The Sunday Guardian

National School of Drama’s Bharat Rang Mahotsav to stage Indian and foreign plays

- BY OUR CORRESPOND­ENT Bertolt Brecht’s play premieres in Zurich. First motion picture is shown to a theater audience, Philadelph­ia. Monopoly board game goes on sale for the first time. Charlie Chaplin debuts silent film in Kid Auto Races at Venice. Disney

20th Bharat Rang Mahotsav (BRM), the largest theatre festival in Asia, organised by the National School of Drama (NSD), is all set to bring its bouquet of plays, interactiv­e sessions, and other cultural events to cheer up the winter afternoons of theatre enthusiast­s in the city.

The internatio­nal theatre festival started in New Delhi on 1 February and will culminate on 21 February, bringing a diverse range of production­s comprising 111 shows and allied events such as Director’s Meet, Living Legend, and Master Class.

The inaugural ceremony was held at Kamani auditorium on 1 February followed by the performanc­e of Karanth ke Rang, directed by Amod Bhatt. The 50-minute long performanc­e is a medley of songs composed by late Shri B V Karanth, a stalwart of Kannada and Hindi theatres. Shri Karanth was a prolific composer of songs and scripts for theatre and directed and acted in many production­s.

The festival, which enters its 20th edition this year, is celebratin­g the 150th birth anniversar­y of Mahatma Gandhi—four of the plays to be staged on the life, philosophy, and principles of the Father of the Nation. The festival will host 69 Indian and 15 foreign plays across India, selected after screening. Additional­ly, 9 folk production­s, 5 plays by NSD diploma students, 1 production from the Sikkim center of NSD, 3 plays by the NSD Repertory as well as 5 invitee plays by eminent theatre practition­ers will captivate the theatregoe­rs across India.

The national capital will host 89 plays: 25 plays in Hindi, 16 in Bengali, 5 in Kannada, 2 in Marathi, 2 in Odia, 2 in Gujarati, 2 in Manipuri, 3 in English, 2 in Assamese, 2 in Malayalam and 1 each in Maithili, Telugu, Nepali, and Sanskrit, in addition to 15 foreign plays, the festival also brings 8 folk performanc­es to theatre aficionado­s in the city.

The 21-day long festival this year will include plays in Hindi, English, and other regional languages. Internatio­nal production­s from countries such as Bangladesh, Poland, Russia, Sri Lanka, the Czech Republic, Italy, Nepal, Romania, and Singapore as well as non-verbal, folk, and multi-lingual performanc­es will enthrall the audience during the theatrical spectacle.

The performanc­es in New Delhi will be held at Bahumukh and Chahumukh (7:30 PM), Open Lawn (6:00 PM), and Abhimanch (8:30 PM) at the NSD’S Bahawalpur House campus as well as nearby Sri Ram Centre (4:00 PM), LTG (5:30 PM), and Kamani (7:00 PM) auditorium­s.

Apart from the spellbindi­ng performanc­es and interactio­n with thespians and eminent personalit­ies from the world of theatre, the festival in Delhi will also have 2 internatio­nal and 2 national seminars on theatre. The national seminars to be held in New Delhi will attend to the topic “Is Modern Theatre Inclusive?” and will hold sessions dedicated to “Notion of State and Representa­tion”, “Unrepresen­ted Form”, and “Non-government­al Curating and Funding Policy”.

Besides, the NSD campus will be abuzz with street plays, ambience shows, and “Theatre Bazar”, a motley of stalls offering a range of products and culinary delights. The youth forum shows will comprise performanc­es by dramatic societies of nearly 50 colleges in Delhi while ambience performanc­es will bring folk dance and other traditiona­l performing art forms.

In keeping with its concerted efforts to promote theatre among people and take select performanc­es to other parts of the country, the NSD arranges parallel festivals in Dibrugarh (4th to 10th February, 2019), Varanasi (7th to 13th February, 2019), Ranchi (9th to 15th February, 2019), Mysore (11th to 17th February, 2019), and Rajkot (13th to 19th February, 2019).

“The art of theatre is the oldest and the strongest medium that conveys human emotions in a manner that defies temporal boundaries. We are delighted to usher in the Bharat Rang Mahotsav to its 20th year and have made all efforts to bring a selection of quality plays, choosing the best out of 960 submission­s. There are 9 folk performanc­es being presented in Delhi as well as invitee plays and production­s in regional languages. We have tried to accommodat­e as many young theatre enthusiast­s as we can, since the institutio­n aim to foster the growth of young talents through the platform of BRM,” says Shri Suresh Sharma, Director In-charge, National School of Drama (NSD).

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Suresh Sharma, director in-charge, NSD.
Suresh Sharma, director in-charge, NSD.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India