Actors, dancers and directors are breaching the barriers of high and low art, drawing from traditional classical performances to tell their stories
In MÄlavikÄgnimitram, one of the first plays he wrote, Sanskrit poet Kalidasa (4th-5th century AD) evoked the sublime power of drama, describing it as a beautiful visual sacrifice for the gods. He ends a shloka with: “Natyam bhinna rucherjanasya bahuopyekam samaradhanam.” This translates to: “Drama is the single (unique) means of pleasing people of different tastes in many ways.” Did the poet realise that his words would resonate with Indian thespians more than 15 centuries later?
Across the country, actors and directors, poets and playwrights, dancers and musicians are finding new ways to tell their stories on stage. And while they may rely on complex light and sound design, props and extravagant backdrops, the power of their theatre remains as pure as it was during Kalidasa’s time: It is cathartic. It is entertaining. And it shines light on topics like gender, sex and oppression.
But theatre was never egalitarian, at least not in its classical avatar. The Natyashastra—a treatise on the performing arts that dates back to 200 BC—differentiates between ‘Margi’ (high art) and ‘Deshi’ (populist, meant for the layperson). Over generations, the lines demarcating the two have blurred, and this convergence, in a sense, is being played out today.
Sanjukta Wagh from Mumbai and Vivek Vijaykumaran from Bengaluru use Kathak and Kutiyattam (traditional dramatic dance).
Others, like Patna’s Randhir Kumar, direct all-male troupes which fall back on the Bihari folk tradition of ‘Launda Naach’, performed by men dressed as women. In Assam, Pabitra Rabha trains dwarves, and in Bihar, Pravin Kumar Gunjan fights caste politics and oppression on stage. They may speak different languages, but they find common ground by challenging their audience to question the world as it is.
In this mix of high art and low art, there is a strong European influence. The roots of mainstream theatre, with its divisions along the lines of ‘acts’ and ‘scenes’, can be traced to the Raj. The second half of the British rule saw the rise of protest theatre when the fight for Independence spilled onto the stage with the Indian People’s Theatre Association (formed during the Quit India Movement in 1942). Independence gave us new confidence. If the government’s setting up of the Sangeet Natak Akademi in 1952 was the foundation of cultural awareness, then it wouldn’t be wrong to say that institutions like the National School of Drama (1959) provided a platform for modern theatre. The period before and immediately after Independence saw the emergence of dramatists, poets, actors and directors like Ebrahim Alkazi and Urdu dramatist Habib Tanvir, Shambhu Mitra, Chandravadan Mehta and Ranchhodbhai Udayram Dave in Gujarat, Gurajada Apparao and Bellary Raghava Chari in Andhra Pradesh, Laxminath Bezbarua in Assam, Kerala’s CV Raman Pillai and Kalicharan Patnaik from Odisha, all of whom were vital to the revival of Indian theatre.
This tradition was carried forward by a host of artistes and writers, including but not limited to Vijay Tendulkar, Girish Karnad, Kanti Madiya, Pravin Joshi, Mahendra Joshi, Shashi Kapoor, Dr Shriram Lagoo, Zohra Sehgal, Farooq Shaikh, Naseeruddin Shah, Amol Palekar, Usha Ganguly, Alyque Padamsee, Sanjana Kapoor and Chetan Datar among others. They’ve laid the ground for a medium that’s trying to hold its own against the likes of reality TV and Bollywood.
Today, artistes and directors are building on this foundation. Our curation is by no means comprehensive, but we have focussed on new entrants as well as old hands who are working in multiple languages across India.
Here are snapshots of creative forces who have stayed unfettered by convention.
PRITESH SODHA
Troupe: Utopia Communications, Mumbai
Language: Gujarati, Marathi and English
When he’s not using his business management degree to train employees in the fine art of communication, Pritesh Sodha, 32, likes to push the boundaries of experimental theatre. His body of work includes the Marathi play Tee (in the neglected horror genre); Gujarati production Ka Kanji No Ka (on the privatisation of education); an adaptation of the late iconic playwright Vijay Tendulkar’s Baby in Marathi (a story of a girl who works as an extra in the film industry and is exploited by a slumlord who treats her as a slave) and Pramey, a Gujarati adaptation of American playwright David Auburn’s Pulitzer Prize-winning play, Proof (on the life of an eccentric mathematician).
PABITRA RABHA
Troupe: Dapon (The Mirror), Assam
Language: Assamese
Dapon, which means mirror in Assamese, is a theatre group that embodies the big dreams of little people. It is a theatre company of dwarves. Pabitra Rabha, 40, an alumnus of the National School of Drama in New Delhi, eschewed the bright lights of the nation’s capital to set up Dapon in 2003, with the aim of giving a voice to men and women who are marginalised by society because of their appearance. His theatre company—based in Tangla, a remote part of Assam near the Indo-Bhutan border—has more than 35 dwarves from across Assam, most of whom are professional actors.
One of Dapon’s more popular plays is Kinu Kow (What to say) that highlights the struggles of a dwarf’s life. Rabha wants to build a culture village in Tangla or, as he sees it, a village of talented dwarves.
Sonar Meye (Golden Girl) by Jana Sanskriti depicts the state of Indian women before, during and after marriage
SANJOY GANGULY
Troupe: Jana Sanskriti, Kolkata
Language: Bengali
Jana Sanskriti, Centre for Theatre of the Oppressed, is an old and well-respected theatre movement in Kolkata, but we have chosen to include it because it attracts young talent every year. It was founded by Sanjoy Ganguly, 58, in 1985, when he was influenced by Augusto Boal, a Brazilian theatre director, writer, politician and a founder of the Theatre of the Oppressed movement. Under the Jana Sanskriti banner, theatre troupes perform in villages across West Bengal and, along with locals, highlight their problems and concerns. Ganguly practices a form of theatre where a spectator can become an actor. He believes that in real life and in drama, a solution has to come from the people. Debates are part of his plays and, at times, a scene is performed multiple times until the audience finds a solution. The aim is to blur the lines between actors and the audience. Jana Sanskriti has 30 satellite teams of which 10 are all-women troupes.
Sanjukta Wagh in Rage and Beyond: Irawati’s Gandhari
SANJUKTA WAGH
Troupe: Beej, Mumbai
Language: English, Hindi, Marathi
Kathak dancer Sanjukta Wagh, 35, approaches the art of storytelling and theatre through melody, dance and rhythm. Through Beej, the interdisciplinary initiative that she co-founded a few years ago, she uses the classical Kathak form to weave tales. Though she is firmly rooted in tradition, she is not afraid to push the boundaries of interdisciplinary art. Her work, she says, falls in the grey area between theatre and dance. Her solo act in Rage and Beyond: Irawati’s Gandhari—the play is a retelling of the Mahabharata from the point of view of the blindfolded queen Gandhari—won her the 2015 Mahindra Excellence in Theatre Awards for best actor in a lead role (female).
Puja Sarup hosts a mask workshop in Bengaluru
PUJA SARUP
Troupe: The Patchworks Ensemble, Mumbai
Language: English
In his collection of essays, Per Amica Silentia Lunae (1918), poet William Butler Yeats wrote: “I think all happiness depends on the energy to assume the mask of some other life, on a rebirth as something not one’s self.” And it is through masks that Puja Sarup, 32, best expresses herself. She’s known for her role as Gertrude in actor and director Rajat Kapoor’s play, Hamlet, the clown prince. More recently, she and thespian Sheena Khalid founded The Patchworks Ensemble, which staged its first production, Ila, in December 2014. The play—based on author Devdutt Pattanaik’s book, The Pregnant King—expands on the themes of gender and sexuality. Sarup has an MA in theatre arts from the University of Mumbai, and has worked with European companies like Footsbarn Theatre and Buchinger’s Boots Marionettes.
Actors in Aditi Desai’s Akoopar, which is about life in the Gir forest
ADITI DESAI
Troupe: Jashwant Thaker Memorial Foundation (JTMF), Ahmedabad
Language: Gujarati
In the last decade, Aditi Desai, 57, has been pushing the boundaries of Gujarati experimental theatre. She founded JTMF in 2005, in memory of her father, the late Jashwant Thaker, a prominent Gujarati actor, director and activist. Desai’s plays are about the empowerment of women and the girl child. Her adaptation of the play Kasturba is a tribute to a woman who lived in the shadow of Mahatma Gandhi. Desai holds workshops for women, including those whose lives were shattered by the 2002 riots in Gujarat, to help them express their fears and worries. She has also worked with female prisoners.
An actor in Samjhauta, a play directed by Pravin Kumar Gunjan
PRAVIN KUMAR GUNJAN
Troupe: The Fact Rangmandal, Begusarai (Bihar)
Language: Hindi
Caste politics, oppression, political pressure and propaganda: Protest theatre is 37-year-old Pravin Kumar Gunjan’s forte. He stages powerful plays in Begusarai, a small town in Bihar. Gunjan’s productions include Andha Yug (an anti-war drama set on the last day of the Mahabharata) and adaptations of Medea (a Greek tragedy by Euripides) and William Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Gunjan won the Mahindra Excellence in Theatre Awards for best director in 2012 for his play Samjhauta (which depicts a struggling young man’s world as a circus).
(This story appears in the Sept-Oct 2015 issue of ForbesLife India. To visit our Archives, click here.)