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The 2025 Savanna Newcomer Showcase is rolling into Sandton, and with Tumi Morake at the helm, you’re guaranteed a laugh-till-your-face-hurts extravaganza.
On Sunday, 26 January 2025, the iconic Maslow Hotel will be transformed into a comedy playground, where 20 emerging comedians from across the country will have just five minutes on stage to showcase their talent and vie for a chance to secure a nomination in the highly coveted Savanna Newcomer Award category at this year’s awards.
If you want to discover the next big thing in comedy, this is the event to be at! Prepare for quick wit, sharp satire, and hilariously relatable digs as these newcomers pull out all the stops to make their mark.
The Savanna Newcomer Showcase – Where Laughter Meets Opportunity!
Why You Can’t Miss This:
Tumi Morake is your host. Enough said.
20 newbie comedians are bringing their funniest material to the stage.
Tickets are just R150. Tickets are limited, so book now on Quicket.
Oh, and there’s a free Savanna on arrival because laughter is thirsty work.
This year’s Intimate Evening Series, a collaboration between Liberty, Griza Enterprises and leading local promoter Showtime Management – designed to usher in each new year with a symphony of hope – features Soul II Soulin Johannesburg for a celebration of reggae, R&B and neo-soul at Montecasino’s Outdoor Events Area on 01 February, before taking the show to Kirstenbosch in Cape Town on 08 February.
The British hitmakers, creators of the classic singles “Keep On Movin’” and the huge hit “Back To Life (However Do You Want Me)” – Number one in both the US and the UK in 1989 – will be supported by South African legends TKZee.
The trio – Tokollo Tshabalala, Kabelo Mabalane and Zwai Bala, who met at school in the early Nineties – became the biggest-selling kwaito band in South African musical history when their 1997 and 1998 singles “Palafala” and “Shibobo” (respectively) both earned sales more than 100,000 copies, making TKZee a household name across the African continent.
As the new year starts, and the tricky act of juggling the ‘Janu-worry’ budget comes into play, everyone is looking for a bargain to get them through the month. With Ster-Kinekor’s Throwback Cinema promotion continuing through January and into February 2025, you get to enjoy some real cinema classics at the classic price of just R50 per ticket.
“We’ve secured some more iconic movie titles for the whole family to enjoy, as we all ease ourselves into another new year. These include Interstellar, which releases on Friday 03 January, followed by Groundhog Day from 10 January. The Pursuit of Happyness fills the big screen from 17 January with No Country for Old Men releasing the following week, and The Truman Show on 31 January. The much-loved film, 10 Things I Hate About You, sees us survive and exit January, with its release on 07 February,” says Lynne Wylie, chief marketing officer of Ster-Kinekor.
“Bringing back popular movie titles from years gone by is proving to be a popular must-see-again option for our big screen fans and, with the discounted ticket price for these Throwback Cinema titles, what’s not to love? Continuing this popular promotion, January’s line-up spans a number of movie genres, ensuring there is something for everyone to watch during the holiday period, either as repeat viewing or for a first-time big screen experience.”
Getting into the spirit of the new year, Ster-Kinekor’s Throwback Cinema line-up includes some all-time favourites. And even though budgets might be tight, the affordable price gives you the ticket to revisit iconic movies or to discover them for the first time on the big screen.
“I approached the competition expecting a pageant. I walked out with an MBA in life,” says Erin-Jane Miller, the reigning Mrs South Africa. Like thousands before her, Miller discovered that behind the glamour of the crown lies an intensive leadership and women’s empowerment programme that has helped launch successful entrepreneurs, community leaders, and global changemakers.
As entries open for 2025, Mrs South Africa, powered by headline sponsor iME, is now seeking its next cohort of ambitious women ready to transform their lives and communities, and to become the best versions of themselves.
CEO Joani Jacobs is optimistic for the coming year, revealing that applications for the previous season shattered all former records. “The 2024 season showcased the talent of our local women on a scale rarely seen in South Africa, and given its success, we feel confident that the coming year will be our most exciting and popular yet, raising the competition’s standard even higher.”
“But what matters most is the impact the programme has on our participants, and what they’re able to achieve after taking part. The Class of 2024 experienced some phenomenal accomplishments, including collectively raising over R400 000 for charity – in addition to a number of other personal success stories.
The Mrs South Africa programme aims to prepare contestants for a life of purpose-driven success and self-empowerment, equipping participants with valuable life skills such as leadership development, financial management, effective communication, and personal branding.
As an actress, she’s best known for ageing up to play Magda Louw in the series of the same name – a role that’s won her two consecutive Silwerskerm Awards for best actress in a comedy. But did you know that Desiré Gardner is also a scriptwriter on that series, and has been nominated for a SAFTA for her work?
Now, Desiré brings her writing talents to Reënboogrant, a new Showmax telenovela premiering on Wednesday, 15 January 2025.
Inspired by Louise van Niekerk’s best-selling 90s young adult novels, Reënboogrant is a Tshwane-set teen series centred on the Brink family. Minke Marais (Mooiweer en Warm, Nuwejaar and Summertide) and Mila de Villiers (Wyfie) co-star as Grade 10 sisters Shani and Sunette, with Paul Strydom (Spooksoeker) as their older brother, Dolf, who is in Matric.
Also look out for Diepe Waters’ duo Righard van Jaarsveld and Johnny Potsanyane among the teen cast, as well as ex-Miss Teen Namibia finalist Marelee Ferreira and Xander Venter in their Showmax debuts.
André Velts heads up the directing team with Sonvelt Media producing. Sonvelt Media won the 2024 SAFTA for Best Made For TV Movie for ‘n Tyd van Waterpere.
Watch the trailer:
Had you already read the book series when André and producer Soné (Combrink) approached you?
I knew about the books when I was younger, but I hadn’t read them. A lot of young people read the books in the 90s for escapism. So just the title alone already evokes some nostalgia. When I was initially approached, I got all the books and read them. I have to say, it was like suddenly being a kid again. I grew up in the 90s, so it was so specific to that period, and it almost felt like I was reading it as a kid. I sat through nights and said, “I’m going to stop reading now, I’m going to stop reading now…” – and then I just kept going. I enjoyed it so much and thought, “I wish I had read this when I was in Standard 5 and 6 [Grades 7 and 8].”
What do you think is so special about the story of Reënboogrant?
These are books that catch you off guard with how well-written they are. You see the house in the book. You smell the rooms. You can close your eyes and you are in Reënboogrant.
Even though it was written many years ago, it’s still refreshing today. There’s great storytelling, brave stories and great characters that sometimes catch you off guard. They’ll sometimes upset and anger you, but you’ll keep reading because you want to know what happens. It’s very entertaining.
The main characters, in particular, do unexpected things. For example, Shani does not always make the right decision and she also makes a lot of unexpected choices. You expect Shani to do one thing and then she does something completely different. That bravery in storytelling is something I really enjoy and makes the characters so interesting and three-dimensional to me.
Is the series also set in the 90s?
Showmax wanted a modern version of Reënboogrant, so the series uses the books as inspiration but has a more modern angle.
How do you balance staying faithful to the original material with making it relatable to today’s viewer?
The original material is there for us as a starting point. You want to honour the book, while also making it contemporary enough so that viewers find it believable that it’s set in 2024. You know what you have and you honour and respect the material, but you take your eraser and you change a little here and there and then you take another pencil and add a little, and so on.
There were storylines that we created or changed to make them contemporary, but a lot of our love stories and love triangles are like they happened in the book, with just little things that changed. They’re teenagers and they’re in love and when you’re a teenager in love, it’s still just butterflies everywhere you look! (laughs)
You want to weave in new storylines without alienating anyone – not the people who read and loved those books in the 90s, and not today’s teenagers.
My dream is that a 16-year-old teenager can watch and relate to it, while her 40-year-old mother, who read the books back in the day, now also enjoys watching the series, and sighs and goes, “Oh, Shani!” Or can tell their teenager how they were a Shani or a Sunette or an Ans. That is the dream – that both the new and the old “Shanis” can relate to it.
How did you go about updating the books to 2024?
When you want to write something contemporary, you have to look at what has changed between then and now.
One of the big changes is that social media and technology have developed significantly and now play a very big role. Social media has a huge impact on kids in school – even the kids who don’t have social media. Also, now we don’t just show up at someone’s house – we send a WhatsApp first.
On an emotional level, mental health is a bigger priority today. People are now more open to talking about things that are bothering us. There is a greater understanding of ourselves, especially among young people. Young people are definitely more aware of the things they experience and feel.
So it wasn’t just about changing the bicycle in the story to a car; it’s something that bleeds through to every aspect of the characters’ lives.
Without giving anything away – which themes or storylines in the series are you particularly excited about?
Even the characters you don’t necessarily agree with crawl so deep into your heart and under your skin that you end up wanting to fight for them. What is particularly interesting to me is how the antagonist systematically gets under your skin. Before you can catch yourself, you actually want them to be okay, you want them to change, and you vouch for them. You can’t stay mad at these characters. I think if our viewers can get mad at our characters at times and say, “Oh no, man!” or, “Why is that?” or, “It just doesn’t make sense that she would do that!” that’s a good sign. Those storylines excite me.
Then we touch on the themes that teenagers struggle with, the themes that are big in teenagers’ lives today. Dreams that don’t come true. Love that isn’t reciprocated; when you are madly in love with someone and you can’t have them. Some teenagers feel their voices are not heard and how they then express that frustration in different ways.
I’m also excited about our newly created storylines between the parents, Maryna and Herman. Their three oldest children are already in high school, but they still find themselves at odds with how they should handle things.
Are we going to see you acting in Reënboogrant too?
(Laughs) No, I’m just behind the scenes. But I enjoyed it so much. It is really an incredible experience.