Manjit Kaur
Badal Sircar’s Procession (Michhil) is a seminal work in the evolution of Indian political theatre, where the form, content, and performance strategy merge to analyze social inequality and authoritarianism. This paper explores how Sircar’s Third Theatre his experimental, non-proscenium mode of performance transforms the very act of theatre into a participatory space of political resistance. Departing from conventional theatrical norms, Procession discards elaborate sets, fixed staging, and aesthetic detachment in favour of immediacy, intimacy, and ideological clarity. The play becomes a site where the marginalized find voice and where the audience is compelled not only to watch but also to engage. Sircar’s Third Theatre philosophy emphasizes decentralization and accessibility, aiming to bring theatre to public spaces parks, streets, slums thereby reaching communities historically excluded from elite cultural production.
In Procession, themes of mass disillusionment, class struggle, and institutional violence resonate through chorus-like dialogue and shifting narrative voices. This technique democratizes performance and echoes the collective anxieties of a society in transition. The actors function as both characters and commentators, blurring the line between fiction and lived reality. Sircar redefined the audience’s role from passive observer to critical co-thinker. The paper argues that Procession is not merely a dramatic representation of protest but a rehearsal for real-world action, where theatre becomes a tool for consciousness-raising and collective empowerment. Sircar’s work, particularly through Procession, foregrounds the political potential of performance, insisting that theatre must not just reflect society but actively intervene in it.
Pages: 562-564 | 77 Views 45 Downloads