ANA
MOURNS STELLA OYEDEPO
The Association of
Nigerian Authors (ANA) mourn with the family of Stella Oyedepo who until her
untimely death in a motor accident along Lagos -Sagamu expressway last Monday
served as General Manager and the Chief executive Officer of the National
Theatre.
Mallam Denja Abdulahi, ANA National President in a statement made available to newsmen said that Dr. Mrs. Stella Oyedepo was a thorough bred prolific playwright with serious passion for drama and a committed member of ANA .
Mallam Denja Abdulahi, ANA National President in a statement made available to newsmen said that Dr. Mrs. Stella Oyedepo was a thorough bred prolific playwright with serious passion for drama and a committed member of ANA .
It would be recalled
that her death was announced on Monday while returning to Lagos from an official
trip. Her car was said to have rammed into an articulated vehicle in Sagamu
along the Benin- Ijebu-Ode Expressway.
While noting that death
is an inevitable end to every mortal existence, ANA President said members of
the Association were, however, consoled that late Chief Stella Oyedepo,
distinguished herself as an astute and exemplary playwright while serving her
country as GM and the Chief executive Officer of the National Theatre.
Mallam Denja Abdulahi
prayed Almighty God to grant her eternal rest and the family, the fortitude to
bear this irreparable loss.
Stella Moroundia
Oyedepo (sometimes Stella Dia Oyedepo) (born c. 1954) is a Nigerian playwright.
She died on Monday, 22nd April, 2019 in an autocrash along Shagamu-Benin
Express way in Nigeria.
Oyedepo wrote over 300
plays over the course of her career; of these, only around 30 have been
published. She takes as her subject daily life and problems, and her work often
addresses such themes as marriage, corruption, politics, and family life. A
typical example is her 1988 play The Greatest Gift, which contrasts the life of
a family destroyed by the father's drunkenness with the life of a successful
family. Her 2001 play Brain Has No Gender was written for the Kwara State
Ministry of Education for Women-in-Science Programme. Her first play, Our Wife
is Not a Woman, was written in 1979. Oyedepo's origins are from Ondo State. She
trained as a linguist, and for some time in the 1980s she served as Senior
Principal Leturer at the Kwara State College for Education in Ilorin. She has
also served as director of the Kwara State Council for Arts and Culture. Many
of her plays were commissioned for specific occasions.ANA members who attended
the 1999 Convention in Ilesa and the 2000 Convention in Jos would recall the
spice she added to those conventions with the performances of the Kwara State
Council for Arts and Culture Troupe which she led at those periods.
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