- Source: Natmandal
Natya Vidya Mandir, a theatre school, and its amateur theatre troupe Natmandal from Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India had heavily influenced new Gujarati theatre. Established in 1949, it trained many theatre people and produced classic, modern and experimental plays in its twenty years of existence.
History
In 1948, at the centenary celebration of Gujarat Vidhya Sabha, a literary institute, politician Ganesh Vasudev Mavalankar and writer Rasiklal Parikh proposed a school for theatre training in Gujarat. Gujarati theatre actor-director Jaishankar Sundari was appointed to lead the school. Natya Vidya Mandir was established in 1949 and was the first such theatre school of India. The school formed an amateur theatre troupe Natmandal in 1951–52. It operated from the old Premabhai Hall in Bhadra area of Ahmedabad where performances as well as training were held.
Natmandal heavily influenced the new Gujarati theatre with its experiments and academic activities. It trained and encouraged many actors, directors, playwrights and set designers as well as audiences. Their students include Jashwant Thaker, Deena Gandhi, Pransukh Nayak, Kailash Pandya, Dhananjay Thaker, Prabha Pathak and Arvind Pathak.
Natmandal remained active for twenty years.
Selected productions
The school-cum-troupe produced many classic, modern as well as experimental plays over the years including:
Sanskrit classics:
Bhasa's Urubhanga
Bodhayana's Bhagavadajjukiya
Gujarati plays:
Ramanbhai Neelkanth's Raino Parvat
Rasiklal Parikh's Mena Gurjari
Dalpatram's Mithyabhiman
Bengali plays:
Sarat Chandra Chattopadhyay's Vijaya and Birajbahu
Rabindranath Tagore's Chitrangada and Muktadhara
Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House and An Enemy of the People