Duro Ladipo

Duro Ladipo
Ladipo c. 1955
Ladipo c. 1955
BornDúródọlá Dúróṣọmọ́ Dúróoríkẹ́ Timothy Adìsá Ládipọ
(1926-12-18)18 December 1926
Osogbo, Osun State, British Nigeria (now Nigeria)
Died11 March 1978(1978-03-11) (aged 51)
Osogbo, Osun State, Nigeria
OccupationWriter, playwright, actor, producer, dramatist
LanguageYoruba
Period1961–1978
Notable worksỌba kò so, Oba waja
SpouseAbiodun Duro-Ladipo (m. 1964–1978), among others

Durodola Durosomo Duroorike Timothy Adisa Ladipo // (18 December 1926 – 11 March 1978), more commonly known as Duro Ladipo, was one of the best known and critically acclaimed Yoruba dramatists who emerged from postcolonial Africa. Writing solely in the Yoruba language, he captivated the symbolic spirit of Yoruba mythologies in his plays, which were later adapted to other media such as photography, television and cinema. His most famous play, Ọba kò so (The King did not Hang), a dramatization of the traditional Yoruba story of how Ṣango became the Orisha of Thunder, received international acclaim at the first Commonwealth Arts Festival in 1965 and on a Europe an tour, where a Berlin critic, Ulli Beier, compared Ladipọ to Karajan.[1] Ladipo usually acted in his own plays.

  1. ^ Ulli Beier, p.c. (1965) to Prof. Herbert F. W. Stahlke.