Poet-Playwright Gopi Warrier’s two plays “Ego of the Yogis” and “Polyester Lordship” to be showcased in Paris after London
Adi Sankaracharya's Sanskrit Shlokas in Europe for the 1st time
ever sung by two leading classical singers from Kerala
Ø A must for
all corporate executives, yoga students and spiritual seekers
Ø Two major
plays on Corporate Responsibility and the Search for Spirituality reflecting
contemporary times
Ø Hologram of
the illusory universe used in the play designed by Hollywood’s famous special
effects director Jon Bunker
Mumbai, May 30, 2014: Theatre
of Devas and New End Theatre will soon showcase the two major plays by leading
poet and playwright Gopi Warrier (an Alumnus of London Business
School, Ècole des Haute Études Commerciàles and New York University
Graduate School of Business) in the rest of Europe including Paris &
regional theatres after the magnificent debut at the Steiner Theatre in London in
April 2014.
Directed
by Alex Crampton, the cast contains leading British actors and actresses
including the beautiful Sarah Hall, classical actor Tim Heath, Sanjiv Hayre
(who has acted as Jawaharlal Nehru), Lloyd Morris, Gillian Kirkpatrick, Tim
Hilborne and Paul Casson amongst others. On selected days there will be discussions
with writers, intellectuals, corporate leaders and spiritual teachers on the
issues raised in the play.
The two
plays of Gopi Warrier had a significant impact on London's elite theatre
audiences. Here are the reviews…
Dr.
Michael Yorke (Ph. D., Senior Tutor: Ethnographic Film, University College
London, who has made films for Channel 4 – spiritual films mostly in India;
Director of the BBC for 20 years): “We were fascinated with Gopi's two plays
and particularly by the Ego of the Yogis – provocative and suitably
cynical. It must have been a huge job to
manage that production. It worked very
well at the Steiner Theatre – a very apt venue with plenty of good spirits echoing
round the hall. It was very professional, superbly directed and acted. We were
very impressed.”
Werner
Menski (MA PhD, Professor of South Asian Laws, School of Law, SOAS, University
of London, London WC1H 0XG, Chair, Centre for Ethnic Minority Studies (CEMS),
UK Jurist of the Year 2009) “Each of the double bill plays was extraordinary
and although they were totally different in the themes they had your
fingerprint of a human being who is highly spiritual and full of abhorrence to
corruption. The plays were written extremely well, the pace was good and the
interest it held for the audience was consistent. ‘Ego of the Yogis’ really
picked up current issues and dealt with them in a multi-layered way, and the
cast were excellent and the play itself entertaining and thought-provoking. ‘Polyester
Lordship’ was a depressingly familiar story of big business intervention in the
lives of people in our globalised context, and the never-ending scope for
discretion and corruptions of all kind, which are a feature of all societies,
as we know only too well. Nobody can accuse Warrier of only picking up bad
things from this culture or that, as his work provides a very well-grounded
critical perspective of how human society, anywhere, struggles to survive in
decency and sanity.”
Myriam
Brunswic Citron: “Two intellectually stimulating plays cleverly exposing the
corruption of the oriental spiritual doctrines and paths to happiness with the
quick profit, greedy western aspiration. The play is excellently acted and the
naturalistic script flows very well and keeps its pace. The production is
simple, sharp and effective. Two excellent plays which will stimulate
reflection. Not to be missed.”
Theatre
Club Review - Louise Pearlman: “Honest, realistic writing. Good actors had the
ability to immediately draw the audience into the characters - two interesting
plays and well worth seeing.”
The two
powerful plays, which deal with important contemporary themes, have been
conceptualised by the legendary Gopi Warrier, whose exploration of Eastern and
Western philosophies is an inspiration to many. Warrier evokes his unique presentation
abilities to make people see through the shallowness of materialistic society
and reach into our inner souls so tainted by the materialism of this world. "Polyester
Lordship" masterfully portrays the absence of corporate social
responsibility to workers and consumers in the often corrupt world of
international business. It debates International Business Corruption vs. Social
Responsibility in the quest for peerage. “Ego of the Yogis” is a more regretful
yet romantic evocation of the search for true love and of the
contamination of yoga and spirituality in the Western world and in India, the
original home of yoga. It is a timeless saga of an upper-class English woman’s
quest for true love and spirituality in an utterly contaminated world.
For the first time, the great Sage Adi Shankara's famous
Sanskrit Poem "Kanakadhara Stavam" which he recites in the house of a
poor woman who gives him alms is sung on the Theatre stage in London's theatre
stage in the play “Ego of the Yogis”. In the
example of Adi Shankara is cited to show the detachment of great Indian Sages
in comparison to the egotistical and materialistic pursuit of Yoga in the west.
The writer very much wanted a singer from India to recite these and chose two
leading classical singers from Kerala to sing this and some excerpts from the
song of Vasavadatta as she waits impatiently for the monk.
Another
important showpiece in the play “Ego of
the Yogis” is that of how the latest Japanese research mathematically
proves the illusory nature of the world as the Hindus always believed. The
hologram of the illusory universe was designed for Warrier by Jon Bunker, the
leading special effects director for Hollywood films who has worked on ‘Star
Wars’ and with Tom Cruise and George Clooney. This is based on Hindu Yantras of
the cosmos that are practically in every temple and on which the deities are
placed. Creating the Kshetra - the force field of the temple. These Yantras are
representative of the ‘maya’ - the illusory nature of the universe which Hindu
philosophy has always espoused and has NOW BEEN MATHEMATICALLY and
scientifically proven by the researchers at the Ibaraki University in Japan.
PLAY
1: “Ego of the Yogis”- Search for Spirituality in this Utterly
Contaminated World
The play centres on an upper class English woman’s quest for true love and her search for a spiritual teacher. Disillusioned by her marriage she meets an Indian teacher briefly who tells her that all life is an illusion and only through yoga and meditation can one attain liberation from the cycles of birth and death. To find the teacher again she encounters a number of fake gurus and becomes more and more disenchanted with the contemporary world of spiritual seekers until her secret obsession is resolved unexpectedly.
The play centres on an upper class English woman’s quest for true love and her search for a spiritual teacher. Disillusioned by her marriage she meets an Indian teacher briefly who tells her that all life is an illusion and only through yoga and meditation can one attain liberation from the cycles of birth and death. To find the teacher again she encounters a number of fake gurus and becomes more and more disenchanted with the contemporary world of spiritual seekers until her secret obsession is resolved unexpectedly.
PLAY 2: “Polyester Lordship” - International Business Corruption vs. Social Responsibility in the Quest for a Peerage
This
play about the corrupt nature of many acquisitions and mergers, involving
international businesses in most countries but particularly in Asia, takes the
audience through the murky negotiations for the acquisition of an Indian
textile factory. Aggressive executives from London deal with the shady
underworld - but also honourable characters, both British and Indian, who
demonstrate principled corporate responsibility to workers and the local
community. An evolving relationship between two of the directors brings an
element of love and compassion into the tense and very dangerous developments in
the factory and the city of Mumbai as the deal progresses.
About Gopi Warrier: Gopi
Warrier has lived in London for 34 years. He studied English Literature in
India and then came to London Business School and completed an MBA in
International Business from here and from Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales
in Paris and the New York University Graduate School of Business. He comes from a well known and
distinguished family of writers, physicians, diplomats and administrators
including Chief Ministers to the erstwhile kings of Kerala. His grand father M.
R. Krishna Warrier was a leading poet of Kerala and his father G. P. Warrier
the Chairman of the Indian National Railways and Principal Secretary to the
Government of India. Warrier has published three volumes of poetry including
Varaha The Secret of Evolution and the Lament of JC and the art film produced
and co-directed by him based on his poetry was nominated for the best spiritual
film award at the Greatlakes film festival in the U.S and also chosen to be
exhibited at Canadian, French and Hongkong film festivals. He has staged five
plays in London including God Sports, The Tenth Incarnation, Genesis of
Karma-Three Faces of Evil, Siddhivinayak Saves Mumbai from Terror Attack. Warrier
also started McAlpine, Thorpe and Warrier, the management consultancy firm in
London and also founded the Ayurvedic Company of the Great Britain as well as
the Delhi London Poetry foundation to encourage young poets to write. Gopi
Warrier has also authored several books on Ayurveda, India’s ancient medical
system including: - The Complete Illustrated Guide to Ayurveda (with Deepika
Gunwant); - Ayurveda, The Right Way to Live; and - The Secrets of Ayurveda (with Dr. Harsh Varma
and Karen Sullivan).
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