Our Stage

Pleasures and Perils of Theatre Practice in India

Akshara K.V., Sameera Iyengar, Sudhanva Deshpande

9788189487614

Tulika Books, New Delhi, 2009

236 pages pages

Price INR 350.00
Book Club Price INR 263.00
INR 350.00
In stock
SKU
pro_1481

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Theatre practice in India is like the country itself - vast, diverse, pulsating. Theatre in India happens anywhere and everywhere - in badly designed auditoria, in schools and colleges, in parks and gardens, in restaurants, on rooftops, in the open fields, on the streetcorner, and even, sometimes, on moving trains. At times it gives pure delight and touches aesthetic peaks, at others, it is brazen, rude, outspoken and blunt - or both simultaneously. And yet, surprisingly, the actual practice of theatre in India - beyond the work of this or that practitioner - remains vastly undertheorized. In Our Stage: Pleasures and Perils of Theatre Practice in India, leading theatre practitioners, administrators and leading scholars, social scientists and activists interrogate theatre practice around the themes Locales, Experiments, Assertions, Pathologies, New Realities and Training and Institutions. They also interrogate the implicit and explicit premises and projections of the 1956 Drama Seminar. Together, they give a fascinating insight on how theatre happens in India, as well as on the most important issues animating this practice.Theatre practice in India is like the country itself - vast, diverse, pulsating. Theatre in India happens anywhere and everywhere - in badly designed auditoria, in schools and colleges, in parks and gardens, in restaurants, on rooftops, in the open fields, on the streetcorner, and even, sometimes, on moving trains. At times it gives pure delight and touches aesthetic peaks, at others, it is brazen, rude, outspoken and blunt - or both simultaneously. And yet, surprisingly, the actual practice of theatre in India - beyond the work of this or that practitioner - remains vastly undertheorized. In Our Stage: Pleasures and Perils of Theatre Practice in India, leading theatre practitioners, administrators and leading scholars, social scientists and activists interrogate theatre practice around the themes Locales, Experiments, Assertions, Pathologies, New Realities and Training and Institutions. They also interrogate the implicit and explicit premises and projections of the 1956 Drama Seminar. Together, they give a fascinating insight on how theatre happens in India, as well as on the most important issues animating this practice.

Sudhanva Deshpande

Sudhanva Deshpande is a theatre director and actor. He joined Jana Natya Manch in 1987, and has acted in over 4,000 performances of over 80 plays. His articles and essays have appeared in The Drama Review, The Hindu, Frontline, Seminar, Economic and Political Weekly, Udbhavna, Samaj Prabodhan Patrika, among others. He has co-directed two films on the theatre legend Habib Tanvir and his company Naya Theatre. He is the editor of Theatre of the Streets: The Jana Natya Manch Experience (Janam 2007), and co-editor of Our Stage: Pleasures and Perils of Theatre Practice in India (Tulika 2008). He has held teaching positions at the National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad, and AJK Mass Communication Research Centre, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. Since 1998, he has been Managing Editor, LeftWord Books. He cycles around town.