- Zola Maseko
Zola Maseko (b. 1967) is a Swazi
film director andscreenwriter . He is noted for his documentary films related toxenophobia .Biography
Maseko was born in exile in 1967. Educated in Swaziland and Tanzania, he joined
Umkhonto We Sizwe , the armed sector of theAfrican National Congress , in 1987. After moving to theUnited Kingdom , he graduated from theNational Film and Television School inBeaconsfield in 1994. [cite web|url=http://spot.pcc.edu/~mdembrow/DRUM.htm|title=DRUM|last=Dembrow|first=Michael|publisher=Portland Community College |accessdate=2008-10-09] Maseko's first film was the documentary "Dear Sunshine", released in 1992.cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/specials/1349_whoswho/page6.shtml|title=Whos's Who at FESPACO: Zola Maseko|work=British Broadcasting Corporation |publisher=BBC World Service |accessdate=2008-10-09]He moved to South Africa in 1994 and wrote "The Foreigner", a short fiction film about
xenophobia in this country.In 1998 he directed "
The Life and Times of Sarah Baartman ", a 53 minutedocumentary film about a women named Sarah Baartman in colonial times. Set between1810 and1815 , the documentary relates the true story of a 20 year-old women travelling toLondon fromCape Town and addresses the taboo themes ofracial inferiority and black female sexuality. The woman is taken to France in 1814 and from then on becames a subject of scientific investigation. Maseko's cinemtic techniques were employed to depict the woman as a sub-human species, emphasising the racial prejudice against black Africans in Europe during imperialist times. After her death, her sexual organs and brain were displayed in theMusee de l'Homme in Paris until as recently as 1985. Critically acclaimed, it garnered many awards including Best African Documentary, 1999 at thePan-African Film Festival (FESPACO), Best Documentary at the 1999Milan African Film Festival and an award at the 2001African Literature Association Conference Film Festival .cite web|url=http://icarusfilms.com/new99/hottento.html|title=The Life and Times of Sarah Baartman:"The Hottentot Venus"|publisher=Icarus Films|accessdate=2008-10-09]Other short films by Maseko include "The Return of Sarah Baartman", "Children Of The Revolution", and "A Drink In The Passage", all released in 2002. The latter won the Special Jury Award at FESPACO.
His first feature film was "Drum", released in 2004. Set in 1950s
Johannesburg , it tells of the magazine of the same name and specifically focuses onHenry Nxumalo , a journalist fightingapartheid . He received the top prize at FESPACO, the Golden Stallion of Yennenga, in addition to a cash prize of 10 millionCFA francs (US$ 20,000) at its closing ceremony in 2005, the first South African to do such. [cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/03/05/AR2005030500201.html |title=South African Wins Africa's Top Film Prize |last=Knight|first=James|coauthors=Manson, Katrina|date=2005-03-05|work=Reuters |publisher=The Washington Post |accessdate=2008-10-09]The filmmaker is currently working on the television series,
Homecoming , following the adventures of three freedom fighters trying to fit in with the rest of South Africa. Maseko is also working on "Liverpool Leopard ", which is to be his second feature film.Filmography
As director
*"The Foreigner" (1997)
*"The Life and Times of Sara Baartman " (1998)
*"The Return of Sarah Baartman " (2002)
*"Children Of The Revolution " (2002)
*"A Drink in the Passage " (2002)
*"Drum (2004)References
External links
*imdb name| id =0563220|name =Zola Maseko
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.