Paraphrase the following

Curl up & Dye – by Sue Pam-Grant & DJ Grant was first staged in 1989, to huge acclaim in South Africa and Europe. It won a Fringe First at the Edinburgh Festival in 1990. It was written up in the New York Times. The narrative takes place in in a hair salon, in Joubert Park, Johannesburg. The salon is on its last legs and mirrors the realities of SA at that time- 1989. The salon was in what was termed a ‘grey area’. The Apartheid Group Areas Act was still in force in 1989, but high density areas such as Joubert Park, Hillbrow, Yeoville were grey areas, where people across the Apartheid race classifications were living. This led to many landlords extorting exorbitant rents. It was also a time for an extraordinary diversity across the so called colour bar – with South Africans living together in congested and crowded blocks of flats.

Curl up & Dye, a play by Sue Pam-Grant & DJ Grant, premiered in 1989 to critical acclaim in South Africa and Europe. It received a Fringe First at the Edinburgh Festival in 1990 and was praised in the New York Times. The story is set in a Johannesburg hair salon in Joubert Park, reflecting the social and political realities of South Africa in 1989. The salon, located in a 'grey area', was in a neighborhood where the Apartheid Group Areas Act was still in effect, yet people of different racial backgrounds lived together. This period saw a unique diversity and coexistence among South Africans living in congested and overpriced flats.