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You taught me language,and my profit on it is I know how to curse. Thus spoke Caliban in William Shakespeares The Tempest. Now,a new play takes one of the most marginalised characters in English literature into the war zones of Sri Lanka where he learns a new language,one that highlights the victims in the states fight against the LTTE two lakh Tamils thrust into relief camps in Serendip,and journalists who have been arrested for alleged anti-government stories. In About Caliban: Also About Colombo,directed by Parnab Mukherjee,which will be staged during the Fourth Peace Day Festival at the India Habitat Centre on Tuesday,Shakespeares text merges with that of dissident writers like the Jaffna-based Shanmulingam,Sumathy from Colombo and RA Cheran,who now lives in Canada.
Caliban in our play is not just marginalised,he is also a voice of protest. Shakespeare had restricted his dialogues to 42 lines but for us,he is the main protagonist, says Mukherjee. The actors are students of Loyola College in Chennai,where the play premiered a week ago as part of the Hamara Shakespeare outreach project. The Delhi show is part of a 15-part India tour. The play begins with seven Calibans taking to the stage; though the stress is on Sri Lanka,the Calibans also represent violent regions like East Timor,black areas of New York,Nandigram,Imphal and Singara in India apart from Kandy and Jaffna in Sri Lanka.
The play will be staged on Sept 21. Contact: 011-26027845
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