AFDA is a South African private Higher Education institution that offers higher certificates, undergraduate, and postgraduate degrees in film, television, performance, business innovation and technology, radio and podcasting, and creative writing. It has four campuses located in Auckland Park, Johannesburg; Observatory, Cape Town; Durban North, Durban; and Gqeberha Campus, Central, Port Elizabeth.[1][2]
History
AFDA was founded in 1994 by Garth Holmes, Bata Passchier, and Deon Opperman. Its inaugural class at its Johannesburg school had five students. In 2003 AFDA's second campus opened in Cape Town followed by the Durban campus in 2012 [3] and the Gqeberha campus in Eastern Cape in 2015.[4] AFDA Botswana was established in 2015 at Oodi College Of Applied Arts And Technology (OCAAT), but has since closed.[5]
In 2017, AFDA was acquired by tertiary education company, Stadio Investments, a wholly owned subsidiary of JSE-listed Curro Holdings. By then, the school had expanded to 2,000 full-time students, 3,500 alumni, five campuses (eventually scaled back to four), and nine fully accredited degrees. [6]
In 2024, AFDA has 2,700 students, over 7000 alumni and a permanent staff of over 180 academics and administrators. [7]
In November 2024 Diaan Lawrenson was appointed as CEO of AFDA. The former actress had been serving as Dean of AFDA Cape Town since 2019.[8]
In 2021, 2022, and 2023 AFDA was ranked among the top 5 most innovative South African educational institutions in the creative brand space in The Loeries Official Rankings. [9][10]
AFDA has won the Best Student Film award at the South African Film and Television Awards 10 times, with Anguish, a 2023 graduation film from AFDA Johannesburg, taking home the award at the SAFTAS 2024 awards.[11]
At the 33rd 2006 annual Student Academy Awards (SAA) presented by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences, the AFDA production Elalini, directed by Tristan Holmes, won the Foreign Film Award, making AFDA the only African film to have won the award.[12] The 2021 SAA Narrative Gold winner, Lakutshon’ IIanga” (When the Sun Sets) by South African Phumi Morare of Chapman University (USA) was filmed in South Africa and produced in association with AFDA.[13]