The Dramatic Arts : Girivalam
Many times, as a person who
reviews art on the internet, I have to take into account the fact that every
person has a different opinion about what is makes a piece of art good. This means that I may have to pull
some punches in the negatives department because I set a really high standard (for
example I hate ‘masala’ movies) and
everyone may not agree with them.
But once in a while something
like Girivalam comes along, and I can’t
help but let loose all of my frustration. So before I go any further I would
like to formally apologize for all the hate in this “review”.
Now that that’s out of the way *Cracks Knuckles*; this stage play is,
to me, everything that is wrong with the drama industry. It is a poor excuse for
a play, which has no right to be on stage in front of an audience, parading
itself as if it’s the best thing to happen to live theater since its invention.
It is an uncoordinated, unrehearsed, unplanned, unpleasant, unforgivable
stinking hot mess, which came closer to driving me insane than my twelfth
boards.
I could just end the review here
and ask you not to see it, but that would be unethical of me, so here is the
breakdown of the play: It is a historical, fictional account about Thiruvannamalai and the religious
practice of Girivalam.
Cast and Crew:
Story, Dialogues,
Songs and Direction - Kalai Chemmal A.P.S Manimaran
Asst. Direction -
N Balasubramanian
Music Production-
Joyful Gopu
Sets and Costumes
- Madurai Kannan - Padma Stage
Make-up -
Bonda Mani
Lights - Mano
Lights
Music - N
Kandasamy
Stage management
- A Nagarajan, M.Nedumaran, R K Madhivanan
Cast - N
Balasubramanian, M Thirumaran, S Jayapal, k S Vijayakumar, M Annamalai, Kumara
Srinivasan, R Kaliyaperumal, R Jayakumar, G Srihari, R Prince, Sivadurai Thangaraj,
M K Kannan, M Easter Anburaj, P Gopalakrishnan, M saraboji Srinivasan, D
Thambusamy, J Kalyanasundaram, J King Faizal (Sivan), M Sivasri, Ko. Rajamogana
Sivam –Sivachariyaar, Pudhuvai Bharathi, Puduvai Viji – Veerammal, Natuvangam -
Kudandhai Lakshminarayanan & Party
Production - Kutralam
Thamizhannai Productions
Marketing - Sridevi
Fine Arts
What I liked:
If you are honestly expecting
something in this section after my introduction, then you will be surprised to
know that this stage play does have some redeeming qualities. The set design and
costumes for all the characters by ‘Padma Stage’ Kannan (who invited me to
review this drama) was near perfect and the makeup by ‘Bonda’ Mani is truly
amazing.
There are three dances in the
play which are somewhat okay.
Unfortunately that’s pretty much
it.
What could have been better I Hated:
Sometimes good set design and
makeup can inspire the actors to do a good job. Sadly that is not the case. Featuring
some of the worst acting I have seen this play puts some of the worst movies to
shame. The actors either have no charisma or have too much charisma. That is to
say they seem to be reading from a teleprompter or aiming for an Oscar.
Speaking of Teleprompters, actors
on stage were forgetting dialogues and they had to be prompted by people behind
the sets, all of which could be heard by the. And there I was sitting in the seventh
row hearing all this praying that the guy who was prompting them would at least
come in front of the mike and say the dialogues himself so that I could walk
out of the theater before my brain melted from looking at the utter nonsense happening
on stage as the actors fumbled with their dialogues.
With uninspiring, essay like
passages of emotionless exposition written in such a convoluted manner that I could
understand just as much as pig Latin, the stage play drags on and on and on
without having any mercy on the audience.
Speaking of dragging on and on
and on, this … thing… is three hours long, with no interval. Plays which are an
hour and a half long have intervals and I haven’t the faintest about what
convinced the director that the play was good enough, to be three hours long,
let alone have no interval. I guess he was afraid people would leave. But if
that was the case, the idea failed miserably because of the fifty meager people
who attended the screening thirty of them left within the first two hours.
Moving on to the director. I am
in no position to comment on him, as much as I want to, because this is the
only stage play of his that I have seen. But that being said, this is one of
the worst directed plays I have seen, if not the worst. The actors have no idea
what to do on stage when someone else is spouting their dialogues and they have
no idea where to stand, to the point where someone backstage was trying desperately
to hide his hands while he asked them to step forward and move back.
The people on stage had no clue
that they should not look at someone backstage when they are in front of the
audience and they had no idea under which light to stand, in spite of so many
shiny lights provided by Mano Lights.
But, I must take my hat off to
the director. He was able to create two characters who I managed to hate more
than King Joffery in Game of Thrones. In the name of comedy, these two ‘actors’
manage to be icing on the most garbage filled cake ever. I hated every moment
they were on stage, which means that I hated more than two hours of the drama.
While they may have been veterans of the stage in their prime all they did was
make everything twenty times worse.
I am proud to say that I have
been watching movies and stage plays from the age of five. That’s a good
thirteen years of movies and plays. Never have I ever, in all this time,
seriously considered walking out of the theaters however bad the content was. Girivalam achieved what I thought was
impossible. *Slow Clap*
Five hundred and fifty words out of the eight
hundred and fifty words before this sentence and I’m not done yet.
Moving on, this play has more
time with the curtain down and lights off than it does with the opposite. Every
twenty seconds the curtain drops and the lights go out. The longest scene was
probably a three and a half minutes long, while the longest curtain drop was
well over a minute long.
All of this was accompanied by the actors fumbling in
the dark and shouting expletives while the mike was on.
The story is for the most part, incomprehensible.
I had no clue what was going on for the first hour, and the play itself doesn’t
know when it is going into a flashback and when it is telling the actual story.
The worst part about it is that the story does not have enough substance to
have a three hour run time. Bloated with unnecessary content which make no sense
to the actual plot, this story is committing a heinous crime by being three
hours long.
Jesus Christ, or should I say, O!
Arunachala, all of this and I have
not even gotten to the music yet… right, moving on. My connection to the world
of live theater is through my dad, who produces music for a lot of stage plays.
He uses recorded tracks and sequences them on his laptop, and seldom is there live
music involved partly because of technical constraints and also due to the fact
that in this day and age it is not that practical to use live music.
He did not make music for this
play. But what caught my attention was that they were using live music. They had
a guy on the keyboard, who was the music producer, a guy on the mirudhangam and
a guy on vocals. To be light about the music, it was mind melting. Badly timed
background music, played badly on the keyboard, along with the worst vocals,
which didn’t match the music at all, were played on repeat over and over and
over again.
With a suspense and thrill theme
every time something happened on stage, the music gave this devotional stage
play a spy thriller feel, with the story along the lines of : “There is a bomb
in Thiruvannamalai, and it is up to
Lord Vishnu and his team of elite soldiers to stop it.” What in God’s name was
the music director thinking?
When I mentioned earlier that the
dances were somewhat decent, what I meant was that they were accompanied by the
worst music recital ever. Period. For everything that the dancers tried to make
it look good, the singer did a worse enough job that it took away the positive parts
of the dance and then some.
Some technical faults with the
music which I got after consulting with my father are listed below:
1. Music
plays a vital role in Historical drama and it is not the Bangs and the Punches
that matter but the Ragas and
Instruments used which do. Electronic music and western tunes were not played
during those times. And, please, know the difference between sitar and veena music; at least when Brahma
and Saraswathi are on stage.
2. With
music director Shri Soundaryan in the audience, the prayer was sung in one shruthi while the keyboardist fumbled
with a totally different shruthi till
the end. Electronic shruthi boxes are
cheap and are more accurate than the singer, most of the time.
3. When
Nandhi came on stage playing the mirudhangum,
the instrument was upside down (gives a whole new meaning to the term south paw) and the music was Arabic! Surprising,
isn’t it?
4. The
height of it was Nadanam Aadinaar
being sung in Adi Talam while it is
supposed to be in Kanda Jathi Ada Thalam.
The Charanams were sung properly but
when it came to the Pallavi once again,
it went back to the wrong talam. Poor
Gopalakrishna Bharathi. I hope the grave he is turning in is comfortable.
While I am not an expert in Carnatic music, my father sure is, and I
can safely say that these facts are provided with the proper reference. Through
all of this, my complaint is that they should have gone either fully Carnatic or performed it all live. Not a
dirty mash-up of both with weird transitions
But somehow, through all of this,
what got me the most was that every person who wanted to see this mess of a
play had to pay from five hundred to two thousand rupees for the ticket. While I
didn’t have to pay as I was invited as a reviewer, in no way shape or form is
this sum of money warranted. These people should be paying the audience two thousand
rupees for sitting through their play.
Final Thoughts:
Girivalam completely sapped the soul out of me. For the love of all
that is holy and pious it has no reason to exist, and it is a complete waste of
time, space, money and the brain cells which are used to process it. This is
the kind of play which you leave feeling desensitized and numb with no faith in
humanity.
The two things I have Girivalam to thank for is for providing
me the opportunity go on this rant, and showing me that however bad something I
have seen, there is always something even worse.
I give Girivalam 1/2 out of 5 stars.
But after all the hate I have spewed
on this play and director, people who know me personally know that this is not
the worst I can say about something that is this bad. And to an extent I have
to agree.
I did not go all out because of
one simple fact: Even after all this I hope that this troupe improves. I hope
the director improves and they go on to make a great play. But until then, the
anger on this post is all that I have for them.
This may not be warranted but
still:
Peace!!!

Entirely validated. Just Sets and Costumes dont make a play. Disastrous and takes people for granted because no one will question the producers. I am sure there were a lot of people who went and marveled the Crew and Cast at the end of the play... Just like it happens in any BAD play that makes the Director/ Producer, Produce MORE Bad plays.... I earnestly hope this review makes them think twice before going half-cocked on any production hence forth. If any take offence of the review, let them watch the Video that they had taken, to introspect themselves and Produce/ Direct a play.
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