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Leading theatre artist Ratan Thiyam, first NSD graduate from Manipur who went on to become its director, passes away

Leading theatre artist Ratan Thiyam, first NSD graduate from Manipur who went on to become its director, passes away

Indian Express6 days ago
Ratan Thiyam, an eminent theatre personality from Manipur, passed away in Imphal on Wednesday. He was 77.
Thiyam, along with others such as B V Karanth and K N Panniker, was one of the leading figures in the Theatre for Roots, a post-Independence theatre movement in which practitioners embraced traditional and indigenous practices as a process of decolonisation.
His plays, which were staged and performed at international platforms too, drew from the epics, dances and movement forms from Manipur, as well as other parts of India. The themes ranged from environmental crisis to Manipur's socio-politics.
He had founded his group, Chorus Repertory Theatre, in 1976. In a statement issued on Wednesday, the group wrote, 'Dear Ojha, you held us close like a father's embrace, guiding us through every challenge with love and care. Though the pain of your absence is heavy, we hope your soul now rests in peace.'
He had been awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in Direction in 1987. A graduate from the National School of Drama – the first from Manipur – Thiyam later served as its Director from 1987 to 1988 and then as its Chairman from 2013 to 2017. He had also served as the vice-chairman of the Sangeet Natak Akademi.
As condolence messages poured in for Thiyam on Wednesday, Inner Manipur MP Bimol Akoijam wrote, 'It's a terrible loss! Legendary playwright Ratan Thiyam has passed away today in Imphal. An alumnus of the National School of Drama who later on became its Director and Chairman, and also former Vice Chairman of the Sangeet Natak Academy, he's an embodiment of our culture and struggle. It's a great personal loss for me as well… Besides the images, thoughts and emotions that his plays embody, I will never forget the pain he has shared with me as he confronts the present situation of his beloved Manipur! The agony that he felt could only come from a patriot! We'll miss you Oja!'
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Apart from this there was, and still is, another routine in place – of practising movement, breath, vocalisation, song and music derived from the vocabularies of Manipuri dance traditions, martial arts and ritual practices. This training happened in a cluster of buildings set amidst the landscape, that included an exhibition space, a rehearsal space, and a blackbox theatre equipped with light and sound systems. Away from the noise of the city, the Chorus Repertory as imagined by Ratan functions as a sort of ashram, where skill is transferred to the shishya – student – on a daily and continual basis, a mode of transmission different from the segmented time-tables of 'modern' theatre training institutes. 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From the dark upstage you might see a tall, white fabric umbrella, held firmly by an actor, float downstage, to form a halo ─ marking a passage to the heavens? The tumultuous clang and flash of hand-held gongs deafen and blind the spectators as the chakravyuh gains the velocity of a tornado in a circle of red beams. And who can forget the often-cited image of an elephant materialising on stage as if in a dream, in his memorable production of Agyeya's Uttarapriyadarshi! These are stage effects that cause the heart to pound. Almost nobody understood the magic of the image in theatre better than Ratan Thiyam. And almost nobody used the proscenium arch theatre, also known as the picture-frame stage, better than him. The picture-frame stage, brought to India by the British to house their theatricals, has given rise to much debate. The proscenium, as we know, is the architectural frame that edges the opening of the stage. 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