Angeline Solange Bonono | |
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Born | March 2, 1975 |
Nationality | Cameroonian |
Occupation(s) | Teacher, Novelist, Actress, Playwright, Theatre director |
Angeline Solange Bonono (born March 2, 1975) is a Cameroonian teacher, novelist, actress, playwright, and theatre director.
Angeline Solange Bonono was born on March 2, 1975. Her parents were teachers and youth counselors. She lost her father in 1979.[1] She attended secondary school at the bilingual high school in Essos, Yaoundé.[1]
Her academic journey includes a bachelor's degree with an option in German, a bachelor's degree in French literature, a master's degree in theatre studies, another master's degree in French literature, a diploma in general high school teaching (DIPES II), and an advanced studies diploma (DEA) in French literature.[2]
In 1981, Angeline performed in the troupe of the bilingual college of Ngoa-Ekellé, playing Kabeyene ou à qui la faute by Julien Mfoulou, later televised. In 1982, she performed in La Secrétaire particulière by Jean Pliya.[1]
She contributed to three collective books. The first, D'aujourd'hui: 15 poètes camerounais, included her work Que la poésie soit avec vous with 14 other Cameroonian poets.[3] The second, Les Balançoires, included her piece La femme que je suis devenue in 2006.[4] The third, Cameroun mon pays, featured her work Apostolat de la fourchette in 2008.[5]
She participated in writing residencies, festivals, and intellectual societies such as the Round of Poets alongside Pabé Mongo.[1] Her literary works span various genres including novels, theatre, children's literature, and essays.[1]
Angeline wrote and produced the screenplay Oui No with journalist François Bingono Bingono of Cameroon Radio Television (CRTV). She starred in the feature film Amours à hauts risques directed by Serge Alain Noa.[1] In 2008, she won the Clé Editions award for Best Playwright for La Déesse Phalloga directed by Rodrigue Barbe at the fourth edition of the Francophone Theatre Scenes festival.[1]
She taught French at high schools in Ebonè, Nkongsamba, Obala, at the Lycée général Leclerc in Yaoundé, and was a lecturer in African literature at the University of Yaoundé I. In 2008, she became a regional pedagogical inspector for French.[6][2]
Several authors have analyzed her works. Mokwe Edouard discusses her works in L'afrocentrisme dans la prose d'Angeline Solange Bonono as a response to reestablish Cameroon and Africa's reputation.[7] Raymond Mbassi Atéba explores the sexual idea brought to writing in his book La Plume androgyne d'Angeline Solange Bonono: du féminin à la masculinisation de l’écriture.[8]
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