Disclaimer: This series will most likely infuriate you and send your blood pressure to places it has never been. But if you like a challenge, proceed.
Jonasi Gomora is dead before the first episode of The Polygamist is even properly underway. The women in his life are assembled at his funeral, and already you can tell this story isn’t really about him. It’s about what he left behind and who had to clean it up.
Netflix’s first South African supernovela, adapted from Sue Nyathi’s 2012 novel and produced by Stained Glass Productions, the team behind Uzalo and The Wife, arrives with production values that immediately separate it from what local television has offered before. It looks expensive because it is. And for 22 episodes, it earns that budget.
The show centers on Jonasi, a wealthy CEO whose entire life is organized around one thing: his appetite for women. Not polygamy in any traditional or cultural sense. Just a man who could not, or would not, exercise any discipline over his desires.

Sdumo Mtshali plays him without making him a cartoon villain, which is the right call. Jonasi is charming enough that you understand why people fell for him. He is also the kind of man who leaves permanent damage everywhere he goes and never seems particularly bothered by it.
His first wife Joyce, played by Gugu Gumede, is where the show gets genuinely interesting. Joyce is easy to sympathize with on the surface. She has spent years managing a husband who treats fidelity as optional, holding her family together through sheer force of will. But the show doesn’t let her stay in victim territory for long, and it’s right not to.
Joyce is also a villain. The things she does to protect her position, the way she treats women she sees as competition, the quiet cruelty she exercises as the woman at the top of a broken structure, none of it gets softened or excused. Gumede plays both sides of her without blinking, and the result is the most compelling performance in the show.
The rest of the cast fills out a world where almost everyone is dealing with the fallout of Jonasi’s choices in one way or another. His children in particular carry the weight of a household built on secrets, and the show is smart about showing what that does to people over time.

Where the show stumbles occasionally is in its writing. Some storylines chase shock value when they could go deeper. The drama occasionally tips into melodrama when something quieter would hit harder. But the performances, especially Gumede and Mtshali, hold things together even when the script doesn’t fully cooperate.
The most interesting structural choice the show makes is refusing to explain Jonasi. You spend several episodes waiting for the backstory that puts his behavior in context, the wound that made him this way. It never fully comes, and eventually you realize it was never going to. Because the damage he causes doesn’t become more or less real depending on what caused it. The show keeps its focus on the people absorbing that damage, which is where it belongs.
The Polygamist is not a comfortable watch, and it’s not trying to be. It is a show about what it costs to love the wrong person, and what it costs even more to stay.
Release Date: June 12, 2026
Streaming Service: Netflix
Episodes: 22
Runtime: Approximately 30 minutes per episode
Directors: Akin Omotoso, Rolie Nikiwe and Nthabi Tau
Cast: Sdumo Mtshali, Gugu Gumede, Kwanele Mthethwa, Noluthando Shabalala