Snapped is back by popular demand at the Magnet Theatre after a successful debut season at the Baxter two years ago!
Written by Jennie Reznek and directed by Mark Fleishman, this riveting two-hander was first presented as one of the Baxter’s first productions as lockdown restrictions lifted in 2021. Garnering no fewer than six Fleur du Cap Award Nominations for Best Lead Performance, Best Lighting Design, Best Original Music, Best Set Design, Best Videography and Best costume Design, this anti-war, text-punchy play sensitively and creatively deals with relationships between fathers and daughters and what it means to be a good man. It tackles loss and grief – and what it takes to overcome these – and the futility and destructive nature of war. True to Magnet Theatre’s award-winning signature style, Snapped is an immersive experience inside a visual archive of striking imagery and original photography captured during the Second World War.
Joining Reznek onstage is Magnet graduate Carlo Daniels, who recently scooped two Fleur du Cap Theatre Awards at the 58th ceremony held in Cape Town earlier this year. In Snapped he plays the father as well as an unknown stretcher-bearer and various other characters.
The play intersects two stories – that of a woman stuck in grief over the loss of her father, and of a young South African stretcher-bearer from the Cape Corps who was killed in action in World War ll and left behind in an Italian grave, his body unable to be returned to his family. Gently presented, audiences will encounter a warmth in this emotive play that is bolstered by a touch of humour. “It’s like a meditation on living, dying, holding onto grief, and letting go,” explains Jennie, who wrote the piece during lockdown. “The structure of the play loosely draws on Dante’s Inferno, where Dante is guided through the levels of Hell by the poet Virgil. In Snapped, the stretcher-bearer acts as the woman’s guide into the hell of WWII and into her father’s past,” she explains.
Snapped has been brewing ever since Reznek’s father died sixteen years ago. She looks closely at a woman’s relationship with her beloved father and the seemingly insurmountable challenge of dealing with his death and absence from the world. It is also an encounter with a rich archive of photographs and films that Jennie’s father left behind when he died. A captain in the Medical Corps who was decorated for bravery, he was also the official photographer for the Natal Carbineers during the Second World War when his regiment was stationed in North Africa and Italy. The play uses photographs and images from his extraordinary historical archive as an integral part of the performance.
The title of the play refers to the ‘snaps’ or photographs that become remnants of peoples’ lives, pictorial reflections and visual mementos that retain their meaning long after the subjects are no longer with us. These images are intrinsically woven into the narrative – light and dark; light being the element that captures the images and is a reminder of its opposite, while the darkness accompanies emptiness, absence and loss.
Snapped is a celebration of the resilience of human creativity as it cuts through, and finds ways to deal with, universally difficult human themes. With an unflinching gaze at mortality, it is an arresting, moving and powerful piece of theatre that unpacks one of the hardest aspects of the human condition. Like grief, the story does not proceed in straight lines, but curves and circles back on itself, in poetic, musical progression.
WHAT: Spanned – Jennie Reznek
WHERE: Magnet Theatre, corner Lower Main & St Michael’s Roads, Observatory, Cape Town 7925
WHEN: 22 September at 7pm, with matinees on Saturday 9, 16 and 23 September at 2:30pm |
BOOKING & TICKETS: R120 and R80 for scholars, students and pensioners, via Webtickets.
INFO: T 021 448 3436 | Visit
WHAT THE PRESS HAD TO SAY IN 2021
“Magnet Theatre’s Snapped… is an intensely beautiful and personal piece of theatre– knitted and layered – with images, ideas, words, voice, music (heart stopping original music by Neo Muyanga). It is a journey through memory; life and death and how we somehow process and snap moments and spool threads together. Jennie Reznek’s performance is a masterclass -of transitions- from old woman to little girl.” – Robyn Cohen, The Cape Robyn
“Jennie is her heightened self, brilliantly articulated physically, vocally, and emotionally. She is the unique performer made utterly vulnerable and she is both mesmerising and heart ripping to watch….supported on stage by the utterly remarkable Carlo Daniels. Mark Fleishman’s direction is inspired. This is a massive collaboration in support of such a singularly personal story, and it works on every level….do not miss it for anything.” – Megan Choritz, WeekendSpecial