{"id":604,"date":"2018-11-01T12:33:03","date_gmt":"2018-11-01T12:33:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/archee.uqam.ca\/?p=604"},"modified":"2022-10-27T12:33:17","modified_gmt":"2022-10-27T12:33:17","slug":"novembre-2018-transformation-in-contemporary-indian-theater-abhilash-pillais-helen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/archee.uqam.ca\/novembre-2018-transformation-in-contemporary-indian-theater-abhilash-pillais-helen\/","title":{"rendered":"Novembre 2018 – Transformation in Contemporary Indian Theater: Abhilash Pillai’s Helen"},"content":{"rendered":"\n

In recent times in India we have seen the actor\u2019s presence eclipsed by technology in productions affiliated with national institutions. The actor is reduced to a scenographic tool and converted into a component in a show. Upon closer examination, this can be seen as a case study of neoliberal imagery celebrated by the State and its Institutions. My paper questions the notion of acting processes and methods that create performers to fit into these new shows. Can this be called an acting method? What leads the National School of Drama to make this genre of show at their annual student fair? How do methods and pedagogy of actor\u2019s training become intertwined with technological devices? Is it related only to the final presentation, or is it inherent in the process that is then canonized and emulated by a number of acting institutions in India? I study these vital questions via the work of one of the leading directors of contemporary Indian theatre, and a faculty member of NSD,\u00a0Abhilash Pillai. Every year he directs a student production featuring a profusion of technology on and off stage, performed publically amidst great publicity. How does technology affect a young actor\u2019s training, and construct the imaginative as the final outcome? Through Pillai\u2019s case, I shall also explore the evolution of an \u201cIndian acting training process\u201d that started with the inception of the drama school in 1956 and its need to respond to tradition and \u201croots.\u201d Does this create a \u201cbody-based acting method,\u201d or is it inevitable in its own historical conception? How does a \u201crooted\u201d body adjust to what I would like to see as its \u201ctransformation\u201d?<\/p>\n\n\n\n


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Helen directed by Dr. Abhilash Pillai<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

In the past two decades in India, theater productions organized and funded by the State through\u00a0the National School of Drama (NSD),\u00a0have blended text, acting and technology in a spectacular manner. These productions have come to utilize theater techniques that were earlier not deemed suitable for a State institution to work with. In what follows, I shall elaborate on the transformation of contemporary Indian theater toward a spectacle and a neo-liberal imagery that was first rejected and then celebrated by the State. I would like to explain how the State ideology, in the process of projecting a modern and democratic stance, tends to overshadow the resistance and critique of the society. I will summarize different methods of actor training that were instrumental to the development of the NSD institution, and in effect helped produce a genre of plays that celebrates the extravaganza of digital and virtual media, which I will call technology. To support my argument, I will use the example of Abhilash Pillai\u2019s play\u00a0Helen<\/em>, performed in 2007-2008 in\u00a0Bharat Rang Mahotsav, Delhi (and in Tokyo), which was made in collaboration between the Japan foundation and the National School of Drama<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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