Mannie Manim
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
July 1941 (age 84)
Mannie Manim | |
|---|---|
| Born | Manuel Manim July 1941 (age 84) |
| Occupations | Theatre administrator, producer, lighting designer |
| Years active | 1955–present |
| Known for | Co-founding the Market Theatre, Johannesburg |
| Notable work | Sizwe Banzi is Dead, The Island, Nothing but the Truth, Show Boat |
| Awards | Order of Ikhamanga (Silver), Naledi Lifetime Achievement Award, Chevalier of Arts and Letters (France) |
| Website | Market Theatre |
Manuel Manim (born July 1941), known as Mannie Manim, is a South African theatre administrator, producer and lighting designer. He co-founded Johannesburg's Market Theatre in 1976 and has worked for over six decades in South African and international theatre.[1][2] Manim led major theatre institutions and toured South African productions abroad. He received numerous awards for his contributions, including the national Order of Ikhamanga (Silver).[3]
Manim was born in July 1941 in Cape Town, Western Cape province of South Africa. He began his theatre career as a teenage usher at the Brook Theatre in Cape Town in 1955, and became a manager there after 5 years.[4] In the early 1960s he moved to Johannesburg, serving as technical director at the newly opened Civic Theatre and later as head of drama at the Performing Arts Council of the Transvaal (PACT). In 1967 he became administrative head of PACT Drama. During this period he also worked in stage management and production, including Stephen Sondheim's A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum at the Civic).
He recognised the potential of non-racial theatre in apartheid South Africa, and in 1973 left PACT to co-found an independent company with Barney Simon committed to non-racial artistic practice.[5]