As I read through Anjum Katyal’s Badal Sircar: Towards a Theatre of Conscience, it seemed to me that all the ideas I have had floating in my mind about the meaning of my own work in theatre — which I could never manage to properly articulate — were formulated beautifully by Badal Sircar in his lifetime of dedication to the art of theatre. I refer, in particular, to the idea that theatre can act as part of a movement to bring about a change in the socio-political-economic status quo through cultural action. Tehrik-i-Niswan, my own theatre group, was, and is, highly influenced by India’s Nukkad Natak movement, which followed from Sircar’s practice and the concept of cultural intervention through performance arts.
The manner in which Katyal has approached her subject is perhaps the best way to convey the greatness of the personality and genius of Sircar. Her book is not just well-written, well-researched and accurate, but it follows Sircar’s life and work with great love and honesty; tracing his life, thoughts and accomplishments in the field of theatre.
Sircar (1925-2011) was probably the most influential, daring, controversial dramatist and theatre personality of the Indian subcontinent. As Katyal puts it: “His was theatre as anti-establishment counterculture, challenging normative middle-class mores and complacency, an attempt at conscientisation and awareness-raising, protest and political comment. It drew on the daily reality of the common man, the entire gamut of oppression, corruption, injustice, power politics, struggle, disillusionment, despairing hope, battered idealism and confused questioning that all of us experience as we grapple with the everyday.”
Anjum Katyal’s well-researched study gives insight into the life and work of Badal Sircar and highlights the need for Third Theatre in contemporary society
Reading Katyal’s book introduces the many facets of Sircar. As a playwright, his plays were phenomenally different from what had been written earlier. There is humour and wit, along with a preoccupation with social issues, including the injustice and inequality faced by women and the poor, violence, war, and nuclearisation. His plays raised questions about the status quo. His texts have become milestones in the history of written theatre; his plays are not only performed in all languages of the subcontinent, but have also been translated into many other languages, and are performed all over the world. He used an interesting form, in which the protagonist might address members of the audience directly.