Market Theatre Celebrates 50 Years of Defiance and Artistic Triumph

Arts & Culture News

Market Theatre Celebrates 50 Years of Defiance and Artistic Triumph
Market TheatreApartheidSouth Africa
  • 📰 NPR
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 251 sec. here
  • 11 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 121%
  • Publisher: 63%

South Africa's iconic Market Theatre, a symbol of resistance against apartheid, marks its 50th anniversary, reflecting on its role in the struggle for equality and its lasting impact on South African society and the arts.

South Africa 's iconic Market Theatre , born in the darkest days of apartheid and a force for change, is celebrating its 50th anniversary.Performers Percy Mtwa, left, and Mbongeni Ngema in a scene from"Woza Albert" at the Market Theatre in Johannesburg, South Africa , in 1981.

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa—When it first started in the 1970s, South Africa's Market Theatre staged plays considered to be so subversive that it became a regular target of the apartheid government's zealous censors. Even the fact that its audiences were made up of Black and white South Africans mingling together was unheard of in a city where the law separated areas and people by race. The theater, established in an old fruit and vegetable market in central Johannesburg, was born at a pivotal time in"the Struggle" — the fight against the apartheid government. It opened its doors just days after the 1976 Soweto uprising changed the country forever.Youth took to the streets to protest schools teaching in the Afrikaans language and the ensuing government crackdown saw hundreds killed. "So, we opened our doors three days after that event," says the theater's current artistic director Greg Homann."The Market Theatre has been forged in those days of June 16 and now has really carried the weight of telling the national story of South Africa all the way through the dark years of apartheid." This year, the theater, where legendary South Africans like actor John Kani and playwright Athol Fugard made their names, is celebrating its 50th anniversary. John Kani arrives at the premiere of"Murder Mystery 2" on Tuesday, March 28, 2023, at the Regency Village Theatre in Los Angeles.In that half century it produced plays of international renown, including "Woza Albert,""Sophiatown," and"Sizwe Banzi is Dead," and the hit musical"Sarafina" — about the Soweto uprising. "Sarafina," written by jazz musician Hugh Masekela, went on to Broadway and became a Hollywood movie starring Whoopie Goldberg. But many initially doubted it would survive. Tony-award-winning actor John Kani said he was stunned when the theatre's founders Barney Simon and Mannie Manim first told him their vision. "I thought these two whities were nuts, it's not going to work, and they said to me and Athol Fugard that it's going to be open to all. I said what are you talking about, it's '75, '76" Kani recalled in a 2014 interview.But despite his initial reservations, Kani said,"my entire career fell in place on this stage."The theater"was often raided. Actors were sometimes in some kind of danger," Homann says."They would then go onto stage and they would start doing their censorship in front of the audience," he continues."And it almost became like a second act of the production where the censorship was actively part of the work."Then there was the fact it was a place where all races could mix, with the theater's directors cleverly finding loopholes to circumvent the law. "At one point our bar was sold for one rand, so, you know, the equivalent of 50 American cents, so that it was privately owned," says Homann. Being privately owned meant that audience members of color"could stand in that space legally," he explains."But if they stepped one meter into the foyer they were illegal by apartheid laws." United States First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, left, and Vice President Al Gore applaud during a variety musical performance of "Sophiatown" by members of the Market Theatre Company on Monday, May 9, 1994 in Johannesburg. Rev. Jesse Jackson is seated behind Gore.While the theater's work helped spread the message of the anti-apartheid movement at home and abroad, some white audience members were triggered. "Quite a number of times I've seen them whites. You know, they get up," recalls director Arthur Molepo, a theater veteran who has been involved with the Market since its inception. "You see a man grabbing a woman and just walking out during the play, meaning they were angry, of course, or they're not agreeing or believing what we're saying," said Molepo."There was no black, there was no white. We were just a whole group, a whole bunch. So we were making things, making theater," he says.From the applause and standing ovation it was clear the subject matter still resonated, even with what appeared to be a mainly Gen Z and millenial audience who never knew life under apartheid. The story follows a Black family's struggles in the first half of the twentieth century and ultimately ends with their forced removal from their home under the white government's racial segregation laws. Gabisile Tshabalala, 35, played the lead role in Marabi, but she grew up in a free South Africa and doesn't remember apartheid. However, the actress says:"Theater is extremely important for young South Africans....especially as Black people...we get to tell our stories."It"tells the South African story," says Homann."whatever that might be of its day." "So during the '80s, that was the story of the fight against apartheid. More recently, it's the challenges of a young democracy." Issues like access to education, corruption, and gender-based violence are all being tackled on stage as the Market turns 50, with South Africans hoping for many more years of thought-provoking theater.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

NPR /  🏆 96. in US

Market Theatre Apartheid South Africa Theater History Social Change

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Oscars to Move to L.A. Live's Peacock Theater in 2029, Leaving Dolby TheatreOscars to Move to L.A. Live's Peacock Theater in 2029, Leaving Dolby TheatreThe Academy Awards will relocate to the Peacock Theater at L.A. Live in 2029, ending its long-standing residency at the Dolby Theatre. The move marks a new era for the Oscars, with a ten-year agreement with AEG and a transition to streaming on YouTube.
Read more »

National Champs: Pima Community College women's basketball team celebrates victoryNational Champs: Pima Community College women's basketball team celebrates victoryVanessa Gongora joined KGUN 9 as a multimedia journalist in December of 2024. Born and raised in Southern California, her move to Tucson means she's not too far away from home.
Read more »

XRP Sets up Bear Trap, Shiba Inu Bull Market Confirmed; If This Hits, Will Ethereum Hold $2,000? Crypto Market ReviewXRP Sets up Bear Trap, Shiba Inu Bull Market Confirmed; If This Hits, Will Ethereum Hold $2,000? Crypto Market ReviewMarket is taking a solid hit after the liquidation series on an overcrowded Bitcoin derivatives market.
Read more »

The iconic South African theater that took on apartheidThe iconic South African theater that took on apartheidSouth Africa's iconic Market Theatre, born in the darkest days of apartheid and a force for change, is celebrating its 50th anniversary.
Read more »

Paul McCartney Shines at Rare Underplay at Fonda TheatrePaul McCartney Shines at Rare Underplay at Fonda TheatreThe musician played an extensive set of Beatles and Wings hits in the first of a two-night stand at the Hollywood venue.
Read more »

Inside Paul McCartney’s Friday night performance at LA’s Fonda TheatreInside Paul McCartney’s Friday night performance at LA’s Fonda TheatreFans snapped up tickets to one of the most intimate shows McCartney has ever played in Los Angeles. They got a night they will never forget.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-04-01 03:20:08