Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali Explained

Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali
Genre:Gujarati theatre
Location:Mumbai

Gujarati Natak Mandali (1878–89) and its successor Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali (1889–1948) was a theatre company in Bombay, British India. It made immense contribution to the Gujarati theatre, with productions of more than hundred plays, as well as the training and introducing of many major actors and directors.

History

Gujarati Natak Mandali (1878–89)

Gujarati theatre was established on the foundation of the Gujarati Natak Mandali. It was founded in response to discontent with the Parsi theatre company owner Framji Gustadji Dalal. The playwright Ranchhodbhai Dave, who had previously worked with Natak Uttejak Mandali (1875–94), helped in the starting and management of the new troupe, which initially started as an amateur group of Gujarati teachers. On 5 June 1878, three partners, Jayshankar Sarveshvar, Narottam Bhaichand, and Shivshankar Karasanji, co-founded the company, which later became known as Mehtajis' theatre company. Later they were joined by Manekram Dhirajram, Damodar Ratansi Somani, and Lalji Karsanji as new partners. The partners were responsible for various departments of the company. Sarveshvar was the manager and director of the company. The company pioneered the pure Gujarati culture-influenced theatre, free from any Parsi influences.[1]

The company first produced Lalita Dukhdarshak (Lalita's Manifold Sufferings), a reformist play written and directed by Dave. It premiered on 6 January 1878 at the Victoria Theatre in front of an audience of 1200 people. It was the first social tragedy in the Gujarati language, with five acts and thirty-four scenes. It had twenty characters, including the character of Nandan, whose name became synonymous with a fool.[1]

Dave wrote and directed the second play, Nal Damayanti (Nala and Damayanti), which also became successful. Other plays, Harishchandra, Madalsa ane Ritudhvaj (Madalsa and Ritudhvaj), and Banasur Madmardan (Taming of Banasur's Arrogance) were also produced by the company.[1]

Chhotalal Mulchand Kapadia of Khambhat bought the Gujarati Natak Mandali with two other partners. Dayashankar Visanji Bhatt, aka Dayashankar Girnara, a theatre actor-director, renamed it the Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali and guided its further progress.[1]

Rise and acclaim (1889–1922)

The new company was inaugurated on 29 June 1889 by Jhaverilal Umiyashankar Yajnik, the Sheriff of Bombay and native of Nadiad, with opening of the performance of Kulin Kanta or Vanrajvijay based on Manilal Nabhubhai Dwivedi's Kanta. It was directed by Girnara. Dwivedi saw the advertisement of performance and told Govardhanram Tripathi in Bombay to send him a legal notice for performing the play without his permission. Dayashankar went to Nadiad and met Dwivedi where he apologised, took him to Bombay, gave a diamond ring as well as requested him to write another play for rupees 400 to 500. Dwivedi did not accept the ring but agreed to write another play Nrusinhavatar for him. The new play was staged on 18 February 1899 but failed commercially because the director and lead actor were Parsis.

Under Girnara, the company excelled and brought many gifted actors and visionary directors as well as reputed playwrights, including some from literary circles.[1] In the 1890s, Mulshankar Mulani was a major playwright who wrote several plays based on history and mythology.[1] Bapulal Nayak was the leading actor of the company then.[1]

Shankuntal (1889) and Rajbeej (King's Progeny, 1891) were successful productions.[2] [3] [4] Kundbala (1892) depicted a relationship between a princely state and the British Raj. Following it, the censorship by the British authorities was instituted. It was followed by hit plays Mularaj Solanki (1895) and Karanghelo (1896, based on Nandshankar Mehta's Karanghelo). Barrister (1897) was about a youth who was devastated due to his attraction to the western world.

Bapulal Nayak was also involved in stage planning and the management of a theatre company. In 1899, he and Mulani became partners in the company, each holding a 6% share of the company.

Jayraj (1898) and Ajabkumari (1899) were not initially successful, due to the occurrence of a plague in Bombay. They became hits when they were performed again in 1912–13.[5] Although the financial condition of the company had deteriorated, Vikramcharitra (1900), based on Shamal Bhatt's Sinhasan Batrisi, became a commercial hit and helped the company recover. Feeling hurt because of not receiving his previously agreed sum, Mulani left the company.

Mulani returned to the company and rewrote Saubhagya Sundari (1901), an adaptation of Shakespeare's Othello. The company introduced Jaishankar Bhojak, then aged 12, in 1901, who mainly performed as a female impersonator as females were not allowed in theatres in those times.[1] [6] [7] He played the role of Desdemona as a female impersonator in Saubhagya Sundari, opposite Bapulal Nayak. The play was successful and Jayshankar received his sobriquet, Sundari ('pretty woman'), for the lifetime.[1] [8] [9] The pair soon rose to fame and acted together in several successful plays including in Jugal Jugari (Jugal the Gambler, 1902), Kamlata (Lovestruck Girl, 1904), Madhu Bansari (Sweet Flute, 1917) and Sneh Sarita (River of Affection, 1915), Vikrama Charitra (Vikrama's Life, 1902), Dage Hasrat (1901).[10] Their pair continued till 1932.[1] Prabhashankar 'Ramani' acted in several plays and also rose to fame. The company also travelled Karachi in 1905-06 where they was attacked by goons as well as a rumour of abduction of Sundari was circulated.

Music director Vadilal Shivram Nayak composed scores of more than 500 songs in about forty plays. About hundred of these were published in Gujaratna Natak-Geetoni Sargam (Notations to Songs in Gujarati Plays, 1956).[1]

Nayak wrote Nand-Batrisi (1906), Chandrabhaga (1909), a farce entitled Navalsha Hirji (1909), Anandlahari (1919) and Saubhagya-no Sinh (1925).

When Mulani's three plays failed consequently, the company chose to stage nationalistic plays written by Nrisinh Vibhakar. These plays experimented with story and themes as well as focused on contemporary subjects instead of taking inspirations from popular subjects such as mythology. But their enactment stayed unchanged. His Snehsarita (River of Affection, 1915) had a lead character of a woman participating in the Indian independence movement.[1] His another Sudhachandra (Sudha and Chandra, 1915) focused on swaraj (self-rule) and Madhubansari (Sweet Flute, 1917) focused on home-rule movement. Madhubansari ran successfully for two years due to great direction, fine acting and music. The Gaiety Theatre — now Capitol Cinema — owned by the company from 1893, was filled with spectators for these plays.[1]

Decline (1922–1939)

Bapulal Nayak acquired the company in April 1922.[1] He started directing his plays and started adapting literature into plays. He produced Ramanbhai Neelkanth's play Raino Parvat (Mustard-seed to Mountain) in 1926. The songs of the play were written by Rasiklal Parikh and four shows of it were staged. Later he staged four plays written by Champshi Udeshi, four plays written by Gajendrashankar Pandya as well as many Parsi theatre styled plays. Gajendrashankar Pandya's play College Kanya (College Girl, 1925) starred popular actors Pransukh Nayak and Chhagan Romeo as comedians and it created controversy due to some of its dialogue about females; Narsinhrao Divetia, Chandravadan Mehta and Hansa Jivraj Mehta led the public protests against the play.[1]

The company suffered due to internal squabbling and jealousy. Mulani had left the company. After death of Dayashankar Girnara, Sorabji Katrak was brought in as a new director. Bapulal highlighted his directorial mistakes so the owners of the company established a separate Mumbai Urdu Natak Mandali which was closed down after a year and Katrak had to leave. The owner Maganlal and Chhotalal were focused on profits only. Bapulal wanted to be a director and writer so he played a major role in outing others. Jaishankar Sundari too left the company and joined Laxmikant Natak Samaj for a brief period before returning to the company. After sometime, he retired from the theatre in 1932. p. 19 Mulani also retired in 1932. Nepolean (1937), written by Manilal Pagal, was premiered in Sayaji Theatre in Baroda.

Many poor quality plays produced only for profits led to their failure. The high salaried actors, costly productions and failure of plays led to the loss. With the advent of the cinema, the theatre started to lose its audience. The company was sold in 1938 and was closed on 30 November 1939.

Last years (1944–1948)

M/s Shantilal and Co. financed the company and Bapulal briefly ran it from 1944 to 1945 before his retirement in 1946. In 1948, Chandrahas Manilal Jhaveri ran it for some time and renamed it to Mumbai Subodh Natak Mandali before it became defunct.

List of plays

Following is the list of plays produced by the Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali:

DateTitleWriterNotes
Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali under Chhotalal Mulchand Kapadia
29 June 1889Kulin Kanta or VanrajvijayMulshankar Mulani (adaptation)Adaptation of Manilal Dwivedi's Kanta
10 August 1889ShakuntalMulshankar MulaniAdaptation of Annasaheb Kirloskar's Shakuntal
4 January 1890KanaktaraPopat Prabhuram Vyas
9 August 1890HarishchandraVishwanath Prabhuram Vaidya
21 January 1891RajbeejMulshankar Mulani
27 February 1892KundabalaMulshankar Mulani
15 August 1892RasikmaniNarabheshankar Manchharam Vyas
17 December 1892Nal DamayantiRanchhodbhai Dave
8 July 1893Mansinh AbhaysinhMulshankar Mulani
2 December 1893Sundar Veni
30 June 1894Chanda
3 November 1894PremkalaVijayshankar Kalidas Bhatt
14 January 1895Dukhi Bhai Bahen
27 April 1895Mevadno Pratapi ChandVijayshankar Kalidas Bhatt
20 July 1895Lalita DukhdarshakRanchhodbhai Dave
19 October 1895Mularaj SolankiMulshankar Mulani / Vijayshankar Kalidas Bhatt
5 September 1896KarangheloMulshankar MulaniAdaptation of Nandshankar Mehta's novel Karanghelo
4 August 1897BarristerMulshankar Mulani
8 January 1898RamcharitraVijayshankar Kalidas Bhatt
8 March 1898Lakshadhipatino Ramanone-act play
23 April 1898Pushpasen Pushpavati
27 August 1898JayrajMulshankar Mulani
18 February 1899NrusinhavatarManilal Dwivedi
18 July 1899TilakkumarVijayshankar Kalidas Bhatt
30 September 1899AjabkumariMulshankar Mulani
16 December 1899Veer MandalMulshankar Mulani
7 February 1900MohiniVijayshankar Kalidas Bhatt
7 July 1900VikramcharitraMulshankar Mulanibased on Shamal Bhatt's Sinhasan Batrisi
19 October 1901Saubhagya SundariMulshankar Mulani
26 August 1902Jugal JugariMulshankar Mulani
18 October 1904KamlataMulshankar MulaniLoosely based on Shakuntal
1906NandbatrisiBapulal Nayak / Mulshankar Mulani Based on Shamal Bhatt's Nandbatrisi
1908Sangatno Rang
22 May 1909ChandrabhagaBapulal Nayak
3 November 1909Navalsha HeerjiMulshankar Mulani
17 December 1910VasantprabhaMulshankar Mulani
1911DevkanyaMulshankar Mulani
1912KrishnacharitraMulshankar MulaniInspired from stories from Bhagavata
31 January 1914PrataplakshmiMulshankar MulaniBased on Manilal Dwivedi's novel Gulabsinh
28 February 1915Sangatna FalMulshankar Mulani
19 September 1915Sneh SaritaNrisinh Vibhakar
5 August 1916SudhachandraNrisinh Vibhakar
28 July 1917MadhubansariNrisinh Vibhakar
23 November 1918MeghmaliniNrisinh Vibhakar
23 August 1919AnandlahariBapulal Nayak
25 September 1920VishwaleelaAmbashankar Harishankar Upadhyay
Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali under Bapulal Nayak
25 April 1925Saubhagyano SinhBapulal Nayak
1926Madandh Mahila Yane NoorjahanJayshankar Vaghajibhai Vyas
1926Kumali KaliShayda
1926Raino ParvatRamanbhai Nilkanth
1927Jamanano RangGajendrashankar Lalshankar Pandya
1928Tarunina TarangGajendrashankar Lalshankar Pandya
1928Kashmirnu PrabhatGajendrashankar Lalshankar Pandya
21 February 1929Kudaratno NyayGajendrashankar Lalshankar Pandya
29 March 1929Up-to-date MavaliJoseph David
1929Swamibhakti Yane Baji Deshpande (Hindi)Munshi Mohiyuddin Naza
27 January 1929Kimiyagar'Manasvi' Prantijwala (rewritten)
9 January 1930KuldeepakGajendrashankar Lalshankar Pandya
October 1930Bapna BolChimanlal Trivedi
January 1931Kutil RajneetiGajendrashankar Lalshankar Pandya
23 January 1932KarmasanjogMugatlal Pranjeevan Oza
1932Karyasiddhi (Hindi)'Manasvi' Prantijwala (adaptation)
1933Gentleman DakuJoseph David
1933Rannsamragni
9 September 1933Kon Samrat?'Manasvi' Prantijwala (rewritten)
20 October 1933Kanchankumari
1934Koni Mahatta?Manilal 'Pagal'
1934Kirtivijay'Manasvi' Prantijwala
13 September 1934Jeenjarna ZankareChampshi Udeshi
7 January 1935Sachcha Heera (Urdu)Munshi Mohiyuddin Naza (adaptation)
20 March 1935Mumbaini BadiJoseph David
1 June 1935Gheli GuniyalChampshi Udeshi
3 August 1935Kevo Badmas?Joseph David
January 1936KiritkumarManilal 'Pagal'
February 1936NepoleanManilal 'Pagal'
30 July 1936Jobanna JaduManilal 'Pagal'
15 May 1937Shataranjna DavChampshi Udeshi
7 August 1937Gareebna AnsuChampshi Udeshi
December 1937Sinhasanna ShokhBabubhai Kalyanji Oza
5 February 1938Shrimant Ke Shaitan?Babubhai Kalyanji Oza
1938SamarprabhaGajendrashankar Lalshankar Pandya
4 August 1938Komi Nishan (Urdu)
23 September 1938Nyayi NareshManilal 'Pagal'
20 October 1938Cinema ni SundariBabubhai Kalyanji Oza
19 November 1938Sukhi SansarChampshi Udeshi
7 December 1938RajadhirajChimanlal Trivedi
11 March 1939Kalankit Kon?Chimanlal Trivedi
26 July 1939Kartavyapanthe?G. A. Vairati
5 September 1939Khavindne KhatarPherozegar
Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali under Mohanlal M. Jhaveri
25 April 1944GarbhasanskarBabulal Kalyanji Oza
26 October 1944Parambhakta PrahladBabulal Kalyanji Oza
20 January 1945Lakshmina LobheManilal 'Pagal'
14 June 1945Aajni DuniyaChampshi Udeshi
6 December 1945NarihridayShayda
25 April 1945GarbhashrimantBabulal Kalyanji Oza
31 August 1946Aapnu GharVasant Hathiram Nayak
Mumbai Gujarati Natak Mandali under Chandrahas M. Jhaveri
9 September 1948HastamelapAmbalal Manchand Nayak 'Pandit'
6 November 1948KariyavarG. A. Vairati
28 May 1949VarkanyaHemubhai Bhatt
1 October 1949Kulalakshmi

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Bhojak, Dinkar J.. The Oxford Companion to Indian Theatre. Oxford University Press. 2004. 9780195644463. Lal. Ananda. 10.1093/acref/9780195644463.001.0001. Oxford Reference.
  2. Book: Baradi, Hasmukh. History of Gujarati Theatre. National Book Trust, India. 2003. 978-81-237-4032-4. India-The Land and The People. 60–63. Meghani. Vinod. Hasmukh Baradi.
  3. Book: Baradi, Hasmukh. The Oxford Companion to Indian Theatre. Oxford University Press. 2004. 0195644468. Lal. Ananda. New Delhi. 56986659. Oxford Reference.
  4. Book: Nayak, Suresh. Gujarati Rangbhumina Abhinay Shilpi Bapulal Nayak. January 1980. Suresh Nayak. 7173414. 1st. 6, 8. gu.
  5. Book: Bhojak, Dinkar. ગુજરાતી વિશ્વકોશ. Gujarati Vishwakosh Trust, Ahmedabad. 2002. Thaker. Dhirubhai. Dhirubhai Thaker. XVI. Ahmedabad. 349. gu. Gujarati Encyclopaedia.
  6. Web site: Jaishankar 'Sundari'. Gujarati Sahitya Parishad. gu. 20 July 2014.
  7. Book: Lal, Ananda. The Oxford Companion to Indian Theatre. Oxford University Press. 2004. 9780195644463. 10.1093/acref/9780195644463.001.0001. Oxford Reference.
  8. Book: Poonam Trivedi, Dennis Bartholomeusz. India's Shakespeare: Translation, Interpretation, and Performance. Pearson Education India. 2005. 9788177581317. 50.
  9. Book: Anshu Malhotra. Speaking of the Self: Gender, Performance, and Autobiography in South Asia. Siobhan Lambert-Hurley. 12 October 2015. Duke University Press. 978-0-8223-7497-8. 245.
  10. Book: Bhojak, Dinkar. ગુજરાતી વિશ્વકોશ. Gujarati Vishwakosh Trust, Ahmedabad. 1990. Thaker. Dhirubhai. Dhirubhai Thaker. X. Ahmedabad. 95–96. gu. Gujarati Encyclopedia.