'Tales from Two Countries' will unite different but complimenting arts and narratives, combining visceral poetry and ethereal musical expression with the grace, poise and emotions of dance and some never-before-seen art forms.
The two-hour long show presented by Performers' Consortium, will be divided into four performances -- The Whistler Project, Divya Dureja Project, Darshan - Projecting Gods and Black Boi Be.
'The Whistler Project' which will be performed by multi- disciplinary artist Manu Sriram Kamath, guitarist Bhaanu Mendiratta and cello artist Nawa Lanzilotti, will showcase a musical experiment emerging from the obscure french art of sifflement de la langue (langage of whistling).
Dureja, an international spoken word poet, will take the evening forward with her 'Divya Dureja Project', where she will explore life, with its highs, lows and in-betweens, in a society going through seismic changes.
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Dureja says her poetry will create a world that will provoke the audience to think.
The following act "Darshan - Projecting Gods" by Manola K Gayatri, will tell the story of "a pilgrimage to see and be seen by gods and a story about a voyage to other countries".
The story will also talk about "alien gods and the travelling gods".
"It asks us questions about how we see each other and how we see the self in the other," says Dureja.
"Using multiple disciplines and multimedia, 'Black Boi Be' delivers a one man show that keeps the audience, entertained, attentive and constantly surprised. It pushes the grain in not only what theatre can be but also in what spoken word performances are," says Dureja.
The show will be performed on May 15 at the Shri Ram Centre in Mandi House here.