Night of January 16th

1968

Overview

Although Ayn Rand achieved fame as a novelist, 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.

Though Rand was years away from articulating her own ideal, she had since childhood admired the individual who acts on his own judgments, defying social pressure. Thus the main characters in Night of January 16th are bold egoists who unapologetically seek the world’s rewards and pleasures for themselves.

Notably, however, this play’s heroes don’t embody Rand’s moral philosophy. “I do not think, nor did I think it when I wrote this play, that a swindler is a heroic character or that a respectable banker is a villain,” she writes. “But for the purpose of dramatizing the conflict of independence versus conformity, a criminal — a social outcast — can be an eloquent symbol.”

Characters

KAREN ANDRE

Karen Andre fell passionately in love with Bjorn Faulkner on the day she applied for work as his stenographer. For the next ten years she helped him carry out his massive financial frauds on a worldwide scale — and was proud to be his mistress.

How would she react when Faulkner suddenly decided to marry Nancy Lee Whitfield, an eligible socialite with a rich father? Would Karen’s jealousy drive her to murder her lover and try to disguise it as a suicide? The reader (and the jury) must decide based on clues from the way she and Faulkner lived their lives, clues that reveal what she was capable of doing in the name of her values.

Themes

In Ayn Rand’s view, everyone has a basic attitude toward life — what she called a “sense of life.” A person’s sense of life coalesces during childhood by a complex process of adopting basic views on what’s important in life — values which, if verbalized, would resemble these examples offered by Rand: “It is important to understand things” — “It is important to obey my parents” — “It is important to act on my own” — “It is important to please other people” — “It is important to fight for what I want” — “It is important not to make enemies” — “My life is important” — “Who am I to stick my neck out?”

Each major character in Night of January 16th embodies one of two basic and opposite attitudes toward life: independence vs. conformity. “Night of January 16th,” she wrote, “is not a philosophical, but a sense-of-life play.”

Extras

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