Thursday, April 4, 2019

Horatu Ulidavanu

Details of the play


Name: Horatu Ulidavanu
Production House: Antharanga
Designed and Directed By: Archana Shyam


Star Cast:             

SriHarsha : as Govinda
Divyashree: as Govinda’s Wife
Deepak Subramanya : as Mohan
Bhargav Vashistha : as Ramashastry
Arvind: as a representative of the bank Govinda used to work at
Vijay Jois: as Chaccha Chowdry
Sreesha: as a mantra-vaadi
Pooja and Varshini: in the ensemble
Written by: Original Story Ilham by Manav Kaul, Horatu Ulidavanu has been translated by Jagadish Malnad.

Behind the scenes:

Make-Up: Ramakrishna Kannarapadi
Lighting: Manju Narayan
Movement Director: Jyotsna Rao
Setwork and Properties: Vishwanath Mandi and team  
Costume design:   Smitha Kulkarni
Sound: Bhamini Nagaraju         
Origins:  A very literal translation of Manav Kaul’s Hugely popular play Ilham, the play has been translated to Kannada by Jagadish Malnad

Misc Technical Data: 

The season’s of life, Expectations, A journey that stutters while bearing the burden of life

Cost of Ticket: Watched it for free at the 3 day festival.
Where I watched the play: K H Kalasoudha at Chamarajapete
When I watched the play: On International women’s day 2019 9th March

History:

Archana Shyam is one of the very few female directors present in a largely male bastion of Kannada theatre, and her repertoire of work has spanned across a considerable genre of work. She is part of the Antharanga group, which has been hosting plays from the early eighties. She and her husband Ram came across this play of the notable play-writer Manav Kaul (Remember him, yes the husband in Tumhari Sulu) and after obtaining permission from him, got in touch with Jagadish Malnad who then provided a literal translation of the script(more on this later).

Synopsis


This is the age of the high-tech dreams, this is the age where in young is in, young is trendy, alas this is also the age where prices have sky-rocketed, this is also the age where your position in society is everything. This is the age of social media your social presence takes a toll on who you are, what you want to be.
Will a tired hungry soul, yearning for some solace find its path? Will a fragile thin red line be crossed beyond the point of no return? Is it okay for a family man to alternate between his childhood and current routine that he seems to have fallen into? Can he fly high just like the bird that chirps to him every day? Can he put up a charade that he is all fine and normal? Can he transgress between the realms of fantasy and current reality? Will a father come back from the thresholds of insanity into the world of his caring and now scared family? Will a friend get back his best pal?
To find out more, you will need to watch the play, just like how I did.

Remarks

A play from the stable of Antharanga always is close to my heart, and need-I-mention I did have a few heartburns, so let me start my review.

The YAY’s:

First of all, a big huge shout out for the costume design. Getting fantasy characters and creating a mesmerizing and dazzling display for each fantasy characters. Job Well Done!!!
Timing the bulb on and off, every time one of the characters either switched the light on and off, The folks got it right, made me wonder, hey!!! Did they hook up the spot light to the switch??????
And then I had a chance to watch the seasoned actors who shone through, as if like the stage is where they belong: Sriharsha was a revelation, his dance moves with the chorus gang for me was a spectacle to watch.  Deepak Subramanya as a mute beggar…well should I say that I’m lost for words to describe (on mute you see ;-)  the transition from a talkative person that only Govinda can hear, to realizing that the beggar is actually mute was enacted sensationally.   Then comes a dear friend “Chaacha Chowdry” Vijay Jois… if there was ever a role tailor-made for him, this my friends is it. The way the chorus gang enter into the fantasy world that Govinda lives in was FAB…. Utterly FAB!
The concept of the psychiatrist’s interview to delve into Govinda’s condition was truly wonderful, the power of a flashlight (let me say shone through brightly), truly well visioned, kudo’s to whom so ever thought that through.

The NAY’s

  •  My honest opinion is that the set design, especially, the aluminum fold-able chairs was a sore stand out. The bed that Govinda sleeps is a single bed, hmm does this mean his wife sleeps with the kids??? Hmm interesting. For a middle class house, where in the lord of the house goes all out to remove his shoes inside, and in which there are three other people, there are no shoes either inside or outside to depict that there are other people staying there.
  •  For a middle class family, who are struggling to make ends meet, the purse that the lady of the house carries and her choice of designer chappals, hmm that would have burnt a mighty hole in the pocket of the lord of the house.
  •  The seasoned actors carried the play on their able shoulders, however, the ears of the second rung of actors must be given a mighty twirl, they jump through walls and bypassing the door-ways of the house as though they are Bruce-Almighty not caring a damn to maintain the decorum that the others actors are perfectly doing. They spoilt the whole experience built by going thru the walls of invisible doorway, which is marked by a doormat..
  •  Divyashree in the role of the wife was a tad too nagging for my liking, emotion-stability should have been the key, angst and pain could also have also been showcased,  if anger, jibes and showdown’s is what a man has to face every day from his better half, it is better that he descends into a world of gloom\fantasy than the reality he has to face. However, let me also note that her emotions during the psychiatric examination was definitely better.
  •  The costume selection of Ramashastry the trusted Ramu-kaaka of old hindi films, or a best-friend of the nineteen ninety’s needs improvement. He is showcased in the play as having a fashion cloth store, he has the money to buy his best friend imported liquor (though it is Ramashastry who consumes most of it) but when it comes to clothes that he wears, they are still stuck in the early nineteen eighties, It took me to a time when Amol Palekar was wearing oversized\undersized jubbah pyjama’s and playing golmaal golmaal.
  •  The team must figure out how to fix the battery issues of the LED strip light enabled chorus costumes, they keep burning out and atleast 2 folks either had glasses on that did not work or their strip lights just stopped working. And psst Smitha, the size of everyones costumes was atleast 3-4 sizes too large….. some tinkering before the next show perhaps.
  •  One very small input to Harsha is that a middle aged banker would have a slight drop of shoulders as age gets to him, Harsha was a little too erect for a mundane middle aged banker. Right now the best inspiration is the middle aged guy who is “Ghar bechane ka bhoot savaar” 99acres
  •  My Biggest let down…A tiring, boring and insipid word-to-word translation of Ilham by Jagadish Malnad, the script has failed to hold the same magnetism, the same charisma and the same imagination that Manav Kaul has used whilst he penned the magnificent Ilham. No matter how hard the actors try, the power of the hindi thesaurus like script of Ilham is but a watered down version in Kannada. No, No I am not exaggerating, Sample this, The lines that were once present on my palms are now appearing on my forehead….. This loosely translated to kannada is a sure shot howler…

My Open questions:

§  There is a reference to a boy child of Govinda in many instances throughout the play, however he never ever comes on stage. And he does not even drop by when his whole family is being counseled\interrogated by a psychiatrist. Interesting!!! Is he there or was he a figment of my own imagination just like Govinda envisioned Chaccha Chowdry......

5) My Rating

 I rate this as:


  
Inthi,
Manuswath

Saturday, March 2, 2019

Ahalya B.D


Details of the play

Name: Ahalya B.D  Ahalya Balakrishna Devadiga


Production House: Rangashankara productions
Composed and Directed By: Surendranath popularly known as Suri

Star Cast:             

Seetha Kote as Jayashree a.k.a Jayakka
Venkatesh Prasad as Would be Doctorate Aravind Mulgund
Siri Ravikumar as Ahalya
Bhamini Nagaraju as Malathi, a.k.a Mali
Deepak Subramanya as DCP Nagabhushan
Raghavendra Raj Urs as JayaPrakash a.k.a JP

Written by: 

Original Story Henrik Ibsen, Ahalya has been written by Suri.

Behind the scenes:

                Stage Design: S S Sathyu
                Lights:   Parthasarathy, R Muddanna
                Costume design:   Divya Runwal
                Sound: Kiran Studio’s
                Music composition: Praveen Godkindi

Origins: 

Adapted from Henrik Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler

Misc Technical Data: 

Love, deceit, manipulation, murder, lust, power, frustration,
Cost of Ticket: Rs 150
Where I watched the play: RangaShankara

History:

The director who also is Rangashankara’s Creative Head took up the cudgels of making this play last year, I watched the 3rd show of this play, the first being held last year in October, the second was just the day before I watched the play. The starcast is pretty well-known, Deepak Subramanya (Lead actor of the movie Ayana) Siri Ravikumar (RJ Siri of Radio Mirchi) Seeta Kote (increasingly acting in a lot of plays now-a-days, wife of Noted singer Shashidhar Kote) Raghavendra Urs (serial actor and a person who is currently very involved in the Kannada TV world) Bhamini Nagaraju (who is increasingly leaving remarkable footprints in every production that she gets involved with)

Synopsis

Circa 1975, the time of the emergency, things are hard-to-get, India is in the midst of a complete blackout. In one part of yesteryear India, a woman schemes on working her charms and her guile on guiding\making\destroying the destiny of 2 men. One her ex-confident and the other an over-aged husband, who goes all out trying to make her comfortable just like how she would have been treated in the house of her father a highly decorated veteran of the armed forces.
Ahalya, in exact contrast to the Ahalya mentioned in the Balakaanda of the Ramayana, desires to tune the destiny of the men in her life. Ahalya, in exact contrast to the Ahalya mentioned in the Balakaanda of the Ramayana, has a love-of-her life, with whom she transgresses the boundaries defined by yesteryear Society. Ahalya just like the Ahalya mentioned in the Balakaanda of the Ramayana, is a woman of great beauty, Ahalya just like the Ahalya of the Balakaanda is married to a much older husband.
What does the destiny of a woman who is bored of her current life turn out to be? What does the desire to manipulate and turn the life of others do to the woman? Where will a life lived without the love of a secret-lover end up? At the cross-roads of life, with all the choices that life seems to dish-out, an option to be a secret-object-of-lust and a consenting-sexual-slave leave Ahalya the lady far, very far away ?
To find out more, you will need to watch the play, just like how I did.

Remarks

A play that I had high hopes considering the pedigree that was on offer, Let me be a little candid, Ahalya.B.D did let me down.
Let me list the strengths:

  • The only positive that I can say appealed to me was Deepak Subramanya as the playboyish DCP Nagabhushana, his acting prowess to showcase support for a buddy the would be Professor Mulgund, his manipulation to put forth what he desires from Ahalya, his intonation of speech, his use of props.
  • The other spark of brilliance was provided by Raghavendra Raj Urs in his portrayal of JayaPrakash, the dialect of dialogue delivery, the body language and the change from being steadfast against drinking to succumbing to the vile's and guile's of Ahalya wherein in an instant of suspicion more due to guilt he destroys all the efforts that he and Malathi have put for the past 3 years.
  • Interesting stage utilization, where in a study is combined with a living room.
  • Ranga shankara's sound system that continues to amaze me, the clink of the glasses resonated through the whole area.
Let me list the area’s of improvement (my humble 2 cents)
  • Siri Ravikumar had the role of a lifetime and I felt she had the chance to showcase the best of her, however her acting was a little too-subtle for my taste. Hope they work on this front.
  • I felt the writing could have been a little more encompassing, I feel in the need to fit in the play into 90 minutes, there have been a few edits and cuts, which I felt hampered the narration.
  • Some of the dialog’s esply at the end where in DCP Nagabhushan says, a bullet must have been fired into the chest, as JP was trying to remove the pistol from his coat, Coat… Really…. JP was wearing a Kurta pyjama through out the whole play, and nowhere in the play did he even wear a waistcoat… Hmmm
  • I was let down by the costume that DCP Nagabhushana wore, let me be frank, I have a DCP brother-in-law(now 50+ in age) and have been to quite a few instances wherein he and his colleagues are casually dressed, the costume design of Nagabhushana was not like what I see. I did a quick search to see the kind of clothes Iftekar Sahab used to wearing in the Swinging Seventies….. and this is a clue I leave to the costume designers.
  • The use of props, What is the need to have a window that looks like a door? The window could have been smaller.
  • There are some books kept on the table in the living room, however Prof Mulgund keeps all his books inside in the study room, so what kind of books are those that are sitting in the living room?
  • The use of props, there is an alarm clock that is sitting on the table in the living room, I have had alarm clocks and have used them for quite a long time, never-have-I-ever kept an alarm clock in the living room.
  • Due to this prop being there, it showed a time of say just for example 8:30, now during the whole play this clock showed almost the same time.
  • Ahalya is shown tearing a piece of manuscript, next time hope she tears up the whole manuscript, yes cleaning it would be a pain.
  • I hope Siri, will show a lot more of “Vikata” ness while she tear’s up the manuscript. And a lot more loving touch when she sits face-to-face with the love-of-her-life, An opportunity lost.
  • The next time somebody gets a cuppa coffee to drink on stage, please have some liquid in it and please ask the actor to actually gulp some of it and move her throat as if she is swallowing it. The impression that I got was that the coffee was cold, now a lady dressed in a night suit, having an night-gown-coat on top of it, which she clutches often, told me that there was a cool breeze blowing, now in such a scenario, drinking a hot cuppa coffee would have made more sense.
  • There are so many instances where in the actor's have their face and body turned behind to the crowd, leaving me thinking what kind of expression are they giving.
  • At the end, they could have introduced the cast and crew.


5) My Rating


I rate this as: 2.5 Star's  




Inthi,
Manuswath