- Source: Janak Dave
- Ramayan (seri televisi 1987)
- Tera Mera Saath Rahe
- Gempa bumi Nepal April 2015
- Pandya Store
- Tarun Gogoi
- Janak Dave
- Janak
- List of Gujarati-language writers
- Uncho Parvat, Undi Khin
- List of songs recorded by Alka Yagnik
- Ninnila Ninnila
- 2024 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado
- Ramayan (1987 TV series)
- Cgroups
- Sunayana (Ramayana)
Janak Harilal Dave (born 14 June 1930) is a Gujarati dramatist, theater actor and drama teacher from Gujarat, India.
Life
Dave was born on 14 June 1930 at Bhavnagar in British India, to his father Harilal, and mother, Chaturabahen. He passed his matriculation in 1955, and worked at a preschool for seven or eight years. In 1957, he joined the music college affiliated with M. S. University, Vadodara, where he studied dramaturgy under Chandravadan Mehta and Jasvant Thaker, earning his bachelors and masters with first class honours.
From 1963 to 1967, he worked as a chair person of drama department at Sangit Natya Bharati, Rajkot. From 1967 to 1971, he served as lecturer at drama department of Panjab University. In 1971, he joined Gujarat College, taught drama, and retired from there in 1988 as a head of department.
Works
Dave is known as a drama teacher, theater actor and playwright. He is a scholar of Bhavai form (a folk theater form popular mostly in western India). He wrote plays, books on drama-teaching, and translated several books into Gujarati.
He wrote Aakhri Kasabno Ughad (1997) and Abhinay Prashikshan (2002), which are based on the system of Konstantin Stanislavski. His Hetulakshi Ekankio (2001) contains some original plays while some are translated plays. His Bhavai-Vesha (literally different narratives composed in the form of Bhavai) are published as Lokranjan Bhavai (1988), Dehno Dushman and Veshavansh (1998). They are mostly reform-oriented in nature.
Dave has also played a significant role in the development of children theater in Gujarati, and has published several books in the field: Rangalo Chalyo Farva (1989), Natak Khele Bal Gopala (1997) and Balnatya Digdarshan Kala (1997). He was popularly known as 'Janak Dada' among children.
He received the Gaurav Puraskar from the Government of Gujarat in 1993 for his contribution in drama teaching.
See also
List of Gujarati-language writers
References
External links
Janak Dave in Gujarati Vishwakosh.