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There are many influences at work in Cape Town, which makes the city a particularly interesting one for the arts. Like many other South African cities, Cape Town has endured a turbulent cultural ride over the past decade, as the cultural voice of the city has slowly made itself heard over the clamour of inequality and long-standing prejudices. The large cultural organizations so reminiscent of the past have successfully diversified and everywhere small projects and artistic developments pop up to thrill and entertain everyone - hilarious comedy acts, large-scale operas, art exhibitions, intimate
theater performance and poetry readings can all be found in a number of venues.

Cape Town’s two biggest contributions to South African society have probably been in the fine arts and in the unique Cape jazz style, epitomised by musicians like Abdullah Ibrahim, Basil ‘Manenberg’ Coetzee and Robbie Jansen.

The city’s two major cultural centers are the Baxter Theater Center, Main Road, Rondebosch (tel: (021) 685 7880; website: www.baxter.co.za), and the Artscape Theater Center, 1-10 DF Malan Street, Foreshore (tel: (021) 421 7839; website: www.artscape.co.za). Tickets for Artscape events are also available through Artscape Dial-A-Seat (tel: (021) 421 7695).

Listings information can be found in the Friday editions of the daily press - The Cape Argus and Cape Times. These are both subsidiaries of The Independent and listings also can be found online (website: www.tonight.co.za). The bi-monthly Cape Etc and monthly SA Citylife publications are excellent sources of information and listings for Cape Town’s nightlife. The Mail & Guardian (website: www.mg.co.za) also has cultural listings for Cape Town. Other websites with listings include www.artthrob.co.za, www.ananzi.co.za and www.capetowntoday.co.za. Tickets for all major cultural events can be booked through the national booking system Computicket (tel: 08391 58000; website: www.computicket.com), which also has kiosks in the large shopping malls including Victoria Wharf at the V&A Waterfront

Music: The Cape Town Philharmonic Orchestra (tel: (021) 410 9809; website: www.cpo.org.za) performs regularly at the City Hall, Grand Parade (tel: (021) 465 2029), and the Artscape Theater Center (see above), as well as various other venues - details are published in the local press. The Artscape Theater Center (see above) opera house features regular opera from the groundbreaking Cape Town Opera (tel: (021) 410 9800; website: www.capetownopera.co.za), famous for successfully ‘Africanising’ the classics. Both the Artscape and Baxter venues (see above) host classical music, jazz and popular music. Regular performances also take place at the South African College of Music, off Woolsack Drive, Rosebank (tel: (021) 650 2626; website: www.uct.ac.za/depts/sacm).

Further afield, the Spier complex, Lynedoch Road, Stellenbosch (tel: (021) 809 1111;  website: www.spierarts.co.za), one of the oldest wine cellars in the country, is now well established as one of the Cape’s major performing arts and music centers, largely thanks to the annual summer festival taking place in the large outdoor amphitheater from November to March.

Theater: Besides the Baxter and Artscape venues (see above), which both host regular and varied theatrical productions and stand-up comedy acts, the Theater on the Bay, 1 Link Street, Camps Bay (tel: (021) 438 3300; website: www.theateronthebay.co.za), is the city’s other major theater, staging popular and contemporary theater, as well as cabaret and music.

Dance: Cape Town’s premier contemporary dance company, Jazzart (tel: (021) 410 9848 or 9828; website: www.jazzart.co.za), stages regular performances at Artscape Theater Center (see above) and other venues. Visiting national and international dance and ballet troupes frequently appear at the Baxter and Artscape venues (see above). The Cape Town City Ballet (tel: (021) 650 2400/4672; website: www.capetowncityballet.org.za) is based at the UCT School of Dance, Lovers Walk, Rosebank and performs at the Artscape Theater Center opera house and the delightful Maynardville Open-Air Theater, Maynardville Park, corner of Church and Wolfe Streets, Wynberg; tickets for both venues are available through Artscape-Dial-a-Seat (tel: (021) 421 7695) or Computicket (tel: 08391 58000; website: www.computicket.com).

Film: Although Cape Town has a huge film and television industry, locally made feature films mainly come out of Johannesburg. The South African film industry, although packed with new talent, is yet to receive the necessary funding and attention it deserves to truly take off. Nevertheless, one of the city’s favorite pastimes is cinema. Every major shopping center has a cinema complex showing mainstream movies, either run by Ster-Kinekor (website: www.sterkinekor.co.za) or Nu-Metro (website: www.numetro.co.za), with advance booking through Computicket (tel: 08391 58000; website: www.computicket.com). Increasingly, the cinemas are installing swipe machines for credit cards to receive pre-booked tickets. On one day of the week, usually Tuesdays, tickets are half price.

Ster-Kinekor outlets are located in various shopping centers, including Blue Route, Tokai Road and Cavendish Square, Dreyer Street, Claremont. A 17-screen Nu-Metro Multiplex is located at Canal Walk, Century City. Nu-Metro also provides the big-screen thrills at Victoria Wharf, V&A Waterfront and N1 City, Louwtjie Rothman Street, Goodwood. Arthouse and independent films are equally well catered for, with Ster Kinekor’s Cinema Nouveau outlets located at Cavendish Nouveau, Cavendish Square, Dreyer Street, Claremont and V&A Nouveau, Kings Warehouse, V&A Waterfront.

The Labia Theater, 68 Orange Street (tel: (021) 424 5927; website: www.labia.co.za), is the city’s oldest and most bohemian art house cinema, which shows more off-beat gritty movies and has a bar and you can take drinks in to the auditorium. The cinema has a second two-screen outlet on Kloof Street that shows more mainstream films. Another popular art house spot is the Independent Armchair Theater, 135 Lower Main Road, Observatory (tel: (021) 447 1514; website: www.armchairtheater.co.za).

Although foreign film crews flock to Cape Town, it seldom appears as a definite setting for a movie. The city and scenery are often used, although masquerading as another location. For instance, those familiar with the white-sand beauty of Long Beach will easily recognize the beachscape (particularly the famous wreck) when watching some scenes of David Lean’s classic Ryan’s Daughter (1970), which is set in Ireland, although partly filmed in Cape Town. Most recently, in 2006, the remake of the Poseidon Adventure was filmed in the city. Possibly Cape Town’s most famous and internationally known son, the Shakespearean actor Sir Anthony Sher, was born in Sea Point. Other actors associated with the city include Sir Nigel Hawthorne, who was raised in Cape Town and studied at the University of Cape Town, and cult actor Richard E Grant, who also attended university in the city.

Literary Notes: Ever since Sir Francis Drake described the Cape Peninsula as ‘the most stately thing and the fairest cape in all the whole circumference of the earth’, Cape Town has featured strongly in international literature. Most often, the city has been used as a metaphor for the system of apartheid and as a symbol of white oppression in black Africa. However, since the release of Nelson Mandela and the end of apartheid, Cape Town has become a symbol of freedom and democracy, with many of the major political works on South Africa (by figures such as Nelson Mandela, Desmond Tutu and Govan Mbeki) written in the city.

The writer who has, perhaps more than any other, defined South African literature is J M Coetzee - twice winner of the Booker Prize for literature and winner of the 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature. His novels, which include Disgrace (1999), Foe (1986), Waiting for the Barbarians (1980), The Life and Times of Michael K (1983) and Dusklands (1974), go to the very heart of the South African psyche and delve deep into the political and social landscape of the country. Coetzee was born in Cape Town and was professor of English at the University of Cape Town, before following the white South African trend of immigrating to Australia. Another literary figure at the university is André P Brink, three-time winner of South Africa’s premier literary prize, the CNA Award, twice shortlisted for the Booker Prize and winner of the 1980 Martin Luther King Memorial Prize. Brink’s novels include Looking on Darkness (1974), Rumours of Rain (1978), A Dry White Season (1979), An Act of Terror (1991) and Rights of Desire (2000). Both Before I Forget (2005) and Praying Mantis (2006) were both shortlisted for the best book on Africa in the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize. Jakes Mda is an internationally acclaimed and award-winning Capetonian poet, playwright and novelist, whose works include Heart of Redness (2000), She Plays With the Darkness (1995) and Ways of Dying (1995).

South Africa’s premier playwright, Athol Fugard, based his powerful two-man play, The Island (1973), on the political incarcerations on Robben Island. Lesser known internationally but the unofficial king of Cape Town musicals, David Kramer penned a magnificent memoir of Cape Town’s darkest moment when he captured not only the grief, hatred and confusion of the relocations but also the spirit and wonder of this tragic area in his musical collaboration with Taliep Petersen, District Six (1987). Kramer has also achieved acclaim for his musical Karoo Kitaar Blues (2002) and has exported his work to London stages.

Another lesser known Capetonian writer who has caught a remarkable and perceptive glimpse of the city is Menán du Plessis: her novels, Longlive! (1989) and A State of Fear (1983) both focus on various lives, perceptions and personal struggles in a politically turbulent Cape Town during the 1980s. On a more factual level, in A Mouthful of Glass (1998), Dutch writer Henk van Woerden documents with clarity and remarkable sensitivity the events that took place in Cape Town, when Demitrios Tsafendas stabbed the then Prime Minister, Hendrik Verwoerd, in the chamber of the South African Parliament in 1966.

Sport:

Sport has proved to be a wonderful way of bringing together the people of South Africa and various steps to break down the traditional racial stereotypes of certain sports have been taken and seem to be working well. Most recently, the awarding of the 2010 FIFA World Cup to the country has created ripples of celebration and excitement throughout the entire population, especially following the disappointment of losing the 2006 bid to Germany. Football has a predominantly black following and is largely seen as a sport that resists integration. It is hoped that 2010 will overthrow these perceptions.

Most of the top football teams are based in Johannesburg. The top local teams – Ajax Cape Town (website: www.ajaxct.com) and Santos – feature strongly in the national Castle Premiership league. Football’s governing body, based at Hartleyvale Stadium, Willow Road, Observatory (tel: (021) 448 8652), is the Western Province Football Association (tel: (021) 448 1649).

Other popular sports in Cape Town include cricket, rugby and horseracing.

Cricket was given a great boost after South Africa successfully hosted the World Cup Cricket in 2003. With a strong English colonial history, the city is one of the main feeding grounds for the South African international cricket squad, the Proteas. The home of Western Province cricket is at the Newlands Cricket Ground, 146 Campground Road, Newlands, where the governing body, Western Province Cricket Association, 161 Campground Road (tel: (021) 657 2003; fax: (021) 657 2020; e-mail: info@wpca.co.za; website: www.wpca.cricket.org), is located. Matches are played most weekends in summer, with international tests between South Africa and its main rivals regularly on the agenda. Night cricket is also one of the most popular pastimes in Cape Town and a good excuse to down beer and cheer at every ball that gets hit.

The city is home to one of rugby’s most famous teams, the Stormers (website: www.thestormers.com), who compete with Australian and New Zealand rivals for the top of the Super 12 Log. Newlands Stadium, 11 Boundary Road, Newlands, is home to these local heroes as well as the comprehensive SA Rugby Museum (tel: (021) 659 6768; fax: (021) 686 2151), which is located on the ground floor of the Sport Science Institute; guided tours of the stadium are also available. The home union is the Western Province Rugby Football Union (tel: (021) 659 4600; fax: (021) 659 4601; website: www.wprugby.com).

Horseracing is as much a social event in Cape Town as it is a sporting one. The hugely popular annual J&B Met is held at the Kenilworth Race Track, Rosmead Avenue.

Tickets to sporting events are available for purchase from Computicket (tel: (083) 915 8000; e-mail: info@computicket.com; website: www.computicket.com).

Adventure Sports: The spectacular natural setting of the city means that adventurous sports enjoy a huge following. There are several operators who offer a range of adventure sports, from mountain biking to abseiling, rock climbing to sky diving, hiking to bungee jumping, surfing to shark diving and canyoning (known locally as ‘kloofing’, which entails hiking into remote mountain ranges and then swimming and jumping down the gorges). Daytrippers (tel: (021) 511 4766; fax: (021) 511 4768; e-mail: info@daytrippers.co.za; website: www.daytrippers.co.za) offers hiking and kloofing tours, while Adventure Village Adventure Village (tel: (021) 424 1580; fax: (021) 424 1590; e-mail: info@adventure-village.co.za; website: www.adventure-village.co.za) offers a full range of adventure and extreme sports options, tours and expeditions, including daily abseiling expeditions down the sheer faces of Table Mountain.

Fitness Centers: Virgin Active (tel: (0860) 200 911; website: www.virginactive.co.za) has the monopoly on the fitness centers around the Western Cape, each offering a variety of facilities, including gym, swimming, squash, tennis and other sports. The city-center club is situated on the Foreshore, 21 Lower Long Street (tel: (021) 421 5857; fax: (021) 419 7319) and includes aerobics, toning and cardio circuits, free weights, a pool, squash, sauna and steam bath facilities. Other club locations include Claremont, corner of Main Road and Brooke Street (tel: (021) 683 2402), Constantia, Main Road (tel: (021) 794 5010), Durbanville Palmgrove Center, corner of Main Road and Church Street (tel: (021) 975 5210) and N1 City Value Center, N1 Goodwood (tel: (021) 595 3030). A one-day guest fee is R75.

Golf: There are many golf courses in and around Cape Town and many are open to the public. The Western Province Golf Union, Mowbray Golf Club, Raapenberg Road, Pinelands (tel: (021) 686 1668; fax: (021) 686 1669; e-mail: wpga@global.co.za; website: www.wpgu.co.za) can provide further information.

Eighteen-hole golf courses that are open to the public include the Rondebosch Golf Club, 3 Klipfontein Road (tel: (021) 689 4176/7; fax: (021) 685 1447; e-mail: rgc@mweb.co.za; website: www.rondebosch-golf-club.co.za), the Royal Cape Golf Club, 174 Ottery Road, Wynberg (tel: (021) 761 6551; fax: (021) 797 5246; e-mail: bookings@royalcapegolf.co.za; website: www.royalcapegolf.co.za), and the Clovelly Country Club, Clovelly Road, Clovelly (tel: (021) 782 1118; fax: (021) 782 6853; e-mail: clubhouse@clovelly.co.za; website: www.clovelly.co.za). Green fees vary from R200 to R500 for non-members, depending on the club and season (high season is 1 October to 30 April). Further afield, Spier Country Club, located off the R44 toward Stellenbosch (tel: (021) 809 1100; e-mail: info@spier.co.za; website: www.spier.co.za), is an 18-hole course situated beneath the Helderberg Mountain range, with green fees of R200 for non-members.

Swimming: The Cape Town City Council’s call center (tel: (086) 010 3089) can provide information on Cape Town’s public swimming pools. Newlands Swimming Pool, Sans Souci Road, Newlands (tel: (021) 674 4197), is the center of competitive swimming, diving and water polo. The Long Street Baths, Long Street (tel: (021) 400 3302), is an indoor, heated pool, adjacent to the Turkish Baths (tel: (021) 423 9849). Entrance to the pools is R10. Many Virgin Active clubs (see Fitness Centers above) provide excellent swimming facilities. The Camps Bay Tidal Pool, Camps Bay beach (tel: (021) 434 3341), provides alfresco bathing possibilities. The best beach swimming is in the False Bay, at Fish Hoek or the St James tidal pool, although swimmers should not venture out too far as this is shark territory. Bathers should exercise caution at all times and not swim at deserted locations.

Tennis: Although there are scores of recreational tennis clubs dotted around the city, it is extremely difficult to access the courts unless accompanied by a member. Several of the golf clubs (see Golf above) also provide tennis and lawn bowl facilities. Likewise, many of the Virgin Active clubs (see Fitness Centers above) also provide tennis courts, as do several major hotels. Tennis Western Province, Lovers Walk, Rondebosch (tel: (021) 686 3055; fax: (021) 685 5293), can provide further information.

Watersports: Cape Town is an extremely popular destination for watersports enthusiasts. Zandvlei, in Muizenberg, is still quite popular with windsurfing and small craft yachting, although it is largely considered a learning ground for beginners. Hardcore wave freaks prefer to brave the breakers off Bloubergstrand, Milnerton, Long Beach and Cape Point or the Dungeons off Hout Bay. Although conditions can be excellent, False Bay is considered somewhat dangerous, as this is the favorite spot for other watersports enthusiasts, namely Great White Sharks. Downhill Adventures, Shop 10 Overbeek Building, corner of Kloof, Long and Orange Streets (tel: (021) 422 0388; fax: (021) 423 0127; website: www.downhilladventures.com) offers day and multi-day surfing courses with instruction and equipment provided, including transport and lunch. Table Bay Diving, Shop 7, Quay 5, V&A Waterfront (tel: (021) 419 8822; e-mail: info@tablebaydiving.com; website: www.tablebaydiving.com) organizes diving charters (including wreck, reef, deep, night and shark cage diving) as well as diving courses. Equipment is available to purchase or hire. Ocean yachting mainly takes place in the Table Bay and False Bay, with regattas held every Wednesday in summer, with the start point at the Royal Cape Yacht Club, Duncan Road, Table Bay (tel: (021) 421 1354; fax: (021) 421 6028; e-mail: info@rcyc.co.za; website: www.rcyc.co.za). The Wind Report (tel: (082) 234 6300) provides regular updates on the wind situation, while the Surf Report (tel: (021) 788 1350) keeps surfers up to date on wave conditions around the peninsula. Surfing information and tips are also available online (website: www.wavescape.co.za).



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