Thursday, April 30, 2009

Wuthering Heights searing heat of India in a Bollywood-style





British novel Wuthering Heights has been moved from the windswept moors of Yorkshire to the searing heat of India in a Bollywood-style production hitting the London stage this week.

British TV actor Deepak Verma has given Emily Bronte's tale a drastic makeover, tapping into the fast-rising profile of Bollywood which is attracting a wider audience thanks to the Oscar-winning film Slumdog Millionaire.



In the production at the Lyric Hammersmith theatre in west London, the novel's main character - the brooding Heathcliff - has been renamed Krishnan and his search for love is played out against a dazzling swirl of colour.

The director of the play, Kristine Landon-Smith, is half-Indian and half-Australian.

She says the biggest hurdle she faced was taking the original story of love and heartbreak in the 18th century and setting it to music.

"One of the biggest challenges is making a new musical. We haven't just put Wuthering Heights into an Indian setting, we've made it into a musical and therein lies a huge challenge," she told AFP.



"We kept the production in the same timeframe as the book," she added.

"At that time in India there was a real hierarchy and a class system and all that sat very well with the social context of the novel."

Verma, a former star of popular British soap opera Eastenders, says Wuthering Heights was "just perfect" for adaptation.

"There are so many things about it that just fitted in with aspects of Indian culture," he said.

"What interested me is the ghostly, haunting aspect of the book.

"The Victorian values in the novel are also found in Indian society and the desert is a harsh place, just like the moors of Yorkshire."

The play has been produced by the Tamasha theatre company.




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