Premium
This is an archive article published on October 3, 2010

Play Pen

It wasn’t only verses— Mirza Ghalib,the poet laureate of the Mughal court,had written more than 800 letters in his lifetime.

It wasn’t only verses— Mirza Ghalib,the poet laureate of the Mughal court,had written more than 800 letters in his lifetime,his subjects ranging from his domestic help to the war of Independence in 1857. A Delhi-based theatre group called Pierrot’s Troupe now brings us these letters in a new play called Ghalib Ke Khat,with stage veteran Tom Alter cast as Munshi Hargopal Tafta,the disciple to whom Ghalib addressed most of his letters.

Historians have often fallen back on Ghalib’s letters to get an overview of Mughal Delhi but Ghalib himself considered these missives as no more than casual scribbles. “To him,they were like SMSes or e-mails since letter-writing in the 19th century was an aesthetic pursuit,full of flamboyant Persian words and decorative phrases. His letters were in Urdu and very personal in tone,” says M Sayeed Alam,the director.

But even if he didn’t intend them to be so,the letters do give glimpses of an era long past. The hour-long play begins with Ghalib’s wife Umraoh reading out from a book of Ghalib’s letters to her maid. “As she mentions the different people Ghalib had written to,they emerge on the stage to read out the letters they had received,” says Alam. After the revolutionaries are crushed by the British in 1857 and the last emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar imprisoned in Rangoon,Ghalib laments in a letter: “Allah! Allah! Hazaron ka matamdar hoon/ Main maroonga toh mujhko kaun royega”. He talks about his mentally challenged brother who had made the mistake of stepping outdoors and was shot dead by the British police. And with grief,he reveals his financial woes after the British stopped his pension— “Ek paisey ki aamad nahin/bees aadmi roti khaney wale maujood.” The troupe is known for its plays centred around Ghalib. Their repertoire includes Ghalib,Ghalib in New Delhi and the monologue version of Ghalib ke Khat,which they have performed in India and abroad.

The play will be staged in New Delhi today and travel to Chandigarh and other cities in a few months.

Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Loading Taboola...
Advertisement