Badal Sircar The theatre of life
Title:Badal Sircar: Search for a Language of Theatre; Natarang Pratishthan series on modern Indian Theatre
AUTHOR:Kirti Jain
PP: 460
PRICE:999
Publisher:Niyogi Books
Papri Sri Raman
Some of my childhood memories are of annual visits
to grandparents in Kolkata. A young uncle would
take his volatile and growing charges to a show of
Sagina Mahato or Michhil. Of course, I was too
young to know that it was theatre for the poor, or that
our young guardian was just another unemployed
youth with meagre resources for entertaining a
bunch of kids, or that it was high
intellectual fare or that one day
it would be considered so. The
name Badal Sircar stuck through
the years of varied jukebox
influences. Knowledge of middleclass
Bengali cultural practices
never wither away, no matter for
how long one has lived away from
Kolkata. One has to be perhaps,
typically middle-class Bengali,
to actually relate to what Sircar
was trying to portray in the 1960s,
‘70s and ‘80s.
His letters and pages from
his diary included in this
edition give the reader a
glimpse into the process of
‘evolution’ of Sircar’s kind of
theatre. ‘I have even thought
of writing something other
than a play but to no avail. I
don’t even feel like thinking
about it. The medium of a
play is now so deeply seated
in my mind.’
‘The thought of doing theatre and theatre projects
often becomes almost obsessive. On such days,
I am unable to think of anything else. Against all
reason, logic and intellect, entire evenings are spent
imagining somewhat impossible ideas related to
theatre. I calculate. I make drawings of the set. I
give shape to the production in my mind. I think of
lighting. I think of the stage.’
Not being able to write, Sircar wrote 62 plays.
Sadanand Menon, in an article in EPW, as a tribute
to Badal Sircar after his demise in 2011, soon after
the Left Front lost the assembly elections and power
after thirty-four years writes, ‘In their typically
bureaucratic manner, the Left party shut its eyes
and ears to the signposts of concerns this sensitive
playwright was laying out for them….What they
refused to acknowledge was that Sircar and his
Satabdi group represented the cleanest example
within modern Indian theatre of a group relentlessly
questioning its own politics and, in the process,
persuading its audiences also into intense selfreflexivity.
What the flag-wavers of the organised
Left failed to see was that while they themselves
picked up issues that concerned a narrow bandwidth
in India called the “proletariat”, Sircar was speaking
about speaking about a much more capacious
bandwidth called the ‘poor’.
Though he was a perfectionist, he
was multifaceted. Professionally,
he was an engineer, a scholar,
town-planner, a frugal Protestant
family man, a working person with
responsibilities. A smoker. And he
was an Esperanto buff, a constructed
international auxiliary language, a
contributor to the growing community
of Esperantas. He, of course, was
many other things, among them a selfproclaimed
Marxist, Badal-da and a
Bengali Brecht in thought, at least. He
had a Third Theatre manifesto, as
Sadanand writes, quoting Sircar:
‘The ultimate answer…is not for
a city group to prepare plays for
and about the working people.
The working people—factory
workers, peasants, the landless
labourers—will have to make
and perform their own plays…
This process, of course, can
become widespread only when
the socio-economic emancipation of the working
class has also spread widely. When that happens, the
Third Theatre will no longer have a specific function
and will merge with a reformed First Theatre.’
That was the language of theatre Badal Sircar
spoke, something this book encompassing the
academic and the artistic perspectives is able to
present with clarity and élan.
He was a performer par excellence, unique in his
own way, a star of sorts in the global community
of theatre activists. He was an inspirer of awe, an
innovator, eventually an icon. A book that goes
through his work with different perspectives and
understandings, of course, adds to the ‘history’
and ‘evolution’ of modern Indian (subcontinental)
theatre. The styles have been adopted in Pakistan
and Bangladesh, naturally. The world is a stage and
on that stage Badal Sircar is more than a name.