Wednesday, 27 August 2014

THE MICROPHONES OF MUSSOORIE

In 1981, as a  Fresher  in Delhi University , I decided to attend a show by the  Ghanaian Afro- pop band Osibisa  - for two reasons.  It  had a percussionist by the impressive name of Daku Potato and the performance was an all night show. Or so I thought. For those uninitiated to this group, listen to its rendition of Raghupati Raghav Raja Ram on You Tube. So, fortified and blitzed for a night long entertainment,  I reached India Gate at around 11 pm along with my friend Amit Jha, only to discover it was an evening function and the fellows were winding up. It was a cold night, the cops who accosted us were unhelpful, the DTC Night Specials sped past us.  Why am I  taken up by surprise at the turn of events which I could have easily tackled with a bit of an extra diligence? Such things end up as tragedy or a comedy or as mixture of both as it once happened with me in Mussoorie.

When lack of due diligence combines with microphones, the resultant cocktail  is devastating.The testing  and handling of microphones in themselves are events at an event - almost sub plots of a play. Malfunctioning of mics have been occasions for silent glare, loud arguments and even fisticuffs amongst  artistes and technicians. But when the tragedy  of microphones struck me in Mussoorie, surprisingly it had nothing to do with testing or handling  or malfunctioning of mics.

It was during my Foundation Course at Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration, Mussourie. Three hundred and fifty odd young officers of the different civil services  had assembled at Mussourie. The slew of activities in these fun filled three and a half months. 

Morning jogs and Whispering Windows walks,
Eyes agog and cheerful talks,
Guest lectures and back benchers, 
Teen patti and trekking adventures,
The afternoon halts  at the post office,
The anxious waits at the Director's office,
Courting, escorting by the prim and proper
Leer and jeer by the aggressively improper, 
New games of billiards and of squash, 
Of village visits and  the evening slosh,
The one act plays at Sardar Patel Hall, 
Tea and snacks at Hari's stall. 

The One Act Play was a regular  event of this course. Bhaiyya selected  the play "Chandragupta " penned by the celebrated writer Jayshankar Prasad as our entry.He brushed aside my previous experience in Class 5 when I had forgotten the lines in a play which  had led to two teachers being summoned by the Principal, and instead, pencilled me to play the role of Chandragupta.  Of course, Sanjay Pandey, who was a couple of years senior, chose himself . He would settle for nothing less than Raja Nand because it gave him the maximum time to sit  on the throne.  Most of the others  were unwilling, a few singularly unsuitable .  But the cast was cast in stone and Bhaiyya  picked  up the role of Chanakya for himself and started the rehearsals - mainly in my room at  14, Mahanadi after afternoon classes. 

Bhaiya wrote the dialogues, directed and even sang one song ( I only remember the words 'jahan pauncha anjaan khsitij per'…) which would  be repeatedly aired from the nepathya. He would pat us on the back, and in stark contrast to our pessimism, exuded confidence about winning the competition. Diction, delivery, facial expression, sword fight, the dress - he decided. He also gave a valuable tip.

' Vivek, Sanjay Sir, Rajinder, Anil, Alkesh,' he told  us repeatedly in closed huddles, "there would no  microphones in Sardar Patel Auditorium. We should be shouting at the top of our voices to be heard even by the backbenchers."

He even distributed  cough drops after the rehearsals and begged me  to me cut my smoking. 

Finally the day arrived- a particularly cold evening in November. Bhaiya had 'managed' to have our play listed  first. There were two reasons. One was that most of us were thinly  clad for a hill station winter  and second , he was not sure how long he could hold back some of the cast from hitting the bottle. Besides,  we would have the advantage of  a fresh audience. We trooped in.  The song rang out from the nepathya and Raja Nand, accompanied by me,  walked in and  started the proceedings , bellowing orders to the darbaris and santris. Then he bellowed a question on state matter to me, I also bellowed back and in no time  it was 

'Here a bellow, there a bellow,
 Every where a bellow bellow.'  

Which was fine by us  because that  is how  we had rehearsed. 

But I suddenly felt that something was amiss. Firstly, the audience in the first row started to smile in an unhelpful and  funny manner - a few  ladies  covered their ears,  and  even close buddy ICP Keshari followed suit. Then a wolf whistle  flew in from somewhere to signal a few more.  By  then I realised that even our ears were agitating.What to talk of the most soporific elements in the audience,  our bellows would have even woken up a sedated  python and sent the mice scurrying to their chthonic shelters if there had been any.

So without trying to make it obvious and managing not to forget my lines ,  I began to search for the reason. I let my eyes wander furtively, just the way one sniffs searchingly when someone breaks wind a bus.  Then I saw. Suspended from the ceiling, there were at least ten microphones -in rapt attention and dutiful submission to amplify the sound of the quietest shuffle and  the weakest muffle. And here we were, shouting,  thinking there  will be no mikes!!

Now for the damage control. I first beckoned at Rajinder Vij, the Selukus Nikator,  to lower his voice.
Not an expert at  Dumb Charades, he stopped in between , arched his eyebrows , and promptly forgot his lines! More jeers.  Anjali and Radha ,  Oindrilla and Sundari, KPP Rao and Bhaskar Mahanta left the hall. Alka, Chow, Bullu,  Atul, Punnu  and Poonam followed them. Catcalls flew in like bats in an abandoned garage.

Sanjay Pandey,  the Raja Nand, perched on a  throne and dressed in peacock colours , bellowed, " Tum chupp kyun ho Selukus?"

Selukus, thoroughly shaken  up by this time, jumped to the command of the royalty and seniority, but could only pout  his lips - in silent amplification and vigorous animation. 

I intervened,  deviated  from the script, looked  upwards  and lifting my hands at the mics, spoke " Maharaj Nand, kripya shaant ho jaiye, dheeraj rakhiye, yeh kuchh achambhit ho gaye hain." 

Raja Nand, Dhristrashtrically  blind to the mics, never saw the prompt.

He hyper bellowed, " Tumhari yeh dus sahas ki tum hamei shaant rehne ko bologe?

The first two rows , except the judges , jumped out of the hall. More catcalls  followed, prompting Raja Nand to further raise his voice  to drown them.

Bhaiyya made his entry singing 'Jahan Pahuncha Anjan kshitij  per ' to signal the change in cast.  As some others came in , I and Raja Nand went  out into the Green Room . I told him that there are mics which are functioning efficiently, that the Diro was wrong about them  and now we  must speak softly. He took a drag from the cigarette which was being shared by four of us,  wiped the  Raja Rum dribble   and in about three  minutes we trooped inside the stage to stare  at a larger number of empty seats.

Raja  Nand started his  second proceedings on  a much subdued, chastened pitch, I too delivered my dialogues tenderly - but soon realised something was amiss again. The judges started to crane their necks and hood the palm to their ears   to hear us . The backbenhers of Keshav, Mathursaheb, Ilango and Sivaramkrishnana started shouting. Bhaiyya was glaring at us to raise our pitch. Raja Nand,  an ex IITian from  Kanpur,  understood in a jiffy where the problem lay. He rightly  guessed that when we were away, someone had told the technicians to switch off the mics since we were hollering.

So he decided to  do some damage control for a change - he again raised his pitch to status quo ante to make up for the silence of the mics. But with astonsihing alacrity, even before Raja Nand had hit the pitch,  the sound technician, confused by the initial low pitch of Raja Nand's second innings, reverted the volume of the mics to the loud  status  quo ante volume. So again it was  bellows status quo ante. Bhaiya  had given up, and even smiled that luminescent smile which flutters in the eyelids of lambs just before slaughter.  

'Here a bellow, there a bellow,
 Every where a bellow bellow.'  

I conceded it was was too much to expect even my college mate Herman Prit Singh, my teen patti friend Srikant Mahiyariya and my classroom neighbours, Roll Nos. 17 and 18  Alka Thomas and Bandula Sagar,  to stay back and suffer this Comedy of Unadulterated Errors.   My big regret was that when I slew Raja Nand and sat on the throne, and  Bhaiyya  the Chanakya came  to anoint me amidst bellicose bellows of Raja Chandragupta ki jai, there were no cheers except polite and unenthusiastic handclaps  by the judges, about 20-30 officers and a few technicians. We did get a standing applause though- when the curtains came down and the  the audience was assured we were truly done. 





34 comments:

  1. The tale that was originally spun on a summer afternoon to a few faithful students of Hero-Prof, punctuated and interrupted by disturbing elements at office, comes alive at last :) Your comic sense and timing, Sir( ji) is simply sublime!! This is one piece that would increase your fans manifold (may their tribe increase) ...Mark my words!!

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    1. Oh that was one of those rare days there was some work in office, Anuradha.

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  2. College escapades brought to life in this fun piece of comic writing. Some stories are just like that, they get better with each retelling. The photographs supplied also add to the tale. I love the crowns and the chequered dhotis that match the throne covering, all cut suspiciously from the same cloth. Excellent write-up.
    Now to wait, with bated breath: for the motorcycle on top of rickshaw story.


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    1. For me an added delight in writing this was that it made me dig into an old album of Mussoorie photos after a long time. On 25/8/1988 I had started this journey, about 26 years ago, 30 kilos less.

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  3. Hilarious is too short an expression. One can almost visualize what happened that fateful night. Sirji do keep us posted with such wonderful experiences.

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  4. Once again Fabulous writing which brings Reader's audience to Life. "Comedy of Unadultered Errors!!" LOL!!

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  6. This was too good. I could not help holding back my laughter during the lunch break reading through this. I could visualize a you yelling out dialogs, clad in jazzy costumes. Back stage events are always entertaining. Chandragupta sharing a cigarette with Raja Nand during the break reminded me of a riot in Bihar during a shooting scene of Ramayana (Arun Govil, Deepika Chikhalia)- the screen Sita was seen puffing a cigarette during a break and hell broke loose. Another one in one of those jatra-s in CFRI during Diwali - a troop from Purulia performing Mahabharat, where a man was dressed up as Kunti was spotted smoking a beedi off stage (while still in stage costume). Of course it started a laughter riot rather than a real riot.
    You started with Osibisa and that brought back memories of the 1 hr black and white TV program we saw in 1981 - they started with ojaye oja, and then went on to Raghupati Raghava - the sheer energy of the band especially the bare chested percussionist Daku Potato was something we never saw before.

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    1. Hi Indranil. Yes, these incidents of mythological characters smoking and triggering hungama are quite common and widely reported. This CFRI colony scene could have happened anywhere. One of the best pictures which brings out these gaffes brilliantly is Delhi 6.

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    2. Indranil, you were fortunate to see a one hour B&W programme on Osibisa.
      That day, I first went with Amit Jha to his DCP Uncle Giru Maamu to get passes. We wanted for an hour but when his Uncle came and was asked for passes, he snapped," Padhna likhna sadhe bayees, aur chalein hain Osibisa sun ne. Bhago yahan se."

      Amit Jha was quite embarrassed , but managed to introduce me. But the Mamu went on at me also, " Tum kyun is laphander aur nalayak ke saath samay barbaad kar rahe ho? Hain?"

      We scampered away with our tails within our legs.

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  7. Ah! I had a glimpse of 14 Mahanadi , the scene of the rehearsals- it was being demolished to make way for newer constructions when we visited Mussoorie a couple of years ago.

    I have become a big fan of Raja Nand and Bhaiyya of course I have met.In my school, too, such goof ups happen during school functions- but they are by small kids. How could you people, the country's bright civil servants ,commit such an error ? No wonder desh ka yeh haal hai.

    And I must mention about you leaving behind your pair of expensive sneakers in the hotel where we stayed in Mussoorie- had it not been for our nephew Manish, it would have taken more than four months to reach Kolkata. It has become a habit with you.

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    1. I am sure the last has not been heard of this pair of sneakers!!

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  8. "..कभी हम नहीं, और कभी तुम नहीं थे।"

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  9. Drama in real life.....haha. Made me laugh out loud. Too funny to imagine and poor raja Nand. It must have been a real earful of errors. Keep writing these titbits of life's experiences....makes happy reading.

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    1. Vineeta, Arrey don't poor Raja Nand. He was a bright IITian and later on in service, created a sensation by his expose of Cobbler Scams which rocked Maharashtra around 2006. And a very powerful long distance runner.

      But yes, he had some strange ways and I loved him for that. Along side us, there was another group which was staging the famous play Ek Thha Gadha . One fellow had played the role of a darbari who was killed despite his plea. During the final Dress Rehearsal, this IPS officer, after finishing his role, came over to Sanjay Pandey, the Raja Nand and asked in his Sachin Tendularesque voice, " Sir, how did I do my role?"

      Normally out of politeness, one would have said 'well done, yaar' even when not convinced. But Raja Nand hollered," You are an IPS officer. Why did you accept such a role where you have to grovel and beg for your life? I am disgusted."

      The poor fellow didn't know where to look at.

      Later on I asked him as to why he was being so harsh he said that when he was very young, his father had almost turned him out of the house for having played the role of a thief in a primary school play!

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  10. Drama in real life.....haha. Made me laugh out loud. Too funny to imagine and poor raja Nand. It must have been a real earful of errors. Keep writing these titbits of life's experiences....makes happy reading.

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  11. i bellowed out into a laughter reading this...u r a remarkable story teller.

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  12. Amazing rendition Vivek.... You do have a perfect knack for sublime presentation..... Keep going.... Thoroughly enjoyed this blog too as it brought back wonderful memories. Yeh dil maange more......

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  13. There was never a doubt about it, Rajan!!

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  14. O My God! Had real tough time controlling my laughter! Could imagine each and every moment on and off the stage! Imagine, Raja Nand sharing a cigg with Chandragupta....twist to the real tale! As for that screeching sound of the microphone, had experienced that almost every time a program was staged at our Sindri Club... Hello Hello.... mike testing.... 1 2 3 4..... and all sorts of things! Ah!! What a tale you tell Vivek .... true "Comedy of unadulterated error"!!!!

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  15. A nice observation on mikes- so here to it more, Shikha.
    The" hello hello mike testing" , the " check check" baritone sounds, the 'one teu three foh five six saven eight nine ten' serial testing, the dry throat gargle, the 'phoo phoo' blow the air and the tap with the knuckles are a few examples of mic testing.


    And here to on holding the mike styles-There is a way of fixing mics as per the height of the artist, and there is a way of holding the mic- some hold it like a lollipop , some look into it and some look away from it, some sing into it and some sway away in rhythmic cycles, some hold it forcefully as a spouse's neck in a heated argument and some rest it on the arched knee and inch forward their mouths to imitate a forceful smooch.

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  16. Bones may creak,hair grey,but the spirit remains the same....indomitable and out to touch the sky ! So happy to find the good ole brat not changing course as he says it all in style. And say you do with your characteristic wit sugarcoated with metaphor,irony and the resultant humor. In the process,the sweat,the fun and the pun et all--in fact the Romance of Mussorie comes back to the fore. Great piece indeed. Kudos bugger !

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    1. Bhaski,
      There you go. I may even think about writing an IOU for Rs. 300/- in Gauhati, if you remember.

      And Shrikant has asked me write about the 'Smoking shoe' in Mussoorie.
      The Tej chal has still not come to a kadam taal!!
      Thanks buddy.

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  17. Brilliant narration…. hilarious. Brother, you are blessed with the gift of story-telling. Asked my son and wife to read the piece to share the nostalgia of Mussourie. It reminds me of our play slotted after your ‘managed’ first slot. Kamal Saxena was the Director. I had the audacity to play the role of a ‘Sutradhar’, who has to deliver dialogues in chaste Hindi- Imagine the plight of a non-Hindi speaking person. Being at the receiving end of directional-banter of Kamal, I had to improve my diction and still cherish the pat (relief?) from the ‘Lucknowvi’ director after the play was over. Satyajit

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  18. Satyajit thanks.
    I do remember that play, Ek Thha Gadha written by Sharat Joshi. A small aside on the Dress Rehearsal play between one of your cast and our Raja Nand is mentioned in my reply to Vineeta above. I am sure you"ll recognize the person.

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  19. Vivek...Here is CHEERS to you for such a lovely blog with a glass of toddy from Gods' Own Country and a disclaimer "DRINKING IS INJURIOUS TO HEALTH" :) (before it is eased out from the State), accompanied by the memories of .... ‘Killele Killele Aao Aao Killele..., Mama Mama Killele ....Papa Papa Killele’.....beautiful, interesting and rib-tickling writing . Mazaa aa gaya. Distributing cough drops....ha..ha...ha...ha....hilarious. I remember there was this joke going around during school and college days where parts of coversation gets deleted.
    It was in 1983 (I have to re-confirm the year with my sister Liz but I write it down as I am 99.9 % sure), that Osibisa came to Ernakulam. Liz, myself and half a dozen of us were in college and having a great time. Two incidents remain in the portals of my memory which are interlinked. Our gang of girls were asked to model for a friends' clothes collection at that time. No designer label and done for free. It was a time of great friendships, sharing and not worrying about labels, status symbols and sans hypocrisy. We walked the ramp with elan. I remember the entire group being asked by the organisers to take care of the guests' seating on the day of the Osibisa concert. We all were thrilled to bits since we would get a chance to meet the group. Meet them we did. And what a concert it was. African rhythm is meant for dancing and from the minute the concert took off and long after it ended, people were on their feet dancing. Before the concert started I remember cousins and friends who came to watch the concert asking about the group members . Strange how at that age I described them as African guys from Ghana who played foot thumping music. Today my description would be much different, warmer, and more detailed. Another memory is of this guy and the magic he weaved through drumbeats. A conversation that has stayed in my mind of the group was when an Osibisa team member introduced himself as, "I am a roadie...I take care of all the travel arrangements". I remember thinking, "What kind of occupation is that?" It gave impetus to the thought that the world is not all about being a doctor or an engineer. It has got too many varied people and occupations that one could more than fathom.
    Regards. Have a great weekend.

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  20. Hello Rachel,
    Yes, school plays were quite often like this!!
    What is happening to God's Own Country? No more liquor? Will roadies go there anymore??
    Hey, I should touch you. You people actually met these guys whereas mine ended in a big fiasco?
    Africans have a great ear , feel and feet for music, indeed.

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  21. Wood house would have enjoyed this. What a joyous piece! Typical academy play. Brings back memories of the good old days.

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  22. Again a block buster!!!!Top of the charts. Story telling at one of its best. Hilarious. Some how reminded of my unadulterated tragedy that snuffed out what ever little pretensions I nursed for playacting. Was probably in Std 6th or7th, a bubbly young kid, sitting in the audience at the Prize Nite function of my school. And suddenly I felt a gentle nudge on my right elbow. It was Naveen Manchanda, easily one of the finest of theNobilian specie. He half pulled and half coaxed me to the green room. I had to act!!! Never mind the nerves, kid, I was told since I had to speak just three words,"I am Wednesday". Apparently, Wednesday had not turned up and I had to fit into his shoes. Despite my protestations and bellowing, make up was thrust and at the appropriate time, I was pushed on the stage. We were seven of us, each representing a day. Something of course went wrong in the sequence of the way we were pushed and I saw myself standing next to Monday. And my turn came. I remained silent. After Monday, it had to be Tuesday. But I was Wednesday. So mum I kept, till the lead actor, our very own Naveen bellowed, "who are you"?. Now I had to speak. So very confidently, I bellowed, "I am Tuesday". Very happy with myself that I had saved the day with my presence of mind. I do not remember what happened afterwards since people, both on stage and back stage, let out a cry of agony and disappointment. The wrong sequencing, as I learnt later, was in the original script and I had 'malfunctioned'!!!

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  23. Hahaha! That was so funny. It must have been quite significantly so for you to carry the minutest of details in your memory for so long! I could visualize the initial embarrassment, followed by the gaalis to the " sound man", blaming the diro for the misinformation about the mics and then the LAUGHS!! Smoking out the embarrassment dragging on cigs and diluting the uneasiness over endless cups of chais over countless adda sessions and creating deep within, (along with coatings of nicotine), memories! The memories turned into treasures, over the years, an insurance against bad, sad days. And thank the heavens that something went so wrong that day to make it Oh! So memorable! Life's true treasures that you can't put a numeric value to :)
    Enjoyed this chapter too, Vivek

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  24. Pampa,
    A bit of embarrassment this may have been for Raja Nand who was dating a colleague - but it seems it did not matter much as he sailed through right till marriage.
    The early Academy days were not much different from the college ones, so this was a transaction which was fairly par for the course.
    But yes, recollecting and finally putting fingers on the keyboard also made me reconnect with a few of that cast and other friends of those days. And yes many nicotine stained and sepia coloured memories flitted past.

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  25. "Oh Christ, the mic is alive !" Am reminded of the faux pas committed by Presidents Reagan, the Bush(es) and the colourful Clinton. Microphones, like golf, have been great levellers.
    Bloopers galore !
    I actually guffawed in the presence of some peers while reading this - resulting in a reading aloud of this and other earlier blogs penned by you, Vivek, on public demand, of the private audience. Thankfully, in the enclosed confines of the room, over sunset rehydrations, mics were not needed.
    May your bellow never mellow, my dear happy fellow !!

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  26. mic-ro(w)-mega-cthonic thunder
    nary a play plundered
    whereof merry mirth is rendered

    'Sound is all repercussion, outburst, scandal...it is thus that the sound is symbol par excellence--a reaching beyond the given.'--Emmanuel Levinas

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