In 1963, Kente produced his first play,
Manana, The Jazz Prophet, which featured celebrated musicians
Caiphus Semenya and
Letta Mbulu. The play focused on Manana, a gospel preacher and prophet, whose main concern was to bring everybody to the Christian faith. His success with his first two plays motivated him to leave the Union Artists to start his own training centre and production company, GK Productions. He trained famous South African artists and entertainers such as
Brenda Fassie, Nomsa Nene, in the garage of his home in Dube,
Soweto. Kente also wrote music for artists such as
Miriam Makeba and
Letta Mbulu. Three of his plays drew criticism for being anti-
apartheid (Segregation) and were banned:
How Long,
I Believe and
Too Late. He was jailed for one year in 1976 on conclusion of the filming of his play
How Long. The film was never released and the master negative of the film was given to the National Film Board in
Pretoria. The National Film, Video and Sound Archives is the current custodian of this film. First performed in 1975, his play one-act play
Too Late was banned by the Publications Control Board because it dealt with the death of Ntanana, a crippled girl, through brutal police action and apartheid bureaucracy. Another of his plays
I Believe, was also banned. Another famous piece is
Mama and the load. In 1989, his Soweto home was firebombed burning early scripts and records. The garage at his home served as rehearsal room, set construction workshop, training centre and storeroom for GK Productions. It is estimated that before his death, Kente wrote 23 plays and three television dramas. Kente began his last play,
The Call, when he was diagnosed
HIV positive. It is a musical about a man living with
HIV who brings hope to others with the disease. ==Recognition==