Cultures clash at Kalighat, Mother Teresa's first home
for the dying in Calcutta. "Kalighat" tells
of Westerners who discover themselves and their role in
a turbulent world. With a cast of 23, "Kalighat"
dramatizes the work of Mother Teresa's Missionaries of
Charity, and seeks to build a bridge of understanding
between West and East. The powerful new drama merges current
Euro-American theater styles, politics and spiritual/religious
perspectives with the traditions of South Asia.
"Kalighat"
has enjoyed development support at Circle Repertory Company,
Circle East, La MaMa, HERE Arts Center, and with the Indo-American
Arts Council. The production features choreography by
Myna Mukherjee; scenic design by Mikiko Suzuki; costume
design by Reshma Patel; lighting design by Brian Aldous
and sound design by Bart Fasbender. Susan Kellerman is
the associate director. The world-premiere production
costars a cast of 23 actors from 7 countries: India, Pakistan,
Sri Lanka, Japan, Ireland, Canada and United States.
Presented by the Indo-American
Arts Council in association with the Baruch
Performing Arts Center, Mela: A South Asian Festival,
running through February 15, is a celebration of South
Asian performing arts in contemporary Western culture.
In addition to "Kalighat", the festival includes
a dance program from Nayikas Dance Company; the films
of Lifetime Achievement Academy Award-winner Satyajit
Ray; two South Asian music nights; and an evening of South
Asian comedy.
Playwright/director Paul Knox worked
at Kalighat; his play is based on his experiences there.
Knox recently directed his work GEHRI DOSTI: FIVE SHORT
PLAYS WITH A SOUTH ASIAN BENT at Harvard University. Knox
is the Executive Director of Circle East, formerly the
Circle Repertory Lab. His one-act INFORMED CONSENT, called
"poignant" by The New York Times, was a highlight
of Circle East's FIRST LIGHT: A FESTIVAL OF NEW SHORT
PLAYS at Chashama last summer. His plays have been seen
in the Circle Rep Lab, at Circle East, the Neighborhood
Playhouse, the 42nd Street Project, the Columbia University
Dramatists, the New York State Summer School for the Arts,
Wellesley College, the Baxter Theater in Cape Town, South
Africa and elsewhere. He is a co-recipient of the United
Nations Society of Writers' Award for his cultural exchange
work with the Russian Academy of Theater Arts (GITIS)
in Moscow. Knox is a co-founder and trustee of the Tides
Foundation-India Fund, which supports grass-roots education
and community building efforts among sexually marginalized
groups in South Asia, with particular emphasis on HIV/AIDS.
Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC)
supports all the artistic disciplines in classical, fusion,
folk and innovative forms influenced by the arts of India.
IAAC works cooperatively with colleagues around the United
States to broaden our collective audiences and to create
a network for shared information, resources and funding.
The focus is to help artists and art organizations in
North America, as well as, to facilitate artists from
India to exhibit, perform and produce their work here. |