December 12, 2024
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Oprah Winfrey meets Prudence Mabhena (right) at the Oscar Awards ceremony (Image Credit: Nehanda Radio)

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Zimbabwean musician Prudence Mabhena’s triumph over disability has all the makings of a Hollywood movie. Fortunately, filmmaker Roger Ross Williams decided to make a documentary about her life particularly the band Liyana.

The documentary titled Music by Prudence, went on to win an Academy Award, commonly known as an Oscar. This made Prudence Mabhena arguably Zimbabwe’s first Oscar award winner.

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Winning an Oscar award did not translate into financial rewards for Prudence Mabhena who was leading an eight-piece afro-fusion band comprising disabled members.

Mabhena was flown to Los Angeles for the Oscar awards ceremony, rubbing shoulders with Oprah Winfrey and famous personalities.

Prudence Mabhena’s life was difficult from an early age considering that she was born with Arthrogryposis, and was severely disabled.  Arthrogryposis refers to the development of multiple joint contractures affecting two or more areas of the body prior to birth. A contracture occurs when a joint becomes permanently fixed in a bent or straightened position. This can impact the joint’s function and range of motion and may lead to muscle atrophy.

As a result, she was abandoned at an early age by her parents and was raised by her maternal grandmother. Speaking on  her complicated family setup, Prudence Mabhena said:

When my mother gave birth to me, my father immediately divorced her because he could not accept my condition. And my mother went on to marry and I could not go with her into her new marriage.

Prudence fell in love with music in 1999 when she was in grade six at King George VI Primary School. Mabhena joined an acapella group called Ngojani which marked the beginning of her professional music career.

Prudence Mabhena and her Liyana bandmates (Image Credit: Passion River)

As part of the acapella group, Prudence Mabhena toured Switzerland for three months singing in a stage production with a group of people living with mental disabilities.

Her watershed moment came when she joined the band Liyana in 2005. It was with the band that she won the Music Crossroads provincial finals in 2006. Liyana proceeded to Marondera for the national finals where they came third.

Prudence Mabhena and Liyana competed in music competitions in Sweden, The Netherlands, Belgium, and so many others. It was with Liyana that the documentary ‘Music by Prudence’ came about.

Roger Ross Williams and Prudence after ‘Music by Prudence’ won the Oscar for best short documentary in 2010 (Image Credit: VALERIE MACON/AFP via Getty Images)

The documentary was done by director Roger Ross Williams and produced by Elinor Burkett. It was taken to the Oscars and won the Best Short Documentary category in 2010.

The documentary came about when its producer Elinor Burkett was in Zimbabwe lecturing at a university.  Prudence Mabhena’s band Liyana was invited to perform at one of Burkett’s sculptor husband’s exhibitions.

Burkett was impressed by the band’s performance and when she returned to the United States she spoke to Roger Ross Williams who then became the director of the short documentary.

The two then asked each member of Liyana to write about their various backgrounds. Prudence Mabhena’s story caught their attention and they decided to focus most of the documentary on her.

Prudence Mabhena said she and her bandmates were promised many things by Roger Ross Williams but nothing materialised.

She was fortunate to meet a doctor who specialized in scoliosis at one of the screenings. The doctor straightened her spine in the United States.

She got an electric wheelchair in 2011, and it broke down in 2019. Mabhena opened a GoFundMe campaign, but could not get enough money to replace the chair so she got it fixed. However, the chair started malfunctioning thereby disrupting her music career.

In 2018, she was appointed as an ambassador for South Africa’s Casual Day project. Casual Day is the flagship project of the National Council for Persons with Disabilities (NCPD).

Casual Day helps NCPD to fulfil its mandate of creating a fully accessible and inclusive society for all, raising R220 million.

Source: iHarare News

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