| What: Ayn Rand’s Night of January 16 When: February 6-21, 2026 Where: Milnerton Playhouse Theatre, 81 Pienaar Road, Milnerton Show Dates and Times: Evenings 19.30: Friday6, 13, 20; Saturday 7, 14, 21 February 2026 Matinees: 14.30: Saturday 14 and 21 February; Sunday 8 February Tickets: R150 Bookings: www.milnertonplayers.co.za; Concessions/Discounts/pensioners specials – email bookings@milnertonplayers.com Follow on social media: Instagram: http://@milnerton_players Facebook: @milnerton_players Website: http://www.milnertonplayers.co.za |
Exciting theatre news for the new year 2026 is that Milnerton Players is staging Ayn Rand’s Night of January 16. The production is on February 6-21 at the Milnerton Playhouse Theatre. Direction is by veteran theatre maker, Johann van der Merwe. This play was first staged in 1935, when Rand was 28. The drama is set in a courtroom, during a murder trial and the audience becomes the jury. The cast features seasoned players and newcomers. For example, LAMTA graduate, Tumelo Mogashoa is making his community theatre debut as the District Attorney. Read on for more. Info as supplied:
Milnerton Players present Ayn Rand’s Night of January 16, from February 6-21, 2026
Milnerton Players is proud to present The Night of January 16, written by iconic writer/philosopher Ayn Rand and directed by veteran Johann van der Merwe. From February 6-21, Milnerton Playhouse stage becomes a courtroom and the audience – the jury. With this participation as the key to the outcome of the show, 12 patrons become jurors who will vote guilty or not-guilty every night, thus changing the end of each show.
This totally gripping drama about the rise and destruction of a brilliant and ruthless man is a play with a difference as you decide the fate of Karen Andre: guilty or not guilty? This embodies Rand’s style of social commentary – “Who is truly on trial — the accused, or the society that judges her?” it promises to be a nail- biting, thought provoking and absorbing evening.
The trial of Karen Andre (Kendra Maduray) grips New York. Once the brilliant secretary — and mistress — of powerful Swedish financier Bjorn Faulkner, she now stands accused of his death after he fell fifty stories from the penthouse they once shared.
The courtroom becomes the stage for a moral duel between two opposing worlds: the cold rationalism of District Attorney Flint (Tumelo Mogashoa) and the passionate defiance of Defence Attorney Stevens, (Gillian Vosloo) who insists that the truth about Faulkner’s death is tied to the kind of man he was — ruthless, magnetic, and unbound by ordinary rules.
Witnesses deliver testimony one by one: the building staff, the police inspector, a private investigator, the widow and more. Each with another piece of the puzzle, until an unexpected twist silences the courtroom. The judge watches. The attorneys question. Tension reigns.
While Ayn Rand achieved fame as a novelist, (The Fountainhead/Atlas Shrugged, among her most famous) her first public success came as a playwright. Night of January 16th, which opened on Broadway in 1935, introduced her to audiences as a bold critic of social conformity. The themes explored are as relevant today.
The cast includes a combination of veteran actors, a few newcomers in the smaller roles; all exceeding expectations with their performances during rehearsal. LAMTA graduate, Tumelo Mogashoa makes his amateur theatre debut as the District Attorney.
The creative team of director: Johann Van Der Merwe, production designer /assistant director: Hema Maskowitz, have put their considerable expertise into presenting this production, alongside very experienced stage manager and props mistress, Melissa Marcus.
✳ Sponsored content. Readying for the courtroom: Attorney Stevens (Gillian Vosloo), John Graham Whitfield (Chris Cameron-Dow), Ms Jungquist (Danalia Borman), The Judge (Ingrid Penzhorn), Elmer Sweeney (Theo Roux), Karen Andre (Kendra Maduray) and ‘Guts’ Regan (Kabo Mokhati). Photo: Christoff Van Wyk
