Urdu Art and
Stage Drama.
During the
second half of the 19th century, Urdu was the main spoken and written language
of the northern half of the subcontinent and understood in almost all the
principal cities.
The Parsi were
the pioneers in establishing a commercial theatre, that lasted from 1873 to
1935 and influenced all the other regional theatres. Though located mainly in
Bombay and Calcutta, the Parsi companies toured the subcontinent with huge
staffs, sets, and an army of players.
The best known
playwright of this period is Agha Hashr (1876-1935), a poet-dramatist of
flamboyant imagination and superb craftsmanship. Among his famous plays are
Sita Banbas, from the Ramayana; Bilwa Mangal, a social play on the life of a
poet, whose blind passion for a prostitute results in remorse; and Aankh ka
Nasha, about the treachery of a prostitute's love, with realistic dialogue of a
brothel. Many of Hashr's plays were adapted from Shakespeare: Sufaid Khun was
modelled on King Lear, and Khun-e Nahaq on Hamlet.
His last play,
Rustam-o-Sohrab, the tragic story of two legendary Persian heroes, Rustam and
his son Sohrab, is a drama of passion and fatal irony. Theatrical companies
were large-budgeted affairs. Plays opened with the actors in full makeup and
costume, their hands folded and eyes closed, singing a prayer song in praise of
a deity, and generally ended in a tableau.
Sometimes at
curtain call the director rearranged the tableau in a split second and offered
a variant. Actors were required to know singing, dancing, music, acrobatics,
and fencing and to possess strong voices and good physical bearing.
In improvised
auditoriums with bad acoustics and packed with more than 2,000 people, actors'
voices reached the farthest spectator.
Plays began at
10 o'clock and lasted until dawn, moving from comedy to tragedy, from pathos to
farce, from songs to the rattle of swords, all interspersed with moral lessons
and rhyming epigrams.
The droll humour
and realism of the comic interludes remain unsurpassed in contemporary Urdu
drama. Important playwrights of this period were Narain Prasad Betab, Mian
Zarif, and Munshi Mohammed Dil of Lucknow.
All took
inspiration from Hindu mythology and Persian legends, transforming these tales
into powerful dramas. Imtiaz Ali Taj was
a bridge between Agha Hashr and contemporary Pakistani playwrights. His
Anarkali, the tragic love story of
Anarkali, and Crown Prince Salim unfolds the love-hate relationship of a
domineering emperor and his rebellious son. Brilliant in treatment and
character analysis, this play has been staged hundreds of times by amateur
groups and has entered the list of Urdu classics.
In the absence
of a professional company, Urdu theatre has found it difficult to strike roots.
After 1947 many
Muslim actors and writers were absorbed by the Indian film industry in Bombay,
and they found it difficult to adjust their great talent to amateur theatrical
clubs.
All the same,
plays have been staged in Karachi, Lahore, and Rawalpindi. The best productions
have been those dealing with topical themes--refugee problems, new adjustments,
the corrupt bureaucracy, the Kashmir issue, and other sociopolitical issues.
Agha Babar in Rawalpindi produced Burra Sahib, an adaptation of Gogol's
Government Inspector, setting it in Pakistan. Tere Kuce se Jub Hum Nikle by
Naseer Shamshi, describes the pathetic condition of an aristocratic family in
Delhi that is forced to leave home because of communal riots.
In Lal Qile se
Lalukhet Tak, by Khwajah Moinuddin, the comedy arises out of the pitiable
condition of the refugees who leave their well-settled existence in Delhi
dreaming of prosperity, take a tedious journey, and arrive homeless in Karachi
to find shelter in thatched hovels.
Ali Ahmed, an
avant-garde actor-director in Karachi, presents his plays with polished
stagecraft and esoteric appeal. Lahore remains the centre of amateur theatre
based on the tradition of the late directors A.S. Bokhari and G.D. Sondhi, both
former principals of the Government College in Lahore. In 1942 G.D. Sondhi
built the Open-Air Theatre, situated on a small artificial hillock in the
Lawrence Gardens and perhaps the best in all of South Asia. It has remained the
centre of dramatic contests and festivals and is a favourite of visiting dancers
and actors.
The
actor-playwright Rafi Peer, with his knowledge of Western theatre as a result
of his training in Berlin in the 1930s, has helped to develop Pakistani
theatre. Professional in approach, he has produced radio and stage plays and
has been a critical colleague of A.S. Bokhari and Imtiaz in the revival of
amateur theatre.
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