New Years’ Eve last year had been spent in the open air, with my visiting brother and his wife, at the Call Against Patriarchy event at Ranuchhaya Mancha near Rabindra Sadan, Kolkata. Even though I really didn’t know many people, and wasn’t at all involved in the “scene”, I had an amazing time. I must also confess to a warm feeling of pride, being able to show my “foreign” brother and sis-in-law that we Indians, and Kolkattans, are not just sitting idly by; that we are reaching out, trying to sensitise, trying to resist, to make change.
This year, I have been a lot more active in the queer and
activism spaces. Organising Addas,
volunteering for NGOs, writing for handbills, blogging, meeting people, getting
involved in Pride planning, and so much more has made this a pretty good year,
brain-food wise. So, what could be better than to end the year with a repeat
dose of the event? And this year, I was on stage, with a few friends, attempting
not to totally screw up a forum theater presentation on “intersectionality of
oppression”.
Needless to say… it was amazing. While the pleasure last year came completely from
being a voyeur, this year’s fulfillment was more participatory. Also, being
involved a little bit in the planning process, and doing the writing – again – I
felt much more like a stakeholder this time around.
And so, my two bits as audience and stakeholder. As audience, there isn’t a lot to be said. It all
looked nice, if a little curiosity-engendering or line-blurring for many
people. There was music, dance, skits, recitation, and more. Most of it was
visually striking (if not always visually pleasing to the average person) and
all of it brought out questions. All in all… successfully doing what it set out
to do, getting the person on the street to think, question, and take a new look
at the status quo.
This would have quite a ripple effect. Some of the acts
were visibly or not so visibly, quite hastily put together and would have
benefited immensely from more thought and more rehearsals. I include my own
piece in this, because we barely had enough time to give it 3 or 4 run-throughs
over 2 days, where ideally ANY theatrical or stage production should be
rigorously rehearsed. Additionally, with
a little more time to work on the script, I am sure we could have fixed some of
the issues and improved the overall quality of the presentation. And this is true
of some of the other presentations as well, I am sure.
In addition, a bit of a mishap happened with the common
literature, the content for the handouts. While I am sure most people will not notice,
and that it won’t really have very serious long term consequences; as a
stakeholder I am aware of what went wrong, and wish there had been the time…the
elbow room… to fix it.
And, with a little more time, maybe we could have had a sort of dress rehearsal or combined final rehearsal? That would have smoothed out issues with cuing music and so on, in my opinion. Not a necessity, of course, but would make the whole thing smoother.
One other thing I thought we could have done a little
differently. Maybe someone could have curated the content a little bit? Although
most of the items were on point and in keeping with the “patriarchy” and “resistance”
theme of the event, including the wonderful musical presentation by the special
kids who did a tri-lingual version of We Shall Overcome, some items just had
nothing to do with the theme. While it is
wonderful to see so many talented underprivileged kids do so many fun things, there
could have been some attempt at maintaining some sort of connect with the
overall theme of the event. Given time, and a little back and forth, it is
possible that some such idea could have been worked out, even within the
Rabindrik, Classical, Bangla space that the performances seemed to occupy.
Another thing time, and curating, might have achieved is
the optimization of duration. While some items could have been a little longer,
being more dramatic or theatrical in nature and presentation, some SHOULD have
been shorter. I come back again to the kids, and wonderful though they were, I personally
thought 30 mins was a little too much time, even broken up into 10 min chunks
as it was. In fact, being broken up, these items basically acted as intrusive wedges
taking up a lot of time when the next act could have been on stage. This delayed
the whole thing, and frankly, got boring after a while. There is only so much
recitation and dance one can watch…from the same few kids… no matter how
talented and smart the kids are.
There were some intra group issues, and some friction,
which could also have been sorted out more easily and much more amicably
perhaps, if we had had more time in the run up to the event. This again comes
from a very personal place for me, since I care about many of the parties
involved in multiple sides of these strife situations, and the mata does not
like to see her cubs fight. However, it is essential for future events to be
successfully organized, and for the long term benefit of the movement itself,
for such issues to get sorted out.
Other than that, it was all good. People watched. Passersby
stopped. People became curious. People asked questions. People got
uncomfortable. People made fun. It was spectacular. It was disturbing. It was thought
inducing… all the things that we really wanted to achieve. In short, it was
another New Year’s Eve well spent.
No comments:
Post a Comment