Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Laughter’s the best medicine; these docs and medicos should know!

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Leaving behind their microscope­s, stethoscop­es and books, a small mix of doctors and medical students will take to the stage to show off their talents in acting on January 13 and 14 at the Namel Malini Punchi Theatre in Borella.

They will be presenting the ribticklin­g comedy ‘Laughter the Best Medicine’ which comprises four short plays portraying characters that people meet in their day-to-day lives, which would create ripples but also have a clear take-home message.

This is a not-for-profit venturing onto the stage, says Consultant Haematolog­ist Dr. Chitranga Kariyawasa­n who is attached to the Sri Jayewarden­epura Hospital, adding that all proceeds are for the Haemophili­a Associatio­n of Sri Lanka.

‘Laughter, the Best Medicine’ will include the three plays, ‘ Kopi with Kamala’, ‘ Natalie Patali’ and ‘ Trip Eka’, which are 10 minutes each, while the fourth would be the 12-minute ‘ Sereppuwe Bale’.

The six-member cast comprises Dr. Kariyawasa­n, Consultant Histopatho­logist Dr. Isha Prematille­ke who is attached to the Sri Jayewarden­epura University’s Faculty of Medical Sciences and Medical Officer-inCharge of the Amugoda Primary Medical Care Unit, Elpitiya, Dr. Sankha Randenikum­ara, and medical students of the Sri Jayewarden­epura University Madhusha Liyanage, Tharindu Wickremasi­nghe and Sachith Francis.

‘ Kopi with Kamala’, mimicking a television talk is mostly in English with snippets in Sinhala, ‘ Natali Patali’ depicting a woman who responds to an advertisem­ent placed by a medical clinic; ‘ Trip Eka’ about the antics of a patient in a mental hospital; and ‘ Sereppuwe Bale’, a comic satire on the current political scene are all in ‘Singlish’, says Dr. Kariyawasa­n.

On the first day (January 13), the plays will be interspers­ed with a musical interlude by the Past Musaeites Choir led by Kalani Kulathilak­a and a dance item by sisters Madhusha and Uvini Liyanage, while on the second day (January 14) it will be Flame which

‘Laughter the Best Medicine’ will go on the boards of the Namel Malini Punchi Theatre on January 13 and 14 (Saturday and Sunday) at 7 p.m. Tickets are priced at Rs, 1,500, Rs. 1,000 and Rs. 750 (reserved) and Rs. 500 (balcony unreserved). For the Box Plan and tickets, please contact Dr. Kariyawasa­n on Mobile: 0777891983. provides the music in-between.

The three doctors are not amateurs, having been on stage in many production­s not only when they were in school but also acting out skits and plays before their peers, the medical fraternity, during the very popular Doctors’ Concert of the Sri Lanka Medical Associatio­n (SLMA), for more than a decade.

“We write our own scripts,” says Dr. Kariyawasa­n, adding that it was veteran actor Indu Dharmasena who brought her to the stage when she was still a schoolgirl at St. Bridget’s Convent. Dr. Prematille­ke too had begun acting in school and is a talented artist and singer.

An original play among the many written by Dr. Kariyawasa­n and Dr. Prematille­ke is ‘The Proposal’, with the storyline revolving around a widow who is desperate to get her only daughter married and sets her sights on an elderly surgeon. Eventually, however, it is the widow herself who hits it off with the surgeon. Another is ‘MCQ’ (the acronym for multiple choice questions) looking at the hilarious stuff that occurs during such an examinatio­n in medical school, as observed by the teachers.

Picking out two more original comedies in their repertoire, Dr. Kariyawasa­n says ‘Yours, Mine and Ours’ is about two friends having affairs with the other’s spouse and get a reality check through a soothsayer, while ‘Mistaken Identity’ is the chaos that results when a mix-up occurs of a wife and a mistress.

With many an encore for them during the SLMA concerts, they felt it was a pity that a wider audience could not see their creativity and this is why they have decided to become “adventurou­s for a cause” and go before the public.

Seeing the medical students’ talents during performanc­es at the faculty, they roped them in and the group have been practising every weekend, so as not to disrupt their work and studies during the week, over the past five-six months.

For all of them what Dr. Kariyawasa­n says seems to ring true – “Medicine is our love, but acting is our passion.”

So, to see these doctors and medical students in different and funny roles, head to the Namel Malini Punchi Theatre on January 13 and 14 not only to have a laugh but also to help a worthy cause.

 ?? ?? Medical students take the stage: Madhusha Liyanage, Sachith Francis and Tharindu Wickremasi­nghe
Medical students take the stage: Madhusha Liyanage, Sachith Francis and Tharindu Wickremasi­nghe
 ?? ?? (L-r) Dr. Isha Prematille­ke, Dr. Chitranga Kariyawasa­n and
(L-r) Dr. Isha Prematille­ke, Dr. Chitranga Kariyawasa­n and
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 ?? ?? Dr. Sankha Randenikum­ara in ‘Sereppuwe Bale’
Dr. Sankha Randenikum­ara in ‘Sereppuwe Bale’

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