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Three Plays by Ranjit Hoskote, Jan 22-25 & Jan 30-31


STAGE TWO THEATRE SOCIETY invites you to

 

 

THREE PLAYS BY RANJIT HOSKOTE

 

- Karna

- The Last Annal of Alamgir

- Aftermath

 

 

*

 

Directed by Avaan Patel

 

Cast: Tom Alter, Vivek Tandon, Gerish Khemani, Vijay Varma, Danesh Khambata, and Avaan Patel

 

Lighting designer: Sam Kerawala

Movement consultants for The Last Annal of Alamgir: Sanjukta Wagh and Gulshirin Dubash

 

*

 

DATES & VENUES

 

The plays will open at the Y B Chavan Centre (22-25 January) and will continue at Prithvi Theatre (30-31 January).

 

* 22-25 January 2009

7 pm

Y B Chavan Centre/ Rangaswar Auditorium, Sachivalaya Marg, Mumbai 400 021

 

* 30 January 2009

9 pm

Prithvi Theatre, Juhu Church Road, Juhu, Mumbai 400 049

 

* 31 January 2009

6.30 pm & 9 pm

Prithvi Theatre, Juhu Church Road, Juhu, Mumbai 400 049

 

*

 

SYNOPSES OF THE PLAYS

 

1. Synopsis: Karna

 

(Cast: Tom Alter, Danesh Khambata, Gerish Khemani, Vivek Tandon, Vijay Varma) 

 

Inspired by 'Karnabharam' ('Karna's Burden'), a fragment by the ancient Sanskrit dramatist Bhasa, Ranjit Hoskote brings the epic hero Karna alive to present-day audiences as a contemporary figure driven by mixed compulsions, anxieties and convictions. Hoskote has re-crafted Bhasa's text and expanded the action of the play to include elements from the 'Mahabharata' that are not found in the original drama.

The play unfolds on what will turn out to be the last day of Karna's life. It opens just before Karna proceeds into battle. He has learned from Kunti that he is her first-born, and so half-brother to the Pandavas. This knowledge, coming to him at a crucial moment, provokes memories of all the curses and misfortunes he has suffered, weighing him down. At this moment, Indra, the king of the gods, arrives to trick the warrior out of his armour of invincibility. The tragic hero's mixture of generosity and pride seals his fate.

 

 

2. Synopsis: The Last Annal of Alamgir

 

(Cast: Tom Alter and Avaan Patel)

 

 

Ranjit Hoskote's 'The Last Annal of Alamgir' is the poignant portrait of a dying emperor. Alamgir inhabits the speculative, poetic space of possibility between historical figure and fictional character. He is, and is not, the Mughal tyrant Aurangzeb: the author takes deliberate liberties with history, melding past with future to reveal the emotional undercurrents of public events. We find the powerful and cruel emperor lying under a cupola in the southern peninsula where he has spent decades fighting a defiant enemy.

 

We travel, with the emperor, through his life: he meditates on his obsession with power, justifies his violence. On the brink, vulnerable, Alamgir invokes his angel: a character who he refers to, but does not address directly. The angel answers his call, but this is rendered in keeping with Alamgir's convention of not speaking directly to her. An intriguing dramatic space is created for the two characters to voice their thoughts about one another.

 

 

3. Synopsis: Aftermath

 

(CAST: Tom Alter, Vivek Tandon, Gerish Khemani, Avaan Patel, Vijay Varma, Danesh Khambata) 

 

'Aftermath' is conceived of by Ranjit Hoskote as a 'score for six voices'. The setting is an unnamed future, with a catastrophe having destroyed civilisation. In the ruins, six survivors each damaged by these events come upon each other. They speak to each other, not in the phrases of social civility, but in fragments of conversations or texts they half-remember, or find while rummaging around. In losing language and memory, they have lost their sense of self. It turns out they are figures from various periods and stories: Ghalib, Gandhari, Indra, Shahid, Sleeper and Lost.

 

Metaphors of sleep, insomnia, nightmare and awakening dominate the play, as the characters recover fragments of their personalities while trying to piece together some sense of a lost world and destroyed relationships. From the inarticulacy of circling discussion, meandering, malingering and cross talk, there develops a portrait of a society destroyed by a violence it has turned against its own.

 



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Interpersonal Skills Training at TISS, Jan 23-March 16


For the programme content and other details, visit:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/karmayog/message/45996


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Extramural Studies Faculty <extramural@tiss.edu>


Dear friends,                                  

                                                    

The Centre for Lifelong Learning announces a short-term programme on "Interpersonal Skills Training for Human Service Professionals" from January 23 to March 16, 2009.  Please spread a word about this  programme among your associates so as to enable the interested people to enroll for it.

The details of the programme are given below.

Thanks.

                                               

Sabiha Vasi

Assistant Professor

Centre for Lifelong Learning

---------------------------------------------------------


   

INTERPERSONAL SKILLS

TRAINING FOR

HUMAN SERVICE PROFESSIONALS

 

January 23 to March 16, 2009

 

About the Programme

All people need to use interpersonal skills in the course of every day living to be able to experience enriching lives.  The territory is already familiar.  The range of what constitutes interpersonal skills is vast.  A short list of such skills would include at least the following: counselling, group membership skills, assertiveness, social skills, interviewing skills of various sorts, writing skills, using the telephone and group facilitation skills.  Examples of how such skills are used in a range of settings are also numerous and would include the following among many others:

 

·                                                   Counselling skills: counselling colleagues, friends, clients and customers;

·                                                   Assertiveness skills: returning faulty goods, saying 'no', keeping to contracts and agreements;

·                                                   Social skills: introducing yourself, attending meetings, working with the general public, with customers and clients;

·                                                   Facilitation skills: running meetings and groups, chairing discussions and organizing planning meetings.

                       

 

Programme Details

 

Mode

Part-time Evening Programme

(Monday – Friday : 5.30 p.m. – 08.30 p.m.)

Location

TISS

Duration

23rd  January to 16th  March, 2009

Medium of Instruction

English

Fees

Rs.2500/- (Course fee)

Eligibility Requirement

Graduate in any discipline with minimum two years of experience in any helping/teaching profession

Selection Procedure

Applications will be screened to ascertain one's suitability.  If required, candidates will be called for an interview.

Contact Person

Ms. Sabiha Vasi

Assistant Professor & Programme Coordinator

Centre for Lifelong Learning

Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Deonar,

Mumbai – 400 088. Tel. 25525682 / 25525681/ 25525000


 

Application Forms

Available with the Centre's Secretary from
10.30 a.m. – 05.00 p.m. (Monday – Friday)

Last Date for Receipt for Applications

 21st  January, 2009


                                                                        

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

                                                                                                  


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Monday Shorts, Jan 12, Bandra


The Monday Shorts mission is to unite audiences via the short films submitted each fortnight. Monday Shorts strives to bring awareness to individuals and organizations who are creating socially relevant films to positively impact our worlds. In an effort to fully engage an array of transglobal creativity we wish to provide a forum for everyone's ingenuity to be premiered.

Monday Shorts promises to be like none other. This fortnightly event of screenings will allow directors and actors the opportunity to learn from one another and build networking connections through a wide array of artistic prospectives.

Monday Shorts was created to discover and nurture brilliance and innovation in the worlds of film, animation and music.

INFORMATION

You are welcome to submit your film to multiple categories and are allowed to submit several films to a single category.

However, it must be noted that we screen only 5 movies every fortnight so multiple entries will be shifted to the next fortnight

Please send in a short description of the film along with the a trailer and a movie poster if possible to more@bombayelektrik.com so that we may print and display them at the venue

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=43371593287

http://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Bombay-Elektrik-Projekt/38278179661

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GNU Action Pilots Workshop, Jan 25-26

http://www.cometmedia.org/www/GAP%20brochure%20Jan09.pdf


From: "Comet Media"


*The GAP programme*

If you are a person with a passion for ICTs (Information & Communication
Technologies), who feels that society needs to change its priorities and
would like to take part in bringing about that change, read on...

The COSMOS New Media Initiative of Comet Media Foundation is developing a
network of 'champions' or leaders called GNU Action Pilots (GNU is a popular
acronym of the Free Software movement). These men and women (20 years and
above) are expected to act as coaches and change agents, to take forward the
use of ICTs, particularly use of Free Software, in their institutions and
communities.

The GAP programme is intended not only to provide them with technical
knowledge but also a contextual background in basic socio-cultural, economic
and political issues.

The GAP year long programme is open to students, homemakers, freelancers and
regular job-holders alike. Anyone with a degree or diploma (or expecting to
get one within a year), including working people looking for a change in
career are welcome.

This programme will offer freedom, growth and opportunity to contribute and
make a difference in society. Involvement in this programme is expected to
continue alongside other professional and academic commitments.

For more on GAP, download the attached brochure and get in touch with us.
Please forward this to anyone who may be interested in taking part in such a
project.

===========================
Comet Media Foundation
Topiwala Municipal School, Lamington Road
Mumbai 400007, India
Tel: 91-22-2382 6674 or 2386 9052
e-mail: cometmediafdn@gmail.com
website: www.cometmedia.org

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Workshops on the Use of Technology in Teaching & Learning Economics in Bombay


http://www.arth-manthan.com

From Prof. Shashi Panikar <learneconomics@gmail.com>


The Economics Club, Mumbai an NGO set up to promote Economics Education in the state is organising a series of workshops on the USE OF TECHNOLOGY IN TEACHING AND LEARNING OF ECONOMICS at different colleges in Mumbai.

The next workshop will be held at R. Jhunjhunwala College Ghatkopar West on 24th January  from 8.30 am onwards.

There will be two sessions which deal with the Use of Blogs and other Internet resources for Teaching and Learning of Economics.

This workshop is organised specially for Junior College Teachers from different colleges in the city.Every participant will be given a computer with internet access during the workshop.The workshop is sponsored by the Forum of Free Enterprise and admission is free of cost on a first come first serve basis.

For Registration Contact :09324818296/9323966998

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Film Screenings: Berlin, World Capital of Negativity, Jan 11, Khar


http://www.piratecinema.org/screenings/20090111

Pirate Cinema Bombay
                                             Berlin, World Capital of Negativity
                                                              Sunday, January 11
                                                                    7 pm - 10 pm
                                                            www.piratecinema.org
                                                                                
                                                             Ticket of No Return
                                                     directed by Ulrike Ottinger
                                            with Tabea Blumenschein, Nina Hagen,
                                          Eddie Constantine, Martin Kippenberger
                                                          1979, 110 mins, 1.4 GB
                                                                                
                                                                      Possession
                                                    directed by Andrzej Zulawski
                                                with Isabelle Adjani, Sam Neill,
                                                Margit Carstensen, Heinz Bennent
                                                            1981, 120 mins, 1 GB
                                                                                
                                                                    CAMP Rooftop
                                                             301 Alif Apartments
                                                               34A Chuim Village
                                                                       Khar West
                                                                www.camputer.org
                                                                                
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                
BERLIN, name - polabian: "swamp", vulgar: "built on sand"; a "political         
abstraction" (Maurice Blanchot), a "position from which there is no escape"     
(Joseph Goebbels), a "conglomerate of calamities" (Frank Wedekind), a "curse"   
(Alfred Döblin); an "attitude of defiance mingled with self-conceit" (Walter    
Benjamin), the political condition of being "poor but sexy" (Klaus Wowereit)    
                                                                                
NEGATIVITY, noun - organized negation, collective expression of antagonism,     
denial or refutation, application of destructive forces within a political      
struggle that is not aimed at a positive goal and usually directed against the  
state and its organs; critical negativity - to employ the power of negation in a
critical situation: "I have been hit by a taxi", "my wife has left me", etc.;   
dialectical negativity - the negatively dialectical reversal of the concept of  
negative dialectics, negativity applied to itself, affirming - but refusing to  
accept as total or self-identical - the object of negation: "no future", "punk's
not dead" etc.; historical-political negativity - any sustained political effort
that aims to make the sum of a specific historical process less than zero.      
Commonly cited causes of negativity: bad weather, bad food, bad housing, the    
Great Depression, the Cold War, the German Reunification (see: Berlin)          
                                                                                
TO CAPTURE THE SPIRIT OF A CITY, expression - 1. to drink oneself to death: to  
capture the spirits of a city (to never return from a city); 2. to find the     
monster one's wife is having an affair with: to chase the ghosts of a city (to  
be possessed by a city); 3. to build a wall around a city (see: negativity)     
                                                                                
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                
                                                                     ()         
                                                                     ><         
                                                            pirate cinema bombay
                                                            sundays from 7 to 10
                                                            www.piratecinema.org

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Random Acts of Kindness, Week 2, Jan 11


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Vinod Sreedhar <vinodsreedhar@gmail.com>
Date: 2009/1/10
Subject: RAK Week 2, time and place...




Random Acts of Kindness, Week 2



Hi all :)

Finally I'm back on track after a whole month of slogging away at work. I've been meaning to send out an email about our next RAK but just haven't had the opportunity. Now that I'm free once again, here's the good news… we're doing an RAK tomorrow! :)

On December 14th, we connected with over a 100 people on Marine Drive through our 'chai and conversations' session. The idea was to reach out to as many people as possible and make new friends out of complete strangers. And we did! We had loads of great conversations with all kinds of people about all kinds of things. You can read about it at Ronak's blog.

It's a much simpler thought this time. We will be focusing on the other end of the spectrum… connecting with just one other person, one on one. And our 'victims'? The homeless, the underprivileged, the poor… the people on the streets. We pass them all day long, huddled in their rags in some dirty corner of the city's roads. We even give them some money sometimes. Or some food. But mostly, they just experience a whole lot of indifference from people like us. As if they didn't really exist. As if, our jobs are more important than their lives. As if, our meetings with our friends are somehow more important than the homeless man fainting from hunger.

Tomorrow, let's share something with them… our time, our curiosity about their lives, possibly a meal or a snack and if we can, our love & affection. Let's allow them to feel human for a little while… let them know their existence matters... that they're not the cast offs of society, but integral pieces of our society. Let's make them feel that way for a brief while at least.

The venue:      As of now, it's Chowpatty beach... but will decide today and inform those who call me to confirm their participation.
The time:
        5 pm
The date:         Sunday, the 11th

Each of us (or maybe two of us to a group depending on how many we are) will find someone we want to talk to. We will spend about an hour with them. And then we will meet to share our experiences with each other before we disperse for the day.

Please call me on 98191 54365 tomorrow if you're interested in being a part of this. Take care!

Love :)
Vinod   


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Mithi Yatra, Jan 11


Date:
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Time:
7:30am - 12:30pm
Location:
From Powai Lake to Mahim Bay

The Jal Biradari has organised the Mithi Yatra 2009. We will be marching across the length of the Mithi (city folks cant walk so bus-ing!) with 2-3 stopovers in between. We will be joined by Shri Rajendra Singh - the river man of India and Magsaysay Award winner.

The march is meant to highlight the various facets of the river requiring attention from everyone in Mumbai. After the November 26th attacks there has been a lot of awakening in the city and we hope to invite everybody who is concerned about the city to look into this important and multifaceted issue of Mumbai.

Be there! Lets do the Mithi!

The first half is from 7:30 am - 12:30 pm and then in the evening Shri Rajendra Singh will be speaking at Kirti College from 4:30 - 6:30 pm.

Volunteers are urgently needed to do the various preparations and please do contact for the same!!

Objective of the Yatra:

1) The Yatra seeks to bring together people who have felt strongly for the issue but don't end up connecting in the normal course of life.
2) Meet people living along the banks of the Mithi and understand their efforts at saving the river.


The Itinerary

7:30 Assemble at Powai Lake promenade which is on the Adi Shankaracharya Marg or the main Powai road.

9.30 : bailbazar crematorium, kurla

10.30: : air-india colony main gate, kalina

11.30 : vakola nala bridge, bkc (bridge going from MMRDA towards NSE)

12.00 : koliwada, mahim causeway

4.00 : exhibition of mithi "progress" pics/documents, kirti college (off cadell rd)
4.30 : shri rajendra singh's public address, kirti college:
1. river management
2. mithi - the way forward
3. formation of mithi nadi sansad

Email: mithiyatra@jalsangrah.org

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/event.php?eid=42199338566

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?#/group.php?gid=51461351693

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Wildlife & Environmental Film Fest in Feb


From: britishcouncil_india <shruti.sharma@in.britishcouncil.org>
Subject: Wildscreen Film Festival



Wildscreen Festival in India – 9-13 February 2009

Wildscreen is the world's largest and most prestigious wildlife and
environmental film festival. The festival is coming to India in
February 2009. The programme will comprise of master classes on
various aspects of filmmaking and film screenings. Nine filmmakers
from the UK will be coming for the festival.

Festival Dates
9 – 10 February – Delhi and Bangalore
12 – 13 February – Guwahati and Mumbai

Participation is by prior registration, for programme schedule and
online registration please visit www.britishcouncil.org.in/wildscreen

__._,_.___

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Talk with Shyam Manohar, Jan 17, Dadar

(download)



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: granthali09 <granthali09@gmail.com>
Subject: Invtn : Kritarth_ShymMnohr_by_JyntPwr&RvndrLakhe_Sat17Jan09@Ddr630pm



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