Film News South Africa

How Stephina Zwane's film Baby Mamas celebrates single moms

Writer-director Stephina Zwane's Baby Mamas takes a closer look at four women who share all their experiences on the joys and woes of being single moms, while still searching for true love.

Two of South Africa’s most dynamic women, Stephina Zwane and Salamina Mosese, are not afraid to push the bar as producers and think outside of the box. As young black women, they are able to bring to the fore topics in their films, that are relevant to society, in a fun and unique way, and in this way, they are have developed into storytellers who are bringing to the fore stories that are both entertaining, thought-provoking and compelling.

How Stephina Zwane's film Baby Mamas celebrates single moms

A sisterhood of single motherhood

Their first foray into film saw the pair produce their first feature film, titled Love and Kwaito, written and directed by Zwane, which was first screened at the Nasrec Youth Expo, and was later one of the official selections for two local film festivals, namely the Johannesburg Film Festival and the Mzansi Women’s Film Festival.

Their latest project, Baby Mamas was funded with the assistance of the IDC (Industrial Development Corporation), the DTI (Department of Trade and Industry), and the NFVF (National Film and Video Foundation), under the Emerging Black Filmmakers’ Fund.

Baby Mamas follows the daily lives of four (middle class) friends, played by Mosese, Mdoda, Dineo Ranaka, and Kay Smith, as two of them struggle with the challenges that face single mothers, another finds out she’s pregnant, and the other grapples with the fallout of an abusive relationship.

This is a comedy-drama revolving around the daily lives, loves and drama of four professional women who are all in different stages of their own real-life baby mama drama.

How Stephina Zwane's film Baby Mamas celebrates single moms

A sisterhood develops among these four very different women, as they find in each other the strength and courage it will take to navigate the treacherous waters of the relationships, good and bad, that they have with the men in their lives.

When asked why she wrote this story, and why it’s important for such stories coming out of Africa to be told, Zwane says “Our generation is fortunate to have the privilege of being able to tell our story ourselves, so the first thing I’m going to do is always to tell the other side of our unique African story.”

She says of the film’s four female lead characters. “I’m tired of images that don’t celebrate me as an African that constantly shows me lacking and struggling. This is not all that we are.”

During their search for funding, they were repeatedly asked why there needed to be four leads. “Because it needs to be four. The story of the baby mama, or the single mama, of a mother, is manifold. You can’t tell it with just one or two people.” Actually, four doesn’t even begin to cover the myriad of baby mama experiences. It’s also important to show women who are smart, beautiful, funny, sassy, and that stand by each other,” Zwane says.

“These are the women that we know and that we want to see more of on our film screens and on television.”

How Stephina Zwane's film Baby Mamas celebrates single moms

Switching roles on set

Zwane’s career in media started with her in front of the camera. After over 13 years of acting on various television dramas such as Gaz’lamBackstage, and Scandal, she made the gradual transition to writer and director.

Following a successful debut feature film, Love and Kwaito, she penned Baby Mamas.

Her love for directing is spurred on by how it allows one to not only tell the story one wants to tell but also by how it also allows one to tell the story how one wants it to be told.

As a writer-director, Zwane believes she is able to provide a perspective she has not seen much of in storytelling; that is the female perspective or experience. Directing also means she is able to work with amazing talent and learn from them and watch the story coming to life with the help of the crew and talent.

How Stephina Zwane's film Baby Mamas celebrates single moms

She believes one of the most important roles a director plays, is in giving insight to the story that others on set might not have thought of.

On why she wanted to tell the Baby Mamas story, she says she had always come across the term ‘baby mamas’ in a negative light. What was confusing for her was that the ‘baby mamas’ she knew were all amazing women, doing their best to raise their children in the best way they knew how. She wanted to highlight this in the Baby Mamas story. She believes that in one way or another we have all been raised by a ‘baby mama’, or know a ‘baby mama’, so it’s important to highlight this and shift the thinking on this topic to one that is more positive.

Many believe that directing is a superpower but, as a relatively new director, she is not sure if she has developed her directing superpower yet. However, having been a performer in the past, she is able to build a special relationship with her performers on the director’s floor. As such she is able to spot potential and see how great that talent can be and how to further bring out the best performance from the talent.

When asked what kind of director she wants to be known as she says, “I want to be the kind of director that is able to tell various kinds of stories with a new and fresh angle every single time. Many stories have already been told, what is important is to provide an experience to the viewer that will leave them thinking about your story and its impact on their lives, long after the credits have rolled. I would like to be the kind of director that tells stories that question human behaviour and help us to interrogate why we do the things we do as humans, not judge but rather to learn and change behaviour where necessary.”

Stephina’s main inspirations are women in media such as Oprah Winfrey and Ava DuVernay. These amazing women have been able to shift the industry as we know it, one by building a media empire, the other by promoting the inclusion of women in positions previously only reserved for men. Like these women that she admires, she too wants to make a difference, especially where African stories are concerned.

“We live on a continent that is rich in so many things including stories. I am excited because we need to move in the direction where we have a pan-African approach to our stories and an understanding that the market is both across the continent and global too.”

Read more about the latest South African Films here.

About Daniel Dercksen

Daniel Dercksen has been a contributor for Lifestyle since 2012. As the driving force behind the successful independent training initiative The Writing Studio and a published film and theatre journalist of 40 years, teaching workshops in creative writing, playwriting and screenwriting throughout South Africa and internationally the past 22 years. Visit www.writingstudio.co.za
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