Monday, June 14, 2010





Habib Tanvir, a vibrant personality and theatre person whose work was inspired by elements as wide-ranging as folk-theatre and Shakespeare, passed away on June 8 last year. JAVED MALICK recalls his life and times…

A theatre person with a difference. Director, actor, playwright, poet—all rolled into one. A lively conversationalist with a sonorous voice and a wide range of interests. And, above all, the director who brought the rich dramatic and musical traditions of Chhattisgarh to national and international attention.
That was Habib Tanvir, one of the most significant theatre persons of post-Independence India, who passed away a year ago. During the half century of his career in theatre, Tanvir gave us such exciting and memorable productions as Agra Bazar, Mitti ki Gari, Gaon ka Naam Sasural Mor Naam Damaad, Charandas Chor, Jis Lahore Ni Dekhya, and Rajrakt,many of which are widely recognised as classics of the contemporary Indian stage.
The uniqueness of Tanvir's work in theatre was that it demonstrated how Indian theatre could be simultaneously delightfully traditional and poignantly contemporary or modern. His productions successfully harnessed the skills, energies, and conventions of traditional or folk performance and made them relevant to contemporary concerns and a secular and democratic worldview. The result was that his theatre was as incisive as it was entertaining.
Intense study
Far from the all inspiring catch-word that it later became, “folk theatre” was a neglected and greatly devitalised category when Tanvir began his career. Beginning with 1958 when he returned after several years in Europe, he spent years researching and studying folk traditions in drama, story-telling, music, and dance. He frequently and extensively travelled through the interiors of Chhattisgarh, meeting local artists, often watching their night-long performances.
Although he worked largely with more or less illiterate village artists, Tanvir himself was highly educated and well-travelled with a categorically democratic and modern consciousness, which was shaped mainly in the crucible of left-wing cultural movements. In particular his involvement during the 1940s in the Indian People's Theatre Association and the Progressive Writers Association had a deep and lasting influence on him. Having spent his childhood in Raipur, which was then a small town hemmed in on all sides by villages, Tanvir already had some early exposure to folk culture. His association with IPTA not only renewed his early interest in folk culture but also gave it a new political focus.

This complex of a democratic bias in favour of the common people, an interest in music, and passion for poetry lies at the basis of all of Tanvir's work in the theatre. It can be evidenced in all his plays from the celebrated Agra Bazaarto his last production Raj-Rakt, a play that he adapted from two of Tagore's stories. Tanvir's activist work would include plays like Ponga Pandit, Z ehreli Hawa, Sadak, Kushtia ka Chaprasi, and even the controversial Indira Loksabha.

When Tanvir moved to Delhi in 1954, the city's stage scene was dominated by amateur drama groups which, like the NSD a decade later, derived all their ideas from European models of the later 19 {+t} {+h} and early 20 {+t} {+h} centuries. There was little effort to link theatre work to the indigenous traditions of performance, or even to say anything of immediate value to an Indian audience. In complete contrast to this, Tanvir's first major production Ag ra Bazaar offered an experience radically different, both in form and content, from anything that the city had ever seen.
The play is based on the works and times of the much neglected 18 {+t} {+h} century Urdu poet, Nazir Akbarabadi, who not only wrote about ordinary people and their everyday concerns, but wrote in a style and idiom that disregarded and challenged the elitist norms of poetic decorum. Using a mix of educated, middle-class urban actors and more or less illiterate folk and street artists from the village around Jamia Millia where the play was first produced, what Tanvir, in an innovative artistic strategy, put on the stage was not the enclosed and private space of a room, but a bazaar – a marketplace with all its noise and bustle, its instances of solidarity and antagonism, and above all, its sharp social, economic and cultural polarities.
Rootedness
Soon after Agra Bazaar, Tanvir went to England where he studied theatre at RADA and Bristol Old Vic. During his travels in Europe, he also spent eight months in Berlin in 1956 soon after Brecht's death and saw many Berliner Ensemble productions. This influenced him deeply and reconfirmed him in his belief that one must work close to one's cultural roots. “I thought you could do nothing worthwhile unless you went to your roots and tried to reinterpret traditions and used traditions as a vehicle for transmitting the most modern and contemporary messages. Which means intervening in tradition creatively.”
Tanvir did not romanticise the folk tradition. He was aware of its ideological limitations, and did not hesitate to allow his own modern consciousness and political understanding to interact with the traditional energies and skills of his performers. His project, from the beginning, had been to harness elements of the folk traditions to “make them yield new, contemporary meanings and to produce a theatre which has a touch of the soil about it.”
This rich interaction is perhaps best witnessed in Tanvir's excellent adaptations of A Midsummer Night's Dream( Kamdeo Ka Apna, Basant Ritu Ka Sapna)and The Good Woman of Szechwan ( Shaajapur ki Shantibai) as well as his complex philosophical play, Dekh Rahe Hain Nain, could not be possible without this collaboration. In the first two, Tanvir beautifully blended fidelity to the original foreign texts, the authenticity and freshness of poetic expression, and native folk tunes. In Nain, he successfully represented an intellectually complicated theme.
However, Tanvir was quite careful not to create a hierarchy by privileging his own educated consciousness over the unschooled creativity of his actors. In his work, the two usually met and interpenetrated, as it were, as equal partners in a collective, collaborative endeavour in which each gave and took from, and thus enriched, the other. An excellent example of this non-exploitative approach is the way Tanvir fitted and blended his poetry to the traditional folk and tribal music, allowing the former to retain its own imaginative and rhetorical power and socio-political import, but without in any way devaluing the latter.
Thus in contrast to the fashionable, folksy kind of drama on the one hand and the revivalist and archaic kind of ‘traditional' theatre on the other, Tanvir's theatre, with its incisive blend of tradition and contemporaneity, folk creativity and modern critical consciousness, offered a new and more inclusive model of modernity. It is this rich blend which made his work so uniquely memorable.

Friday, October 2, 2009

AWARDS
















AWARDS:
1969 Delhi Sangeet Natak Academy drama Award
1973 Shikhar samman for drama, M.P. Govt. Bhpoal
1972-1978 nominated member of parliament- Upper House
1980 Visiting professor jamia millia University New Delhi
1982-1984 Jawaharlal Nehru Fellow Near Dehli
1982 Fringe Firsts Award for his play ‘charna das chor’ al Edinburgh International Drama
Festival U.K.
1982 D.Lit. Indira Music University Khairagath, Chhattisgarh
1982 Padma shree national Award Govt. of India Delhi
1983 Academy of Arts and Literature Award Delhi Administration
1982-1985 Visiting Professor pandit sundarlal shrma chair, Ravi Shankar University Raipur
C.G.
1985 Nandikar Award for Drama, Kolkata
1986 Visiting Professor M.S. University Baroda, Gujrat
1990 Kalidas Drama Award Govt. of M.P. Bhopal
1995 D.lit. Rabindra Bharti University Kolkata
2000 Maharashtra Urdu Academy Award Mumbai for play and poetry
2001 Aditya Vikram Birla kala shikhar Award Mumbai for literature
2002 Bhavabhuti Hindi Sahitya Sangh Award Bhopal for literature Bhopla M.P.
2002 Padma Bhushan National Award Govt. of India, Delhi
2002-2003 Visiting Professor Shamman Mitra Chair National School of Drama New Delhi
2002 Chakradhar Samman Chhattisgagh Govt., C.G.
2003 D.Lit. Vidyasagar University Midnapur W.B.
2003 D.Lit Guru Ghasidas University Bilaspur Chhattisgarh
2006 National research Professor Award Govt. of India, Delhi
2006 Officer of the order of Arts & Latters, Ministry of culture Arts Letters &
Communication, French Republic, Paris

They represent an absolute extreme of purity


“They represent an absolute extreme of purity: a peasant company directed by a highly sophisticated man who brings them up to town taken every conceivable to prevent the town from contaminating them. They go back to their villages tat harvest tine. They speak their local hindi patois … it’s pop art, using the vocabulary of natural fun, and on that sense the naya shows could be from anywhere. But there’s something about this part of India that makes then very talented. They’re born actors. What they produce together is an enormous variety of stories that they tell completely on their own terms: not only village fables, but bits of Brecht and ‘The Bourgeois Gentihomme’ with no apparent difference. From folk tales to Moliere it’s all one seamless movement deriving from their experience of life. There’s no halfway house between the local root and the foreign style.”
PETER BROOK in THE LONDON TIMES

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

जनम दिन.

जनम दिन मुबारक हो!

آپ امر ہیں ہندوستانی کلچر میں، یہاں کی تہذیب کے ہر شعبے میں، ہر ہندوستانی کے دلوں میں

Lifetime Achievement after a Life

Delhi Government today decided to confer lifetime achievement awards to Pandit Bhimsen Joshi and late Habib Tanvir for rich contributions in their respective fields.The decision was taken at a Cabinet meeting presided over by Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit.The award carries an amount of Rs 11 lakh, a citation and a shawl.Joshi, a vocalist in Hindustani classical, is renowned for the Khayal form of singing as well as is his popular renditions of devotional music.Tanvir was one of the most popular Urdu and Hindi playwrights, theatre director, poet and actor.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

حبیب تنویر

Habib Tanvir

Indian playwright, poet, and director, pioneer of a movement that sought to close and politicize the urbanrural divide in the arts. Joining the Indian People's Theatre Association a few years after its formation in 1943, he became aware of the vitality of ‘folk’forms,

particularly nacha and pandavani, which were native to the state of Madhya Pradesh in central India, where he was born and brought up (in Raipur). A multilingual artist, Tanvir has worked inUrdu, Hindi, and, most inventively, in Chhattisgarhi, the language spoken by the predominantly tribal group of actors who make up the Naya Theatre and with whom he has been associated since1958.

Even before his connection with Chhatisgarhi folk theatre, Tanvir wrote and produced the legendary Agra Bazar (1954). Earthy and replete with robust characters and the songs and cries of vendors in a bazaar, it was to become a classic of its kind, focusing on the writing, rather than the life, of the nineteenth-century Urdu poetNazir Akbarabadi. Another of Tanvir's famous productions, Mitti ki Gadi, a fluid adaptation of Sudraka's classic Sanskrit playMricchakatika (The Little Clay Cart), was conceptualized while he was touring Europe in 1956 -- 7, following his short stints as a student at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art and the Old Vic Theatre School. Ultimately, however, Tanvir is remembered for one phenomenal production, Charanadas Chor, which continued to draw packed houses long after it was first produced in 1974. A somewhat Brechtian adaptation of a Rajasthani folk story, this play narrates the trials of a charismatic thief (chor), the representative of a common man, who makes good in spite of himself, and who ultimately gets entrapped within his own vows. While the Queen pressures him to lie, the thief remains true to himself and pays the price with his own life. Since its widely acclaimed international exposure at the Edinburgh Festival in 1982, Charanadas Chor has played all over the world and continues to be a favourite at Indian drama festivals. Tanvir has produced many other plays that question the complacency and corruption of post-independence India. Despite his nationwide status—he was for a time a member of the upper house of the Indian Parliament—Tanvir has not been able to consolidate the future of his group, which remains economically vulnerable.


By Vasudha Dalmia, Rustom Bharucha