The Herald

Theatrical delegation heads to India

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Class Act since 1997, and will be part of a four-strong Scottish delegation in Mumbai.

“Working in different countries as well, I’m always fascinated to meet the young people and hear the stories they want to tell. India has its own set of traditions and concerns, so it will be interestin­g to see how they influence things.”

While McCartney will direct the work produced by the students as well as mentor them as a writer, she will be accompanie­d by fellow playwright Stef Smith and director Emma Callander. Traverse creative producer Sunniva Ramsay will lead the project which, in keeping with every Class Act, looks set to be as much a learning experience for the artists as the students.

“To have that opportunit­y to speak with these young people, and to put ourselves in their shoes, I think that’s a really important part of the project,” says Ramsay.

“Just to have them tell us what matters to them. That’s about empathy, and because the young people come from such different background­s, they might not share a similar walk of life, but because they’ll be sharing the same space with this project, it will hopefully give them an opportunit­y to find some kind of common ground.”

This chimes with McCartney’s experience with Class Act in Russia and the Ukraine.

“It’s been fascinatin­g watching how Class Act has developed over the years,” she says. “In Scotland it’s changed enormously, and has grown into what I think is a really important platform for young people finding their voice.

“In Russia and the Ukraine, it’s applicatio­n has been in a very social and political way. Whether that happens in Mumbai I don’t know, but I suspect it will reinvent itself in its own Indian image.”

For Class Act Mumbai, the Traverse have teamed up with RAGE Production­s, the pioneering Indian theatre company who similarly focus on new and contempora­ry work. Having previously partnered the London-based Royal Court Theatre, RAGE were ideal to team up with for Class act Mumbai, and a team of four Indian playwright­s and four directors will be taking part.

Over an intense fourteen days, this Scots-Indian supergroup will work with sixty four 15 to 18-year-olds from fifteen schools. These will come from a diverse array of background­s that will accommodat­e several different languages, as well as from schools whose focus is educating street children.

The assorted workshops rehearsals and a final performanc­e will take place at the Prithvi Theatre, the purposebui­lt auditorium opened in 1978 by Indian acting legend Shashi Kapoor, who sadly passed away at the end of last year, and his wife Jennifer. The Kapoors built the Prithvi in honour of Kapoor’s father, Prithviraj Kapoor, who founded what was then a travelling troupe of actors in 1942.

With Kapoor senior unable to fulfil his dream of creating a permanent venue in his lifetime, his son picked up the reins of his vision, and for almost 40 years the Prithvi Theatre has provided a home for contempora­ry Indian theatre. This makes it perfect as a safe and neutral space for Class Act Mumbai.

Class Act Mumbai comes at the end of of the British Council’s UK/India 2017 Season, which was designed in part to commemorat­e the seventieth anniversar­y of the partition of the country that set up the two separate independen­t dominions of India and Pakistan. Class Act Mumbai is also supported by Creative Scotland and the Scottish Government.

While such internatio­nal cultural exchanges as Class Act are vital, it is important too that there is a two-way traffic, whereby Scottish artists can learn from different cultures in the way McCartney and Ramsay have highlighte­d. While the current political and financial climate across the world may yet impinge on Class Act making further internatio­nal strides, given the success of Class Act over its twenty-six year existence, it is imperative that all doors are kept open.

“You can’t under-estimate the power of sitting there on the opening nights of one of these projects,” says McCartney, “and seeing the audience go, wow, that’s what our young people think. There is hope.”

McCartney quotes a high-tanking Ukrainian official who watched a performanc­e.

“He said, if our children can do that, why can’t we?”

Whether Class Act Mumbai provokes such epiphanies remains to be seen, but McCartney and Ramsay are hopeful.

“I hope we’re able to inspire the young people in engaging with us,” says Ramsay. “We want to hear about their experience, and to have a belief in their own voices .

“Rather than doing anything academic, as with every Class Act, wherever that might be, we want young people to engage with things through creativity, and to take a leap into that world in a way that matters to them.”

The final performanc­es of the Traverse Theatre’s Class Act Mumbai will take place at Prithvi Theatre, Mumbai, on January 23-24. www.traverse.co.uk

We want young people to engage with things through creativity, and to take a leap into the world in a way that matters to them

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