Wednesday 31 October 2012

THE GARDEN


THE GARDEN
THE INVITATION
On 12th and 13th October, 2012, St. Anthony’s High School and St. Joseph Nursery and Kindergarten, in association with TTIS, presented their School Concert. The concert was held at Vidya Mandir Auditorium. The first day was for the parents and guardians of the primary section students. The chief guest on that day was His Grace Archbishop Thomas D’Souza. The second day was for the parents and guardians of the secondary section students. On that day the chief guest was Mrs. Molly Bhowmick (Gomes), the Assistant DI of Secondary Schools. Other guests of honour present on the second day were Bishop Ashoke Biswas, Rev. Fr. Moloy D’Costa and DJ Akash. The programme also featured the launch of the school magazine The Anthonian 2012. 

ARCHBISHOP FELICITATED
HONOURABLE GUESTS


MRS MOLLY BHOWMICK
WELCOME SONG








                       


THE MAGAZINE
DJ AKASH
On both the days the programme started with a welcome song and the felicitation of the guests. On the second day the Headmaster, Fr. Devraj Fernandez, presented the school report. Boys from St. Joseph Nursery and Kindergarten enacted their parts in garish costumes to the accompaniment of Nursery Rhymes sung by the Children’s Choir. It was followed by Koli Dance performed by the boys of Classes One and Two. The major attraction of the concert, though, was the adaptation of Oscar Wilde’s ageless tale “The Selfish Giant” into a musical called “The Garden”. There are several reasons why this story, known to almost everyone, was chosen to be adapted to the stage for the School Concert this year. Primarily, the story is rich in personification. In today’s world people purport to do so much to conserve Nature. Acharya Jagadish Chandra Bose had hypothesized years ago that plants can "feel pain, understand affection etc.” In the play adapted from the story, Nature is a character. When the giant is selfish, Nature has a role of its own to play. The different aspects of Nature are given the ability to perform feats like feeling, sleeping and dancing, almost like acting on their own free will. When the giant is selfish, and closes up his garden winter and cold move into his life. North Wind dances and says that they should invite Hail. This is something the forces of Nature wouldn't do outside the human imagination, but it creates a picture of nature having a life of its own. The flowers refuse to come out of the ground because they feel sad for the children. The trees bend as low as they can for the little boy who is too tiny to climb the tree. The threat of global warming looms large owing to the selfishness of people. In these actions Nature demonstrates a will of its own and becomes a judge of what is good and what is not. Keeping this in mind the play was renamed “The Garden”.

NURSERY RHYMES
KOLI DANCE










CHILDREN IN THE GARDEN
HUMPHREY AND ADAM











There are two larger than life characters in Wilde’s "The Selfish Giant," the giant himself and the Cornish Ogre, who is converted into a speaking character with a wife and children in the play. Far removed from stereotypical perception, the ogre in the play is morally and filially oriented. In folklore, the ogre is a bad creature who eats children. But this ogre, Mr. Gustave Swamplouse is a softie at heart and is matched with a wife who is driven by normal human motivations. The giant in the play symbolizes post-modern man, who is self centered and greedy to the point of being self destructive. In performing acts of will he often performs acts of negation. But he is vulnerable at the core of his heart and his conversion in his state of extreme loneliness and isolation is pretty dramatic. That is the reason the giant in the play is given the name Humphrey, which means “peaceful warrior”. The Giant battles his own narrowness and selfishness to realize the potential that was always latent within him. 

HUMPHREY AND BOB THE BUILDER
SNOW QUEEN ADMINISTERS









THE SWAMPLOUSES


Whereas the spirit of the original story is preserved, the end is changed. Eschewing the death scene of the Giant years after he reconciles himself to the children and breaks down his wall, the play ends with a reunion of sorts. The Giant is reunited by the children’s efforts with another character who has been introduced to enhance the drama. Adam is the Giant’s faithful servant who has served him for several years and who had looked after the castle and the garden in his absence. The character is reminiscent of the servant in Shakespeare’s “As You Like It”. The Giant dismisses him from service on the charge of disobedience when he discovers that the garden was open to children when he was away. The first stage of estrangement from close ones is followed by the next when the Giant has an altercation with the Swamplouses who decide to pay him a surprise visit and inadvertently accuse him of having boasted about his garden which looks nothing like what he had described it.  But when he realizes that the beauty of the garden is on account of the children he comes to terms with his own narrow mindedness. The children, who are the driving spirit of the play, perform a catalytic role in converting the Giant. Not only do they exemplify the goodness, cheerfulness and joy of children all around the world but they also demonstrate a strong conscience, an element that is sadly getting eroded in children in today’s materialistic existence. The child the Giant had helped into the tree performs the same role as he does in the original story with the difference that instead of years later the action takes place days later. Also, the child, who symbolizes Jesus, appears not only to the Giant but to everyone on the stage to make the message he extols universal in its reach. 

THE TIME IS GREY
THE GIANT AT THE WINDOW











Of course, none of this would have ever been written had there not been such a wonderful source material to work with. Oscar Wilde’s timeless tale is pure magic. Equally, the two-hour long musical was made possible to stage in a lavish scale because of the efforts of the students from class three onwards, who acted in the play, and the teams of teachers of the school, who took up various responsibilities to bring the project into fruition. The grand project also required the help of a team of technical associates led by Ms. Sangeeta Bapuli, Ms. Reeta Rohira, Mr. Baidyanath Chakraborty, dress designer Hitesh and choreographers Raj and Vicky. The programme was a roaring success and was greatly applauded. It also heralded the approach of the 150th year of St. Anthony’s High School. 
THE END
TECHNICAL ASSOCIATES

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