 |
|
|
 |
 |
| |
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
| |
Loveness Wesa
|
Discography · Booking · Similar
Music
|
|
Biography:
|
| |
|
Loveness Wesa had 14 years experience as a dancer, choreographer, actress,
singer and producer in her native Zimbabwe before moving to Portland, Oregon in
December 2002. She was first exposed to the traditional music and dance of her
country as a small child watching her mother, aunt and grandmother who were
Sangomas – the traditional spirit mediums who use song and dance to channel
ancestral spirits.
Loveness recorded and released three albums of her original compositions.
Tovera
(2001) is a collection of music inspired by traditional songs and
Brooms (2002)
includes her renditions of songs from her dance play, and in the summer of 2005 Wesa went back to Zimbabwe to record and produce her latest album
Mukadzi
Wamambo. These albums include songs in Shona, Ndebele, Venda, Sotho and English.
In 1989, while still in secondary school, Loveness Wesa joined the Amakhosi
Theatre in Bulawayo where she studied music, dance, acting, choreographing,
script writing and stage design with the leading artist of Zimbabwe as well as
visiting artists from Ghana, Burkina Faso, Zambia, South Africa, Mozambique,
Botswana, United States, United Kingdom, France and Jamaica. She performed in
many of Amakhosi’s best known plays, appearing on national television and
touring Norway, Switzerland, South Africa, Botswana and Mozambique. She has
performed for Queen Elizabeth and Prince Edward of the United Kingdom and
Presidents Mbeki of South Africa and Mugabe of Zimbabwe.
In 1998 Loveness founded the Kgotso African Dance Theatre as a vehicle for
bringing works by women artists to Zimbabwe’s stage. She choreographed Kgotso’s
first production, Chakwatu. In 2001 Ms. Wesa became her country’s first woman
theatrical producer when she brought her dance drama Brooms to Amakhosi. As well
as being the producer, she wrote, choreographed, directed, designed sets and
costumes and danced one of the lead roles. Loveness Wesa has pioneered a style
of dance which she calls African Dance Theatre. She merges a variety of
traditional dances from throughout the African continent to create a coherent
story. Though the dances are African and the lyrics of songs and chants are in
their original languages, she tells her stories entirely through the dances and
music making them comprehensible to any audience.
In December 2004 Loveness Wesa made her American debut as a choreographer with
her production Langivela Khona (Where I Come From), a dance theatre based on the
stories of young African refugees and immigrants living in Portland, Oregon.
This community arts project which was sponsored by the Regional Arts and Culture
Council developed out of dance classes she was teaching for African refugees.
The production involved twenty–one performers, both students and professional,
from nine different countries and ten schools in Portland.
In July 2005 Ms Wesa was invited by California State University Summer Arts to
join Amakhosi founder Cont Mhlanga in teaching workshops on African Theatre.
Loveness performed a solo show of her original music and dances at the Cal State
Fresno program and taught classes on the use of dancing, singing and
storytelling in African drama.
In addition to performing she teaches classes in dance, music and traditional
crafts. |
|
|
Discography:
|
| |
|
Tovera (Metro Studios, 2001)
Brooms (Loveness Wesa, 2002) Mukadzi Wamambo (2005) |
|
|
Booking:
|
| |
|
Kgotso African Dance Theatre
Ph: 503-281-4599/ 971-570-1620;
Email: kgotsolaii@hotmail.com
Loveness Wesa
kgotsodance@yahoo.com |
|
|
Similar Music:
|
| |
|
Zimbabwean, Shona |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
 |