Setting the Stage for a Dream Theatre
S.ANANDAN
Chandradasan plans to set up a flexible performance space with state-of-the-art acoustics and seating for less than 200 spectators |
No amount of heckling can dissuade the truly motivated from
chasing their dream.
Chandradasan, artistic director of theatre collective
Lokadharmi has demonstrated it beyond doubt. As government institutions that
ought to create dedicated performance spaces in the city looked the other way,
he refused to cringe into whining mode.
Taking a bold step, he raised Rs.1 crore by selling about
6.5 cents of land with a house at Vyttila and spent nearly half of it to buy 26
cents of land at Manattuparambu, near Naryarambalam, some 11 km from Marine
Drive, to construct a ‘Centre for Theatre Research, Training and Performance’.
Dreams, after all, are solitary walks.
A ballpark figure of Rs.3 crore is what he estimates the
centre to cost, hoping to raise the outstanding sum through crowd-funding,
corporate donations, individual patronage and as grant from government agencies
and other institutions. Ved Segan, renowned architect of Mumbai’s Prithvi
theatre, visited the property and held discussions with the architects of the
project.
“Theatre productions
are perfected over a few performances, but thanks to paucity of quality spaces,
we don’t have regular staging of plays,” he rues.
The centre he plans to set up will have a flexible
performance space with state-of-the-art acoustics and seating for less than 200
spectators. It will be ideal for theatre workshops and collaborative
productions. Given the potential of such a project, the Tourism Department
could bring interested tourists to spend an evening for a performance here. A
la cinemas, the same production could be staged here for days or months
together.
It could also be used for other art performances and even
screening of parallel cinema.
Mr. Chandradasan also wants to set up a theatre library,
physical and digital, on the premises. Young playwrights could take up writing
residency. Theatre badly needs fresh plays, he says.
The plan is to complete the first phase in a year’s time,
with the remaining being gradually built. “For now, there’s an urgent need for
storage space to keep Lokadharmi’s costumes and theatre properties,” he says.
“Wannabe actors call
me everyday to see if I will organise acting workshops. Such a centre, in a
quiet place but within a radius of about 11 km from all major points around the
city, would make it possible,” says the professor, all eager to live his dream.
Courtesy - The Hindu Kochi, 21 September 2015
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home