"To tell the truth, I have
very little to do in Delhi apart from bringing up my child and
running the house. Since I rarely socialise there, I haven't had
a chance to integrate myself with the culture milieu of the capital.
So I look forward to any excuse to be in Mumbai and the Prithvi
Theatre Festival is one great excuse," she laughed.
The fact is the festival would not have had a
30-year run if Sanjana had not come forward to manage it.
Ever since his wife passed away in 1984, actor
Shashi Kapoor lost interest in the theatre. It was on the verge
of decay until his son Kunal and theatre director Feroz Khan volunteered
to take charge of it.
"After running Prithvi Theatre and its theatre
festival for eight years, Kunal and Feroz felt restricted as they
could barely spare time to pursue their respective individual
careers. So I stepped in, with some trepidation at first, I must
say," Sanjana said.
What had actually scared her?
"The very thought of shouldering a responsibility
scared me," she replied.
Indeed, saving an institution like Prithvi Theatre
from peril was not an ordinary task. And when Sanjana revealed
her intentions to her father, he told her matter-of-factly that
she would have to manage everything, including raising finance
to give shape to her dream, on her own.
"I almost had a second thought then. But
I plucked up courage and went ahead. Fortunately, my daring paid
off," she grinned.
She gave Prthvi Theatre and the festival a new
lease of life. And today both have grown in stature, popularity
and prestige.
Sanjna, who took charge in 1993, said she had
ventured in with a five-point agenda for Prithvi Theatre.
"One, I wanted to have a children's theatre
workshop; two, I hoped to revive the Art Gallery situated at the
Prithvi Cottage opposite the theatre complex; three, to clean
up the ambience of the café, which is an inseparable part
of the theatre; four, to start our own production company under
the name of Prithvi Players; and, finally, to have a drama library
and a reading room," she said.
Sanjana has already put four of her five-point
agenda to practice, making Prithvi Theatre an important cultural
landmark of Mumbai and the festival an event that is eagerly looked
forward to.
The only dream she hasn't been able to realise
yet is to find a suitable place for the drama library, though
Prithvi Theatre already has over 1,000 books on drama and a good
collection of plays. Many books, however, were destroyed during
Mumbai's 2005 deluge.
A great lover of circus, Sanjana regrets that
most of today's kids, including her son, have never gone inside
a circus tent.
"In fact, I want to have a circus company
on the lines of those in the Western countries in which all human
participants are treated and act like artistes, not just perfunctory
performers," she said.
Any unfulfilled dream?
"Yes, there is one," she admitted.
As a child, she heard her maternal grandfather,
Geoffrey Kendal, talk a lot about the tours of his travelling
theatre company 'Shakespeareana' and she always wanted to have
a Prithvi travelling theatre company in which all artistes would
travel in a bus and perform at different places on the way.
"I don't know whether I will be able to
fulfill this dream of mine," Sanjana said. |