Accra will stage a week-long convergence of performance, dialogue and cultural exchange when the Broadway Theatre Festival 2025 animates the University of Ghana’s School of Performing Arts. Under the banner Threads of Heritage — Weaving the African Identity, the festival brings together practitioners, scholars and delegates from Malawi, Kenya, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Nigeria, Togo and the United States to examine how diverse ethnic traditions inform contemporary Ghanaian and African identity.
The programme (performance days run 6–12 October, with delegate arrivals scheduled for 5 October and a concluding curtain call on 13 October) balances public spectacle with professional exchange. Audiences can expect staged works that blend traditional forms and contemporary dramaturgy, daily durbars and a Heritage Day that foregrounds communal ritual and pageantry. Parallel strands include masterclasses for emerging artists, hands-on workshops led by international directors and choreographers, and panel discussions such as Music, Movement and Meaning: What Ghanaian Dance and Drama Teach Us, designed to bridge practice and critical reflection.
The festival is positioned as a living archive, situating artistic practice within wider cultural and economic systems, training, commissioning, audience development and cross-border collaboration. Kotoka International Airport will host a ceremonial welcome for arriving delegates on 5 October, signaling the festival’s role as both a cultural reception and a platform for international exchange.

For Ghana and sector partners the festival carries strategic purpose beyond performance. It is framed as cultural diplomacy and a driver for creative economy outcomes: skills transfer through masterclasses, market exposure for companies and artists, and opportunities to integrate theatre into tourism circuits. By gathering continental and diaspora voices, the event also aims to deepen networks that enable touring, co-productions and longer-term professional partnerships.
The festival’s programme design reflects that dual imperative. Public-facing events deliver visibility and visitor experience; closed sessions, workshops and roundtables create the conditions for commissioning and sector development. For younger practitioners, the presence of regional and international mentors offers practical pathways into professional theatre and related disciplines from dramaturgy and stagecraft to cultural entrepreneurship.
Critically, the festival situates artistic work within current debates on identity, memory and cultural stewardship. It places cultural agency at the heart of its programme, creating space for inherited traditions to be reinterpreted and aligned with contemporary practice.
Logistics and legacy considerations are also central. Hosting in the University of Ghana’s established performing-arts precinct provides technical capacity and a captive academic audience, while the week’s mixed programme offers hotel, transport and hospitality partners clear windows of engagement. For policy makers and tourism stakeholders, the festival presents measurable opportunities: visitor nights, festival-linked itineraries, and expanded cultural tourism offerings across Accra.


