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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, December 17, 2000 |
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Southern States
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King of a thousand gags
Comedy is serious business, he says with a straight face. S. Ve.
Shekher knows his business. This `comedy king' is completing 25
years on stage, and on the eve of his 4001st show, is very
serious about making his plays more humorous than before, to
bring in the audiences. The stage has to do better than TV, he
tells K. Ramachandran.
S. Ve. SHEKHER'S `Natakhapriya' will step into its 26th year this
month-end with a sense of satisfaction. On the memorable
occasion, the troupe is organising in Chennai a drama series
culminating with its 4001st performance on the New Year day. On
show will be the latest political spoof `Periyappa'.
``In 25 years we have gone on stage 4000 times, equal to nearly
11 years' time, with 22 plays. For the 3000th show in 1992, we
had Ms. Jayalalitha. For the 3500th show, we had Mr. M.
Karunanidhi and Mr. Moopanar. All of them will be characters in
Periyappa,'' the veteran humourist says.
Does he want to look back or speculate about the future?
``We emerged at a time when Chennai had 150 sabhas and 100
troupes led by giants like Cho, R. S. Manohar, Mouli, YGP,
Manorama and Surulirajan. I wanted to be different, so I chose
comedy as my line. Our plays are often criticised as ``a garland
of jokes'. I will give 100 jokes.
Can someone make a play out of it?'' he challenges. ``We do
create a story knot, a story line, scene order and dialogue with
jokes. That's how we prioritize.''
Tamil stage is unlike Marathi or Bengali theatre where films are
fewer. To lure people to watching comedy plays here is difficult.
Still, audiences pay Rs. 60 to Rs. 600 a show to watch
Natakhapriya's comedies. That's because each play is different
but uniformly funny. ``We innovate on stage. A sudden joke on the
latest political development catches on like wild fire.''
Shekher is a onetime political aspirant who now swears by his
forte. ``I am satisfied. So is my audience. Look hard. When TV
came, sabhas declined. The actors shifted to the small screen.
But I kept my distance from TV. Still, I was the first to create
a TV serial for DD with Vannakolangal, whose audio cassettes are
still popular after 15 years.''
In 25 years, Natakhapriya has produced 22 plays, 18 of them still
popular. The aim is always pure entertainment. Not passing on
`some message'. ``Our forte is verbal comedy, attractive to all
people. Vulgarity or supporting an illegal cause is a no-no. Last
week, our show at Singapore, even in the midst of Ramzan fasting
and Karthigai day, drew a full house. ''
His recent U.S. trip was a great success: 27 shows in 32 days
across 15 cities.
The troupe is known for its discipline. All are tee-totallers and
Shekher says he does not waste time anywhere. He shot two films
during foreign visits and another one ``Marappan'' is being made.
All this show that even if entertainment technologies change,
``we're like gas lights. Always there and reliable...And any
live-show attracts people!'' he adds.However, he is rueful that
dramas don't get sponsorships as much as music events do.
He has a personal satisfaction. A psychiatrist asks his patients
to watch/listen to Shekhar plays to reduce tension.The
engineering diploma-holder, is an accomplished sound recordist,
producer, photographer and director. He has won awards as radio
producer, but was inspired to take up drama in the 70s under his
father S.V. Venkataraman's leadership. Shekher's film and TV
careers have also met with success, though not his political
foray in Mylapore.
The actor has another side: a willing fund raiser for charitable
causes and a regular blood donor, Shekher along with his troupe
members donate for educating poor children, healing the sick,
helping the disabled; and building three shrines for
`Sukhabrahmarishi'.
His long term plan is to start a drama school because stage
``remains the gateway to filmdom''.
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