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Shaking
up Shakespeare
Othello in rap, audience members coaxed on stage ... It happened last
week, when Delhi's Scene Stealers did a hilarious take on the Bard's
works.
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare-Abridged, was originally
performed by the US' Reduced Shakespeare Company, a parody on the Royal
Shakespeare Company; these guys (Vivek Mansukhani,
Sukhesh Arora and Giles Hewitt) called themselves Reduced Scene
Stealers (RSS). "The RSS prevents ...," they announced. And the
drama had just begun ...
Radio Activity
The listener response to his plays is extremely positive, says BBC
Radio Drama Director Jeremy Mortimer. So Mahesh
Dattani is back
with the BBC, this time with the sequel to his Seven Steps Around the
Fire, in which he introduced detective Uma Rao to listeners. This one's
The Swami and Winston, the story of how Rao, while searching for a lost
dog, gets embroiled in a murder mystery. Says Dattani, author of Final
Solutions, Dance Like a Man and other critically acclaimed plays: "It
is a great opportunity to showcase the hidden India to listeners around
the world." Doing a pretty good job of it too.
Next of Kin
When Aparna Sen made her screen debut, she didn't get a glitzy launch.
Last week, her daughter Konkona Sen Sharma did. The 21-year-old is
about to break into Tollywood with her film Ek
Je Aachhe Kanya, and there's already a buzz about her in Calcutta. In Ek
Je ..., Konkona plays a teenager obsessed with a much older man, who later
tries to bump off his girlfriend. "It's a difficult role," says
the film's debutant director Subrata Sen, "but Konkona's good."
So the genes have not gone wrong.
Q&A: Preity Zinta
On her latest film, Kundan "Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron"
Shah's Kya Kehna!, and more:
»Is this a big break for you?
A.
Yes, especially because it was the first film I ever signed, before all
the ones that have been released so far.
»What's your next film?
A. Har Dil Jo Pyar Karega starring Salman Khan, Rani Mukherji and me.
»Lots of triangles around these days.
A. Well, they're better than squares.
»Have you risen beyond the role of a
pretty prop in your films?
A. I try to do different stuff, films where my presence has some purpose.
»People always call you "pretty
Preity". You think that's because you're pretty, or because it's a
good alliteration?
A. (Laughs) Oh god, that's funny ... I think journalists associate a word
with your name and then it becomes "pretty Preity", "garam
Dharam" or "ravishing Raveena". I mean, I've never heard
anyone say "pretty Raveena" or ravishing Preity".
»Meaning what? You're not pretty?
A. I'm not bad. But I'm not great either.
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