Updated On: 18 December, 2011 09:11 AM IST | | Aditi Sharma
Director Pushan Kriplani explores Hayavadana for the third time in a decade, along with co-director Arghya Lahiri. Catch the classic today at KR Cama hall
Director Pushan Kriplani explores Hayavadana for the third time in a decade, along with co-director Arghya Lahiri. Catch the classic today at KR Cama hall
Answering the first, most basic, questionu00a0-- Why Hayavadana?u00a0-- director Pushan Kriplani, one half of the director-duo heading The Industrial Theatre Company and Black Boxers' new production, says, "Ask a real question." We insist on an answer though. Surely, there's an interesting story behind why he goes back to Girish Karnad's classic Hayavadana time and again. In the past 10 years, he tells us, he has dealt with the script three times. This time Arghya Lahiri, his co-director, will share the challenge. Both consider "the (rehearsal) room" a revered space and are thrilled with the quality of their crew's work. In appreciation, the team has full access to the espresso machine at Kriplani's place and he's also hosted a Burger Night for them. "That's the only reason the actors joined up. You can't pay them what they're actually worth, so you feed the s**t out of them," he laughs. Excerpts from an interview:
Director duo Arghya Lahiri and Pushan Kriplani.
PIC/ Nimesh Dave
Why Hayavadana?
PK: It's a good script. The only reason we do any theatre at all is the text and what we're able to do with it. I've done it twice before, this is the third time and I keep coming back to it. The story is not over for me.
AL: There is something about the innate theatricality of the text because of Karnad's preoccupation with folk theatre and Yakshagana. There's so much in one showu00a0-- dolls, clowns, people stepping out of the show... it allows for physicality. There's a lot beyond what is a vital examination of identity and sexuality. I think for Pushan, it's also an uber text that keeps drawing him back. I just like being in a room working with him. Three days before the play was to open, he calls and says, "Ten years after we did the play for the first time, I think I might understand what to do with the second act, properly."
u00a0
You need to have a lot of belief in your actors to be able to do that...
AL: We believe in these guys entirely ufffd
PK: Also, they need to have the faith that it's the right idea and not the most novel idea. They're a good room and they've done a good job to fill me with those ideas.