Friday, June 01, 2012

An Indian version of the Bible




Artist Edwin Parmar has done a 470-feet long painting depicting scenes from the Bible in an unusual manner

By Shevlin Sebastian 

Photos: Adam and Eve; the crossing of the Red Sea


One day in 2005, Edwin Parmar got an idea. He wanted to do a large painting on Biblical themes. At that time, he was living in Kalol, 40 kms from Ahmedabad. So he bought a thick roll of canvas. “I would open a certain section, do a painting, roll it up, and open the next section,” he says.

In the end the painting was 470 feet long and three feet wide. Edwin worked for 16 hours daily and was able to complete the work in 40 days. This work is now on display at the Pastoral Orientation Centre at Palarivattom, Kochi, at an exhibition organised by the Bible Commission of the Kerala Catholic Bishops' Council.

It is an oil on canvas, and the 101 paintings, each seamlessly moving into the next, immediately grabs the eye, for its simplicity and clean lines. And what immediately becomes clear is that the paintings are different from the usual works on Biblical themes.

So Adam sports black hair, while Eve has waist-length black curls. During the crossing of the Red Sea by the Israelites, the prophet Moses has a black beard. Some of the men wear turbans, while the women have veils. There are a couple of bullocks pulling a cart. When Moses holds up the tablet containing the Ten Commandments, it is written in Hindi.

In another painting the three wise men – who had come to see Jesus at a stable in Bethlehem, just after He was born – look like Indian kings wearing crowns. When the 12-year-old Jesus goes to the temple, in Jerusalem, the scholars whom he meets are wearing round beads, around their neck, just like Hindu priests.

“I wanted to Indianise the paintings,” says Edwin. And he has a particular reason for this. In his village, Kalol, as well as in Mandvi in the Rann of Kutch , where he lived for a few years, the local people are not easily accepting of Christians. “We are not allowed to have our own churches,” says Edwin. “So I wanted to do a painting which shows that our religion is just as Indian as any other faith.”

Meanwhile, in Kochi, all sorts of people have come to see the exhibition: from schoolchildren to elderly people. In the comments book, visitor Lobo Lawrence says, “This is a great inspiration. It takes us through the birth, death, and resurrection of Jesus.” Adds Jayson Jacob:  “It should be exhibited in all the churches.”

So far, the painting has been shown in 39 churches in Thrissur. Fr. Paul Kattukaran, the coordinator of the Artists’ Forum of the Office for Social Communications for the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India, has been helping Edwin in staging the exhibitions.

“The response has been very good,” says Fr. Paul. “But there have been a few people who are upset that the traditional blonde look of Jesus Christ and the people have been changed. Some said, ‘Jews in Israel don’t look like this.’”

But Fr. Paul takes heart that most people like the Indianised version. Incidentally, when the painting is folded up, it weighs 250 kgs.

As for Edwin, following the success of the exhibition in the past two years in Kerala, he has decided to settle down in the state. “For an artist, Kerala is an ideal place. There is peace and greenery and the people are nice,” says Edwin, who is married to Maneesha, a fashion designer. The couple have a three-year-old daughter.   

(The New Indian Express, Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram)

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

A heightened sense of sensibility


Sudarshan Shetty, one of India's leading artists in installation art, talks about the likely impact of the Kochi Biennale, while on a brief visit to the city

Photo: Sudarshan Shetty showing an exhibit in Milan

By Shevlin Sebastian

One evening at Fort Kochi, recently, Sudarshan Shetty, one of India’s premier artists in installation art, was spending time with painters Bose Krishnamachari and Jyoti Basu. As they were talking about how Kochi could become a match for the world-famous Venice Biennale, a large, international ship sailed past.

“It was such a picturesque scene,” says Shetty. “It seemed like a preamble to a Biennale. There was this movement of  people from abroad. Definitely, the Biennale will establish Kochi on the world stage.”

Shetty had come to Kochi to check out the various locations for the Biennale. So, he did go to the Muziris site in Kondungaloor, and all over Kochi. “The trip was fantastic, in terms of understanding the cosmopolitan nature of the city,” he says. “There is such a lot of history, what with all the cultures coming in – Christianity in the first century AD, the Arabian traders from the Middle East, followed by the Portuguese, Dutch, and the British.”

When he went to Jew Town, he felt he was being transported back to another world. “I had the same feeling when I went to Malayatoor, the place where St. Thomas arrived on his visit to Kerala in AD 52, and to the first Muslim mosque in India: the Cheraman Juma Masjid in Kodungaloor.”

Kochi is the most appropriate place for the Biennale. “If you look at the history, it was a place where liberalism was celebrated,” says Shetty. “Everybody was welcomed with open arms. The rulers allowed outsiders to do trade and there were cultural exchanges.”

Asked whether a major city like Mumbai or Delhi would have been appropriate, Shetty says, “In big cities, old buildings have been demolished, in the name of development. As a result, a lot of the history has been erased. But in Kochi, history is an ongoing reality.”

Shetty has been mulling over the type of installation art that he could make, which would be ideal for the setting. “I have been doing a lot of research,” he says. And in the course of it, Shetty has discovered something new.

“In Mangalore, I have been looking at old houses,” says the Mumbai-based Shetty, who belongs to the land-owning Bunt community in Karnataka. “Apparently, a lot of them were designed by Kerala craftsmen. That was very interesting for me. I will be taking ideas from our traditional architecture, and applying it to my own art. I am also going to look at local materials in Kochi.”

During his visit Shetty had a look at the refurbished Durbar Hall art gallery. “It is of an international class,” says Shetty, who has exhibited in London, New York, Milan, Oslo, Davos, Denmark, Japan and the Netherlands. “It has been remade beautifully, and the essential character of the building has been retained. I will give my right hand to exhibit there one day.”

The artist is aware of the controversies regarding the setting up of the Biennale, but says that he knows the people behind the project, Bose Krishnamachari and Riyaz Komu, for more than twenty years. “They are able people and have achieved a lot in their own fields,” says Shetty. “They have a lot of international exposure and the expertise to set up a biennale. Both of them belong to Kerala and that is an added advantage.”

What is also an advantage is the impact it will have on the people. “These initiatives will change the sensibility of the people,” says Shetty.  “Kochi will become an art centre. In Baroda, just because an art school exists, there is a completely different way of viewing art among the ordinary people. In many middle-class homes I have seen paintings by well-known artists. A similar change will take place in Kochi once the international art exhibition comes up.”

In the Kochi Biennale, artists of international class will be showcasing their art every two years. “This will improve the standard of the local artists when they are exposed to international art,” says Shetty. “The fact that I could see a lot of world class art when I was young made a big difference to my artistic sensibility. I could understand how things were made and the processes behind it. The same will happen to the artists in Kochi.” 

(The New Indian Express, Kochi) 

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

In tune with each other


COLUMN: Spouse's Turn 

Dr. V. Krishnan Mohan talks about life with singer Sujatha

Photo: Sujatha, with daughter Shwetha and husband Dr. V. Krishnan Mohan 

By Shevlin Sebastian

Dr. V. Krishna Mohan remembers clearly the first time that he saw Sujatha. It was the year 1971. A wedding was taking place at Guruvayur. Yesudas was scheduled to give a performance. He had invited his friend Mohan to attend it. As Mohan sat on the stage, he saw a seven-year-old girl, wearing a white frock, make her way from the audience towards the platform. Mohan was 19-and-a-half years old at that time.

Soon, Sujatha stood beside Yesudas and sang ‘Mazhavil Kaavadi’ from ‘Nellu’. Thereafter, she sang Lata Mangeshkar's ‘Aaja Re Pardesi’ from the Hindi film, 'Madumati'. “I was struck by her voice,” says Mohan. “She sounded like a professional.” Thereafter, when Sujatha came and sat next to him, after the performance, he leaned sideways, and said, “You have an amazing voice.” Sujatha smiled shyly.

The next day, at the Guruvayur temple, they met accidentally. Sujatha immediately told her mother, “This was the uncle I was sitting next to, on the stage, yesterday.”

Thereafter, the combination of Baby Sujatha and Yesudas created a storm in Kerala. “I saw her in different concerts,” says Mohan. “Soon, through Yesudas, she came to my house in Palakkad. My parents are avid music lovers.”

In 1979, Mohan, an accomplished singer himself, was practising as a doctor at Palakkad. Soon, he began looking out for a life partner. When Chembai Vaidyanatha Bagavathar, the doyen of Carnatic music, whose disciple was Mohan's mother, and Yesudas heard about it, they suggested the name of Sujatha. “Both of them felt that it would be better for Sujatha if she got married into a household which is passionate about music,” says Mohan. “My mother was also very keen. I thought about the pros and cons and finally agreed.”

The marriage took place on May 9, 1981. And Mohan keenly remembers the couple's first overseas trip to America in 1982. At the inaugural concert in New York, Sujatha tripped over certain wires on the stage and dislocated her kneecap. She had to be rushed to the hospital. Thereafter, for the 21-city tour, Sujatha sang from a wheelchair. “Many people thought she was handicapped,” says Mohan.

This incident highlights Sujatha's dedication to music. “She is willing to give her life for a song,” says Mohan. “During a recording session, Sujatha frequently forgets about food and other activities.”

When they go abroad for a concert, Sujatha is not keen to do sightseeing, especially on the day of the performance. “She wants to preserve her voice,” says Mohan. “Sujatha will also not speak much, in order not to strain her throat. So, we maintain 'mauna vratham' (silence). There are many singers who will say, 'Let us go out and enjoy ourselves.' But Sujatha is not like that. This is the attitude of Yesudas and she has been influenced by that.”

And unlike many singers, she does not say 'yes' to each and every concert she is asked to perform. “Sujatha will check everything about the organisers, equipment, stage, audience, and the food,” says Mohan. “If the sponsor is strong and sincere, and will protect her performance, then only will she say yes.”

Sujatha has other qualities that Mohan admires. “She is a good interior decorator,” says Mohan. “By nature, she is methodical and a good mother.”

In fact, Sujatha withdrew from the music scene when she was pregnant with her daughter, Swetha. “She was absent for five years, from 1981-85,” says Mohan. “Many people thought she had retired. We felt she would not be able to make a comeback.”

But Sujatha had a resurgence in her career through Priyadarshan’s film, 'Chitram' in 1988, and composer A.R. Rahman’s Tamil version of 'Roja' in 1991, in which she sang 'Pudhu Vellai Mazhai. It became a big hit and Sujatha has not looked back ever since.

As an artist, she is over-sensitive. “If Sujatha sings a single note wrongly, she gets very upset,” says Mohan. “She will tell me, 'I did not sing well', although nobody else would have noticed the mistake.”

As a result, Mohan is careful in the way he deals with his wife. “I cannot talk roughly with her, the way some husbands do, with their spouses,” he says. “I have to be careful about what I say. I developed a non-interfering attitude. You cannot question her all the time. It was tough initially, but I have learnt to get along with Sujatha. 

Mohan pauses and says, “All this is possible only when there is love. Without love, no marriage can last.”

(The New Indian Express, Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram) 

Monday, May 28, 2012

Out of her brother's shadow


Belinda, the younger sister of Remo Fernandes, sings Spanish, Portuguese, Cuban, Italian, and French songs, with verve and panache

By Shevlin Sebastian

When the curtain goes up for the start of the music concert by Belinda Fernandes and the Tropicanos, the audience is in for a surprise.

Belinda is wearing a purple skirt, with a transparent gold scarf and ghungroos on her feet. And when she begins a Kathak dance, at the JT Performing Arts Centre, Kochi, the music accompaniment is not a tabla and the harmonium, but a fado sung by one of Portugal ’s greatest singers, the late Amalia Rodrigues. There is a nice drum beat, and Belinda twirls around, thumping her feet on the stage, and smiling occasionally.

I was exposed to the fado at home and have a passion for Kathak,” says Belinda. “So I thought, ‘Why not fuse the two?’ It is a dream come true, because nobody had done this earlier.”

The actual performance begins with a Brazilian song. Belinda sings in Spanish, holding an acoustic guitar. In another Brazilian song, ‘Voyeur’ which is about a small bird, despite the title, Belinda plays the flute. And at the end, there is a long duet between Mukesh Ghatwal on keyboards and bass and Munna Chari on timbales and percussion, which reminds one of the legendary jugalbandis between Allah Rakha on the tabla and Ravi Shankar on the sitar.

Belinda has a low-key charisma, made attractive by her evident shyness and introvert nature. When Aaradhana Khanna, the compere, gives a thumbs-up from the second row, Belinda gives a radiant, but relieved smile.

The songs continue: Cuban, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian and French songs. She also sings a song about Goa: of how a most beautiful land is becoming a concrete jungle. Not surprisingly, she also bemoaned the widespread corruption -- an allusion to the land mafia-politician nexus.
   
After the interval, Belinda switches over to a satiny brown top and leggings and wears a bright pink feather hat. She moves easily into the Kizomba, an African-style song from Angola. The group also sings a composition, ‘Chilling out’, which they played for the soon-to-be released film, ‘Love Wrinkle-Free’. And all along, the audience clapped along, unable to resist the sheer magic of the beat.

“It is my first performance in Kochi,” says Belinda. The singer clarifies that they don't do copies of songs. Instead, they are fresh impressions. For 'Voyeur', the band introduced sitar sounds and an alaap.

Incidentally, Belinda is following in the footsteps of her illustrious brother, Remo, who is Goa 's most famous musician. “He has been my idol all along,” says Belinda of her brother, who is eight years older. “I admire his creativity and originality. Remo has formed his own style: a fusion of Indian and Western music.” Sometimes, the Tropicanos performs before Remo in concerts all over the country.

Affected by shyness and stage fright for many years, Belinda turned to academics and secured a doctorate in comparative French literature from the Sorbonne in Paris. Thereafter, she became a professor at Goa University and was also the director of the Alliance Francaise. But her mother’s death in 2005 forced her to go out for parties, with husband Carmelio Machado, to get over the pain.

In Goa, sometimes, bands invite members of the audience to come up and sing. Belinda began to be called up. Suppressing her fear, she sang songs here and there. And that was how she began thinking of a singing career.

In 2006, she set up the band, with her husband as manager, and it has now performed all over the country, in Hongkong and at the ‘Festival of India’ in Macao in 2010. Belinda has also started writing her own songs and has brought out a CD called ‘Belinda - Festa Tropicana’. Here are a couple of lines from the song, 'Unopened Doors': ‘Tiptoeing through your heart/ Should I stay or walk away?’ 

(The New Indian Express, South India and Delhi) 

Crossing over to a new beginning



COLUMN: Spouse's Turn

One of India's premier guitarists, Baiju Dharmajan, is about to release his first solo album, ‘The Crossover’

Photos: Baiju Dharmajan; the cover of the album

By Shevlin Sebastian

A few months ago, Baiju Dharmajan had gone to Munnar to spend a few days. He was accompanied by two members of the music group, 'Kaav': Syam N Pai and Shabeer P Ali. One day, at dawn, Baiju got up and looked out. It was cold, misty, and cloudy. “There was a strange mood,” says Baiju. He picked up the guitar and began to play a few chords. Thankfully, Syam, who had awakened, captured it on a handycam. Syam suggested that that it could be put on the album that Baiju was working on. The latter agreed. “When I returned to Kochi, I developed it into a full-fledged song, called 'Landscape,'” he says.

Thereafter, he worked on another five songs. This comprises the album, 'The Crossover' which is expected to come out at the end of May. “'The Crossover' is the merging of Eastern and Western music,” he says. “Most of the lead guitar sounds have a Carnatic base.”

Among the other compositions there is one called 'Cyber Reptile'. “The new-generation kids are so obsessed with the Internet, Facebook and You Tube, apart from mobile phones,” he says. “They are crawling in cyberspace, like hungry reptiles.”

Another work, 'Philia', is an emotional one. “I wanted to show my love for my daughters,” he says. At present, his elder daughter, Ahana, is in Class 12, while the second child, Neha, is in Class seven. The nearly seven-minute song begins softly and then explodes into some intense lead guitar riffs, backed by drumbeats as background music. There is, as Baiju says, a bit of a Carnatic influence, with the plaintive sound that the guitar makes at times. It is attractive listening.

Since these are instrumental songs, people, who have heard it, have reacted in different ways. “If there were lyrics, there would have been a similar reaction,” says Baiju, with a smile.

What has been unusual is that Baiju played the instruments on his own – the lead and bass guitar  –  and programmed the drums, in his studio, 'Mystic Island', Kochi, and mixed it himself.

But now he has invited a few fellow musicians to play the songs with him. They include Alex Puthumana on the bass, Jayaraj on the drums, and Lancy on vocals and the keyboard. Baiju, of course, will play the lead guitar. In early June, the group will embark on a seven-city tour – Bangalore, Chennai, Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Delhi, Kolkata and Guwahati  – to launch the album. “We are busy doing rehearsals,” he says.

Baiju is releasing the music digitally through international web sites like Amazon and CD Baby. Also, through his recording company, Cochym (old name for Cochin), the CD will be available all over Europe.

The Mumbai-based Heena Kriplani, Entertainment Relations at Gibson Guitar, one of the top guitar brands in the world, has heard the some unmixed tracks from 'The Crossover'. “I love the bits I have heard,” she says. “There is some wonderful instrumentation. It seems to me that Baiju has really come into his own on this solo album.”

It is clear that Baiju has a God-given talent. “But he has backed it up with sheer hard work,” says Heena. “The things that he can do with a guitar are quite remarkable.”


When Baiju quit the well-known Motherjane band on November 24, 2010, people wondered what his future direction was going to be like. But he has been busy, appearing on the Dewarists show on Star World, a collaboration of musicians of different genres.

Baiju played with noted US-based percussionist and composer Karshkale, and Harigovind, a master of the Edakka drum. He was also a producer of 'Kaav's album, ‘Rhapsody of Rain’, and did a tour with the jazz fusion band called Blue Fire. “We played in Mumbai, Pune, and Goa,” he says.

When asked whether he has any regrets about leaving Motherjane, Baiju says, “Not at all. I have been composing new songs, changed my style of play, and worked with different groups. I have associated with all types of musicians. It has been fun and a good time creatively.”

(The New Indian Express, Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram) 

Friday, May 25, 2012

Fear and paranoia



Many people are afflicted with mental diseases like schizophrenia. They are unable to distinguish between fact and delusion. May 24 is World Schizophrenia Day

By Shevlin Sebastian

One morning, Ramesh Menon (name changed), a schizophrenia patient, set out to do a cartoon. But there was nothing funny in it. He drew an agonised man, with open mouth and shut eyes. Inside the head, where the brain is located, there are several questions marks. Just outside, above the temple, there is another series of question marks, ending in a large one near the forehead.

“I view everything suspiciously,” says Ramesh, describing the cartoon. “I told my mother about the disturbances caused by such thoughts. I get peculiar ideas often. At the same time, I believe I am blessed. I have a divine nature within me. But no one believes me.”

In another cartoon, Ramesh drew a coiled wire entering the ears of a person. All over the chest Ramesh has drawn ragged mountain-like peaks. The face, with a straggly beard, with a long nose and fleshy lips seems to be a self-portrait. Two drops of perspiration can be be seen at one side of the forehead.


“This drawing is about my experience," he says, "Something is piercing my ears. It is causing an unbearable sound and pain. I feel an intense burning inside the body and have to drink a lot of water to cool down.”

Dr. Dr. M. Chandrasekharan Nair, Director, Head of Psychiatry, Nair’s Hospital, Kochi, encouraged Ramesh to do drawings to capture what he was going through during a full-blown psychotic breakdown because of schizophrenia. The end result was several cartoons, which showed Ramesh's deep sense of paranoia and distrust of people.

“When he is sick, Ramesh is not in touch with reality,” says Dr. Nair. “But during other times, he talks sense. He is on a daily course of medicines.”

In the past, patients would suffer a visible impact when they took drugs. “They would have a catatonic look, shivering hands, and walk slowly but stiffly, almost like a statue, says Dr. Nair. “But that is no longer the case, thanks to new-generation drugs.” One of the most popular is Clozapine. “It is a wonderful medicine,” says Dr. Nair. “There are no visible side-effects and has a good impact in controlling the disease.”


Ramesh is now 35 years old and for the past several years he has managed to avoid having a breakdown by taking tablets regularly. He works as an accountant in a company and does cartoons in his spare time.


Apart from drugs, counselling helps to discover the factors that is causing stress in the patient. “In Ramesh’s case, he was under the delusion that everybody was teasing him,” says Dr. Nair. “But the family actually treated him well. I tried to tell him that.”


May 24, is World Schizophrenia Day. It is defined as a mental disorder which results in a breakdown of thought processes, emotions, reasoning, and an inability to distinguish between reality and fantasy. In India, around 25 million people suffer from the disease. In Kerala, there is also a significant number of victims.


“Schizophrenia occurs because of hereditary and genetic factors, the influence of the environment, and diseases like meningitis, which affect the brain,” says Dr. Nair. Some signs include the sudden withdrawal from the public. Or a person becomes incoherently garrulous. There is a lack of logic in his talk. Some believe that they are possessed of a divine or demonic spirit. There is also a paranoia that people are attempting to harm them.


“I know of a 17-year-old girl who has not gone to school for the past two years,” says Dr. Nair. “She told me that her parents have been attempting to poison her.”


Sadly, to watch a son or daughter fall prey to a mental disease is one of the most agonising experiences for a parent. “Because of the stigma of a mental illness, parents cannot confide in anybody,” says Dr. Nair. “Hence, they have to face an unbearable situation on their own.”


Interestingly, all normal people have schizophrenia-like experiences often. “When you have a dream at night, you go through incidents which seem to appear very real. You are being beaten, or chasing somebody, or flying in the sky. But the only difference is that, unlike the schizophrenic, you can awaken and realize that it is a dream, while the schizophrenic patient is unable to distinguish between fantasy and reality.”


(The New Indian Express, Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram)

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Here now, gone the next moment


A traditional item, ‘Cheppum Panthum’, which was performed in the durbars of kings, enabled Mayan Vaidar Sha to win the 'Close-Up' title in the Grand Indian festival of Magic in Bengaluru. He speaks about his career as a magician

By Shevlin Sebastian

Magician Mayan Vaidar Sha puts a mat on the floor and carefully puts four golden cups on it. Then he takes a small blue ball and places it under a cup. He places a wand over it and lifts another cup and takes the same blue ball out of it. He carries on doing this, taking out the ball from different cups. At one stage, the blue becomes an orange ball. Then astonishingly, it turns into a small sparrow. After another swish of the wand, the ball now becomes a tiny turtle.

The members of the Wednesday Club, which promotes communication and leadership skills, look on amazed. Mayan has still not finished. He puts a ball in his mouth and swallows it. At the climax, he produces a bunch of red seeds, from under the cup, seemingly out of nowhere.

This particular segment is called ‘Cheppum Panthum’. “It is ancient trick and used to be performed in the durbars of kings,” says Mayan. Very few people know how to do this item. In fact, it was prominent magician Prof. Vazhakkunnam Neelakandan Namboodiri who saved it from dying out. “I learnt it from Namboodiri's disciple Nanu Mash, but it took me four years,” he says. “This is all about conjuring.”

Mayan made some innovations. He added one more cup and came up with the idea of producing a turtle and red seeds. “In the original concept, the aim was to bring out red scarves,” he says.

Club member Nirmala Lilly is impressed. “Mayan's hand movements are so fast that we cannot see what he is actually doing,” she says. “The magic wand is a distraction for the audience. It seems like he is putting dust in the eyes and we cannot see anything.”

Undoubtedly, this item, ‘Cheppum Panthum’, is special. And when Mayan took part in the Great Indian Festival of Magic, conducted by the Magic Academy in Bengaluru, a few days ago, he secured the first prize in the Senior Close-Up competition. There were 17 magicians from all over India who took part. 

“The competition had some big names,” says Academy Founder-President K.S. Ramesh. One of the judges was Pilou, one of France 's well-known professionals and a world champion in magic. Says Ramesh: “The fact that Pilou chose Mayan means that he is very good. Mayan's forte is his traditional items.”

Mayan has been a magician for over 30 years and has performed all over Kerala. “My most popular item is mind-reading,” says Mayan. “I will call a member from the audience and ask him to think about something. And then I will tell him what he was thinking.” Mayan also does items on Aids awareness, the dangers of plastic consumption and industrial safety. “I convey all the messages through magic,” he says.

Mayan says that in most stage programmes, there are mechanical and conjuring styles. “For mechanical, you don't need much skill,” he says. “You open a box and there is nothing in it. Then you close and open it and there is something there.” In conjuring, you bring up something out of thin air. “You take a rope and make it look like you are cutting it up into two, three, or four pieces,” he says. “Then you join it up and make it a single rope. Later, you make it into a circle.”

Unfortunately, because of the lack of a magic culture in the state, Mayan is not a full-time professional. Instead, he works as an assistant engineer in the Cochin Shipyard. “I have to spend a lot of money on buying props, but thankfully, it is break-even for me,” he says. 

(The New Indian Express, Kochi) 

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

“Siddique has never scolded me”

COLUMN: Spouse’s Turn

Sajitha talks about her 28-year marriage to the noted film director

Photo: By Manu R. Mavelil 

By Shevlin Sebastian

Sajitha was five years old. It was her first day at the Darool Uloom higher secondary school at Pullepady, Kochi. Her first cousin was entrusted to take her. He placed her on the rod of his Hercules cycle, put the satchel on the back, and set out. “That is my first memory of my husband Siddique,” says Sajitha. At that time her grandmother told her son -- Siddique’s father -- Ismail Haji and daughter, Athika, that the two children should get married when they are older. “This custom of first cousins getting married is prevalent in the Muslim community,” says Sajitha.  

Sometime later, Siddique, who is nine years older than Sajitha, got a job as a clerk in the Darool Uloom school. “We would see each other often,” she says.

Eventually, they got married on May 6, 1984, at the Darool Uloom auditorium. “The school has played a big role in our lives,” she says. And ever since then it has been a roller-coaster ride for Sajitha. Within four months, Siddique resigned from his job and went off to work as an assistant director for director Fazil. “I was sixteen at that time and had no idea how risky this was,” she says. “It was only much later that I realised that my husband had given up a good job, for the uncertain life in the film industry. It would take years for him to get a steady income.”

But what immediately upset her was the fact Siddique went out of touch. “There were no phone calls or letters,” she says. After three months, when Siddique suddenly returned, Sajitha told him that she was pregnant. “There was no way I could pass the news to him earlier,” she says.

When Sajitha was taken to the City Hospital for the delivery, instead of staying and offering support, Siddique ran off with his friends to watch a film.

“Cinema is his passion,” she says. “But Siddique has a good heart. If somebody gets annoyed with him, he will still talk with that person. He keeps no resentment in his heart. Siddique has never scolded me or the children. Even if I get angry with him, he never loses his cool.”

But in the early years of their marriage, there were moments when Sajitha struggled to remain cool. “I will be talking to him and he will just smile at me and not say anything,” she says. “Most of the time he is in a different world. That is the case with all creative people. Initially, I would get irritated, but now I have got used to it. But that does not mean I remain silent. I keep talking to him and he still has a smile. Nothing has changed.”  

The couple has three daughters, Sumayia, Sara, and Sukoon.  Sumayia, 26, is married to Bengaluru-based professional Nabeel Mehran, and has a 10-month old daughter. Sara, 24, is doing a fashion design course at St. Teresa’s College, Kochi. But it was the third child, Sukoon, 22, that caused heartbreak for the parents.

“Sukoon with born with cerebral palsy,” says Sajitha. “It has been painful for us that our daughter is not well. Since she is unable to walk, we have not been able to take her to school. She has been taught at home.”

In fact, Sajitha is a 24-hour mother and nurse for Sukoon. “As a result, we don’t go out much,” she says. “But on rare occasions, our whole family goes out to see a film.”

Sajitha had been tense when Siddique was making the Hindi film, ‘Bodyguard’, in which Salman Khan was the hero. “I was worried about how it would do at the box office,” she says. “I prayed hard to God. But I never imagined it would be such a big hit. I was very happy for my husband.”

Meanwhile, asked about what advice she will give youngsters who are about to tie the knot, Sajitha says, “You have to learn to adjust to each other. Nobody is perfect. People have flaws. But you must forgive each other. And the most important thing is that the husband and wife should have a mutual trust.”

(The New Indian Express, Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram) 

50 films old and going strong

By Kunchacko Boban

(As told to Shevlin Sebastian)

In the mid 2000s, I had a series of flops. One reason why this happened was because the audience sensed that I was getting fed up of doing these cliched ‘chocolate hero’ roles. So, I took a two-year break from acting and dabbled in business and real estate.

During this time, I did not miss acting. Instead, I pondered over what was missing in my acting. I realised that I did not go for risk-taking roles. The problem was that I did not like to change my hair style or alter my moustache. So I looked the same in almost all the films before I took the break. In my second innings, from 2009 onwards, I made it a point to look different.

In ‘Elsamma Enna Aankutty’, I played a village milkman. Until that time, no director or producer had the courage to give me such a role. They could not imagine me moving around in a M80 moped supplying milk. I cut my hair very short, toned down my make-up, and wore lungis. Overall, it was a big changeover.

The director of the film, Lal Jose, a close friend, convinced me to do the change. During the sabbatical I would keep going to his house and have discussions about acting and films. He said, “You should be in touch with the common man and know their pulse and emotions.” Incidentally, ‘Elsamma Enna Aankutty’, a common man’s story, became one of the biggest hits of 2010. Thereafter, I have had a series of successes: ‘Traffic’, ‘Seniors’, ‘Sevenes’, ‘Three Kings’, ‘Doctor Love’ and ‘Ordinary’, which is the first superhit of 2012.

Of course, the key is to select the right script. When I hear or read a script, I do it from the perspective of an ordinary person. All my other faculties are shut off: I am not an actor, and do not belong to the film industry. I am just a man on the street who wants to spend Rs 50 to watch a good film. If I get excited by the script, that is 50 per cent. Then I will study my character. How big or important is the role? Then I will look at who is the director, producer, technical crew and the banner. This is my formula for acting in a hit film.

But then what is a hit? A film may run for 100 days and will be called a hit by the audience, as well as the media. But it may not be so for the producer, if the budget is high and the costs have not been recovered.

In today's scenario, films are being classified as multiplex, theatre or Facebook hits. For example, a recent film, which I do not want to name, is a good one, but it is only a Facebook success. All the reviews and comments are positive, but the film has not done well, in terms of box-office collections or theatre audience reaction. The producer may not have recovered his money. So, all these definitions are relative.

I have just completed my 50th film in 15 years. What I would like to see is good scripts. But life has become faster. People don't have the time. So writers are also penning Twenty-20 cricket-style scripts. They miss out on the simple things in life. 

(Kunchacko Boban is one of the leading actors in Mollywood)

(The New Indian Express, South India and Delhi) 

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Discovering a new type of spider



Scientist Dr. M.J. Mathew, while doing research in the Western Australian Museum, in Perth, discovered a new genus of spiders


By Shevlin Sebastian


When research scientist Dr. M. J Mathew got selected for the Endeavour Awards from the Australian government, he experienced a moment of joy. Mathew was given a grant of $26,000 to do research on spiders for six months. So, he went to the Western Australian Museum in Perth to work under his post-doctoral supervisor Dr. Volker Framenau.

And, quite surprisingly, they made a discovery of eight spiders in a new genus [category]. Says Dr Mark S. Harvey, senior curator of the museum: “Spiders are amongst those types of animals that are not studied often and we are still trying to untangle their evolutionary relationships and classifications. The fact that this genus was only discovered recently is due to the diligent work by Doctors Framenau and Mathew.”


Another reason why nobody in Australia discovered this was because these spiders had been classified wrongly under another genus – Araneus. Since these spiders were commonly found in Australia, Framenau and Mathew decided to call them plebs, from the Roman word, plebians, which means the common people. It is the right of the scientists who discover a new type to give a name for the spider, but it has to be Latinised. “That is the international protocol,” says Mathew. 

In fact, Mathew named one of the spiders as Plebs Salesi, in honour of the late Fr. Francis Sales, CMI, the founder of Sacred Heart College, Thevara. “The college is my alma mater,” he says. “I did my research studies there.”

Meanwhile, the most distinguishing feature of these spiders is an inverted U-shaped white mark on the abdomen. “It looks like the alphabet ‘Ra’ in Malayalam,” says Mathew. “It’s reproductive structures are also different from other species.”

Another intriguing aspect is that these spiders can be found in places like India, China, Japan, Philippines, Indonesia, and Papua Guinea. “The hypothesis is that all these countries were part of a single tectonic plate, based on the presence of the spiders,” says Mathew. “This happened millions of years ago. Then the plates separated, and India, China, and the other countries drifted away from Australia.”

Interestingly, in India, the spiders are located in a temperate climate, which is similar to Australia ’s. “So, the plebs can be found in Ooty, Darjeeling and Kanthalloor, near Munnarall high-altitude areas,” says Mathew.

Mathew and Framenau have sent their study to the internationally reputed Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society in London. “The paper has already been accepted for publication, after three independent referees, who studied the report, gave the go-ahead,” says Mathew. This means that, following publication, their discovery will be accepted worldwide. This is a big achievement for a researcher from Kerala.

Mathew’s future plans include research on spiders that are found on the forest floor in the Western Ghats.

Apart from scaling new heights, the stint in Australia has been a learning experience for Mathew. “The professionalism in Australia has to be admired,” he says. “Unlike in Kerala, employees will never chit-chat during working hours. They are focused on their job. It is only at lunch-time that they talk to each other.”

They also do not compromise on research. “In Kerala, recently, there was a Ph. D scam where you could buy doctoral theses,” says Mathew. “Such a scenario is impossible in a merit-based society like Australia. Instead, you have to work hard before submitting your thesis and earn a doctorate.” 

(The New Indian Express, Kochi and Thiruvananthapuram)