Based on Shikhandi, perhaps one of the earliest transgender mythological
characters, the play is a comic, tongue-in-cheek retelling of this character
from the epic Mahabharat. The play blends the traditional with the contemporary
and questions the concepts of maleness, femalenessand everything in between.
The play was first staged as a 20-minute, one-womanperformance at Berlin,
Germany in 2010 and challenges stereotypes around gender and sexuality, accepting
this fluidity and everyone for who they are. The director FaezehJalali is an
actor, director, producer, choreographer, teacher, writer and aerialist, and
founder of the theatre collaborative, FATS Theatre in Mumbai, a collaborative
that experiments with form and socially relevantcontent on stage. She is the recipient
of TanveerNatya Dharma Puraskarand Dubey-Tendulkar Theatre Fellowship. She has
also won the Best Supporting Actor (female) at the META 2017.
Caesarean Section: Essays on Suicide
The play talks about the human impulse to commit suicide and the urge to
survive that pulls them back from the brink. The play’s music, composed by Eric
Satie, is based on polyphonic Corsican songs blended with songs from Bulgaria,
Romania, Iceland and Chechnya, forming a new contemporary theatrical rendition
with powerful music. Director Jarosław Fret dons many hats – he is thefounder
and leader of TeatrZAR, a renowned theatre director and actor as well as the
curator of the theatre programme of Wrocław: European Capital of Culture 2016.
He completed the work on Armine, Sisterin
November 2013 that relies on elaborate and special stage architecture and original
musical dramaturgy while his newest piece Medeas,
On Getting Across premieredin 2016. TeatrZAR is a multinational group formed
and based in Wrocław. It believes that theatre is not only about ‘thea’ (a
Greek word meaning ‘seeing’) but should be heard – the body movement of the
singing actor exudes the energy of sound that creates deep images in human
mind.
JagdevKankali
The play builds on the lore of JagdevParmar, one of the Parmar rulers of
Malwa,as conveyed through the oral bardic tradition in Rajasthan. It tells the
adventures of Jagdev as described in folktale ‘JagdevParmar Ni Vaat’that was translated
as ‘Rasmala’in 1868 A.D. and later included in RajasthaniVatas in 1934 A.D. The
play follows ‘KuchamaniKhyal’ style of storytelling where songs are an
important part of the story and the narration. Pandit Lacchi Ram of Kuchaman
area developed this style and several akhadas in Marwar and Ajmer regions adopted
this style for community performances in villages and cattle festivals.
Director Rohit Mathur worked on the form for two years to bring it to the
formal theatre arena. He has also performed ‘KuchamaniKhyal’ in North East cities
(Guwahati, Shillong, Tejpur, and Itanagar)in 2002. He hasperformedin various
festivals likeNational Theatre Festival held at Prithvi Theatre in 2003,
SangeetNatak Academy Shwarnutsava in 2003, and Om Shivpuri theatre festival in 2003
and 2014.
Tomorrow’s Highlights:
·
Doodhan (Writer: Dr. Tara Prakash Joshi; Director: Sabir Khan;
Group: Sarthak Theatre Group; Language: Rajasthani; Venue: LTG; Time: 4:00
P.M.; Duration: 1 Hour 20 Minutes)
·
The Method of National Constellations (Writer and Director:
Michal Stankiewicz; Group: Betwixt, Poland; Language: English; Venue: Kamani;
Time: 6:30 P.M.; Duration: 1 Hour 05 Minutes)
·
Swang-JaaniChor (Director: Satish Georgy Kashyap, Sandhya
Sharma; Group: Swang – A Folk Art Academy, Hisar; Language: Haryanvi; Venue:
Open lawn; Time: 7:00 P.M.; Duration: 1 Hour and 30 Minutes)
·
Dharmashok (Writer: Amit Maitra; Director: Dr. Tapanjyoti Das;
Group: Rangapat, Kolkata; Language: Bengali; Venue: Abhimanch; Time: 8:30 P.M.;
Duration: 2 Hours 10 Minutes)
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