HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentStaging Siachen: Survival drama, from the world’s highest battlefield to Mumbai’s Prithvi Theatre

Staging Siachen: Survival drama, from the world’s highest battlefield to Mumbai’s Prithvi Theatre

In ‘Siachen’, a play written by Aditya Rawal and directed by Makarand Deshpande, a near-primal tale unfolds atop an unforgiving glacier.

June 15, 2023 / 12:18 IST
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Rehearsal of the play 'Siachen' in Prithvi Theatre, with (seated in the centre) the veteran Makarand Deshpande (in blue), Zahan Kapoor (in white) and Aditya Rawal (in black).
Rehearsal of the play 'Siachen' in Prithvi Theatre, with (seated in the centre) the veteran Makarand Deshpande (in blue), Zahan Kapoor (in white) and Aditya Rawal (in black).

Aditya Rawal, actor and writer, was last seen in Hansal Mehta’s film Faraaz, and Anahita Uberoi’s play As Bees in Honey Drown. But, if his words and experience are to go by, he’s hardly the new kid on the block. Aditya, actor Paresh Rawal’s son, studied devised theatre and performance at the London International School of Performing Arts (Lispa) and proceeded to bag an MFA in dramatic writing from the Tisch School of Arts, New York University. He has had experience in screenwriting, acting, and is now set to premier Siachen, a play he wrote during the pandemic.

With him, through the journey of Siachen, and during this interview, is collaborator and friend Zahan Kapoor, Shashi Kapoor’s grandson who also featured in Faraaz. They are co-producers who finish each other’s sentences and seem quite inseparable. We are seated in the green room in Mumbai’s Mithibai College, their rehearsal space as they prepare to mount a production that’s ambitious, in both content and scale.

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Rawal, during his time in NYC, started to write Siachen as an ‘anti-war play’. But, as he expanded his reading list, new and interesting facets of this battlefield atop a glacier emerged. His deep interest in history and geopolitics kept him hooked. “I was always interested in the stats about Siachen; the highest, coldest battlefield, unhabitable heights. But what really hooked me eventually was the fact that nobody wants to be there. There has been no bullet fired on this battlefield for the last 20 years. Lives and money are spent to hold on to a place that nobody really wants. It is a tragedy of the human condition. Every conflict comes from mistrust. That breeds fear and fear drives us in many ways,” says Rawal.

His process is journalistic and includes a lot of research as a means of ‘feeling secure in the world’. Here, it involved speaking to locals and mountaineers and a visit to the region to understand and inhabit the terrain. “But when I start writing I put that (the research) aside. At the end of the day, this is a piece of dramatic writing and at that point, I need to service the craft,” Rawal says.