Veteran theatre artists
like Atul Kumar, Mohit Takalka, Koumarane Valavane and young name,
Suraj Parasnis will hold the stage for the first edition of Saarang
Theatre Festival, organised by Ashok Kulkarni of Sahitya Rangabhoomi
Pratishthan.
Earlier, known as Vinod
Doshi Memorial Theatre Festival, the festival steps into 2019 with
the aforementioned new name. However, the ethos and spirit of the
festival remains unchanged and this year too the theatre going
audiences in the city will get to see the best of Marathi and
non-Marathi plays.
Here's a line-up of the
festival that will start from Monday, February 25 and conclude on
March 1. All the plays would be performed at Yashwantrao Chavan Natyagruha, Kothrud.
Khichdi of many different
elements
The Company Theatre
Production play, Detective 9-2-11 is a comic noir, with elements of
Navketan Films and Alfred Hitcockian directorials adding drama to the
world of cinema on stage. Atul Kumar, who has directed the play,
says, “Detective 9-2-11 is an original script. It's written by
Pallav Singh, a third year student of National School of Drama (NSD)
and Niketan Sharma, an actor-director student from The Drama School,
Mumbai. It was actually developed as a play for students for 30-40
minutes at NSD. Later it was performed as a full-fledged play for
Adyam Theatre Festival.”
Kumar, who has directed
Piya Behrupiya, says, “Visuals have their own language and that's
the area, I like to play with. I liked the idea of creating cinema on
stage and that's what we have done with Detective 9-2-11. The idea
was how in cinema house, with one take you are inside the room and
with another, you are outside the room and then suddenly you are up
in the skies, looking at the houses. The camera lenses help you
play with perspective
visually. That's what we have done here.”
The play was improvised as
it was being written. “We had a broad idea about the play and then
we started creating situations. A man and a woman do this and then
suddenly two cops come resulting in a chase. We were also researching
on the typical scenes in Hindi films of 1950s and 60s, especially
movies made under Navketan banner. So we
put some dialogues from
that era. We took dialogues from Hitchcock films and played around
with it. It's a khichadi of many different elements, but it has
worked fortunately.”
The play has six actors,
who are performing about 100 characters on stage. The entire set is
on wheels and it keeps moving around, the characters keep changing
their costumes on stage. Obviously, the Hindi-English play is very
fast- paced and it helped that two of the actors are trained in
physical theatre. “Two of our actors are trained in the London's
International School of Performing Arts and are trained in clowning,
mime and pantomime, mask work. The students from The Drama School put
in input from our classical arts like Kodiyattam and Kalariyapattu.
They brought in that kind of energy to the script and so the play is
very fast-moving,” adds Kumar.
(Detective 9-2-11 will be
staged at Yashwantrao Chavan Auditorium on February 25, 7.30 pm)
Behind the walls
Whenever Suraj Parasnis
would visit his aunt and peeped from her house into the home of her
neighbour, he would always be struck by the stories and the byplay
that would take place in each dwelling. “The unfolding stories,
dramas were separated by only a wall/s. I was very keen to capture
all this in one frame,” says Parasnis. He has directed Davikadun
Chauthi Building for the festival and has roped in four writers for
the same.
Manaswaini Lata Ravindran,
Abhiram Joshi, Virajas Kulkarni and Omkar Gokhale are the writers.
Parasnis, who has formed a theatre group called Theatron with
Kulkarni and Shivraj Waichal, says, “Our play Mickey is doing quite
well. Ashok (Kulkarni) kaka heard of it and he asked if we could do
something for Saarang Theatre Festival. I didn't want to let go of
the opportunity and so we came up with this concept.”
He mentions that he needed
a female perspective for Davikadun Chauthi Building and he asked
Manaswini if she would write a story. “We were clear that for a
show on this scale, we couldn't have one writer writing all the
stories. We wanted a different tone and that's why we got four
writers with different sensibilities. Hopefully, all the four stories
will come out as one whole on the stage. Manaswini had written the
script of Bun Maska for Shivraj, so we knew each other's work. I hope
I can do justice to her writing. I had also directed the plays of
other writers, so Manaswini's writing will act as a glue and hold the
other stories,” says Parasnis.
(Davikadun Chauthi
Building will be staged on February 26, 7.30 pm)
Against caste-hate crimes
Chandala or Impure is an
adaptation of William Shakespeare's play, Romeo and Juliet. Directed
and adapted by Koumarane Valavane for Indianostrum Theatre,
Puducherry, Chandala is the story of an old demon, who feeds on hate.
He has divided the world in four varnas: the purest at the top –
Brahmins. Below them are the Kshatriyas, followed by Vaisya and
lastly the Sudras. There is also a fifth category – the Chandalas.
They are excluded from everything because they can pollute purity
itself. An angel, Kama, the cupid, will face this eternal demon. But
the monster has cleverly broken itself into pieces and hidden them
deep in our heart. “This is a story of two mythical lovers, Romeo
and Juliet, renamed as Jack and Janan. Their story will make love
flow in everybody's hearts and cleanse them of the monster,” says
Valavane.
“The choice to do do
Romeo and Juliet was triggered by honour killing incidents in Tamil
Nadu. The story that has left a deep impression on us is of Shankar
and Kausalya. Shankar, a lower caste man, was killed in broad
daylight by Kausalya's family. Kausalya fought to brink justice to
Shankar and she is now an activist crusader against caste-hate
crimes,” he adds.
(Chandala will be staged
on February 27 at 7.30 pm)
The father-son bond
Aasakta Kalamanch has come
out with its new Hindi play, Chaheta. It's based on a Palestinian
play by Amir Nizar Zuabi and explores the relationship between a
father and a son. It has been directed by Mohit Takalkar, who has
also collaborated with Zuabi on another of his play – Main huun
Yusuf aur yeh hai hamara bhai. When asked about Palestine connection
in his recent works, Takalkar says, “This is Amir's second play. I
read it after Main huun Yusuf... and I liked it, found it
interesting. However, Chaehta doesn't deal with Israel-Palestine
conflict per say. It has observations about religions and I think
it's more universal.”
The crux of the story
deals with the myth about Abraham's story which is found in
Quran, Bible and Jewish
religious book. “It is said that Abraham takes his son to the top
of mountain to sacrifice his favourite son, his chaheta. Our play
takes off at this point, figuring out what must have happened to the
son, what happens to the mother. It's a dark, metaphorical tale,
wondering if the family is able to put this incident behind them and
can move on with their lives,” adds Takalkar.
(Chaheta will be performed
at 7.30 pm on February 28)
Hdg: Past continuous
Deewar was written by
Prithviraj Kapoor and Inder Raj Anand. It has been revived by Sunil
Shanbag, who has made a few changes to his own. Talking about the old
play, Satish Alekar said, “The original cast of Deewar included the
entire Kapoor clan – including Shammi and Raj Kapoor. When it used
to travel to Pune, they would book a special train to haul the set,
costumes. The sets used to be erected on Hirabaug maidan (now Nehru
Stadium) It was performed realistically. This was a much talked about
play in those days. My parents had watched this play. When I decided
to work in theatre, my parents told me, 'Direct a play like Deewar'.”
The synopsis of the play:
In a fictional jagir in north India, two rich zamindar brothers rule
over a happy family and a harmonious community of peasants. The
unexpected arrival of foreign visitors seeking refuge is the
beginning of a dramatic change of fortunes. Ruthless machination by
the foreigners split the community and turned brothers against each
other. First staged in 1945 by Prithviraj Kapoor's Prithvi Theatres,
Deewar is a fascinating allegory of colonisation and Partition. In
2019, it is a remarkable insight into a historical moment full of
promise for a new nation.
(Deewar will be performed
on March 1, 7.30 pm)
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