In 1983 the theatre researcher Temple Hauptfleisch raised concerns about the decline in South
African amateur theatre (also called amdram). He identified several factors that could support
its continued development, among them “the availability of a theatre or hall”. He states that
“to produce a play one needs a theatre, and for the sophisticated public of today the old school
hall is no longer good enough” (Hauptfleisch, 1983). This quotation can hardly be regarded
as representative of all amateur theatre companies or communities in the South Africa of the
1980s. The sophisticated audiences and amateur companies that he referred to were limited
to high middle class white audiences in cities and major towns. In most communities and rural
towns such preferences would have been unimaginable.
This article investigates the position of the Cape Flats Players (the Players), an amateur
theatre company that was established in 1973 and continued its activities until about the turn
of the century. Where relevant, the fate of the Eoan Group, an amateur Cape Town opera
company, is discussed. It is common cause that during the high point of apartheid very few
theatres were accessible to non-white actors or patrons. For instance, the Players had no
permanent rehearsal space or performance venue. They initially rehearsed in their founder,
Adam Small’s garage, and later after hours in university lecture halls, a community library,
or the dance hall of a local hotel.
Helen Southern-Holt founded the Eoan Group in 1933 as a cultural and welfare society.
Under the guidance of Joseph Manca, the group became primarily known as a choir and opera company. They had their own rehearsal venue until they had to move and used the Cape Town
City Hall for their performances to ethnically mixed audiences. Changes to the stage of the
City Hall and the implementation of the Group Areas Act in the early 1960s forced them to
relocate their activities. With the aid of private donors and government subventions they built
the Joseph Stone auditorium. The close relationship of members of the Group to and their
financial reliance on the Department of Coloured Affairs gave rise to criticism and eventually
boycott action by anti-apartheid activists.
With reference to the Players the article investigates the availability of theatre spaces
between 1970 and the early 1990s and the impact of apartheid legislation on their and the
Eoan Group’s activities and performances. Specific attention is paid to the effects of two key
apartheid statutes, viz. the Reservation of Separate Amenities Amendment Act, No. 10 of 1960
and the Group Areas Act, Act 41 of 1950 as amended by Act 77 of 1957. Theoretically, the
paper is informed by various perspectives on space formulated by Michel Foucault, David
Harvey, and Henri Lefebvre.
Foucault’s essay “Of other spaces” is relied on with reference to his notions of
“heterotopia” and “heterochrony”. A key insight of Harvey, namely that “space and time are
socially constructed” is used in the paper to explore the processes of social reproduction of
political policy guidelines. With reference to Lefebvre’s notion of the “production of space” three key concepts are referred to in the article, namely that of spatial practice (i.e., space as
perceived between daily routine and urban reality); representations of space (i.e., space as
conceptualized by scientists and social engineers, among others) and representational spaces
(i.e., “space as directly lived through its associated images and symbols”).
With respect to the Reservation of Separate Amenities Act, Act 49 of 1953 as amended it
is found that the Players did not have access to any of the available theatres on university
campuses in the Cape Town vicinity or surrounding towns; that the access of audiences to their performances was restricted; that they had to use non-traditional spaces for their
performances; that they had no control over the nature and demography of their audiences
and that through their itinerant performances they created new networks of connected
individuals and groups.
As far as the Group Areas Act, Act 41 of 1950 as amended is concerned, the obliteration
of the early cultural networks of the Eoan Group and their relocation to their own theatre in
a township are discussed. It is found that the anti-apartheid activists promoted the boycott of
the facility, consequently seriously hampering its effective functioning for much of the 1980s.
In the final instance, the Players’ approach to perform in the once boycotted “whites only”
Nico Malan theatre, is discussed in juxtaposition to the fate of the aforementioned boycott of
the Eoan Group. It is found that by the beginning of the 1990s the political climate had change
significantly from that of the early 1970s and 1980s. Although their performance at the former
“whites only” facility in 1991 met with some criticism, the political and cultural climate had
changed significantly. In this respect the Players could be regarded as the group whose
performance signalled the end of the community boycott of the Nico Malan theatre.
In general, it was found that the place of performance is relational to other spaces,
histories, and symbolic conceptions. The choice between “an old school and a theatre”, although apparently simple, conceals complex questions on space, access, and exclusion.
Die teaternavorser Temple Hauptfleisch spreek in 1983 kommer uit oor die agteruitgang van
plaaslike amateurteater. Hy identifiseer verskeie faktore om dit te stimuleer, onder meer die
beskikbaarheid van ’n saal of ’n teater, verkieslik laasgenoemde, “omdat vir vandag se gesofistikeerde
gehore die ou skoolsaal nie meer goed genoeg is nie”. Hierdie artikel ondersoek
na aanleiding van hierdie stelling die lotgevalle van die Cape Flats Players en die Eoan-groep,
beide Kaapse amateurgeselskappe tydens die hoogbloei van apartheid. Die beskikbaarheid
van teatergeriewe en veral die toepassing van apartheidswetgewing met verwysing na die Wet
op die Aanwysing van Aparte Geriewe en die Groepsgebiedewet, word van nader beskou. Die
ondersoek vind plaas aan die hand van Michel Foucault, David Harvey en Henri Lefebvre se
insigte oor die aard van plek en ruimte. Hier is bevind dat die Cape Flats Players nie toegang
tot teaters gehad het nie; dat die toegang van gehore beperk was; dat hulle nie-tradisionele
ruimtes moes gebruik; dat hulle geen beheer oor die aard en demografie van hulle gehore
gehad het nie en dat hulle nuwe netwerke van verbandhoudende individue en groepe gevestig
het. Ten opsigte van die Eoan-groep is bevind dat die apartheidswetgewing tot gevolg gehad
het dat hul kulturele netwerk vernietig is. Ná die oprigting van hul eie teater, het hul
onmiddellike gemeenskap die fasiliteit geboikot, hoofsaaklik vanweë die apartheidsregering
se geldelike steun aan die groep. Die kontrasterende ervaring van die Cape Flats Players wat
in 1991 in die voorheen “slegs blankes” Nico Malan-teater opgetree het, word bespreek. Alhoewel daar kritiek teen hul optrede was, het dit ook die einde van die boikot van die
teaterkompleks ingelui. In die algemeen is bevind dat opvoerruimtes verbande oproep met ander ruimtes, geskiedenisse en simbole. Die keuse tussen “’n ou skoolsaal” en “’n teater”
mag eenvoudig klink, maar verdoesel verwikkelde vrae oor ruimtes, toegang en uitsluiting.