! We’ve really got to deflate that…. It plays into the racism of the other side…. Excuse me. I have had that in my show for several years already! I have just written a letter for the newspapers…. They either have to acknowledge it and pay me royalties – or stop using it.” Is he serious about this, or is it a clever way to take the sting out of yet one more artefact of the rough and tumble of politics? Or perhaps both?

On the other hand, he worries that “Racism is back and it is in the hands of the party I fought for and I am very upset about this…. Of course at least we have freedom of expression, but the day we are compromised we are in trouble…. The day he signs that [the secrecy bill] into law and I criticise the government, I have revealed a state secret.” That, in turn, provokes a recollection of the Apartheid-era Publications Control Board, Uys giggles for just a moment and says, “Ah yes, my old PR department…. But the thing I do worry about now in our democracy is self-censorship…. And I am coming across it everywhere.”

We turn to the decline in the quality of education in the country. Uys has been a strong advocate of high-quality schooling (and honest and thorough sex education) for years. But he says, now, “I’ve stopped being exasperated, it’s too exhausting…. But I still go to schools with my programmes, but it is no longer just about HIV/Aids.” He tells pupils, that yes, “Sex is nice, but it is like swimming in a sea full of sharks. Now let me tell you about the sharks…” He then remembers, that when he was at a school six months ago, he was speaking to the Grade 12 pupils, men really, and “they tell me, I don’t use a condom, I take a shower” – it’s that still-lingering echo of an infamous presidential statement and an excuse. “I laugh but the students are no longer so friendly as before.”

He shuffles around with some papers that have been sitting in front of him all this time and he says, “I have a novel – coming out next month, I’m very excited about it.” The book jacket blurb begins, “Panorama – Robben Island – right on the edge of the world like a full stop at the end of a long sentence called Africa” and the book begins in 1987.

Is he ever fearful he has been overtaken by events? He replies that he tries hard to imagine the worst possible things and then he is never surprised by anything because he has already imagined much, much worse than what actually is happening.

Is it time for some of Uys’s older characters to be retired?  “Oh no, Evita has lots of time to go still before the retirement home, she’s gone to Luthuli House instead, which is almost the same thing.” We reminisce about his introduction of the Jacob Zuma puppet with the trademark showerhead during the previous national election. Uys explains that he now has a new puppet, a Julius Malema doll – the little child who was crying in an alley whom Evita has adopted. Uys warns not to write Julius Malema off just yet – because there is something there still. There is more about Malema in a few minutes.

As far as new characters and situations go, Uys says some characters have been with him for decades – and audiences have come to know them and watch how they have changed and evolved. And as far as the Mandela family’s troubles? Well, he has added a Mandela granddaughter. “Free Mandela from his family!” he says. And of Winnie? “She’s okay as long as she takes her medication…. And my new project for the election next year will be, ‘Nkandla - Don’t cry for me Nkandlakosweti!’”

Turning to the country’s actual political future, Uys says, “I see an Arab Spring.” He argues that if he were a young South African who votes for the first time next year, given the poor quality of their education and governance, he scowls and says, “I would take a stone…. I can’t tell you how perplexed I am by the generosity and patience of this generation so far. But do not underestimate their anger…. They really and truly want their dreams to come true. They are not interested in what their parents went through…. And that’s why I miss Malema because his voice was important to listen to from that side of the ANC. That fact that he did it wrong is not relevant, he focused on things that needed to be focused on.”

Even so, if we have a good election we’ll be fine for the next 10 years, he adds. Good? Good equals a strong turnout, a good of balance of choice, little racism in the campaigning and the DA focusing on all the areas of society that did fight Apartheid, not falling back on things like that snide use of the old flag. “That’s my job – not theirs!”

So who is leading by example right now? Uys says that Trevor Manuel is one (until he trips over his own halo), Lindiwe Sisulu is one, the minister of health is another, and Graca Machel is a great Southern African. He pauses at Mamphela Ramphele. He says that he just hopes she is doing a huge amount of work to build credibility with the people who matter. As for the larger shape of the country’s future politics, Uys says he actually hopes for a split in the ANC – that would help the country’s democracy mature, along with an alliance of the opposition parties.

The conversation turns to Jacob Zuma. Surely it must be hard to imitate him? We agree the best thing might just be to have a large stone on stage sitting on a chair – he, it, never says anything. Then he adds, “Of course I always like to think of him like a chameleon, with those eyes.” And as for the new fad of blaming everything on Apartheid? As one of Uys’ other characters, Bambi Kellerman, says, “That’s like blaming the mini skirt on Adolph Hitler!” But even after having said that, Uys adds a footnote that of course it is true with middle aged people and above that the emotional legacy of Apartheid lingers into the present. For example, he explains how at his Boerassic Park venue in Darling, there are some of those old racial segregation signs – Whites Only/Blacks Only – and the older generation continues to be flummoxed by them when they encounter them at the venue’s various doorways.

Thinking further about the country’s political shape, Uys adds with characteristic bluntness, “There was a moment when I thought the Malema-factor would split the party at Mangaung, but Zuma was brilliant… and he’s doing it the African way, he’s creating his own tribal homeland…. And if you cross him? Malema was bankrupted in a month. The rest of the Cabinet should have been bankrupted in four years and they’re still in their jobs. The majority of the voters are poor. They will be poorer still by the time of the election. If Malema formed his own party and called it the ‘real ANC’, he could be elected.” It could happen, he insists.

Are there things he won’t touch in his performances? “There are things I should do like religion. I’m courting the area but it is not what is dangerous for me, I don’t want to lose the audience. But there are ways of doing it.”

Then he tells a wonderful story about his father who was actually on the Apartheid-era’s censor board. Uys says that after a few weeks of doing this work, the elder Uys met up with his son and told him to make fun of the censors because they were idiots, they didn’t know what they’re doing, they were destroying the films they dealt with.

But then he offered still more advice. His father had been dismayed by some of the language Pieter-Dirk had been using on stage and so he told his son that he didn’t have to use all those words. Instead, he said, “Don’t put your finger in my eye, tickle me behind my ear and eventually my eye will find your finger.” Being on stage you have tremendous power, Uys explains.

Finally, returning to current politics, what about the DA’s efforts to expand its political heritage back 200 years and simultaneously airbrush out some of its history? Of all the unexpected comments, Uys proffers ex-party leader Tony Leon’s advice not to fight this coming election on the basis of the past. As far as the DA’s sudden embrace of Nelson Mandela, Uys says that of course he too embraces Mandela, “we all embrace Mandela”. But this must mean that Uys believes this is simply not enough to win the hearts of the born-frees.

As we wind up lunch, he notes he once learned that Madiba, when he was president, had on his desk a framed picture of the president embracing Evita in full costume. Now that’s something we’ll bet most readers didn’t know before reading this article. DM

Pieter-Dirk Uys is at the Theatre on the Square in Sandton from 6-25 May.

Article from Daily Maverick by  J Brooks Spector

Evita's Bossie Sikelela

Evita — acclaimed chef and icon of the nation — presents her recipes for delicious dishes gathered on travels in South Africa and around the world.
From the Cape to Limpopo, the West Coast to our president's home province, come divine platefuls: guineafowl with prunes, potroasted quail, quince bredie and orange duck. Pofadders, oxtail and even sweet and sour warthog.

Evita reinvents old favourites, and deliciously prepares veldkos — who would have thought of waterblommetjie chicken or dandelion salad for the dinner table?

Each recipe has been tested and vetted, and they're all ridiculously easy to make.

My liewe aarde, just paging through the book is a mouth-watering experience, with all these pictures taken on her visits. First there was Kossie Sikeleta, now there is Bossie. A new culinary front hits your table.

Evita's Bossie Sikelela costs R175 including VAT and is available from selected leading bookshops as well as Evita se Perron.

All royalties go to The Darling Trust
www.thedarlingtrust.org

An Audience With Pieter-Dirk Eish

26 February -10 March – Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre, Durban

In our world of reality TV, breaking news, 400 television channels to surf through, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and SMS, choice has become the cherry on the cake of entertainment. Pieter-Dirk Uys has prepared four hours of performance choices to present nightly at the Baxter Theatre from 29th October on the road to Mangaung.

Every night a different show of 90 minutes, because the audience decides what they want. It could be Evita Bezuidenhout as a new ANC cadre, or Nowell Fine celebrating forty years in the public eye. Maybe a Malema in Gucci or chains, some Zumas married or not, one or two Mandelas, a Tutu, a PW or a Pik. What about Mother Theresa making sure that Jesus will only return if the ANC stays in power? Even a chorus line of former NP leaders chanting the old National anthem. A virtual Ha-Ha-History Channel. With the choice of fifteen boxes on stage, a member of the audience chooses a number. Out come characters and an entertainment that could be either a drama, a comedy, a farce or a shocking expose. Every box holds a familiar secret! Every laugh truly South African!

An Audience with Pieter-Dirk EISH!   

Meet those in our Rainbow Nation who will help us laugh at our fear of an uncharted future. Pieter-Dirk Uys presents a celebration of free speech, an orgy of laughing at sacred cows, an embrace of being in a relatively healthy young democracy. Come and enjoy it all while it lasts. A different show each night, depending on the choices of the audience, might force future thought-police to buy tickets for each show, just in case a State Secret is let out of a box!

From a review from National Arts Festival Grahamstown Thursday 5 July 2012
An Audience with Pieter-Dirk Eish!  by Charl Blignaut

“ The 66-year-old satirist Pieter-Dirk Uys strolled onto the Monument’s main stage last night in a black leather jacket to perform to a packed-to-capacity audience of aging white groupies and throngs of school kids. He left to a standing ovation. The reason for the love had less to do with his performance  and more to do with his heartfelt use of his platform to deliver a very particular message in between the impersonations that have cast him as an obstreperous national treasure.

Uys offered the audience the opportunity to structure his routine by selecting numbered boxes. Each contained a skit or character. The first box selected was empty. It was a one-liner about the ANC’s service delivery. After that we got Bambi Kellermann, the erotic and uninhibited younger sister of Evita Bezuidenhout, based in Germany. Bambi did sex education. She did contraceptives and penis size and bananas and tricked the audience into laughing while demonstrating how to apply a condom: “the wrong way round and it looks like a Basotho hat”.

Uys then took the audience back to 1975 and his Grahamstown presentation of Strike Up the Banned to remind us of when he was not allowed to say the things he was saying now. Then we got Nowell Fine, the mother ship of kugels, who disliked apartheid even more than she disliked blacks, has aged. She is bewildered and defiant. But she loves her ANC more than she loves her ex-pats. We got Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela and Kgalema Motlanthe and Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma in sunglasses and a shower cap. But really what we got was a deeply concerned Uys.

He is concerned about Aids. He is concerned about dwindling theatre audiences and about the threat to our freedom of expression in light of The Spear. He is particularly concerned about the Protection of State Information bill. Drawing to a close, he shared that the festival had asked him to present something he had never shown before. He said yes, “if you can give me nine months.” Jokes aside, the numbered boxes, he declared, are a secret weapon. They are there to confuse the secret police this time next year. They will have to keep coming to the show to see which boxes are opened that night as each box contains a national secret – “because it’s our right to know”. As an artist who has been banned, censored and threatened in the past, he suggests history may be repeating itself.
“If I do these jokes, will I go to jail next year?”

'An Audience with Pieter-Dirk Eish!' was funny and camp the whole way through – and it was also deadly serious.”

RSG broadcasts live from Evita se Perron
Friday 12 October 2012
Johan Rademan interviews Tannie Evita

Audience enjoying breakfast & the show
Tannie Evita and Johan Rademan have a quick dance Johan interviews Dianne le Roux from
Darling Tourism about Darlings Butter Museum

Johan interviews floor manager, Rhonda Vlotman Johan interviews Pieter-Dirk Uys

Johan interviews Nick Pentz from Groote Post Wine Estate Johan with Anna Cleophas: Trustee of The Darling Trust

Johan interviews the i Africa Drama Queens before they tell their story

Jo-Anne Delport sings her latest songs

Johan interviews Omnia Grobler from the Darling Backpackers Evita, Johan and the staff at Evita se Perron
Uys’s brilliant take on the
South African political scene
Estelle Sinkinns - The Witness, 14 March 2012

ON a stage bare of everything except a screen plastered with newspapers, two boxes and the old and new South African­ flags, Pieter-Dirk Uys kicks off his latest show in the guise of one Adolf Hitler who has popped up from hell to see what’s happening in South Africa.

Uys likens the German führer to Julius­ Malema and reminds the audience that, like JuJu, Hilter too was once on the lunatic fringe and that simply by forming his own party, appealing to the poorest in society and promising them everything, he came to power.

The message: it’s not safe to write off Malema, even if he’s been expelled from the African National Congress.

Adapt or Fly is being staged 30 years after Uys debuted his one-man show, Adapt or Die, the title of which was sparked by the then Prime Minister P. W. Botha’s words “adapt or die”, which he said while proposing revisions of apartheid policies before the 1981 general election.

The new show’s title, meanwhile, was inspired by a spokesperson for the ANC Youth League who said that if whites did not like the fact that the youth would take over South Africa, they could “adapt or fly”.

In Adapt or Die, Uys used his show to tackle the apartheid regime and its architects, and during the evening some of those old faces — the Bad, the Bold and the Bastards, as Uys calls them — made an appearance, including B. J. Vorster, Hendrik Verwoerd, P. W. Botha and F. W. de Klerk.

The satirist also shares anecdotes of what it was like to perform his shows during apartheid. It wasn’t easy to say the things Uys said and made him, at one point, the most banned playwright in South Africa. The satirist also revealed how his trademark boxes came into being — they were quick to carry if he needed to get away fast — and he reminded the audience of Helen Suzman, the lone voice of protest in Parliament during the apartheid years, and a woman who “drove the Broederbond insane” because she was like a “Chihuahua on crack” with her constant refrain of “free Mandela, get rid of apartheid”. Suzman also told him that if he wanted to impersonate the National Party leaders on stage, he had to see them in action in Parliament. It was, he said, a little surreal when he did.

Other characters who pop up include a coloured police officer, whose grandmother was turned out of her beautiful Cape Town home and forcibly moved to the Cape Flats, Pik Botha, who maintains that he was not here, but over there (in foreign lands), during apartheid and so did not know what was happening, Piet Koornhof, who went from apartheid spin doctor in chief to a man happily married to a coloured woman, South Africa’s former black presidents Nelson Mandela and Thabo Mbeki, Kgalema Motlanthe and Jacob Zuma, Cape Flats resident Mrs Petersen, who is campaigning for the DA and kugel liberal­, Nowell Fine (circa 2012 and the eighties).

He also allows his irrepressible alter ego, Evita Bezuidenhout, to make an appearance, this time as the chairwoman of the Media Tribunal.

A dapt or Fly makes it clear that Uys is worried that history is in danger of repeating itself.

This is especially true of the Protection of State Information Bill, which he says could impact heavily on freedom of speech.

God forbid that happens, because we need Uys’s biting political commentary and witty satire to help keep those in power on the straight and narrow.

Adapt or Fly is without question one of Uys’s best shows, so whatever you do, don’t miss it.

Estelle Sinkinns - The Witness, 14 March 2012

Evita's BlackBessie

Published specially for Mother’s Day. The most famous white woman in South Africa helps you to organise your life in a fun way. In the age of BlackBerrys, iPods, iPhones and such, an astonishingly versatile old technology. Evita Bezuidenhout presents her own version of surviving a technologically challenged state of mind: a notebook focused on organising one’s life with enjoyment and humour. This is much much more than a journal and includes photos and sayings of Evita.

Also available in Afrikaans as Evita se BlackBessie.

Evita se Perron harvests Awards
EVITA SE PERRON in Darling (www.evita.co.za) now proudly adds three very
diverse awards to its substantial international harvest of achievements:

* The 2010 FLEUR DE CAP AWARD for BAMBI KELLERMANN, sister of Evita
Bezuidenhout, for BEST PERFORMANCE IN A REVUE OR CABARET for "F.A.K. SONGS &
OTHER STRUGGLE ANTHEMS" performed at the Fugard Theatre Cape Town;

* The Special 2011 TEDDY AWARD presented in Berlin to PIETER-DIRK UYS
(www.pdu.co.za) for personal excellence and his commitment to the fight
against HIV/Aids and for his stage alter ego Evita Bezuidenhout;

* The 2010 NALEDI LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD to EVITA BEZUIDENHOUT (Twitter:
@TannieEvita) for her witty, refreshing and fearless observations of the
social fabric of our country over the past 30 years.

This is the first time they have ever posed together for a photograph.
(PIC by STEFAN HURTER)

A Letter from Evita Bezuidenhout
I was happy to receive the 2010 Naledi Life Achievement Award in Johannesburg recently. Even though I was not on my usual political high-ground, I didn’t feel like a stranger there because so many of the actors and personalities were people I knew either personally, or from the point of view of being a fan. In my acceptance speech, I also underlined the fact that I was not one of them. ‘I can’t act. But I can react.’ They all laughed and applauded. I had sat for some time earlier in the day, trying to work out how I could make our two worlds compatible, these vibrant arenas of politics and theatre, so near and yet so far. “In the theatre, the audience always basks in the reflected glory of the star, the leading lady, the dramatic actor, and the drama of the moment. But nothing could happen if there was not someone who plans the lights, another who sees to the sound. A stage manager and stage hands that move sets and furniture. People to clean the theatre, sweep the stage, make the dressing rooms a precious part of an artist’s life outside home. There are those who design costumes, iron dresses, press trousers. Others who set the cups and saucers and fill bottles with flat Coke that looks like fresh tea. And the audience believes everything on stage because there is service delivery. Without the backstage people, there would be no show. Which brings me to the Municipal Election. On 18th May 2011 we will be casting our votes for the lighting man and the sound guy, the cleaners and sweepers. Choose the technicians and production teams, because without them our political superstars would not have a stage to pose on. There can be no show. This will be the most important election in the history of our country. If we can be sure of honest incorruptible municipalities, we will be assured of an honest incorruptible government. At the moment we have neither. And so I end with familiar words that ring in the ears of all of you in theatre: ‘Country? This is your Five Minute Call. All Citizens stand-by to ACT!’”

Lifetime achievement award for Tannie Evita

South Africa's "most famous white woman", Evita Bezuidenhout, was last night honoured with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the eighth Naledi Theatre Awards.

Bezuidenhout, also known as Pieter-Dirk Uys, joined an illustrious list of previous winners, including industry veterans actress Lilian Dube, director and playwright John Kani, playwright Winston Ntshona and actress Wilna Snyman.

The awards' executive director, Dawn Lindberg, said: "We chose Evita because she is somebody who epitomises every culture in this country. She's not only a character, she's a satirist, she's very unPC (un-politically correct), but is still loved by many people.

"Apart from her work on stage, she's extended her work into HIV/Aids activism and raising awareness and money, and she's been around for 30 years. We feel she really deserves this award. She's a diva. We love divas."

   
Evita Bezuidenhout and the other 'Evita' Angela Killan, both Naledi Award winners: Tannie with a Lifetime Achievement Award and Ms Killan for her performance in the musical 'Evita'.
 


Pieter-Dirk Uys
receives Special TEDDY Award
South African satirist Pieter-Dirk Uys has been honoured with a Special TEDDY Award in Berlin.

On Friday 18 February, at a glamorous gala ceremony in Berlin, Pieter-Dirk Uys received a Special TEDDY Award in recognition of his commitment to HIV/AIDS education at South African schools and for his on-stage alter ego Evita Bezuidenhout, the Most Famous White Woman in South Africa, as Nelson Mandela once called her.

Uys received a standing ovation from 3 000 guests representing the arts, culture, political and economic sectors. Previous winners of the Special TEDDY Award include film-makers Pedro Almodovar, Gus van Sant and Derek Jarman, as well as acclaimed actors Tilda Swinton, John Hurt and Helmut Berger.

The TEDDY Awards is celebrating its 25th anniversary this year. It is part of the annual Berlin International Film Festival and every year a unique individual is honoured with a TEDDY Award for outstanding lifetime achievements.

In 2008 the acclaimed documentary about Uys’ work, "Darling: the Pieter-Dirk Uys Story", by Julian Shaw, was presented with the Panorama Audience Award at the Berlin Film Festival, with Evita herself making a legendary appearance at the TEDDY Award Ceremony that is televised across Europe.

On Sunday 20 February, Uys gave one performance of his show ‘Desperate First Ladies’ at the Jewish Museum in Berlin where his late mother’s piano is kept. In this performance he celebrates his Jewish heritage, his Afrikaner legacy and his fantastic legs and he hopes to remind the audience that a patriot can also be someone who protects his country from its government.

In September 2011, Pieter-Dirk Uys will present a new season at the Baxter Theatre entitled ‘Icons and Aikonas and Desperate First Ladies’

Evita's Kossie Sikelela lends a helping hand

Mrs Evita Bezuidenhout hands over a cheque of R140,000 to Chris Adonis, Project Manager of The Darling Trust.

Evita & her publisher Umuzi have generously donated royalties from Evita's Kossie Sikelela cookbook to The Darling Trust.

" IN DARLING DREAMS DO COME TRUE"
Evita's Kossie Sikekela Wins at the Gourmand Awards!
Evita Bezuidenhout has done it again. Her very first cookbook, Evita’s Kossie Sikelela, of which over 40,000 copies have been sold since the release in March 2010, has just been named the South African winner of the Gourmand World Cookbooks Awards 2010, in the category “Best Easy Recipes Book.”

This qualifies Mrs Bezuidenhout’s book for the next round, in which its peers from all other countries compete for the “Gourmand Best in the World” award. The award ceremony takes place in Paris (France – not Parys in the Free State) on 3 March 2011 on the first day of the Paris Cookbook Fair.

  Evita, who is no stranger to fame and the limelight, says: “I am thrilled and delighted at this news and pay a special tribute to Linda Vicquery who did most of the work, while I picked up most of the weight! Best in South Africa is better than best in the world!”

Publisher Frederik de Jager says: “The delight of having to do with Tannie Evita is like standing in the crowd and cheering her along the red carpet. She is glamour and generosity personified and makes magic of everything she touches. And her partner in this book Linda Vicquery is as bounteous in the arts of cooking and drawing as she is in her love of life. Eating one’s way through this entire book couldn’t give greater pleasure than seeing the two of them thus honoured.”

Author royalties from the sale of this book, matched by the publishers, go to the Darling Trust, founded by Pieter-Dirk Uys to serve the community of Darling in the Western Cape through art and culture, education and health.

Praise for Evita’s Kossie Sikelela:

“Utterly delicious” – Horizons

“Evita is a national treasure … the illustrations are close to brilliant … You can’t help loving the old tart, can you?” – Jenny Crwys-Williams, Food & Home Entertaining

“reliable food that will not explode, collapse or fall over” – Mary Jordan, Business Day

“don’t let the laughter give you indigestion” – Patricia McCracken, Farmers Weekly “a visual feast of spectacular proportions” – Diane de Beer, Pretoria News