Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Echoes from the stage
Mail & Guardian
|June 27, 2025
From fruit market to freedom stage — The Market Theatre marks 49 years

Johannesburg is a city where the pavements speak, if you listen close enough — stories beneath tar, between bricks and rising in spaces that have defied silence.
Among these sacred spaces is a building that once bustled with the rhythms of trade: fruit piled high, hands exchanging change, spices scenting the air.
But beneath that everyday chaos, something deeper was always stirring because the building that housed Johannesburg's Indian Fruit Market would become one of South Africa’s most radical, revolutionary cultural sites — The Market Theatre.
Today, 49 years after that transformation, the Market Theatre still stands. Not just as a venue but as a living archive of resistance, artistry and the unwavering human urge to speak truth to power.
It is no accident that The Market Theatre was born in 1976, a year that ripped off the apartheid regime’s mask of control.
On 16 June 1976, thousands of students across the country rose in peaceful protest against the forced use of Afrikaans as a medium of instruction in black schools. What followed was state violence that left hundreds, possibly even thousands, dead. That year became etched in our bones.
Just three days later, on 19 June 1976, Mannie Manim and the late, legendary Barney Simon founded The Market Theatre inside the very structure built in 1913 for the Indian Fruit Market.
It was prophetic timing. As the streets burned with rage and sorrow, this theatre opened as a space of artistic defiance, where the suppressed stories of black South Africans could breathe.
The theatre’s existence challenged apartheid laws — multi-racial casts performed for integrated audiences in defiance of segregation. It was a rebellion with stage lights and scripts. It was activism in performance.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 27, 2025-Ausgabe von Mail & Guardian.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Mail & Guardian
Mail & Guardian
Mpondoland at the precipice
Its plight echoes a global call to remember who we are and what we stand to lose
5 mins
M&G 17 October 2025
Mail & Guardian
Namibia shifts gears in its journey to women in power
That changed with Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah. When she took the oath of office on 21 March, she did not just become Namibia’s first female president — she recalibrated the country’s idea of who belongs at the top.
3 mins
M&G 17 October 2025
Mail & Guardian
What Multichoice, Canal + deal means
This is the French media company's largest transaction
2 mins
M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian
Student wins bullying case
Amara Mooloo says the college launched disciplinary proceedings against her instead of addressing the claims
5 mins
M&G 17 October 2025
Mail & Guardian
Côte d'Ivoire vote relevant for region
Côte d'Ivoire's experience in handling electoral disputes through legal channels demonstrates the rule of law in action
4 mins
M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian
Paris, death destination of ambassadors past and present
Last week, as Spring dawned, the 5am news bulletin stopped me mid-step en route to my first cup of piping hot coffee.
6 mins
M&G 17 October 2025
Mail & Guardian
Sex pest teacher: Mom speaks out
Bereaved mother recalled her son's 2022 suicide as a 52-year-old former teacher at the school appeared in court this week on 25 counts of indecent assault and sexual assault of young boys
5 mins
M&G 17 October 2025
Mail & Guardian
Walk with us, President Ramaphosa
As with Marikana, the CR17 bank statements and Phala Phala — the biggest scandal of his presidency — Cyril Ramaphosa yet again finds himself in a pickle.
2 mins
M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian
When the lens sings
Vuyo Giba speaks about archiving South Africa's jazz legacy through black-and-white photography and reflects on Feya Faku's death
5 mins
M&G 17 October 2025

Mail & Guardian
Odinga: the relentless Pan-Africanist
Kenya's Raila Odinga, a pan-Africanist who dominated politics for half a century
5 mins
M&G 17 October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size