Theatre

Once upon a time, I was a king. 

No, this isnโ€™t a fantasy story that Iโ€™m writing although the opening is making me question whyever not. But, itโ€™s a truth. When I was in the seventh grade, because none of the tall boys in our class were available, it was decided that Iโ€™d play a king. 

I had short hair at the time and I was wearing a turban so none of the audience members knew that a girl was playing a kingโ€ฆuntil the turban came off that is. Then there were gasps. 

Right now, it feels quite Shakespeareanesque but then, it just made me mildly annoyed because being a tall girl at fourteen meant I had to do things I wasnโ€™t very happy doing. Like playing a man on stage.

I have not performed on stage since then – donโ€™t let the title of this post fool you. Though I enjoyed myself thoroughly, and I knew I just had to get the first dialogue out without fumbling and Iโ€™d be okay but, I grew quite scared of the stage. And even though I was told Iโ€™m a good orator, I was not ready to talk on stage. I did participate in dance performances, but those were never on my shoulder. Being a king on stage meant the entire thing was on me. It was terrifying.

I have, however, seen quite a few performances on stage since then, including a few plays. All thanks to a friend who, being in DU, was more culturally rounded than me.

The first play that I remember seeing on stage was As You Like It followed by Macbeth. These were not faithful renditions of the plays but musicals where Macbeth was called Macky-B, played by Ranvir Shorey and they were in clown makeup.

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I think thatโ€™s the day I realized what mom used to keep telling me about the charm of watching plays, all her stories of watching them at Prithvi theatre or writing scripts and performing them on her school stage. 

The most elaborate play that I saw was A Few Good Men at NCPA. I remember feeling extremely posh – I had dressed with care because I didnโ€™t want to appear uncultured – and even though I had spent a lot of my school years on stage, the way they used that space to create locations was absolutely mesmerizing. 

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I saw one more play before the pandemic put a stop to it all – again all thanks to my more culturally advanced friend who would find a play, convince me by saying Suchi letโ€™s go see a play, and Iโ€™d just follow her, knowing Iโ€™d have a good time. Incidentally, I found the tickets to this play in my inbox and it was on 8th March, 2020. It had been a special performance for Women’s Day. I know it has been only two years but it feels like a lifetime ago. It was called 9 Parts of Desire and Ira Dubey played 9 different characters. It was at Prithvi theatre and this was the closest I had ever been to a stage. We were like right there and Ira was right in front of us, acting. Just thinking about it gives me goosebumps.

I donโ€™t know if it’s the fourth wall that makes watching plays different from watching movies or it’s the fact that theyโ€™re there and itโ€™s not recorded and youโ€™re watching it live – fumbles, tumbles, and all – that makes a difference. Is it that they use their entire bodies to perform or maybe itโ€™s that theyโ€™re completely stripped of walls and are there, in front of you, asking you to trust them and just go with them on a journey. Maybe itโ€™s a mixture of all of it. I think Iโ€™d have to watch a few more to be certain.

Have you seen plays on stage? What has your experience been like?


Connecting this post to #BlogchatterA2Z. To read other posts, check Theme Reveal 2022: Without Prearrangement.


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9 responses to “Theatre”

  1. I’ve seen a few plays and it always amazes me how the performers can make themselves so detached from the audience and everything that surrounds them in that tiny space (especially the space in Prithvi Theatre) If you’re planning on watching more plays, I’d recommend The agina Monologues, btw.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. *The Vagina Monlogues

      Like

    2. Ah heard a lot about this one. Let me see if its playing anywhere.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I love watching plays and musicals, though do not go for many because well tickets are expensive and not many too many theatre groups come to Dubai, though the scene is changing here. I was quite fond of dramatics in school, but in college English Drama Club was more pretentious than I was comfortable with, and Hindi was frankly not really my cup of tea, though I did help in the production of Hindi plays.

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    1. Oh yes ticket prices can be a bummer. And finding good plays is also not that easy. I feel I expect more from plays than movies – maybe because of the steeper ticket prices.

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  3. Several. There’s an Amateur Dramatic Club in Shimla. They put up regular shows. I was myself a very keen theatre artist and then life happened!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Oh yes I remember you talking about your theatre artist days. It is such an immersive experience watching a play.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Radhika Acharya Avatar
    Radhika Acharya

    Watching live plays on stage is quite the experience. I have watched quite a few when we lived in Goa.
    Mumbai theatre groups would come down to Goa and perform and some of them were extremely good.
    Would love to hear more about ‘when you were a king!’ ๐Ÿ˜Š๐Ÿ˜Š

    Liked by 2 people

    1. That is so cool. Well thankfully I had to perform only once and I cannot really remember what the story was. I just remember a dialogue that I had to say many times: I’m still looking for an answer ๐Ÿ™‚

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