Matta vilasa prahasanam - our vichitra chitta's creation as a dance drama
  • http://www.phillipzarrilli.com/productions/drunkenmonk/index.html

    The Story, its background, and the order of performance:

    Preliminary Dance
    performed by the entire performance ensemble.

    Prologue
    Featuring the Director of the theatre company staging the evening's
    performance, and the senior Actress of the company, the Prologue is a
    traditional part of all Sanskrit dramas enacting a `play-within-the
    play'. It is structured to introduce and reflect—humorously in a
    farce-- the overall plot of the drama proper.
    The Director (Sutradhara) Stella Subbiah.
    Senior Actress Mira Gokul
    The Actor (who `purifies/blesses' the stage) Narendran Thody

    The play proper (a brief summary): follows the drunken sport of an
    unorthodox, wandering holy man—known as a Kapali—who is a devotee of
    Lord Siva, and his female partner, Devasoma, who is his constant
    companion. As members of a radical and highly unorthodox sect known as
    Kapalikas, their `rites' included drinking, wild dancing, singing, and
    ritual intercourse with their partners. Their `home' was traditionally
    the cremation grounds where they smeared the ashes of the dead over
    their bodies. Most important to their identity as a sect, was the fact
    that they used the bowl-like fragment of the upper part of a human
    skull as an alms-bowl when they went begging. The word for `skull' in
    Sanskrit is kapala—thus the sect, and our main character, is known as
    a Kapali. The plot of the farce revolves around the loss and
    eventually recovering of the skull-bowl, so precious to the Kapali and
    his partner, Devasoma. Like all such mendicants, they are in a
    constant search for `alms'—in their case, liquor, which will keep them
    in a state of ecstatic devotion.

    Section 1
    The Kapali and Devasoma enter in a state of drunkenness. The Kapali
    drunkenly mixes up his partner, Devosoma's name, with Somadeva—the
    name of the goddess of liquor! Devasoma asks the Kapali if he can
    clarify for her who, precisely, he `is'.
    The Kapali Narendra Gundurao
    Devosoma Vidya Thirnarayan

    Section 2
    As she continues to drink from their skull-bowl, she begins to see
    double—are there now two Kapalis, or even more?
    The Second or `Double' Kapali Narendran Thody

    Section 3
    In their search for additional alms, they decide to travel (Section 3)
    to the great capital city of Kanchipuram where there are many taverns.
    After the great city is introduced (through dance), two women of the
    city greet the Kapali and Devasoma, taking them to a tavern/temple
    where they can `worship' Lord Siva in front of the lingam. The couple
    become increasingly drunk and eventually pass out. A Buddhist monk and
    a mad-dog encounter the two in their stupor. When they awake, the
    Kapali discovers that his precious skull-bowl is missing! After
    searching for it, he declares that the Buddhist monk must have stolen it.
    Buddhist Monk (Nagasena) Narendra Thody
    The Mad-Dog Mira Gokul

    Section 4
    The Buddhist monk enters with a dance. Discovered by the Kapali and
    Devasoma, they (mistakenly) accuse him of stealing their skull-bowl,
    and a chase begins. The Buddhist monk, whose alms bowl he has kept
    hidden according to the custom of his sect, is finally so disgusted
    with the antics of the Kapalikas that he simply gives them his own
    alms bowl—but it is not their skull bowl.

    Section 5
    The mad-dog enters with the skull-bowl in his mouth! The dog finally
    drops the skull-bowl, bringing a happy resolution to the farce.

    Concluding Dance
    the ensemble.

    Production/Programme Notes by Phillip Zarrilli

    Opened February 14, 2003 and all-UK tour through November, 2003.
    Performed at Purcell Room, Queen Elizabeth Hall, National Theatre
    (London). Funded by Arts Council of England project grant to Sangalpam.

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