Feb 05 2024 to Feb 05 2024 7 p.m.
EVENT HAS ENDED
7 4th Main Rd, Stage 2, Domlur 560071
Bangalore International Centre collaborates with the Drama Library to enliven our library calendar with the second edition of their multi-city play reading series, carefully curated and read simultaneously in two or more cities. A play truly comes to life when it is read and heard, out loud. To this end, The Drama Library returned to Arghya Lahiri and Phalguni Vittal Rao to curate a second volume of scripts we want to hear and playwrights whose work we want to engage with more. This week we hear, here – Keffiyeh/Made In China by Dalia Taha Synopsis Palestinian playwright Dalia Taha’s utterly distinct slices of Palestinian life are at times unsettling, heartbreaking, and humorous – as parents, lovers, sisters and friends cope with a decades-long occupation. These exquisite short plays explore how the most intimate of relationships are infiltrated by colonisation and displacement. Directed by Nisha Abdulla Featuring Maahir Mohiuddin Nisha Abdulla Sathwik NN Suneel HR Ujwala Rao Curators’ Note What happens when two particles collide? In one realm, they either bounce off each other, stick to each other or break apart into two particles. In another realm, in 2024, we find ourselves living in a world where multiple forces are trying to displace each other, resulting in an environment that feels unstable, sometimes hopeless. Collisions everywhere – of populations, ideologies, politics, and identities,.The selection of plays in Hear, Here! (Vol. 2) brings together a selection of plays that reflects this. Based in part on suggestions we received from our audiences during Vol. 1, and in part a recognition of the moment we’re living through, the lineup is a snapshot of responses to seething chaos. Vol. 2 we comprises of Girish Karnad’s Tughlaq – which investigates the political mood of disillusionment under the Delhi sultan Mohammed bin Tughlaq’s rule; Keffiyeh/Made in China by Dalia Taha – which underscores life under occupation in Palestine and western attitudes to the conflict; Scorched by Wadji Mouawad – a fiery tale of a mother who sends her two children on a quest to unravel their identity, from beyond the grave; and Lucy Kirkwood’s Mosquitoes – a spellbinding account of two sparring sisters set in the world of particle physics. The (mildly) rehearsed readings will take place at Harkat Studios in Mumbai on alternate Mondays starting Jan 22. And as another nod to mildness, this time in expansion, we find a home at the Bangalore International Centre in Bengaluru, for two of the plays. The readings are free and open to all. Though if you work in the theatre, they’re especially for you. The scripts will be available to read through January and March 2024 on www.thedramalibrary.com – Arghya and Phalguni