Monthly Archives: February 2019

At Kumbh Mela, UP Eyes Guinness Record For “Largest Parade Of Buses”

According to an official, the parade of 500 buses would be the longest anywhere in the world ad will make new Guinness World Record.

Pragyaraj :

By rolling out a fleet of 500 buses at the ongoing Kumbh Mela in Prayagraj, the Uttar Pradesh government is eyeing to break existing Guinness World Record. The record of largest parade of buses is currently held by Abu Dhabi of 390 buses. A 5.8 km-long convoy of 390 buses had travelled a stretch of 4 km on the Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Highway in Abu Dhabi. The record attempt was to celebrate UAE 39th national day.

According to an official, the parade of 500 buses would be the longest anywhere in the world.

The Uttar Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation (UPSRTC) buses will cover a distance of over 3.2 km. The parade of the saffron-coloured buses will be held at NH-19, between Sahson toll and Nawabganj toll plaza.

“The parade is also to demonstrate the traffic plan which worked very well during the ongoing Kumbh Mela where 1,300 hectare of land was used for parking of vehicles”, Additional Chief Secretary (Information and Tourism) Avaneesh Kumar Awasthi told news agency IANS.

Over 20,000 police personnel were deployed for security and safety of the Kumbh Nagar where millions visit every year, he added.

The UPSRTC had issued directions to all the 18 regions of the state to send the buses along with manpower in the city by February 27.

A couple of observers from the Guinness Book of World Records will witness the record-making attempt on the route on which buses will run.

(With Inputs From ANI, IANS)

source: http://www.ndtv.com / NDTV / Home> All India / by Richa Taneja (with input from Agencies) / February 28th, 2019

Fame has sought him, his creations

The popular Hindi adage ‘Jahan na pahunche Ravi, wahan pahunche kavi’ (The poet manages to reach even where the sun doesn’t – in salute to the poet’s power of imagination) stands true for Naresh Saxena, 80. In Lucknow literary circles, he needs no introduction.

The popular Hindi adage ‘Jahan na pahunche Ravi, wahan pahunche kavi’ (The poet manages to reach even where the sun doesn’t – in salute to the poet’s power of imagination) stands true for Naresh Saxena, 80. In Lucknow literary circles, he needs no introduction.

Even though his first book was published in 2000 at the age of 61, his fame and body of work has reached across the country. His poetry is part of syllabi right from Class VIII to M Phil in various states, and at the Jawaharlal Nehru University.

But, that’s not all. He has made a solo film which has won a national award. His play ‘Aadmi Ka Aa’ has been staged over 5,000 times. He has made TV serials for Lucknow, Bhopal and DD National. His musical compositions have been aired on All India Radio and he has given flute and harmonica performances on stage. HT City profiles the multi-faceted Lucknowite.

NO SCHOOL AS KID!

He was born in Gwalior and after Intermediate, he completed his graduation studies (in engineering) from Jabalpur (1964), and post-graduation studies from Kolkata. In 1965, he joined Lucknow Jal Nigam as assistant engineer, from where he retired in 1997.

“My father was in the irrigation department, so I was brought up in the Chambal region. It is not just a co-incidence that I became an engineer of water! I have grown up in dak banglows around the tributaries of Chambal and have seen rivers and life around it very closely.”

Interestingly, he never went to a school till the age of 10. “We were living in a very remote area, so nothing was near our dak bungalow. So, I was directly admitted in Class V in Moraina. But, my parents took care of my basic education at home. I got into the habit of reading, which made my Hindi strong. Also, my sister later shifted to Etha for Hindi Sahitya Visharad course, so I got chance to read a lot of Hindi literature. That’s how I got into the habit of reading poetry – Suryakant Tripathi ‘Nirala’, Sumitranandan Pant, Maithali Sharan Gupt and others.”

With no friends around and no one to play with, reading became his best pastime. “My passion for reading grew to the extent that I even ‘picked up’ a few books,” he confesses, bursting into laughter.

NARESH, THE POET!

His first book ‘Samundra Pe Ho Rahi Hai Barish’ was published in 2000, and without a book to his credit, he had bagged the coveted Pahal Samman, which is awarded once in two years to a poet from across the country for his contribution to literature. “My poetry has been published since I was 17 that too in the prestigious Gyan Uday (Calcutta), Kalpana (Hyderabad) and Dharmyug. I never had to struggle. Gradually, I started getting invitations to kavi sammelans (poet symposia) and have performed on all major stages of India. I never felt the need to write a book till I retired.”

He had two books ‘Samundra Pe…’ and ‘Suno Charusheela (2011) and two collections of poetry (‘Kavi Ne Kaha’ and ‘Naresh Saxena aur unki chuninda kavitayein’) to his credit.

Closest to his heart are ‘Acche Bachchey’, ‘6 December’ (on the Babri mosque demolition), ‘Shishu’ and ‘Chambal ek nadi, ka naam’. “‘Chambal’… is closest to my heart. Never mind my listeners, it even brings tears to my eyes,” he said.

A few lines of his poem ‘Ek Vriksha’ have been immortalised on Lodhi Road (Delhi) and at the Dehradun crematorium. “It (my poetry) has reached places where I had never thought it would reach. A film has been made on my poem ‘Girna’, and on the same creation, a theatrical performance has been held in Varanasi.”

He renders the opening line of the poem: ‘Cheezeon ke girne ke niyam hote hain, manushya ke girne ke koi niyam nahi hotey’ (When objects fall they do so governed by science but there is nothing to measure how far man may fall)!

The poem ended on a hopeful and inspiriting note that if one has to fall then: Giro kisi dushman par, kisi gaaj ki tarah giro, ulka paat ki tarah giro, vajra paat ki tarah giro, main kehta hoon gir kar dikhao to sahi (Fall, but like a sword upon the enemy, fall like the meteor, or like a thunderbolt: Let me see how you can fall)!

NATIONAL AWARD

“I made a serial ‘Jugalbandi’ for DD Lucknow and one for DD Bhopal in the ’80s. I made a serial ‘Nai Kiran’ that was telecast on national TV on prime time.” Besides, he has made few documentaries.

He won national awards for the only celluloid film he made. “I directed a 20-minute film ‘Sambandh’ that I shot on 35 mm print. It had been shown on DD and at many places and had also featured on ‘Surabhi’ TV. I won the Jury Special Mention Award in 1991 – the same year Amitabh Bachchan (Agneepath) won his first national award. Lata Mangeshkar too won another national award that year. So it was very special.”

‘Sambandh’ was shot in Lucknow (Bakshi Ka Talab) with city-based actors and was based on his own poetry ‘Ek vriksh bhi bacha rahe sansaar mein’. “But, I did not use my poetry in the film and interpreted it with visual medium and conveyed it with montages. The jury chairperson complimented that he has ‘for the first time seen creative use of grammar in the film’.”

Film happened by chance to him. “My wife (late Vijay Naresh) was supposed to direct the film. But, she went to Surinam as director of the Indian Cultural Centre. I had not made a film till then but my experience of TV and documentary came handy and I eventually made the film.”

His wife did not go to college after Intermediate and later, she completed her education privately. She then worked with All India Radio and Doordarshan. “She left her job and went to FTII, Pune and was the first woman to graduate in direction. She was appointed at the level of first secretary at the Embassy of Surinam and later director of Indian Cultural Centre there. Later, she became director of State Institute of Educational Technology.” His daughter Purva Naresh is a famous theatre director and son, Raghav, has an office job.

PLAYFUL ACTS!

His first play ‘Ek Hati Manu’ was based on Rani Laxmibai. His play ‘Aadmi Ka Aah’, on literacy, has had 5,000 shows across the country and has been translated in many regional languages. Two of his plays ‘Utterly, Gutterly, Atrocious’ and ‘Pret’ (Ghost) have been adapted and directed by his daughter. Luminaries Urmil Kumar Thapliyal, Suryamohan Kulshrestha and a director from Kolkata have directed plays written by him.

Besides, his music composition has been broadcast from Lucknow, Allahabad and Delhi. “I have never learnt anything. I used to play the harmonica and used to believe that I was the best in the country till I heard RD Burman playing it. I have given stage performances for both flute and the harmonica.”

Talking about his love for music, he said, “All art forms aspire to be music. It was my first love but I could not learn it. My parents did not let me learn it so I learnt it on my own but it was ‘adha-adhoora’ (incomplete). In my serials and documentary, I have played the flute. Now, I can say poetry is closest to me. I have taken on everything as a challenge.”

On writing poetry he said, “Poetry removes the hurdles of life and creates new openings. ‘Arth pehle aatey hain, shabd baad main aatey hain (First comes the perception; the words merely follow)’. We have to search for words according to the perceptions we conceive. Poetry is an art of the language! It’s not just the use of language but a special use of language, and unfortunately, today, people just scribble anything and get labelled as a poet!

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Lucknow / by Deepak Saxena, Hindustan Times – Lucknow / February 25th, 2019

At 83, the fire burns bright within

Raj Bisaria – a TV, stage, radio, literature personality who continues to inspire aspirants, this octogenarian thespian, is still working on his Shakespearean favourite, ‘Hamlet’.

“Oh my fair warrior …,” this line from ‘Othello’, began the career of the father of modern theatre in North India – Raj Bisaria.

Today, 53 years after his first professional play as director, octogenarian Bisaria is working on another admired work of Shakespeare, ‘Hamlet’, and looking for an answer to the question: “To be or not to be…”

It was 1965, Bisaria, all of 30 years, conceptualised the thought of directing ‘Othello’, only with four characters- Desdemona, Iago, Emilia and of course ‘Othello’. “All were British artists, who were here in India under some literature and linguistics programme,” said Bisaria, going down memory lane.

“We started working on it in October 1965 and it was staged on February 12, 1966. I telescoped the play to four characters. I worked on the essence of the play with no violation of its spirit,” he added. It was the first play by Bisaria’s theatre group- The Art Workshop. After that there was no looking back as he directed more than six dozen plays in English as well Hindi, in India as well as abroad.

Since then, the changed viewing culture has pained the octogenarian thespian. “The entire viewing culture has changed. We just see short images. Especially when the audience is not theatre-oriented, theatre conscious, what do you expect,” he said.

Anguished over the fact that the younger lot is less interested in theatre, he said, “Even parents are not interested. Still, people like me are working for a bright tomorrow. I am the lone voice in the wilderness.”

Critical of the ‘modern’ form of theatre, he said that theatre is not song and dance but it is relates to human issues and psychology, which is universal. “Kalidasa’s ‘Shakuntala’ was performed in Germany. Shakespeare is alive in India, even more alive now. What connection do the Germans have with Kalidasa or we with Shakespeare?,” asked Bisaria hypothetically, and then responded, “Theatre depicts human problems, which are universal, these can’t be ignored. But convenience of ignorance is creating barriers in culture.”

‘STINT WITH CINEMA’

The thespian said that he meant to be a film actor and director. “There was no theatre accept Papa Ji (Prithviraj Kapoor). I am talking about 1950s,” he said. “I tried for films but I was told that I am too ugly, too thin to become an actor,” said Bisaria smiling and added, “Rejection trained me.”

However, he credits firms for his theatre education. “My whole theatre education has been through films because there was no theatre. But I believe, theatre is the womb of all the arts,” he asserted.

However, he has acted in Muzzaffar Ali’s ‘Aagman’ and Govind Nilhani’s ‘Aaghat’, besides several Doordarshan’s productions including ‘Biwi Natiyon Wali’.

Recalling theatre legends’ date with Lucknow, he said Prithviraj Kapoor, Geoffrey Kendal, “they used to come with their group to Lucknow. But times have changed now.”

BEYOND SHAKESPEARE

Five decades after staging ‘Othello’ and working on ‘Hamlet’, Bisaria, is the more impressed with Charlie Chaplin. “I stayed bit long with Shakespeare but my work ranges from George Bernard Shaw’s ‘Candida’ to Maxwell Anderson’s ‘Barefoot in Athens’, Harold Pinter’s ‘The Caretaker’ to Mohan Rakesh’s ‘Aadhe Adhoore’, Badal Sircar’s ‘Baki Itihas’, Dharamvir Bharti’s ‘Andha Yug’ and Adya Rangacharya’s ‘Suno Janmejaya’.

As a stage and light designer, his use of colours and perception of its psychology help him create a new spectrum of theatrical images. “My effort has remained to promote a serious bi-lingual theatre, more purposeful and contextually relevant to India’s social conditions,” he said.

ENGLISH THEATRE

After ‘Othello’, he directed Christopher Fry’s poetic play ‘A Phoenix Too Frequent’ and Eugène Ionesco’s absurd play ‘The Lesson’. A significant advance was made when he directed Jean-Paul Sartre’s existential ‘In Camera’, Edna St. Vincent Millay’s ‘Aria Da Capo’. Bisaria recalled, “In 1967, I directed Ronald Duncan’s translation of 12th Century classic ‘Abelard and Heloise’ in a three-bill.”

HINDI, URDU THEATRE

Bisaria put his efforts to promoting bilingual theatre sensibilities in Lucknow. He invited groups from other parts of country to produce plays in Hindi, under TAW’s umbrella. Badal Sircar’s ‘Baqi Itihas’ was the first Hindi play directed by Bisaria under the auspices of TAW.

Bisaria did not stop there and his debut in Hindi theatre lined up a wide range of plays which were translations from English, Bengali, Marathi, besides Hindi.

BHARTENDU ACADEMY OF DRAMATIC ARTS

Bisaria said he was excited when he founded Bhartendu Academy of Dramatic Arts. “I taught in the university for decades but I am not a teacher. I am an artist,” he said. He suggested the then state government, to have a semi-professional repertory theatre in Uttar Pradesh and in 1974 the State Government asked him to set a roadmap for establishing a drama school, which would function as a full-fledged academy. Hence, Bhartendu Academy of Dramatic Arts (BADA) was born in 1975. That time, its contemporaries were the Delhi-based National School of Drama, said Bisaria, who, remained founder director of the academy for years.

STILL LOOKING FOR THE FIRE WITHIN

“Something like a fire is within me which I am still looking for,” he said, showing, some papers relating to a project under the prestigious ‘Tagore National Fellowship’. “Shakespeare’s ‘Indian Summer’ is the title of my work, which tells about the theatrical study of Shakespearean plays in India.

Other than this, under the ‘Senior Fellowship’ of the central government, the thespian has worked on a book – titled ‘The Mind of the Director’ – on Hindi theatre directors.

But, Bisaria, who is working on directing Hamlet – his 5th of the Bard, said, “Hamlet is my favourite work and character. I would love to do the role of Hamlet.”

AWARDS AND HONOURS

For his contribution to modern theatre, he was honoured with the third highest civilian award, Padma Shree, in 1990. Besides, Bisara has been awarded with several awards at the state, national, international levels.

source: http://www.hindustantimes.com / Hindustan Times / Home> Lucknow / Hindustan Times, Lucknow / by Saurabh Chauhan / February 18th, 2019