BRINGING THEATRE TO THE UNIVERSITY 

This article was published in: Reflections II
Content type: Article
Shiva Rijal

The curtain of the second Nepal  International Theatre Festival 2022  (November 25—December 3, 2022),  organised by Mandala Theatre Nepal at its  new venue at Thapagaun, Kathmandu,  rolled down with three essential messages  for the stakeholders of modern Nepali  theatre. 

First, the Covid-19 pandemic could not stop people from being creative  and productive. Every ticket the audience bought and the show they  attended on the cold evenings of Kathmandu’s early winter was a victory,  a celebration of our collective dream. With their faces masked and hands  sanitised, the audience arrived at the theatre carrying a zest for life and  creativity. Second, GIZ, a reputed German INGO, supported the festival  just as it did in the first edition. The underlying message was that Nepali  theatre professionals still need external support to do theatre. Be that as  it may, donor support has been a boon for theatre professionals who  hardly get any support from the government. Third, the festival called  for a reflection on the skills and energy of Nepali theatre artists. I want  to focus on the third point in this article. 

One of the driving forces of theatre in Kathmandu is the practice of  running three-month-long courses for aspiring artists. The number of  students applying for these courses offered by theatre groups has  increased of late. Moverover, Mandala Theatre Group has started  offering a year-long course on theatre studies. With this, the number of  trainers, teachers and teaching materials required for theatre studies has  increased. However, despite the almost a four-decade-long history of  providing such short-term courses to aspiring artists, no effort has been  made to establish theatre studies as an academic subject at the university  level. As a result, only a handful of academics on modern theatre studies  are available in Nepal. 

Several performances of guest artists during NITFest drew the audience’s  attention. Incidentally, the guest performers were graduates of theatre  studies from one or the other universities. But the same cannot be said  about Nepali theatre artists and their performances. As a theatre critic,  I see Nepali theatre artists’ tremendous skills and potential for  professionalism waning or getting derailed.  

Creativity is often connected to “sadhana”, or the personal effort an  individual artist puts into his or her work. I find two problems with such  assumptions. First, people who assert such views come from the social  and academic contexts where there were/are no opportunities for  pursuing academically higher theatre studies. Second, even the academic  courses offered at universities inculcate a passion for creativity among  the artist students. Sadhana is not an exclusive experience felt by a few  individual artists in a specific reclusive state of mind, but something that  can be done or achieved in the classroom, workshops, library and  rehearsal rooms in front of teachers and among fellow friends, students  and researchers. 

Students in their late teens and early twenties are found to apply for such  short-term courses. Exposed to the art and charm of performing plays  in their school and college, they seem eager to study and practice more  on their interest. Since many of them need training at the basic level of  understanding about theatre arts, the theatre groups running such  courses hire locally available senior directors, experienced  choreographers, dramatists, and dancers to conduct classes and produce  a play by the end of the course. During such courses, they are taught  academically canonical essays on acting, choreography and theatre  history books from the East and the West. They are provided with  training on physical exercises, breathing exercises and yoga. Rehearsal  of a play is arranged for them. And at the end of such a course, students  come up with the production of a play. But deep down, one knows that  such short-term courses in theatre studies are not enough to develop  professional skills and talents warranted by the competitive market and  professionalism. 

Tribhuvan University has been running programmes in fine arts, dance  and music for several decades. Kathmandu University provides a BA  and MA in music. But no university in Nepal seems ready to offer higher education in theatre studies even as there is no lack of theatre enthusiasts  in cities such as Kathmandu, Pokhara, Damak and Dharan, among  others. Considering how trainers and teachers have been running short  courses regularly for over two decades now, it is safe to say that there is  already an academic base and a market for theatre studies in Nepal.  

In such contexts, the International Theatre Festival organised by the  Mandala Theatre raises questions: How should the university address  this very trend? Why do contemporary theatre directors and academics  hesitate to approach universities and authorities concerned about  running academically full-fledged courses on theatre? Who will create a  medium between and among these students, theatre teachers and  universities in the form of pedagogues and policymakers? 

A lack of exposure to academic studies in Nepal is one of the dominant  reasons behind the suffering of artists. The late Prachanda Malla, who  had worked with various talents, recalled Gopinath Aryal and Bekhaman  Maharjan, brilliant artists who could not get good jobs because they had  no institutionally recognised academic degrees. Similarly, artist Sushila  Rayamajhi writes in her autobiography that despite being liked by their  fans and holding over a four-decade-long acting career, she had to live  an unsecured retired life. On the other hand, Dambar Shamsher Jang  Bahadur Rana and Manikman Tuladhar, who were trained and exposed  to modern theatrics in Calcutta in the late nineteenth and early twentieth  century, are credited for providing greater dynamism to theatre within  the Rana palace and beyond.  

Similarly, Prachanda Malla, who studied theatre in the then USSR, is  credited for bringing a new lease of life to the then Royal Nepal  Academy’s theatrical performances. So are Sunil Pokharel, Anup Baral,  and Bimal Subedi, among other theatre studies graduates from the  National School of Drama, India. 

However, little effort has been made to explore the possibility of running  an academic degree in theatre studies in Nepal. Theatre trainers,  teachers, and other forms of human resources must be located, managed,  and promoted to create a friendly academic environment to provide  academic growth to modern theatre practices and studies in Nepal. For  this, education policymakers, theatre practitioners, pedagogues from the university, theatre directors, trainers, and researchers must come  together and act out the agenda pragmatically. 

Mandala’s International Theatre Festival sent such a message that  probably depending on the donor for survival also needs to be checked  carefully. Nepali theatres started staging plays to raise awareness through  the support of donor organisations in the early 1980s. Sarwanam Theatre  Group, under the leadership of dramatist Ashesh Malla, is credited with  liberating Nepali theatre artists from the limited mode of production  that the then Royal Nepal Academic and Naachghar provided or offered.  Nepali theatre artists started becoming more mobile and vocal in their  expression. Undoubtedly, these theatre artists in Nepal have developed  mastery over the medium of expression such as Kachahari, street, forum  and so on.  

However, this mastery over the medium does not secure an economically  secure profession for them. Nor does it solve their need to upgrade with  the technology, fulfil their need for learning modes and manners of  marketing their productions, or extend their studies in other areas  warranted by modern theatrics. With systematic training and studies  alone, will they be able to land at the marketplace, the actual site of  survival? 

Modern theatre artists in Nepal need exposure to higher academic  studies to be able to draw the attention of the audience. Audiences recognise the professional’s works; they can feel the aura of  professionalism not only on stage but also on the face of artists. Modern  Nepali theatre artists must develop greater patience and more prolonged  sadhana in their studies. To conclude, Mandala Theatre’s Second  International Theatre sent hopes and visions among the stakeholders of  modern Nepali theatre this time. The time has come to translate into  action the vision of producing creative graduates and postgraduates so  modern theatre gets its healthy soul in Nepal.  

Picture of Shiva Rijal

Shiva Rijal

Rijal is a playwright, theatre critic and senior lecturer of English at Tribhuvan University. 

Picture of Shiva Rijal

Shiva Rijal

Rijal is a playwright, theatre critic and senior lecturer of English at Tribhuvan University. 

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