Unique Play Fuses Lincolnshire Folk Music with Classic Indian Theatre

20 September 2016

Theatre-goers will have the opportunity to enjoy a unique theatrical performance which weaves together traditional Lincolnshire folk music and dance with one of India’s most celebrated plays.

Theatre-goers will have the opportunity to enjoy a unique theatrical performance which weaves together traditional Lincolnshire folk music and dance with one of India’s most celebrated plays.

Charandas Chor: The Honest Thief is a light-hearted comedy based on a classic Indian folk tale, telling the story of a principled man who finds himself on the wrong side of the law and makes a bizarre set of promises to a holy man in return for a safe haven from the police. Vowing to never eat from a golden plate, sit on a throne, marry a Queen, mount an elephant or tell a lie, one by one his promises are tested.

Directed by Dr Sreenath Nair, an award-winning theatre director and playwright from the University of Lincoln’s School of Fine & Performing Arts, this imaginative new production is based on the acclaimed 1975 original by Hindi playwright Habib Tanvir. It integrates traditional folk music and dance from Lincolnshire with Indian costume and theatrical style, performed by a cast featuring current University students and alumni.

The production, which will be performed at five venues around Lincolnshire this September, draws on expert knowledge from the Lincoln Folk Dance Society, renowned folk musician Frances Kelly, local Indian Dandia folk dancers. It forms part of Lincolnshire Diversity in the Arts: Research and Development, an Arts Council England funded project, examining cultural diversity in arts in rural communities.

Lead investigator on the project Dr Arya Madhavan is a practitioner of the world’s oldest theatre forms, Kutiyattam, and a Senior Lecturer in Lincoln’s School of Fine & Performing Arts. She said: “Combining a celebrated Indian play with Lincolnshire folk music and dance has been an exciting challenge and a revealing experience for the cast of actors, providing a gateway to examine the diversity of arts in rural counties.”

Dr Sreenath Nair added: “Whilst very distinct, the cultural elements come together in harmony, enhancing a larger understanding of human conditions that cut across the boundaries of culture and ethnicity.”

Charandas Chor: The Honest Thief will be performed at the LPAC on the University’s main Brayford Pool Campus on Sunday 25th September 2016. The performance starts at 7.30pm. Tickets cost £12 (£10 concessions) and are available from the LPAC Box Office, open Monday to Friday from 10am – 6pm or one hour before the performance.

They are also available by phoning 01522 837600 or visiting www.lpac.co.uk.The play will be touring Lincolnshire with performances at the following venues during September: Wednesday 21st September – Louth Riverhead, 7.30pm Friday 23rd September – Franklin College, Grimsby, 7pm Sunday 25th September – LPAC evening show, 7.30pm Thursday 29th September – Stamford Arts, 7.30pm Friday 30th September – Gainsborough Trinity, 7.30pm

Ends