Outrage in Goa over govt move to censor tiatr

Outrage in Goa over govt move to censor tiatr
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Highlights

The BJP-led Goa government\'s third attempt in the last one year to censor a nearly tiatr or teatro, a century-old street theatre form, has triggered outrage in the influential theatre community and invited flak from the opposition.

Panaji: The BJP-led Goa government's third attempt in the last one year to censor a nearly tiatr or teatro, a century-old street theatre form, has triggered outrage in the influential theatre community and invited flak from the opposition.

While the opposition has accused the Goa government of being dictatorial, over 400 tiatr performers, including the biggest exponents of the organic performing art form, have accused the government of muzzling freedom of expression. The controversy comes at a time when newly-appointed Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) chairperson Pankaj Nihalani has issued a controversial diktat blacklisting 'offensive' words from Indian films.

"Any move to have this censored in advance will kill the very spirit and the nature of this art form," Francis de Tuem, a popular tiatrist who has in the past been arrested for allegedly defamatory songs, told IANS. He is one of the 400 tiatr performers who signed a memorandum earlier this week swearing to oppose what they call a draconian move by the government.

For thousands of Goans, especially Catholics, a tiatr is more than just a play or a theatre outing. With its socially and politically relevant and organic themes, watching a tiatr show on weekends, religious feast days and holidays is like watching their own lives play out under bright lights, mixed with a bit of banter and slapstick fun and a touch of tragedy. Tiatrs are usually made up of two components - the play and the songs between acts. These are necessarily unconnected to each other. Interestingly, the roots of the tiatr are embedded not in an Indian art form, but owes its inspiration to Italian operettas which were a rage in colonial India, especially in Bombay (now Mumbai) right from the late 1800s.

Which is why the BJP-ruled government's move to enact the "Goa Licensing and Controlling Places Of Public Amusement (Other Than Cinema) and Performances for Public Amusement Rules 2015" has set the proverbial alarm bells ringing. Director of Information and Publicity Arvind Bugde has already confirmed to the media that the government has begun a "process to analyse whether there is a need to have a censor board or not, to monitor tiatr and Marathi drama in the state".

"There is no doubt that this is an attempt to muzzle the right to free expression, especially when exposing the misdeeds and scandals of politicians and governments," Oscar Rebello, a member of the AAP, told IANS.


This is not the first time that attempts have been made by the present government to control tiatrs. Last August, during a discussion in the assembly, legislators, including Caitu Silva of the Goa Vikas Party, claimed they had been personally targeted during tiatr performances and had demanded that the art form should be reined in.

By: Mayabhushan Nagvenkar

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