(Johaar Mosaval. Pic by John Hogg)
At
their annual Awards this year, the Arts & Culture Trust (ACT) honoured one
of South Africa’s most accomplished dancers for his exceptional talent and
tenacity. At 88-years-old, Johaar Mosaval took home the Dance Lifetime
Achievement Award, sponsored by JTI.
Born in District
Six in 1928, Mosaval never allowed the chains of Apartheid to restrict his
dreams. First noticed at a primary school pantomime, he was invited
to attend the UCT Ballet School from 1947 to 1949, an offer that was not
supported by his Muslim parents or the white community.
While Apartheid laws prevented Mosaval from pursuing a
dance career at home, it was arranged that he continue training at the Sadlers
Wells Ballet School in London. In 1951 he entered the Royal Ballet School,
graduating to the Royal Ballet Company a year later.
“The absolute pinnacle of my career was when I was chosen
to dance my very first solo for the Royal Ballet, in the opera Gloriana, specially composed by Benjamin
Britton for the occasion of the Majesty the Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation.
This performance was attended by almost every reigning monarch, including
Presidents and Prime Ministers from all over the world,” Mosaval recalls.
By 1963 he was ranked as principal alongside legendary
dancers. This was the first of several historic milestones – he was also the
first dancer of colour to hold the position of principal dancer in a
world-renowned company.
In 1975 he retired from performance and became the
first dancer to complete the Professional Dancer’s Teaching Diploma implemented
by the Royal Opera House. That year, the Winston Churchill Travelling
Fellowship Award was bestowed on him by Britain’s Queen Mother, which enabled
him to study contemporary dance and jazz in America.
His return to Cape Town in 1976 saw him as the first
black dancer to perform in the Nico Malan Opera House. He was also the first
black South African performer to appear on local television.
Mosaval opened his own ballet school the following
year and was employed as the first black Inspector of Schools for Ballet under
the Administration of Coloured Affairs. And although his school was shut down
when Apartheid powers discovered that it was multi-racial, he continued to find
ways to dance and teach.
His contribution to the performing arts has been
recognised respectively by the Western Cape Arts, Culture and Heritage Award in
1999, the Premier’s Commendation Certificate in 2003 and the Cape Tercentenary
Foundation’s Molteno Gold Medal in 2005, he was also awarded Civic Honours by
City of Cape Town.
Mosaval says adding an ACT Lifetime Achievement Award to
this list is an honour and a privilege. “Arts and culture has been an integral
part of my life, and is an important part of South African heritage, one that
we need to showcase. My hope is that young dancers dream to satisfy this hunger
for the arts, and that they choose to perform these dreams with excellence,
grace and physical beauty.”
Nomalungelo Faku, the Corporate Affairs and Communications
Director at JTI says they are incredibly proud to sponsor this much deserved
award. “JTI has many links with
the artistic and cultural world, largely due to the numerous community
investment (CI) programmes we have in place with some of the world’s best-known
and iconic institutions. Similarly in South Africa, JTI aims to extend the rich
legacy we have maintained in supporting arts and culture associations such as
ACT.”
The 19th annual ACT Awards was hosted by Sun
International in association with the National Lotteries Commission (NLC) and
is supported by the Southern African Music Rights Organisation (SAMRO), the
Dramatic, Artistic and Literary Rights Organisation (DALRO), Media24 Books, the
Nedbank Arts Affinity, JTI, Creative Feel,
Business and Arts South Africa (BASA) and the Distell Foundation.
For more information about the Arts & Culture Trust (ACT) visit www.act.org.za