Robert Kirby (Satirist)

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Robert Kirby
Born 26 April 1936(1936-04-26)
Durban, South Africa
Died 10 February 2007 (aged 70)
Cape Town, South Africa
Occupation satirist, author, columnist, pilot, pianist

Robert Kirby was a famous South African satirist, playwright, comedian, novelist, columnist and musician who died in 2007 following complications from a heart operation, some four months prior.

Contents

[edit] Career

Kirby started his career in the early ’60s as a broadcaster at the SABC where he presented The Early Morning Programme. He became well known for his brand of satirical humour and his sharp wit—both of which were demonstrated in his later column in the South African newspaper, Mail & Guardian. Kirby is particularly remembered for his plays and reviews which were highly monitored due to his liberal attitude to apartheid.

Kirby also wrote specialist essays on fly fishing and on Aviation, whilst putting in many hours flying for the Red Cross.

[edit] Awards

Kirby was twice awarded the English Academy of Southern Africa’s Thomas Pringle Award for journalism, in 1996 and 2002, for his reviews and for an educational article respectively.

[edit] Quotes

  • “You can’t have humour without offending somebody. Every joke offends somebody down the line. Humour that didn’t plunge the knife into somebody’s ribs would be terribly pale, vapid, weak.”
  • “I believe that we can do without censorship. I do not believe that censorship saves us from anarchy. It serves very little apart from itself. There has been no noticeable decline in pornography as a result of censorship.”

[edit] Bibliography

Reviews

  • Finger Trouble
  • Finger Trouble 2
  • Eight Beasts
  • Eight Birds
  • Heliotrope Bouquet
  • Quodlibet
  • Brave New Pretoria
  • How Now Sacred Cow
  • Separate Development

Plays

  • Gentlemen
  • It’s a Boy!
  • Panics
  • Weedkillers
  • Wrong Time of Year
  • The Bijers Sunbird
  • The Secret Letters of Jan Van Riebeek

TV Sitcoms

  • Louis Motors

Columns

Books

[edit] Sources