Pieter-Dirk Uys
In a classic interview from 2016, Stephen Sackur speaks to South African satirist, Pieter-Dirk Uys. Are there dangers in playing South Africa's recent history for laughs?
HARDtalk celebrates its twentieth anniversary with a repeat of one of its classic interviews. In this interview from 2016, Stephen Sackur speaks to South African satirist, Pieter-Dirk Uys. Leaders who routinely abuse their power cannot stand to be laughed at. Satire is a potent political weapon. That's a truth my guest today has exploited for forty years. Pieter-Dirk Uys styles himself as "the most famous white woman in South Africa." Thanks to his alter ego Auntie Evita; a character he created to poke fun at the white Afrikaner establishment during the apartheid era, and which he now uses to lampoon Jacob Zuma and the ANC. Are there dangers in playing South Africa's recent history for laughs?
Last on
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Stephen Sackur |
| Interviewed Guest | Pieter-Dirk Uys |
Broadcasts
- Wed 5 Oct 2016 03:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Wed 5 Oct 2016 09:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Wed 5 Oct 2016 14:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Wed 5 Oct 2016 19:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Mon 7 Nov 2016 04:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Mon 7 Nov 2016 09:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Mon 7 Nov 2016 15:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Mon 7 Nov 2016 20:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Wed 31 May 2017 03:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Wed 31 May 2017 08:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Wed 31 May 2017 14:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD
- Wed 31 May 2017 19:30GMTBBC News Channel except BBC News UK & BBC News UK HD