Stages of Life: Indian Theatre Autobiographies

Front Cover
Anthem Press, 2011 - Biography & Autobiography - 374 pages

By the end of the nineteenth century, Western-style playhouses were found in every Indian city. Professional drama troupes held crowds spellbound with their spectacular productions. From this colorful world of entertainment come the autobiographies in this book. The life-stories of a quartet of early Indian actors and poet-playwrights are here translated into English for the first time.

The most famous, Jayshankar Sundari, was a female impersonator of the highest order. Fida Husain Narsi also played women's parts, until gaining great fame for his role as a Hindu saint. Two others, Narayan Prasad Betab and Radheshyam Kathavachak, wrote landmark dramas that ushered in the mythological genre, intertwining politics and religion with popular performance.

These men were schooled not in the classroom but in large theatrical companies run by Parsi entrepreneurs. Their memoirs, replete with anecdote and humor, offer an unparalleled window onto a vanished world, where India's late-colonial vernacular culture and early cinema history come alive. From another perspective, these narratives are as significant to the understanding of the nationalist era as the lives of political leaders or social reformers.

This book includes four substantive chapters on the history of the Parsi theatre, debates over autobiography in the Indian context, strategies for reading autobiography in general, and responses to these specific texts. The apparatus, based on the translator's extensive research, includes notes on personages, performances, texts, vernacular usage, and cultural institutions.

 

Contents

A Retrospective of
3
Theatrical Memoirs and the Archives of Autobiography
26
Narayan Prasad Betab The Deeds of Betab
51
Radheshyam Kathavachak My Theatre Days
102
Jayshankar Sundari Some Blossoms Some Tears
170
Fida Husain Fifty Years in the Parsi Theatre
246
Self and Subjectivity in Autobiographical Criticism
299
Reading the Texts
315
Bibliography
355
Index
361
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About the author (2011)

Kathryn Hansen is a leading scholar of South Asian theatre history, especially the Hindi and Urdu vernacular traditions of North India. She has authored 'Grounds for Play: The Nautanki Theatre of North India', translated 'The Parsi Theatre: Its Origins and Development', and co-edited 'A Wilderness of Possibilities: Urdu Studies in Transnational Perspective'. She holds the position of Professor in the Department of Asian Studies at the University of Texas at Austin.