Skip to content

YOUTHV

Increase font size Decrease font size Default font size    Default color brown color green color red color blue color Skip to content

 

Genesis @ FSM

Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
You are here HOME arrow ART & THEATRE
ART & THEATRE
Par Hamein Khelna Hay
Par Hamein Khelna Hay (Hindi/60mins) Dir. Danish Iqbal. Wri. Shrirang Godbole. Prod. Sada arts Society. Set in the backdrop of riots in the city, the play demonstrates how children can think independently of adults and in situations of stress, actually show them the way. As the riots spread like wild fire, the adults start to panic. The children however take it in their stride in an unruffled manner, with a strong assertion of their rights at the same time. They teach the adults how to deal with the situation rather than squabbling amongst themselves on issues that are not important.
Tickets at Rs.300, Rs.200, Rs.100 & Rs.50 available at the Programme Desk from Nov. 1st onwards. An Old World Culture presentation.
Venue:India Habitat Centre, Lodhi Road Date and Time: 7th Nov 7.15 PM

Comment on this article | Read more...

 
Kharashein
Pratibimb,Dramatics society of DTU(Formarly DCE) Presents Kharashein,one of the master pieces of Gulzar.... Although it has been more than 60 years of our Independence but still those scars of partition still remain etched on our minds.... 1947...1975....1992....2003...every year those scars just grow deeper and deeper.... Date-19th feburary Time- 2pm Venue- Auditorium,DCE(near Rithala metro station) Occasion-Stage play competition,Engifest-2010

Comment on this article | Read more...

 
Tribute to Safdar Hashmi


WWe dedicate this section to all the theatre activitist who have sacrified a lot for making this society a better place to live.

Tribute to Safdar Hashmi

Safdar hashmi.jpgTwenty years ago, on 1 January 1989, Safdar Hashmi was fatally attacked in broad daylight while performing a street play in Sahibabad, a working class area just outside Delhi. Political activist, actor, playwright and poet, Safdar had been deeply committed, like so many young men and women of his generation, to the anti-imperialist, secular and egalitarian values that were woven into the rich fabric of the nation’s liberation struggle.

Tragically, it would be the manner of his death at the hands of a politically patronised mafia that would single him out. The spontaneous nationwide wave of revulsion, grief and resistance aroused by his brutal murder transformed him into a powerful symbol of the very values that had been sought to be crushed by his death. Such a death belongs to the revolutionary martyr.

safdar protest2.jpg

Safdar was thirty-four years old when he died. Those years, during which he had initially tried to find himself in an academic career, eventually encompassed an intense period of revolutionary activity when circumstances and a maturing inclination brought together an early interest in theatre and a growing political commitment. Political theatre, street theatre, and finally the growth of the Jana Natya Manch into a forum for evolving a conception of an alternative people’s theatre and culture.

The goal of strengthening bonds of democratic unity among creative artists had been an important focus of Safdar’s aesthetic and political activities during this period. That it should have been achieved so significantly through his death and through the solidarity surrounding the activities of the Safdar Hashmi Memorial Trust has sustained and strengthened the resolve of those who uphold the values and objectives that Safdar has come to symbolise.

Comment on this article | Read more...

 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next > End >>