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Sunday, May 6, 2012

Mithya Goes Volunteering


Members from Mithya volunteered at the Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Festival on April 29th at Lincoln Square Mall. Radha Venkatagiri, Spurti Akki, Xuan Zhu, and Sarah Brown spent the day helping children color and applying henna to patrons who came for the festival, sponsored by the Asian American Cultural Center.

Spurti Akki and Radha Venkatagiri encourage the young artists
 at the Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Festival

"It was a great time!" said Sarah Brown, one of Mithya's production managers and a member of the Champaign-Urbana community. "It's always wonderful to see the spark of innocent curiosity in a child's eye when you teach them something new. We all had fun talking with the kids. Some of them even colored pictures for us. It was great knowing that we were doing something for the community, and we had fun spending time together in the process."

Xuan Zhu explains the art of henna to a child during the festival
Although the semester is almost over, Mithya will be doing some exciting things this summer, including getting ready for our upcoming productions, as well as participating in volunteering events and activity nights.

If you are interested in knowing more about Mithya, or want to get involved, please email us at mithya.core@gmail.com. We'd love to hear from you and we are always looking for new members!

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Mithya's Movie and Chai Series: "PushpakaVimana"



Looking for something fun to do this Saturday evening? Did you enjoy watching "The Artist" and want to see other movies like it?

Come join us for the showing of "PushpakaVimana (The Love Chariot)" on Saturday, April 14th at 5pm in 3401 Siebel Center! Admission is free, and chai will be served.



"PushpakaVimana", an Indian silent film directed by Singeetham Srinvasa Rao, is a story about an unemployed youth (Kamal) who dreams of living well. One evening, Kamal finds a drunken industrialist (Sameer Khakkar) passed out on the side of the road, and Kamal uses the opportunity to trade places with him. Come see more to find out what happens to the protagonist in this silent masterpiece!

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Mithya Movie & Chai film series: "Sita Sings the Blues"

Come watch the movie "Sita sings the blues" with the Director Nina Paley. Nina Paley will be joining us for Questions and Answers after the movie screening at 6:30 pm.

There is no fee charged for the movie and seating shall be on first-come-first-served basis. There is only limited seating available, so please try and make it early to the venue.

Sita Sings the Blues is a 2008 animated feature film written, directed, produced and animated entirely by American artist Nina Paley (with the exception of some fight animation by Jake Friedman in the "Battle of Lanka" scene).




Plot: Sita is a goddess separated from her beloved Lord and Husband Rama. Nina is an animator whose husband moves to India and then dumps her by email. Three hilarious shadow puppets narrate both ancient tragedy and modern comedy in this beautifully animated interpretation of the Indian epic Ramayana. Set to the 1920's jazz vocals of Annette Hanshaw, Sita Sings the Blues earns its tagline as the "Greatest Break-up story ever told"

*Free chai will be served.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Myth Ya Right awards!

Thank you all for the encouragement of our efforts to put up what was Mithya's biggest production so far!

Personally I feel a big void in life because there is nothing to do. (Of course there is work, there are chores, activities here and there, but NO Practice! No time to while away anymore!) It is upsetting! For about 40 days or more the Mithya group has been involved in coming together and put up a play as serious, as intense and as big as this one. Is there any wonder, then, that there should be many memories attached to this play?

Now, I may write a mushy narrative of experiences during the play in future but for now, here is my tribute to all those involved in the play. I'll call them Myth Ya Right! Awards - more for the contortion of the original word than for lack of better names like Awards... (Only some find a mention but that is only because of my frequent interaction with them.)

The award for best:

Lighting: Saptarshi Bandyopadhyay - Not as much for stage lights and related labor as for displaying a kid-like glint in his eyes when he found a trolley on which he could stand and move about. Together with Sonal Mithal he successfully blared strong lights into everyone's eyes. No surprise then that he'd done something to cause the audiences to have tears in their eyes. At the sets he'd often climb up the ladder at the drop of a hat to stand right next to intense lights. He'd then pick a person to talk to, call him/her, the person would look up, and... well... profanity would follow!
His dedication to serious work would come to the fore when someone would mention food! From that mention to the time food was with him, he'd be serious about work. Then he'd get back to his buffoonery, often sounding like Sourav Ganguly!


Music: Ganesan, Nachiket and Usman - for successfully preparing actors and cue masters for SNAFUs or bloopers on stage. It was only one day before the actual play that they realized they weren't composing for a spoof. Until then they'd take turns to deliberately mistime the sound cues. It wasn't until the last show that everyone realized how much that helped the actors develop a knack for maintaining calm in the event of an actual F&&& up! Must be geniuses! About the music pieces, Usman was stunned to learn that he wasn't composing for Coke Studio or Atif Aslam's latest album!

Cue Manager (sound and light box): Sonal Mithal - After auditioning people for that role she only thought it morally improper to take up the lead role. So she decided to be the production manager. (Besides no one had the patience to appease Mithya's president should she fuss and cry over something!) One of the key hands behind making the Uncle look shabby, she'd not suggest a rockstar kind of costumes for the uncle! If the music and light folks were not bungling, it was Sonal who'd deliberately mislead Jay and others. That explains the nothing that was done on the first day the theater was handed to Mithya! Her fascination for fancy equipment overcame her and she used that whole day to play her version of PS3! Together with Saptarshi she'd create the occasional halos around actors under the pretext of faulty equipment!

Cue Master: Jay Chheda - For bungling Uncle Vinay's cues until even the final dress rehearsal. Sources say that he did that deliberately to have my on-stage presence to as minimum a time as possible! Sources also say that the director suggested this. After the award, I re-christen him to "Q (Kyu)Master?" He also gets the award for best backstage management because he had a very Old Parsi Pappa look a la Munnabhai MBBS! Some actors claim to have heard him say to himself between cues "Rani to pappani!" An actor complained in private that Jay's hastening between scenes nearly caused a dressing blooper that'd have caused nightmares to the on-lookers. Esp Mala Kathhhri!Also nominated and nearly won the award for Mr Consistent performer for having mimed Paperwallahs gay actions on all 3 shows from behind the stage! He only lost the award because he lost control of the backstage crew every time he did that. (Hard to get people to work when they're rolling on their stomachs!)

Make-up artist/Shadow actress: Sarah Brown - for working hard on make-up and doubling up as backstage crew as well as shadow of Mala! Her skills were more in the way she disguised her nervousness to show Mala's shyness/discomfort and reluctance at the psychiatrist's office! Rumors have it that she was the brain behind what is accepted as the Asst Director's master stroke of tiring/stressing the actors! She had minimum work to do then, but maximum credit for the make-up. Her item dances during practices earned her the sobriquet of "Gulaabon". Her ability to learn fast was demonstrated through her quick usages of un-parliamentary words in Hindi! Gulaabon delicately lent herself to the production work too. Or so she made people believe! No one realized her scheme of pointing to her shadow appearance as a reason for not doing much work. An actor under conditions of anonymity confessed that Gulaabon would just sit in the blue light backstage. He shudders at the thought of being revealed to her, lest he gets to hear her full range vocabulary in Hindi!

Publicity: Namita Narain and Ankit Chandra - Former (Namita) for bullying the actors into submission during interviews. But just when the actors realized they were being bullied, she'd sugar coat them with compliments and assurances to be natural on the cam. Flatter them with "You guys are amazing! I was always a tree in plays!" Word has it that she had to work on her bullying skills when despite all her efforts, there was a great turn-out for all 3 shows. We had to do something about the extra people that wanted to be let in... Her bullying worked wonders to hush up one actor who'd refuse to give up on his gimmicks! Always the one to add fire to fuel, she'd assure (false assurance) "setting up" between 2 people any time!

The latter (Ankit) more for publicizing his singing than directing all traffic to the latest play in the blog site until just the day before the 1st show. His altruism and efforts behind the stage were manifest in how he'd lend himself to the Asst Director as a favorite punch bag! His best contribution to publicity was to get his girlfriend to fly in from Pittsburgh. At the least that worked... His best production work was in getting food and thereby keeping perpetually hungry beings like Saptarshi interested in the play!

Director: Radha Venkatagiri - For being the Sonia Gandhi for her puppet (Sibin Mohan)! Her charm worked its way to new comers, one of whom would occasionally claim Radha to be his fiance instead of Radhika!
Also gets the award for assisting with the make-up (read: scrubbing faces and eyelids to redness/soreness). The important inspiration from her for everyone came when shed narrate fictitious tales of how she'd not get high at all and that she'd drink 10 shots and sue the liquor maker for making flavored water!

Assistant Director: Sibin Mohan - for his masterpiece when he came up with the idea to make the whole thing look natural. He is a Neo-director trying to make his mark but boy! His ploy to tire the headlights out of 2 actors such that they actually appear and act old (also tired) seemed to work wonders. Friends of the 2 actors who sat in the audience couldn't recognize them even days after the last show!
The stress was working on Mala Cuttery too except that Sibin, smartly, would pat her shoulder assuring that she was the best actress he ever worked with! It didn't work on Deepak because his mind was always on Hookah, Shayari and Liquor, not on the play! His best contribution was during those days that he wasn't in town for the practices!
He reportedly went on record saying that this was going to be his last play as a director. Pity the newcomers took that as a carrot tied to a stick. If only they'd known that that was what he mentioned last time too. The straight face that he puts it with often made onlookers think that he was Mithya's best actor so far!

Versatile actor: Mohin Khushani - for his versatile roles. His Looney Tunes-esque portrayal of the paperwallah, Sarkar-esque portrayal of the Barista and and Drunken-man-who-ain't-knows-the-difference-between-beer-and-wine portrayal of the Waiter wasn't what earned him the award. It was not even for his butt-thrusting a la Saurav Ganguly! His award was for wooing and accepting his co-star (a change from his days when he'd shudder at the thought of being seen with girls), for pretending to study for a fictitious exam when help was needed backstage and for his publicity interview. In fact the meaty part of his role was when he successfully held his chuckle and tried to seriously say that the person playing the Uncle was his favorite actor. To this day no one bought that, but hey he convinced himself! That is quality acting...

Junior artist/ Backstage intern: Dhruv Mehta - After his raunchy back massaging dance he'd slip into the production crew's dress code with more fuss than even Charlie Sheen could create! Dopey dance with wannabe accent seems to be the thing with Junior artists. They also refuse to share a dressing mirror/chair. He started the Junior Artists' rebellion in the dressing room but quietly led it from behind the Doofus-faced Khushani! Khushani would bark vehemently about how difficult it was to sit on a fellow Junior artist's lap during make-up etc. He'd create a ruckus in the dressing room, and when outside it, he'd look to show his non-existent cricketing prowess! Renuka, the jewelry designer and Nachiket's wife, held more sharp catches than Dhruv and Khushani put together!

Mr Nice guy/ soft spoken actor award: Aviral Jain - Coming from the village of La Mart-in-here he was always raised to leave enough room for the audience interpret the play in their own way! Very good practice except when it comes to saying one's dialogues so softly that the audience cannot hear anything, thereby leaving no choice but to imagine/extrapolate those lines!
His only line in the play (he used often) that made sense and men could readily associate with and feel ever so emotional about was "What do you mean? This just doesn't make sense!" (said with a gawky expression...)
The nice guy bit is for promising intoxicants to the lead actresses but never doing it. Chivalry indeed! Sources suspect the low-voice-syndrome in the play was because of repeated stress of the throat (read gasp+gulp) every time he saw Strawberries & Cream in action (read Girl-on-girl)!
He definitely helped keep everyone's moral high by plugging in earplugs and listening to random stuff instead of reciting Shayaris or narrating stories from Luck-No or La Marts! (In which case it gave Sonal - Aviral's best audience - an excuse to not work despite her not needing one.)

Actress/Glamdoll: Nisha Somnath - Every actor/actress in a given famous movie has a famous thing noted in it. Dharmendra for his "Yamla Pagla" dance and "Basanti in kutton ke saamne..." Amitabh for "Mera baap chor hai" Raj Kapoor for his right palm to the audience, light nod and Bambi eyes saying something like "Ok ji", Al Pacino's dance in "Scent of a woman", Yana Gupta's "Babuji" song.
Our Nisha has done it all. She oozed oomph through her high heels. That was the single major factor for her glamdoll tag. Her gait changed greatly with her skimpy and tight outfits, but not more than with the heels. A candid man in the audience wrote in his feedback, "Dear Mithya, all was ok! I loved everything about the play! But must you really have a horse to transport crew and actors from one side of the stage to the other?"
Her method acting must be lauded. She deliberately estranges her real life chemistry with her onstage mother and uncle so as to give her best performance. So what if despite that she couldn't act.
Her most noted lines/words in the play - "Eh! Did my scene with Spurr-tee come out well? I think it fell flat!"
"But how am I acting?" "Ehh I am not doing it well. Maybe you should find a better actress!" (Sibin's integrity was put to maximum test every time Nisha asked him for feedback on her acting. Best Director indeed!)
Words that really moved/reduced the co-actors to tears, "Deii! You are Deid! There is no Llleww for me! Lizzen!" (for Die! You are dead! There is no love for me! Listen!) (from sitting on chair to ROTFL, i.e.)

Upcoming star/Stacey's mom: Spurti Akki - for integrating her on-stage character into real life behavior. Every time a co-actor would ask her for coffee she'd readily peruse her lines from the play, "Huh? (and look lost)" Her peak acting was when she'd be upset over not being allowed to go to her "lab". (At the rate at which she was claiming things about her lab and/or work she should got either a Nobel Prize or an Oscar!)
Her portrayal of Mala's mother beat "Stacey's mom" by miles! People went gaga over her - not as much for her graceful looking saree as much for her impressions of old actresses in old songs.
Nisha's lines may or may not make her famous, but this starlet's lines "It is going to rain ALL NIGHT!" said no less than a million times by now will occupy the Mithya billboards for eons to come! In a given play her frustration (at the weather forecast not being heeded to) building up each time she said the line was impressive and definitely what made audiences go back home with a moral of the story! Last heard from sources, she was considering a career switch. She wants to replace Ravi Shastri as a cliche generator! (Both lines from the play and outside of it!)
She's taken to stardom like a Royal pig takes to a dirty sty! Last seen on the streets she was throwing tantrums about a spoon not being at the precise temperature in a restaurant and that it was hard for her to maintain her schedules with so many people interrupting her for autographs!

Best actress overall: Who said you needed to be on stage or in the whole movie to act? Anthony Hopkins won Oscar for a short duration in the film! Radhika is our such example. She went a step ahead. As an actor that never appeared, she mixed her emotions in an inimitable manner - romance, anger, catwalk, understanding and sharing & caring nature, etc!

Special thanks: Mehul Thakkar - for making his involvement with this play a minimum. With the feedback from the play and with more ideas, he is sure he can do better at that!

(Originally posted in my blog site - http://varun-turlapati.blogspot.com/2011/10/myth-ya-awards.html
Some flattering comments on FB for yours truly:
  • Nisha Somnath So here goes our review for from Sarah Brown and me :D

    Doll lover/ Mr. Creepy : Varun Turlapati was born for the role of Uncle Vinay . He made being creepy look effortless both onstage and off -stage :P . He spent most of his time trying to woo the production team by giving them names like Gulaboo or singing ( read braying ) old songs. Although uncle had the hots for Mala he most definitely had more hots for the paperwallah. Uncle would walk into the room everyday hoping he would get more "laydes magazines " delivered just so that he could have another peek at the paperwallah. He did lift everyones mood even though it meant that most of them were laughing at "him" and not his jokes . There was never a serious moment with him around and he took extra efforts to lift people's spirits including losing his pants in one practice :D . You were a complex character Uncle but where would we be without you ?
    October 28, 2011 at 2:24am · · 7
  • Sibin Mohan Nisha, Sarah: You guys forgot one more bit for Doll Lover:
    He deserves the best actor award simply because he has convinced himself that he is funny. He is a method actor in true respect since he tries antics and lines that only he thinks is funny and then laughs out loud even before he can complete said "jokes". ;)
    October 28, 2011 at 9:24am · · 3

Friday, November 4, 2011

DARK SPACE IS MY CANVAS AND RED BLUE GREEN LIGHTS MY PALETTE...

After so much of hard work, the least that is expected is that I write a blog about my tryst with lighting the stage for the Mithya performance - 30 days in September.
So we had 12 palettes, 4 splashes, 3 strobes; besides that we hung 4 source fours and installed a floor-mounted flood light. The play demanded at least 6 sets - living room of the mother-daughter duo, the counsellor’s office, the guy’s bedroom, one party scene, one coffee shop and one fine dining restaurant; besides an array of emotions that haunted each of these spaces...
We got to work with the most sophisticated equipment on campus and the Whole hog 3 PC software. It was mind boggling. The technologically advanced lights did not allow for any yellow light unless we mixed red and green, and then we ended up getting concentric circles of red and green... It was quite disappointing. The best way to cast a yellow light is by using a source-four which casts only a pure yellow light. But we had only 4 dimmers into which we could circuit the source-fours. In a way, the advanced technology became a limitation.
One of the most challenging situations was when the uncle enters the subconscious of the Mala's mind and haunts her in her thoughts. We showed it by way of washes - faint bluish tone to light up the back area of the uncle so that his face isn’t really seen except for a shade. This particular scene had two sets on stage lit up simulatenously - living room and the bedroom. We used 4 sources to light up the bedroom and 2 sources to light up the living room. Im particularly fond of this light-design in the entire show. Simply by lighting we were able to  make the two spaces appear distant and distinct space-wise and emotion-wise.
The dying-of-the-uncle scene portays his death in the Mala’s subconscious - which we showed by casting a yellowish orange shade on him. That shade was possibly lit using 5 light sources.
There were instances where the Mom is shown as not belonging to this mundane world but to her own world by her God. The unreality of presence of each character in a particular situation had to be evoked to evoke empathy amongst audience. E.g.,the scenes demanded an expression shame, disconnect, empathy, disgust, pain, anguish. Even the happy places like a party or a restaurant had to be made to look discomforting and sorrowful - as if something unhappy is happening here with a person.
Besides, we had several occasions on which lightening had to be created. For that, we used one of the splash lights and used strobe settings for the effect.
We also used a 3 feet wide drape that fell from ceiling down to the bottom and backlit, to show Mala’s unconfident past; by means of casting a shadow of a woman on the drape from behind. The effect was gorgeous. For several subsequent scenes, we used drape as a backdrop on which light was splashed vertically down to give the space its required ambient quality.
Issues - I was not satisfied by the concentric bands of lights we were getting when we mixed colors. In the last scene, there is one occasion in which the actress is completely in dark as she walks across on the stage. The low spot on the dead man was not too effective, as the drape backlight hit hard into audience’s eyes... Inspite of casting 12 lights on living room, there were spaces that were badly lit (read unevenly). Here I don’t mean shade or intensity wise, I just mean color wise. Somewhere was too green, somewhere too red. Someone’s shirt reflected green while someone’s shirt reflected orange. It seemed quite a medley. I guess we might be able to get more clarity next time. This was my first lighting experience. I am happy about getting the opportunity to work on it; and also teh freedom given to me in terms of design. Also, my question to myself is - is there a way to solve issues of transitions thru dim  lighting? We had numerous black outs through out the play which probably can be avoided. But having said that I feel I could have done more, this opportunity has done more than instilling in me a new passion... Painting with lights on a dark space...
I was accompanied by Saptarshi B in this venture, he has immense experience with lights and it wouldn’t have been half as much possible if he wasn’t around. From climbing ladders to fix the lighting circuit to actually hanging the monsters of source-fours, he did it all. His experience also helped us battle the sophisticated whole hog software quite smoothly. Thanks SB; thanks Sibin and thanks Mithya for giving me this platform to experiment with my creativity...

Sonal Mithal

Friday, October 28, 2011

Mithya cuttings: 30 Days in september: Sarah Brown

Sarah Brown, who managed the backstage efforts shares her thoughts about the production and props



Thursday, October 20, 2011

30 Days in September: Armory theater on the Map


We figured you might need to know the exact location of Armory theater. Click on the image for a larger view. Armory theater is on the east side of Armory Building. It is Room no. 160. The direct entrance to the theater is just behind the Harding Band Building.

Click on the image for a larger view.