Mama Africa
Miriam Makeba was the first African to win a Grammy. This documentary about her won the Audience Prize at Berlin.
Synopsis
South African singer and activist Miriam Makeba was the first African to win a Grammy. She sang for John F. Kennedy and Marlon Brando. She performed with Nina Simone, Harry Belafonte and Dizzy Gillespie. She married five times, including legendary South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela and activist Stokely Carmichael, who popularised the phrase “Black power.” She pleaded in the United Nations for sanctions against Apartheid.
She paid a high price for her beliefs. She had her South African citizenship revoked after appearing in an anti-Apartheid documentary, Come Back, Africa. After marrying Stokely, she was effectively cancelled by mainstream America, with the couple moving to Guinea.
By any standards, she was a remarkable woman who lived an extraordinary life.
Accolades
Audience Award, Berlin
“Riveting subject matter, terrific music and engaging interviewees”
Jonathan Romney, Screen International
South Africa | 2011 | 1 hr 30
Did you know?
Mama Africa was the idea of South African co-screenwriter and co-producer Don Edkins, who was developing it with Makeba when she died in 2008, at 76. Edkins was also behind the Why Democracy? anthology, which included the Oscar-winning Taxi to the Dark Side.
Want more Makeba?
French singer Jain made a Grammy-winning music video in South Africa to honour her:
Cynthia Erivo is starring as Miriam in The Road Home, the first STUDIOCANAL film to shoot in South Africa since the CANAL+ acquisition of MultiChoice.
Mandla Dube is launching his documentary of her later this year: Miriam Makeba, Voice of Africa.
Want to watch & discuss with a friend?
Stream more of the best free African music documentaries →


