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Over the years,Voicing Silence has developed its own approach to the development and performance of plays. The content has ranged from reworkings of traditional myths to current social issues; the genres from folk and traditional to avant-garde ; the format and location from street and open spaces to auditoria, but always low-cost; the audiences from rural to small town to metropolitan; while the occasions have varied from women's conferences, and cultural jathas to college shows and local cultural festivals. The sponsors for these plays have varied too ; educational institutions, small town cultural festival committees, women's groups, Dalit groups and NHOs, literary societies, and Tamil dispora in India, as well as mainstream theatre festivals.
 
Every play has been developed for a specific audience, in a specific form and style, and by a different approach. Some evolved from a series of collective improvisations, others have been adapted from literary texts, and a few specially written by playwrights. Most of the plays have been developed in workshop mode, with emphasis on collective functioning, mutual support and group criticism.
 
The first attempt in late 1992 was a short play, Subbutai, based on collective improvisation. The theme was women's dilemmas in decision making on intimate personal issues in the context of middle-class families struggling to modernize, while compelling women to be the carriers of "traditional" values. Though only performed a few times, it marked the start of an adventure.
 
1993 Chuvadugal (Footsteps)
 
A documentary play based on the biographical novel Pathaiyil Patintha Adigal by Rajam Krishnan, the play presents the life of Maniamma, a revolutionary woman activists of the first half of this century, her understanding of class caste and gender issues and her strategies and struggle. It carries a message of renewal and energy for today's women activists.
Script and Direction: A Mangai
 

 

1994 Mouna-k-kuram (Silenced Prophesies)

 

Based on the image of the independent, widely traveled gypsy (kurathi) of the kuravanji tradition in Tamil literature, the play draws heavily on the folk idiom. Her playful eroticism and earthy rejection of puramic images of femininity - such as Sita, Draupadi and Chandramathi- exposes their basis in patriarchy.
 
Script and Direction : S. Ramanujam
 

 
1995 Pacha Mannu (The Newborn)
 
Set in an interactive street theatre format, this play on female infanticide/foeticide suggests that this act of violence is only the extreme form of the gender discrimination that shadows every woman's life. Each performance deliberately draws the audience into its world, compelling them not only to contribute but also to choose between alternative endings. The cultural jathas continued late into 1996.
 
Script and Direction: A Mangai

 
1997 Vellavi (White Steam)
 
This real life story of a 76-year old dhobi woman who has been the ups and downs of life was carefully documented by a research scholar, and presented as a solo performance set against the backdrop of a dhobi square created by the chorus. The cultural context of gender, involving caste, class, age, education and technical know-how, was laid bare, as the old woman mused aloud to the washing rhythms of the younger generation.
 
Script : Parthibaraja Direction : A. Mangai
 

 
1998 Avvai
 
The play challgenges the image of old age imposed on the ancient Tamil woman poet, by the traditional literary view. Letting through loud and clear the female voice resisting restriction, it shows how the patriarchal world view suppressed the image of a youthful, sensuous woman, fearless in expression, and turned it into a less threatening one.
 
Script : "Inquilab" Direction : A. Mangai
 

 
1999 Pavazhakodi or Family Conflict
 
The first innovative play in a series developed in traditional women performers' own genre, the play used comedy and satire to turn traditional views of male-female relations upside down, poking fun even at figures like Arjuna and Krishna. The linking of the performers' own personal and stage lives through stylistic shifts drew attention to the contemoraneity of the issues.
 
Script and Direction : K.A. Gunasekharan
 

 
2002 Pani-t-thee
 
A solo performance set in the idiom of koothu and isai natakam, the play explores gender identity through the tale of Amba -Shikandi in the Mahabharatha, the woman who struggled to become a main in order to seek justice in a man's world. A parallel text is offered by the transformation of male and female roles through costume, make-up and performance style.
 
Script and Direction : A. Mangai
 
2000 Medai Pesudu (The Stage Speaks)
 
Taking a fesh look at some central women characters in Puranic stories, the three sort plays evolved by women performers through improvisation reexamine the myths, exploring the silences. The theatrical devices of the "speaking stage" and the clowns, voice these dimensions, reinforcing a feminist perspective.
 
Script : M.S. Gandhi Mary Direction : "Aazhi" E. Vengadessin
 
2001 Manimekalai
 
The great Tamil epic by Seethalai Sattanar written in the era of Buddhism - Brahmanism conflict, celebrating woman's autonomy and freedom of choice in a historical context, is deeply relevant to contemporary struggles against caste and gender oppression. Performed by the same all-women group in their own idiom, it allows the voice of a Buddhist nun to reverberate down the centuries.
 
Script : "Inquilab" Direction : A. Mangai