Ramakrishnan Ramanathan, known as Ramu Ramanathan, is an Indian playwright and director. He has written plays including Mahadevbhai, Cotton 56, Polyester 84, Jazz, Comrade Kumbhakarna, and Postcards From Bardoli.
Besides playwriting, Ramanathan is the editor of PrintWeek and WhatPackaging? magazines. He has been associated with the print industry for 30 years.[3]
He is the author of three books. 3, Sakina Manzil And Other Plays which is a collection of eight plays. And, two collections of poems, My Encounters with a Peacock and To Sit on A Stone - And Other Shorts.[4]In addition, he pens columns for newspapers.
He has also co-edited Book Binding with Adhesives along with P Sajith and Babri Masjid, 25 Years ... along with Irfan Engineer and Sameena Dalwai.
Early life
Ramanathan was born on 29 December 1967 in Kolkata and later moved to Mumbai. He completed his schooling at St. Stanislaus High School, Mumbai. In 1987, Ramanathan graduated from Mithibai College with a bachelor's degree in chemistry. That same year, he wrote his first one-act play, I Am I. Later, he completed his Diploma in Journalism from Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Mumbai, and an MA in English Literature from the University of Mumbai.
Later, Ramanathan wrote 13 one-act plays for inter-collegiate competitions. He also wrote radio plays and radio documentaries for AIR, produced by S. D. Prins, a rare motivated officer in Akashvani. Along with Sunil Shanbag, he explored alternative spaces for plays, such as on top of a water tank at the YWCA in Andheri, which was transformed into an amphitheatre. He founded and organized the IIT Theatre Fest in 2006 with Raja Mohanty at the IDC in IIT. For ten years, he edited a theatre journal for Prithvi Theatre called PT Notes, published by Sanjna Kapoor. Later, he co-edited the eSTQ bulletin from 2005. He also ran a play-reading movement for many years, in which more than 75 unperformed and unpublished plays in English, Gujarati, Hindi, and Marathi were read in front of an invited audience.
3 Sakina Manzil and Other Plays (in English), Orient Blackswan (2012) - An anthology of eight plays: Shanti, Shanti It’s A War; The Boy Who Stopped Smiling; Curfew; Mahadevbhai (1892–1942); Collaborators; 3, Sakina Manzil; Shakespeare And She; Jazz.
Book Binding with Adhesives along with Tony Clark and P Sajith
My Encounters With a Peacock, Red River (2017)
Babri Masjid, 25 Years .. along with Irfan Engineer and Sameena Dalwai (Gyan Prakashan) (2017)
To Sit on A Stone - And Other Shorts, Red River (2020)
Two plays: Cotton 56, Polyester 84 and Comrade Kumbhakarna, Red River (2023)
Theatre experience
In 1993, Ramanathan wrote Shanti, Shanti, It's a War, which won Best Play at The Hindu - All India Playscript Competition. This play was produced by Madras Players. It was penned in 1992, within the first ten days after 6 December.
In the mid-nineties, he wrote and directed a Gripps play (a children's play) called The Boy Who Stopped Smiling, which was performed in approximately 150 shows. More than one hundred of these shows were organized by Sanjna Kapoor, the play's producer, who created a theatre network across the country.
Ramanathan directed Vaikom Mohammed Basheer’s Me Grandad 'Ad an Elephant and later Marguerite Duras’ L’amante Anglaise (both with university students), as well as Samuel Beckett's Krapp's Last Tape, Jean Genet’s Deathwatch, Václav Havel’s Audience, and a play called Nothing (for V Theatre Group).
Similarly, his collaboration with a group of architecture students resulted in three plays and another piece called PM @ 3 pm. This group hosted 7-day workshops on set design and theatre aesthetics, and fabricated four model sets of King Lear for four language theatre directors in Mumbai. Later, the group staged three student productions: Yaar, What’s the Capital of Manipur!; The Sanjivani Super Show; and Medha and Zoombish – II.
Ramu Ramanathan has conducted workshops for students and taught at KRIVIA, IDC (IIT Powai), the University of Mumbai, and Symbiosis (Pune). He has also been associated with at least 20 educational institutes across the country.
Playwriting
Title
Year
Acclamation
I Am I; What It Is; Gagan Mahal; Etc.
(1987 to 1993)
Award-winning inter-collegiate one-act plays
Nothing – A Play Without Words
1990
Shanti, Shanti, It’s A War
1993
All India Best Play Award awarded by The Hindu
The Boy Who Stopped Smiling
1998
Curfew
1999
Premiered at the Prithvi Theatre Festival
The Travel Show
2000
Premiered at the Prithvi Theatre Festival
Yaar, What’s The Capital Of Manipur!
2002
Combat
2002
Premiered at the Kala Ghoda Festival
Mahadevbhai 1892-1942
2002
Collaborators
2003
Regional Award Winner of the BBC International Radio Playwriting Competition
Medha And Zoombish
2004
3, Sakina Manzil
2004
Chello Ank(in Gujarati)
2004
Bagged the best play award for the Bhupen Khakkhar Playwriting Competition organised by Mumbai Samachar, Friends of Bhupen Khakkar, Image Publications and Coffee Mates.
Cotton 56, Polyester 84
2006
Bagged the META best play and best playwright award[5]
Three Ladies Of Ibsen
2006
Medha And Zoombish II
2007
Shakespeare And She
2008
Jazz
2008
Kashmir Kashmir
2009
Comrade Kumbhakarna
2011
The Diary Of A Word
2012
Postcards From Bardoli
2013
Theatrical adaptations
Title
Year
Adapted from
Translator Of Ded Inch Upar (Into English)
1997
Hindi original by Nirmal Verma
L’ Amante Anglaise (In English)
2002
Based on French play by Marguerite Duras
Steppenwolf
2002
Based on Herman Hesse’s novel in German. Staged as part of the Herman Hesse Celebrations at Max Mueller Bhavan, Mumbai
The Train To Argentina
2002
Theatrical adaptation of play by Thuppatan
Gandhi Katha
2003
The Sanjivani Super Show
2004
Adaptation of Adya Rangacharya’s Kannada play, SANJIVANI
A Play About A Painter
2004
Edoardo Erba’s Italian drama
Direction
Title
Year
Notes
Krapp’s Last Tape
1989
Playwright: Samuel Beckett
Deathwatch
1991
Playwright: Jean Genet
Audience And Mistake (actor &c-Director)
1994
Playwright: Vaclav Havel
Credit Titles
1997
Playwright: Vijay Padki. A staged play-reading
The Boy Who Stopped Smiling
1998
Me Grandad ‘Ad An Elephant
1998
Theatrical adaptation of the Malayalam novella by Vaikom Mohammed Basheer, into a dramatized presentation (Group co-ordination & direction) 1998-99
Co-produced with Katha Publishing and SNDT, University
Yaar, What’s The Capital Of Manipur!
2002
Co-produced by Kamala Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute of Architecture
Mahadevbhai 1892–1942
2002
Premiered at the Prithvi Theatre Festival 2002
L’ Amante Anglaise (in English)
2002
Co-produced by Alliance Francaise, Mumbai
The Train To Argentina
2002
Premiered at the Varkhari Kerala Theatre Festival in Mumbai, on 25 December 2002
Gandhi Katha
2003
Staged reading, premiered at the Gujarati Forbes Sabha’s book launch of Narayan Desai’s four-volume biography on Mahatma Gandhi, in Mumbai on 2 October 2003
The Sanjivani Super Show
2004
Staged during the 100th Birth Anniversary of the Adya Rangacharya, at Mysore Association, Mumbai
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