A Dry White Season
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Euzhan Palcy
Donald Sutherland
Janet Suzman
Zaeks Mokae
Jurgen Prochnow
Susan Sarandon
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Taking place during the 1976 Soweto uprising, the story follows a white school teacher whose life and values are threatened when he asks questions about the death of a young black boy who died in police custody.
Director
Euzhan Palcy
Cast
Donald Sutherland
Janet Suzman
Zaeks Mokae
Jurgen Prochnow
Susan Sarandon
Marlon Brando
Winston Ntshona
Susannah Harker
Mannie Devilliers
Rowen Elmes
Ronald Pickup
Michael Gambon
Hugh Masekela
Anna Manimanzi
Ernest Ndlovu
Derek Hanekom
Richard Wilson
Thoko Ntshinga
Andrew Whaley
Gerard Thoolen
Mercia Davids
Rosemary Martin
Paul Brooks
Stephen Hanley
Willie Zweni
Bekhithemba Mpofu
Sello Maake
Precious Phiri
Stella Dickin
Sophie Mgcina
Tinashe Makoni
Ndu Gumede
Charles Pillai
Kevin Johnson
John Kani
Andre Proctor
David De Keyser
Leonard Maguire
Grant Davidson
Crew
Bunny Andrews
Edwin Angless
Edwin Angless
Martin Asbury
Mickey Bacon
Manny Barthod
Jonathan Benson
Leslie Bingham
Else Blangsted
Jane Boyle
Marc Boyle
Bobby Bremner
Andre Brink
Richard Broome
Max Brown
David Bryant
Roy Cannon
James Cavarretta
Dominique Chapuis
Roy Charman
Michel Cheyko
David Chiganze
Wiseman Chiweshe
Robert Conway
Glenn Cunningham
Elaine Dawson
Ernie Day
Manuel Doro
Tracy Dunn
Kevin Edland
Hilary Eggington
John Fenner
Michael Ferry
Efstathios Fillis
Paul Fisher
Paul Fisher
John Flemming
John Fletcher
Antony Ford
Adam Fredericks
Magdalen Gaffney
Elector Garabha
Gary S. Gerlich
Brian Gibbs
June Givanni
Pierre-william Glenn
Pierre-william Glenn
David Grannis
Dave Grusin
David Guwaza
Bob Hagen
Graham Hall
Tim Hampton
Jamie Harcourt
Jean Harnois
Barbara Harris
David Harris
John Haylen
John Higgins
Pieter Hubbard
Gary Hutchings
Derek Ixier
Marianne Jacobs
David James
Peter James
Jack Keller
Martin Kenzie
Rory Kilalea
Rick Kline
Con Kremins
Cheryl Kroll
Danny Lawson
Sondra Lee
Jimmy Ling
Albert Long
Mervyn Loynes
Issac Mabhikwa
Clive Mackey
Tommie Manderson
Cephas Mathimba
Donald O Mitchell
Vera Mitchell
Virginia Mkiza
Janine Modder
Tim Monich
James Moriana
Mark Moriarty
John Morris
Samson Mudzamiri
Val Musetti
John Narkwell
Mark Newman
Lionel Ngakane
Wallis Nicita
Peter Notley
Gift Nyamandi
Temba Nyamweda
Kevin O'connell
Eamonn O'keeffe
Sam O'steen
Julia Overton
Dominick Palcy
Euzhan Palcy
John Palmer
David Pearson
Bill Phillips
John Phillips
Michael Phillips
Mike Phillips
Kennedy Phiri
Pablo Picasso
Kelvin Pike
Kelvin Pike
Roy Quinn
Germinal Rangel
Caitlin Rhodes
John Richards
Peter Robb-king
Michael Roberts
Murray Russell
Murray Russell
Clement Ruzengwe
Hal Sanders
Steve Sango
Mary Selway
Mary Selway
Joseph Shabalala
Simon Shumba
Bill Stallion
Alexandra Stone
Jeannie Stone
Tony Teiger
Ty Teiger
Billy Thornhill
Tip Tipping
Lisa Tomblin
Alan Tomkins
Carine Tredgold
Dominic Tuohy
Philip Vene
Jean-claude Vicquery
Gerard Wall
Joan Washington
Ene Watts
Paula Weinstein
Bill Welch
Colin Welland
Terry Wells
Andrew Whaley
Susie Wiesenbacher
Jeffrey Wilhoit
Nikki Williams
Vincent Winter
David Worley
Joanne Zaluski
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Supporting Actor
Articles
A Dry White Season
Marlon Brando in A Dry White Season
The late '80s were a hard time for South Africa on screen and with good reason. With the world's growing disgust with the nation's racially discriminatory Apartheid policies, international filmmakers tackled the subject in a series of pictures, including Richard Attenborough's Cry Freedom (1987), with Denzel Washington as Steve Biko, Chris Menges' A World Apart (1988) and the 1989 political thriller, A Dry White Season. Although all three focused primarily on white South Africans involved in the fight for equality, A Dry White Season had the distinction of being the first major Hollywood feature directed by a black woman, Euzhan Palcy, while also containing one of Marlon Brando's last great performances.
Martinique-born Palcy had first attracted attention with her 1983 account of growing up in her homeland, Sugar Cane Alley. With that film's international success (in Martinique it out-grossed that year's biggest hit, E.T.), she set out to make a film about Apartheid. But after years of struggling to find financing, she realized that nobody wanted to finance a film on the subject unless it featured a white protagonist. Fortunately, she managed to hook up with an adaptation of Andre Brink's 1979 novel that had begun at Warner Bros. with producer David Puttnam.
Brink, one of the first South African novelists to write in Afrikaans, had risen to fame with his story of a white school teacher who becomes involved in the fight against Apartheid when his black gardener and the man's son are killed by the South African police. The novel had even achieved the distinction of being banned in Brink's native land.
Puttnam was already in possession of a screenplay written by Colin Welland, who had won an Oscar® for the producer's Chariots of Fire (1981). Then the project moved to MGM, where producer Paula Weinstein took it over. Palcy had problems with Welland's script and set out to re-write it, most notably changing the ending to introduce a note of revolution not present in Brink's novel. .
Although A Dry White Season had been cast with international actors of a high caliber -- including Donald Sutherland as the schoolteacher, British actress Janet Suzman as his wife and then rising young actress Susan Sarandon as a British journalist -- it was lacking in marquee value. As a result, MGM started pushing Weinstein and Palcy to find at least one major star to flesh out the cast. Palcy thought Brando would be excellent casting for the small but flashy role of a crusading lawyer who tries to help Sutherland win one of his legal battles. She never expected him to accept the role, but Brando, who had been off-screen since The Formula in 1980, had been so impressed with her earlier film and so moved by the story's politics that he agreed to work for scale against a percentage of the gross. He even donated his paycheck to anti-Apartheid organizations.
Not that he came without problems. Whether for artistic reasons, as he claimed, or because he simply couldn't learn his lines any more, he insisted that his lines be transmitted to him over a closed-circuit receiver he wore in his ear. He would later claim that he re-wrote his few scenes and even directed them himself. When he saw the finished film, he denounced MGM for allegedly butchering the film to give the impression that Apartheid was a thing of the past. He also complained that his best scene had been cut.
Despite his complaints, Brando got some of the film's best reviews. When the year's Oscar® nominations were announced, Brando was a surprise nominee for Best Supporting Actor. There were even gasps from the press when his nomination was announced. He lost the award to Denzel Washington for Glory.
Overall A Dry White Season received only mixed reviews, with some critics lamenting the changes from Brink's novel while others complained that it was time for an anti-Apartheid film with a black protagonist. Along with Brando, the best reviews went to three South African actors, Zakes Mokae, Winston Ntshona and John Kani. All three were associates of pioneering South African playwright Athol Fugard, another anti-Apartheid activist, and all three had won Tony Awards for Broadway appearances in his plays.
Producer: Paula Weinstein
Director: Euzhan Palcy
Screenplay: Euzhan Palcy, Colin Welland
Based on the novel by Andre Brink
Cinematography: Kelvin Pike, Pierre-William Glenn
Art Direction: John Fenner
Music: Dave Grusin
Cast: Donald Sutherland (Ben du Toit), Winston Ntshona (Gordon Ngubene), Susan Sarandon (Melanie Bruwer), Janet Suzman (Susan du Toit), Marlon Brando (Ian McKenzie), Zakes Mokae (Stanley), Jurgen Prochnow (Capt. Stolz), Thoko Ntshinga (Emily Ngubene), Susannah Harker (Suzette du Toit), John Kani (Julius), Michael Gambon (Magistrate), Ronald Pickup (Louw). C-97m.
by Frank Miller
A Dry White Season
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Fall September 22, 1989
Released in United States on Video April 26, 1990
Released in United States September 1989
Released in United States September 10, 1989
Released in United States October 6, 1989
Released in United States November 1989
Released in United States January 1990
Released in United States June 1990
Released in United States December 1990
Shown at Deauville Film Festival September 1-11, 1989.
Shown at Toronto Festival of Festivals September 10, 1989.
Shown at Tokyo International Film Festival (in competition) October 6, 1989.
Shown at the London Film Festival November 10-26, 1989.
Shown at Sydney Film Festival June 8-22, 1990.
Shown at Cairo International Film Festival December 3-12, 1990.
Film is dedicated to Hannah and Henri Marie-Joseph. While Marlon Brando agreed to work on this film at no cost, he accepted the minimum required Screen Actors Guild rate of $4,000. Donald Sutherland, Michael Gambon, Janet Suzman, and Susan Sarandon also worked for reduced salaries. According to a televised interview with Brando on October 7, 1989, the actor received $3,300,000 for his work (an anticipated percentage of the gross), which he planned to donate to the anti-apartheid cause.
Began shooting April 26, 1988
Released in United States on Video April 26, 1990
Released in United States September 1989 (Shown at Deauville Film Festival September 1-11, 1989.)
Released in United States September 10, 1989 (Shown at Toronto Festival of Festivals September 10, 1989.)
Released in United States October 6, 1989 (Shown at Tokyo International Film Festival (in competition) October 6, 1989.)
Released in United States November 1989 (Shown at the London Film Festival November 10-26, 1989.)
Released in United States January 1990 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival Park City, Utah January 17-27, 1990.)
Released in United States June 1990 (Shown at Sydney Film Festival June 8-22, 1990.)
Released in United States December 1990 (Shown at Cairo International Film Festival December 3-12, 1990.)
Released in United States Fall September 22, 1989