
And She Didn’t Die
And She Didn’t Die tells the life story of South African writer and resistance fighter Lauretta Ngcobo, as seen through the eyes of her daughter, film director Kethiwe Ngcobo. Lauretta grew up in KwaZulu-Natal, became involved in the struggle against apartheid through her husband AB Ngcobo, leader of the Pan African Congress, and eventually fled to London. In exile, she found the freedom to write—becoming one of the first Black women to gain a literary voice.
The director interweaves home videos, archival material, interviews, passages from books, and re-enacted scenes into a richly layered portrait blending the personal and the political. Kitchen table conversations about hairstyles and cultural traditions counterpoint reflections on the role of rural women in the anti-apartheid struggle. The oral storytelling tradition, in which her mother’s books are also rooted, has a central role.
Kethiwe Ngcobo continues this theme through the medium of cinema. The result is a portrait not only of Lauretta, but also of the many other women who co-wrote history. A tribute to the power of stories as a form of resistance, healing, and cultural transmission.
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