History of Indian Drama
History of Indian Drama
History of Indian Drama
INTRODUCTION
Indian Drama
Indian drama and theatre has the longest and richest tradition in theatres
across the world. Bharata is considered the founder of the Indian dramaturgy
appears to be the first attempt to develop and arrange the technique or rather
elaborately with both the theoretical and practical aspects of traditional Indian
precepts for both playwrights and actors. The much renowned Bharata talks
about ten types of drama ranging from one to ten acts. The history of drama
states that he had also laid down guidelines for stage design, make-up,
costume, dance, acting, directing and music culminating in the theory of rasas
began in Indian arts, including drama. While the theatre movement in the
Indian languages had already gathered momentum mainly under the influence
of British drama, the theatre in English in India as such did not flourish on
expected lines.
cities had an urban middle-class audience with values and tastes shaped by the
English education they received and by the need to work with the British in
administration and commerce. Much of the theatre in this era copied the British
troupes that toured the country and took on to some extent the aesthetics,
performances did not take place on a proscenium stage. Nor did they depend
upon ticket sales but upon patronage. The proscenium which was adopted later
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separated the participants from the observers and; ticket sales put an emphasis
group.
gaining popularity and acceptance in literary circles today the world over and
novel and poetry, Indian English drama is almost a non-entity. Although there
are many Indians who have written plays in English, Indian English drama
201).
There are four important factors that explain the slow growth of Indian
and acquired in academic circles and, at best, it is a second language. This has
affected both the playwrights and the audience. Formerly Playwrights wrote in
verse or stylized speech which was different from the socio-cultural idiom and
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language which Aurobindo exhibits in his plays may have an appeal to the
scholar but that cannot fulfill the demands of the stage. Similarly Kailasam’s
language in his English plays cannot equal the natural, easy-flowing spoken
Some hold the opinion that there are very few “actable” plays in
convincing unless the characters are drawn from an English speaking milieu of
milieu. It is absurd to expect all the characters in Indian drama to have English
as their mother tongue or imagine that they normally use it in their everyday
conversation.
to the language factor. A playwright needs a living theatre to put his/her work
to an acid test, evaluate its total effect on the audience and thereby get a chance
been staged abroad, the success or failure of those plays cannot be measured in
those terms because the “foreign” context is very different from the one in
India. A foreign audience may not always understand the Indian and local
idiom and sensibilities expressed in those plays. The absence of a living theatre
Indian models such as those found in Indian classical drama as well as folk
English. Not making any creative use of Indian myths, legends, folklore and
history has been another major setback for Indian playwrights in English,
had any dramatic traditions worth the name, and must therefore
solely ape the West. Actually what a rich and varied dramatic
tradition he can draw upon! Drama was the ‘fifth Veda’ for the
ten centuries and more can safely challenge comparison with its
tradition was broken after the Muslim invasion, it did not die but
turning to folk forms and has been using folk techniques with splendid results.
While the playwrights in English have failed to use the folk forms those
Sircar, Rakesh, Bharti and Tanvir are prominent examples of those who have
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Indian English drama has never reached the high status of the other
genres mainly because the English language is not the natural and authentic
a long way to compete with the other literary genres in Indian writing in
English. It has all the possibilities and potential to carve out a niche for itself in
The evolution of Indian drama in English has been quite extensive but
without “notable gains” (Naik and Narayan 255) as in the vernacular. The
process of change had two phases: the first was smooth and new but belonged
playwrights like Tagore, Aurobindo and Kailasam; the second was rid of the
can identify three varieties of Indian plays in English. They are: plays in the
vernacular that have been translated into English by Indians who are not the
authors of the originals, plays in the vernacular that have been translated into
Indians. This section investigates the second and third varieties mentioned
above. There are not less than 700 plays written in English by Indian authors
since 1831. Of these dramatists, hardly fifteen to twenty have made their mark
in that genre.
Krishna Mohan Banerji wrote the first Indian English play The
Society in Calcutta in 1831. This play presents the conflict in the mind of a
Bengali youth between orthodoxy and the new ideas introduced by Western
education. For more than a generation this play remained the lone dramatic
English began with Michael Madhusudan Dutt’s translation of his own Bengali
plays into English: Ratnavali (1858), Sermista (1859) and Is This Called
1922. Ramkinoo Dutt’s Manipur a Tragedy (1893) is the last Indian drama in
to entertain the British soldiers and citizens who were residing in India.
cities like Calcutta, Bombay and Madras. The British expatriates enacted
famous English plays in these playhouses. Quite frequently drama groups and
But the educated Indians were not interested in these British shows; they
yearned for an Indian theatre. Consequently, rich and young Bengalis in the
languages had already gained momentum under the influence of British drama,
but the theatre in English still lagged behind. Several dramatic organizations
were launched from 1940 but none exclusively for drama in English. The
departments of drama. The Sangeet Natak Akademi in New Delhi started the
annual National Drama Festival in 1954. The British Council and the U.S.
Information Service arranged visits of foreign troupes from time to time. With
all theses initiatives it was drama in the Indian languages that did well but
some plays like Gurcharan Das’s Mira, Pratap Sharma’s A Touch of Brightness
and Asif Currimbhoy’s The Dumb Dancer were successfully staged in the
Pre-Independence Phase
but only a few among them were prominent. This phase presents plays and
playlets, the themes of which were from legends and epics, events from history
playwright during the colonial period, J.M. Lobo Prabhu, T.P. Kailasam and
V.V.S. Ayengar.
Eastern and Western thought. He wrote five complete blank verse plays
besides six incomplete verse plays. His complete plays are The Viziers of
Vasavadutta (1957) and Eric. These plays were written in English as original
dramatic creations in five acts and in blank verse. Of these, only Perseus was
published during his lifetime. His incomplete plays are The Witch of Ilni: A
Dream of the Woodlands (1891), Achab and Esarhaddon, The Maid in the
mill: Love Shuffles the Cards, The House of Brute, The Birth of Sin (1942) and
Prince of Edur (1907). The most striking feature of Sri Aurobindo’s plays is
that they deal with different cultures and countries in different epochs.
Iyengar writes: “Like the poems, the dramas too were a part of Sri Aurobindo’s
life! The outer projections of the richer or quintessential part of his life—the
wrote all his plays originally in Bengali and later translated a few into English.
to convey moral values and philosophical ideas. While his dramas have artistic
richness they are also dramas of ideas. He made a prolific use of imagery and
symbolism and “saw the universals behind the particulars” (.Indian Writing in
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English 122). Iyengar further observes that Tagore created his dramas out of
plays under two broad categories (101). Thematically, Sanyasi, Malini, Chitra
(1913), The Cycle of Spring (1917), Sacrifice (1917), Red Oleanders (1924)
and Natir Puja (1927) are thesis plays. The King and the Queen, Kacha and
Devayani, Kama and Kunti and The Mother’s Prayer are psychological
his first play Abu Hassan in 1918. There are seven verse plays to his credit
which he published under the title Poems and Plays (1927) and these plays are
based on the lives of Indian saints. His Five Plays (1929) is written in prose
A.S. Panchapakesa Ayyar’s first play In the Clutch of the Devil (1926)
has the superstitious practices of witchcraft and ritualistic murder that were
prevalent in the rural South India of his time as its central motif. Sita's Choice
and Other Plays (1935) contains the title play and also Brahma’s Way and The
Slave of Ideas. The Slave of Ideas and Other Plays (1941) is yet another
collection of his plays where he uses the prose medium effectively and is seen
subordinated to the message. His last play The Trial of Science for the Murder
playwrights of Indian drama in English during the colonial era. She wrote two
plays, namely, The Well of the People (1943) and Two Women (1952). The
first is symbolic and poetic, and follows the Gandhian social order while the
second is realistic and is written in prose, and investigates the private world of
a sensitive individual. The Well of the People is based on a real story published
in Gandhi's Harijan and is a poetic pageant. Two Women brims with poetic
Joseph Mathias Lobo Prabhu has written more than a dozen plays. But
only Mother of New India: A Play of the Indian Village in Three Acts (1944)
and Death Abdicates (1945) appeared before the Independence. His Collected
and is considered the father of modern Kannada drama. His genius finds its full
Monologue: Don’t Cry—all three published in one volume titled Little Lays
and Plays (1933). His other plays are Kama or The Brahmin’s Curse (1946)
and English. His English plays are inspired by Puranic themes but he renders
them brilliantly in the intellectual idiom of the present day. In The Burden,
Kailasam has shown that he can make prose a fit vehicle for the expression of
tragic emotion. Fulfilment is the best of Kailasam’s plays. In it, Krishna fails to
persuade Ekalavya from joining the Kauravas and so stabs him. This raises
questions about life and death, good and evil, and means and ends. Kailasam
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wrote only a few plays but these are enough to establish him as an original
talent,
the incongruous, ludicrous and droll elements in the lives of the sophisticated
middle-class people in the cities. His plays are collected in two volumes of his
(1911), The Point of View (1915), Wait for the Stroke (1915), The Bricks
Puranas like the Bhagavata have been a perennial source of themes for Indian
writers during the pre-Independence phase. There have been many plays with
the following social themes: widow marriage, evils of caste and dowry
Post-Independence Phase
Indian English drama continued to occupy the back seat in the post-
Independence phase as well. A prime factor for this dismal scenario is that
even after India became politically independent there was no living theatre so
far as the Indian English playwright was concerned. Highlighting the post-
playwrights with sustained dramatic activity remains very small, thought stray
playwrights like Currimbhoy, Sharma, Das, Karnad and Dattani have been
than thirty plays. The Clock (1959) and The Dumb Dancer (1961) are studies
Tourist Mecca (1959), The Hungry Ones (1965) and Darjeeling Tea (1971).
The Restaurant (1960) deals with the partition and its aftermath. The
is a protest against censorship. The Captives (1963) deals with the Sino-Indian
conflict against the background of the Chinese invasion. Goa (1964) deals with
the liberation of Goa from the Portuguese occupation. Monsoon (1965) deals
With Truth (1969) deals with the Indian freedom struggle and the assassination
of Gandhi. Inquilab (1970) deals with the naxalite movement. The Refugee
(1971), Sonar Bangla (1972), Angkor (1973) and The Dissident MLA (1974)
Indian Writing in English, notes that Currimbhoy “with his feeling for variety
and talent for versatility” is “the most prolific and the most successful of our
handles them all with commendable ease” (732). But Naik, in A History of
plays. Though he admits that isolated scenes in his plays do give evidence of a
genuine dramatic talent, his plays have not been successful in general because
(1968), The Word (1966), The Professor Has a War cry (1970) and Bangla
Desh (1971). His more recent plays include Echoes from Auntie’s Booze-Joint,
Power Play (1980) and Queen Bee (1981). Power Play is a three-act satirical
English at Bombay University. He limits his themes to the urban, middle and
upper middle classes of Bombay in particular. His Three Plays (1969) includes
presents a husband caught between marital duty and love. The Sleepwalkers is
a one-act farce and satire that deals with the Indo-American encounter of the
1960s. It attacks the absurd vulgarism of the Americans and the Indians
Ezekiel’s plays focus on conflicts within families and the plight of the
right idiom for his characters because he knows the life situations and lifestyles
of his characters. His other plays include The Wonders of Vivek, a comedy in
three scenes, and Don’t Call It Suicide (1989), a tragedy in two acts. Both
these plays are “well-written, stageable and remain focused on those themes
that Ezekiel understands best, the English-speaking urban middle and upper-
It deals with the death of a landed, rural Parsi family. The family loses its male
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heir and patrimony due to its ineffective response to external changes. Patel’s
unpublished yet). This play also is set in Southern Gujarat. It depicts “the
120). Mister Behram (1988) also is set in Southern Gujarat in the late
relationship between an old Parsi landowner and his adopted tribal son-in-law.
towards his adopted son-in-law are some of the themes dealt with in this play.
“main characters are Parsis, the community Gieve Patel belongs to and
understands intimately, but his plays’ concerns are pertinent to Indian society
and How President Huckleburger Nearly Won the War in Vietnam (1973). His
The Government of Avadh Wajid Ali Shah is an attempt “to redress the
126). It also presents the British colonization of India and its politics. The Limb
Empire and M/s. Jardine, Matheson and Co. (1974) depicts British
imperialism and its role in the opium trade in China. Jagat Seth and Lord
Ravan of Shri Lanka (1977) are two of his other plays. His characters “reflect
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(Smith 127), They are complex and are portrayed as individuals who are
R. Raj Rao’s The English Professor (1985) and its sequel White Spaces,
standards. His important one-act plays are found in The Wisest Fool on Earth
known as Third Theatre, a theatre supported and created by the people, and not
symbolizes the new awareness and attempts of Indian dramatists to depict the
incidents and/or social upheavals, which throw clear light on harsh realities.
translated into English. His plays highlight intricate human relationships and
reveal uneasy truths, pregnant with meaning, as in his Silence! The Court Is in
questions about love, sex, marriage and moral values in the Indian context,
making ample use of irony, satire, pathos and mock-element to highlight the
traditional Indian society. The Vultures (1961), Kamala (1981), The Cyclist,
Umbugland are his other notable plays. In his latest plays To Hell with Destiny
and The Tour, he highlights the typical middle-class mentality and value
system.
and Karnad, have changed the face of Indian theatre. Tendulkar has changed
the form and pattern of Indian drama by demolishing the three-act play and
creating new models. He has managed to bridge the gap between traditional
Acts (2001), is regarded as the first Indian play with a lesbian protagonist, and
awards including the Padma Shri (1974), Padma Bhushan (1992), Sahitya
Akademi Award (1994) and Jnanpith Award (1998). Most of his plays were
playwright himself. Like Tagore, Karnad turns to Indian epics and myths for
his themes. His journey from Yayati to The Fire and the Rain holds a mirror to
the evolution of Indian theatre in the last four decades. Saryug Yadav remarks
have been far more rigorously conceived and have certainly been far more
succeeded in creating an Indian theatre which is true to its long tradition and at
employing various techniques of Indian classical and folk theatres in his plays.
Bali: The Sacrifice (2004), Naga-Mandala: Play with a Cobra (1990), Tale-
Danda (1993), The Fire and the Rain (1998), and The Dreams of Tippu Sultan
which has opened up fresh lines of fruitful exploration for the Indian English
experiment with the stage techniques of Sanskrit drama, folk theatre and
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slang, Indian English idioms and expressions, and vernacular and Sanskrit
words. He has used Indian myths, folk tales and history to interpret socio
thus demonstrated that there is a truly Indian theatre, which can be true to the
Indian tradition and at the same time responsive to modern and contemporary
Karnad, Dattani and Padmanabhan have proved that Indian English drama can
claim its rightful place in both national and international arenas. In this
context, Dattani emerges as one of the “princes” of Indian English drama. His
Final Solutions and Other Plays appeared in 1994, Collected Plays in 2000
Final Solutions and Other Plays contains four full-length plays: Where
There’s a Will, Dance Like a Man, Bravely Fought the Queen and Final
Solutions. Collected Plays (2000) has six full-length plays and two radio plays.
The full-length plays are: Where There’s a Will, Dance Like a Man, Bravely
Fought the Queen, Final Solutions, Tara, and On a Muggy Night in Mumbai.
The two radio plays are: Do the Needful and Seven Steps Around the Fire.
Collected Plays Vol. II contains two stage plays, four radio plays and four
screen plays. The stage plays are Thirty Days in September and Seven Steps
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Around the Fire; radio plays are Clearing the Rubble, The Swami and Winston,
Uma and the Fairy Queen and The Tale of a Mother Feeding Her Child.
Dance Like a Man (written with Pamela Rooks), Mango Souffle, Morning
Raga and Ek Alag Mausam are his screen plays. Underscoring the
today. His themes are the Indian joint family and its impact on
theme. (206)
father has on his son whom he loves dearly. At the end the son realizes the
truth but it is too late to change himself. His wife, Sonal, is also in a similar
situation, for she had lived under the influence of her elder sister. But Sonal
In Dance Like a Man, the protagonist takes up dancing and marries a dancer
against the wishes of his father. Besides the clash of generations, social
prejudice against male dancers and the plight of the temple dancers are the
other themes. Both these plays portray modern women who are bold and self-
confident.
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gender discrimination. In Bravely Fought the Queen, the queen is the Rani of
Jhansi. But her name is brought in “as an ironic parallel to the women in the
play who are passive, helpless victims of male tyranny” (Naik and Narayan
207). This play also touches upon homosexuality as its theme. Homosexuality
Needful has family relationship as its theme. Seven Steps Around the Fire is
partly a detective play in which the mystery of the murder of a hijra is solved.
The play offers insights into the lives of the hijras, their beliefs and customs.
stage space to create maximum dramatic effect. In Where There’s a Will “there
are three stage spaces” (Naik and Narayan 209). Another device of his is the
heard first as thought and then it is presented as speech. Dattani also uses the
Chorus and masks in Final Solutions. His dialogues are short and functional
The plays of Dattani are perhaps the first to challenge effectively the
between language and sensibility, material and medium. Dattani does not see
"politically incorrect" (Final Solutions and Other Plays 11). English is simply
the language in which "he can best express what he wants to say" (Final
Rakesh who have shaped contemporary Indian theatre, one must add the name
prestigious Sahitya Akademi Award in 1998 for his Final Solutions. Dattani is
one of the most interesting and important playwrights writing in India today
and his work demonstrates the wide range of styles, philosophies, and issues
being dealt with in the contemporary Indian theatre. Naik and Narayan write,
“Karnad seems to have a worthy successor in Mahesh Dattani, who enjoys the
205).
Her play Harvest (1998), which won the Onassis Prize in 1997, portrays a
world of poverty and its shocking effect on mothers who sell their children. It
sale of human organs has become all too common” (Naik and Narayan 213).
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The leitmotif of her play Lights Out (2000) is the victimization of women in
Indian society.
Vera Sharma’s Life is Like That (1997) is about the plight of a middle
has been abandoned by her husband. Her The Early Birds (1983) contains five
one-act plays, mostly about middle class life. The Chameleon (1991) is a
collection of her radio plays. Sharma is good at light social comedy as in The
Uma Parameswaran’s Sons Must Die and Other Plays (1998) contains
plays which were written over many years on different topics. Sita’s Promise
Meera is another dance drama. “Sons Must Die is a war play against the
background of the Kashmir conflict in 1948” (Naik and Narayan 212). Dear
Deedi is a stylized play that features ten women from ten countries and is set in
Canada. Her most successful play Rootless but Green Are the Boulevard Trees
is a social play with a modern setting and presents the problems of the
immigrants in Canada.
drama has experimented with typical Indian expressions and idioms in English
translation. The play wrights of this phase died not confine themselves to our
myths, legends, folk tales and history but went beyond these themes. They
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have addressed social and economic problems like untouchability, sex, power
and wealth.
Mahesh Dattani
August 7, 1958. He completed his schooling at Baldwin High School and his
and also supported his father in the family business. With a Master’s degree in
Marketing and Advertising, he thought he would lead a normal life helping his
When he was ten, his parents took him to watch a Gujarati play. Living
in Bangalore, theatre was, for his parents, one way of staying in touch with
their community. Quite frequently he went along with his parents and two
helped him to keep in touch with his roots and also kindled his interest in
Theatre and participated in workshops, and started acting and directing plays.
in 1985, he made his debut with an English play Surya Shikar, Five
Finger Exercise in Bangalore. His first play as a director came a year later with
a drama titled God. But it was not until he directed Woody Allen's God that
Dattani realised that theatre was his vocation. From 1984 to 1987 he
Dattani created his theatre group called Playpen in 1984, and started
directing plays ranging from classics to contemporary ones. Playpen ’$ aim was
to train and showcase fresh talents in acting, directing and stage craft. It is
around this time that he started his search for Indian plays in English. He
writes:
I felt that the language was stilted. It just didn’t present any real
Dattani wrote his first full-length play Where There’s a Will for the
Deccan Herald Play Festival in 1986. His maiden play was an instant success.
The encouraging response and acceptance from people motivated him to write
write a play, the minute it’s ready and finished on my computer, 1 want to
play, I feel like I’m a complete human being. That makes me happy” (“Mahesh
Dattani directed a thriller Double Deal: How Far Would You Go early
this year. It is an adaptation of Richard StockwelPs Killing Time, and tells the
story of two strangers Jeet and Rhea, their initial encounter and the dramatic
revelations that follow. Dattani’s latest play is Brief Candle. It was written by
him and directed by Lillete Dubey. This play is on cancer and cancer hospices.
modem urban family as his subject. Reeling under the oppressive weight of
struggle for freedom and happiness. "I write for my milieu, for my time and
who aspire to freedom from society," confesses Dattani (The Hindu, March 09,
2003).
Indian society. In the process, significant questions arise regarding gender and
issues that afflict societies the world over. Dealing with issues like male-
nothing. "I'm not looking for something sensational, which audiences have
never seen before," asserts Dattani. "Some subjects, which are underexplored,
deserve their space. It's no use brushing them under the carpet. We have to
isolation within given contexts. That's what makes us individual" (The Hindu,
Dattani is one of the two Indians, the other being Rukshana Ahmed,
among the twenty one writers commissioned by BBC Radio to write plays to
frequently writes plays for BBC Radio 4. His radio plays are popular in UK as
he is able to create the right ambience and context through sounds and word
pictures. Seven Steps Around the Fire caught the imagination of the British
audience because of the character Uma Rao, the wife of the Superintendent of
Police who investigates a murder. After its huge success, Dattani was asked to
comments:
His plays fuse the physical and special awareness of the Indian
theatre with the textual rigour of western models like Ibsen and
write plays, Dattani has won many reputed scholarships and held senior
Portland State University in the US, where he has been conducting classes and
Dattani made his entry into the tinsel world through Mango Souffle
(2002), adapted from his highly successful play On a Muggy Night in Mumbai.
Even though it was his maiden attempt, the film won the best motion picture
award at the Barcelona film festival in 2003. The next film that he directed was
Morning Raga, which glorifies Indian heritage and classical culture. It also
mourns the loss of Indian culture and identity due to the advent of technology
and modernity. Pamela Rooks directed the film version of Dance Like a Man.
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Dattani wrote the screenplay for this film and it won the National Award for
confronting the middle class twentieth-century Indian. He lays bare the social
marginalized sections to the center stage. He does not shy away from sensitive
issues and sensitizes the public in a subtle and gentle way to the complexities
surrounding the issues. Without being didactic, he quite artistically turns his
own course as far as theatre is concerned. He does not hark back to the past or
draw themes from a tradition that no longer sustains him or his audience. His
plays deal with gender disparity, communalism, sexuality and other socially
we have collectively stashed away in dusty closets for generations, is what sets
him apart from other contemporary Indian English playwrights. Fringe issues
that remain latent and suppressed or are pushed to the periphery occupy the
centre stage of his plays. He believes that much of the mainstream society lives
of Dattani which address these “closet” issues throws light on gender and
sexuality.
He shows the ways in which gay writing can deconstruct "the binary logic of
the cognitive stability" of culture itself (12). For Edelman, gay identity is
Gay or queer criticism has signaled, from the outset, that its
desirable body, and the terms of social inclusion and exile. (279)
Research Gap and Potential
communal issues in Final Solutions, stage craft in his plays and postcolonial
elements in his plays. The focus of this study is the theme of sexuality which is
a key issue in Dattani’s plays, and it is this theme that demarcates him from
other playwrights. This study is unique because no such study has so far been
This study gains relevance in the context in which debates are going on
the Delhi High Court in the Naz Foundation case delivered on July 2, 2009
striking down the provision of Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) that
research gap thus identified was Dattani’s pioneering effort in addressing the
gap and the potential for an in-depth study in this area, the researcher has
Five plays of Dattani have been selected for the present study. They are:
Night Queen (1996), Bravely Fought the Queen (1991), Do the Needful (1997),
On a Muggy Night in Mumbai (1998) and Seven Steps Around the Fire (1999).
Out of the five, four {Night Queen, Bravely Fought the Queen, Do the Needful
and On a Muggy Night in Mumbai)) deal with the theme of homosexuality and
Seven Steps Around the Fire deals with transgenders. The researcher has
Through these five plays, Dattani has articulated ideas that pose a
Realizing the potential of the theatre as an agent for social change, Dattani,
through these plays, has critiqued our society for the marginalization of the
directors have not yet explored same-sex relationships, Dattani has taken a
the world. Dattani has used the medium of the theatre to dismantle the
hegemonic sexual tradition in the Indian scenario. The strong taboo against any
from addressing these issues. But the playwright has taken a bold step to bring
out the dormant realities and closet issues in the Indian society, and presents
boundaries.
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plays which address homosexuality and transgender issues. Out of the five
plays selected for the present study, four (.Bravely Fought the Queen, Do the
Needful, On a Muggy Night in Mumbai and Seven Steps Around the Fire) were
published in Dattani’s Collected Plays which came out in 2000. Night Queen
(1996) which deals with the topic of same-sex relationship, has not been
published so far but the playwright has provided a copy of the play (typescript)
The present study intends to take a close look at how the concept of
“heteronormativity” implies that human beings fall into two distinct and
complementary categories, namely, male and female; that sexual and marital
relations are normal only between two people of different sexes; and that
heteronormativity. Only the word “queer” can adequately capture the fluidity
sexual identities.
Queer theory emerged in the early 1990s out of gay and lesbian studies
and feminist studies. Queer theory's main aim is to explore the contestations of
the categorization of gender and sexuality. Queer theorists claim that identities
are not fixed because identities consist of varied components and to categorize
an individual on the basis of just one characteristic is, therefore, wrong. The
The researcher has examined five plays of Dattani with the help of the
elements in each of the five plays selected for this study. The rules and
concerned.
presents a brief survey of the history of Indian English drama and locates
Mahesh Dattani within that history. This chapter presents a brief survey of
literature which leads to the identification of the research gap and its potential.
It also presents the thesis statement and includes a note on the structure of the
thesis.
Chapter two presents an in-depth study of queer theory, highlighting the
development of the theory and the contribution of key queer theorists. Chapter
continues the thread of the third chapter and investigates Dattani’s Do the
Needful and Bravely Fought the Queen which present homosexuality in the
Indian family context. This chapter also discusses Seven Steps Around the Fire
which deals with transgender issues. The concluding chapter brings together
the common elements found in all the five plays of Dattani selected for the
study within the framework of queer theory and sums up the main arguments