Judith Adong

Judith Adong
Born Adong Judith
Uganda
Occupation Playwight/film maker
Nationality Ugandan
Genre Plays

Adong Judith a Ugandan Playwright and Filmmaker.[1] She is a graduate of the arts from Makerere University where lectured at the Department of Performing Arts and Film. In July 2011, she was the only African writer among 10 international writers to attend the Royal Court Theatre playwrights' residency where she developed her play Just Me, You and the silence that featured at the New Black Fest October 2011. She had a public reading for the play at the Old Vic Theatre in London, in 2012.[2] She is also an alumna of the New York acclaimed Robert Redford founded Sundance Institute Theatre Program Lab and Mira Nair’s Maisha Film Lab (2008). In 2007, she was the lone Ugandan screenwriter employed on the first ever Kenyan M-Net original television drama series, The Agency. Some radio drama series titles to her name are Rock Point 256 (2005), River Yei Junction (2007) and Take My Hand (2011).[3]

Writing

Adong's writings cut across the dramatic media of theater, film and television and radio. She is also a published writer with a number of children readers’ titles by Macmillan and Fountain Publishers.[3]

In April 2011, she was invited by Sundance Institute Theatre Program in collaboration was 651 Arts, an arts organization that supports African stories, for a follow up visit to New York City, where she attended a number of workshops and productions in Broadway as well as Off-Broadway. An excerpt from her play, "Silent Voices”,[4][5] which is based on interviews with victims of the Northern Uganda conflict depicts, was read at the WYNC National Public Radio in an evening christened ‘Meet the Artist’, in which the audience interacted with Adong about her play. Judith was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to Filmmaking MFA of Temple University in Philadelphia where she is currently based. She has also written extensively on social-political and pop culture for television and radio in Uganda, Kenya and Southern Sudan in both English language and her local language –Luo (Acholi dialect).[6]

Plays

References

  1. "Adong Lucy Judith" wpic.riksteatern.se. Retrieved November 20 2014.
  2. "Judy Adong" thesilenceplay.org. Retrieved November 20 2014.
  3. 1 2 "ADONG Lucy Judith " paf.mak.ac.ug.org. Retrieved November 20 2014.
  4. "A play shines light on a deepening divide inside Uganda" jackeebatanda.wordpress.com. Retrieved November 20 2014.
  5. "Ugandan Voices of Change: Adong Judith Lucy" startjournal.org. Retrieved November 20 2014.
  6. "MEET JUDITH ADONG" thenewblackfest.org. Retrieved November 20 2014.

External links

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