Roos, Hilde. 2014a. ‘Remembering to Forget the Eoan Group—the Legacy of an Opera Company from the Apartheid Era’. South African Theatre Journal 27(1), 1-18.
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The Eoan Group is a cultural and welfare organisation in the so-called coloured community of Cape Town. Started in 1933 in District Six, it enjoyed an illustrious history that included the performance of many Italian operas as well as choral works, plays and ballets from the classical canon. However, the group's acceptance of government funding during the apartheid era resulted in a political compromise that cost them their reputation and, in time, robbed them of their art. At the height of apartheid, the group was rejected by the coloured community on political grounds and their achievements vanished from public memory in subsequent years. This article presents a broad overview of the group's cultural endeavours, especially in the field of opera, as well as a discussion of the disappearance of their legacy from the public domain. It furthermore introduces the notion of coloured identity as this seems essential to an understanding of the internal workings of this group and its trajectory: from initial acceptance in the 1940s and 1950s to rejection by their own community from the 1970s to the present day. The article discusses the theory of coloured identity as expounded by Mohamed Adhikari and attempts an integration of his ideas with aspects of the Eoan Group's history.
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