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Early development of modern Hindi theatre can be traced to the work of Bharatendu Harishchandra (1850–1885), a theatre actor, director, manager, and playwright based in Varanasi (Banaras), who is also the father of modern Hindi literature as in his short life of 35 years, he edited two magazines, Kavi vachan Sudha and Harishchandra chandrika, wrote numerous volumes of verse in Braj bhasa ...
Hindi Ended Sarabhai vs Sarabhai: Take 2: Comedy: STAR One: 16 May 2017 1 season, 10 episodes: 23–26 min: Hindi Ended Son of Abish (season 4) Talk show: YouTube: 6 April 2018 1 season, 8 episodes: 31–45 min: English Ended Better Life Foundation (season 2) Comedy: YouTube: 10 August 2018 1 season, 6 episodes: 22–30 min: English Ended
Pierrot's Troupe is a theatre group based in New Delhi, India, which was formed in 1989. The group performs original plays in Hindi , Urdu and English. Pierrot's troupe has performed more than 2000 plays touring throughout India, and has staged its dramas in the US, Dubai and UK.
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Tumhari Amrita is an epistolary play directed by Feroz Abbas Khan.Its original cast includes Shabana Azmi and Farooq Shaikh. [1] [2] It is an Indian context adaptation of A. R. Gurney's American play, Love Letters (1988), and the Hindi/Urdu version was created in 1992 by playwright Javed Siddiqui.
The BBC showed its English version, filmed by Satyadev Dubey. [3] Actor-director, Om Shivpuri, directed the Hindi translation of the play as Khamosh! Adaalat Jaari Hai. The play had his wife Sudha Shivpuri in the lead role and is regarded as a key milestone in the history of Indian Theatre. [4]
In his bid to switch over to Hindi drama, he invited Delhi groups to produce, under TAW's auspices, plays in Hindi with a view to making local groups conscious of the potentialities and challenges of Hindi Theatre. [32] TAW's first Hindi play was Baqi Itihas, a translation of Badal Sircar's Bengali play on a thrust stage. It was a non-realistic ...
In 2005, Abhijeet Choudhary, who was working as an actor at Asmita Theatre, and Dhanashree Heblikar, a stage actor, met in Pune and decided to start a theatre group that would produce Hindi-language plays solely, because at that time, the theatre of Pune was dominated by Marathi theatre. [4] The theatre trope was founded on 15 August 2007. [5]