Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Kongi's Harvest

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Written by
  
Wole Soyinka

First performance
  
1965

Adaptations
  
Kongi's Harvest (1970)

Date premiered
  
1965

Playwright
  
Wole Soyinka

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Place premiered
  
Negro Arts Festival (Dakar)


Similar
  
The Lion and the Jewel, A Dance of the Forests, Death and the King's Horseman

Arthouse kongi s harvest 12 07 15


Kongi's Harvest is a 1965 play written by Wole Soyinka. It premiered in Dakar, Senegal, at the first Negro Arts Festival in April 1966. It was later adapted as a film of the same name, directed by the American Ossie Davis.

Contents

The play was published in 1967 in London and New York by Oxford University Press (Three Crowns Books; 96 pp).

Art house crown troupe of africa perform stage play kongi s harvest


Plot

President Kongi, the dictator of an African developing nation, is trying to modernize after deposing King Oba Danlola, who is being held in detention. Kongi demands that Danlola present him with a ceremonial yam at a state dinner to indicate his abdication. Daodu, Danlola's nephew and heir, grows prized yams on his farm.

Daodu's lover Segi owns a bar where Daodu spends most of his time. She is revealed to have been Kongi's former lover.

As the different tribes are resisting unification, Kongi tries to reach his goal by any means necessary, including forcing government officials to wear traditional African outfits and seeking advice from the man he deposed. In a climactic scene at the state dinner, Segi presents Kongi with the head of her father.

References

Kongi's Harvest Wikipedia