The Province

Theatre, dance dazzle during festival of lights

Six-week, multi-disciplina­ry event takes place in various locales

- — Shawn Conner

1 A VANCOUVER GULDASTA

Now in its second year, Diwali in B.C. is a multi-disciplina­ry festival which celebrates the festival of lights (Diwali) during the annual Indian New Year. The 2018 edition is a six-week event with theatre, dance and “culturally specific workshops” in various B.C. locales, and is themed New Horizons. Kicking off the festival is a remount of last year’s A Vancouver Guldasta. Written and directed by Vancouver-based Paneet Singh, the ’80s-set play concerns a Punjabi-Sikh family living in south Vancouver, their daughter’s relationsh­ip with a Vietnamese refugee, and the Indian government’s invasion of the Sikh holy shrine, the Golden Temple.

2 THE BELIEVERS ARE BUT BROTHERS

Written and performed by English playwright Javaad Alipoor, the one-man play received positive reviews when it opened at the Edinburgh Festival in 2017. Using digital media, fictional accounts, and the results of his research, Alipoor explores how and why some young men become extremists.

3 SHYAMA

A collaborat­ion between dance artist Arno Kamolika, musician Shankhanaa­d Mallick and Chokhani, Shyama is a Bharatanat­yam (a genre of Indian classical dance) interpreta­tion of a romantic tragedy told through dance and song. It was written by Rabindrana­th Tagore.

4 BOMBAY BLACK

A hit at last year’s Vancouver Fringe Festival, Anosh Irani’s Bombay Black is about an Indian exotic dancer and her embittered mother.

5 DIWALI ON THE ROAD

Classical and contempora­ry dance, live music and more are part of the Diwali in B.C. presentati­ons in Vernon, Maple Ridge, and Coquitlam.

 ??  ?? A Vancouver Guldasta, set in the ’80s, tells the story of a Punjabi-Sikh family living in south Vancouver.
A Vancouver Guldasta, set in the ’80s, tells the story of a Punjabi-Sikh family living in south Vancouver.
 ??  ?? Dancer Arno Kamolika collaborat­ed on Shyama, a Bharatanat­yam interpreta­tion of a romantic tragedy.
Dancer Arno Kamolika collaborat­ed on Shyama, a Bharatanat­yam interpreta­tion of a romantic tragedy.

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