MMS Ramayana to present 40th production

Ambassador Venkatesan Ashok
Ambassador Venkatesan Ashok
Ambassador Venkatesan Ashok

SAN JOSE, CA: Mount Madonna School (MMS) presents its 40th anniversary production of Ramayana!, the ancient epic adapted for modern audiences and set to a mix of traditional and contemporary music.

Ramayana! returns to delight audiences of all ages June 7-10 at the Mexican Heritage Theater in San Jose. All seats are reserved and tickets are on sale now at ramayana.brownpapertickets.com (June 8-10 performances) and Ramayana-preview.brownpapertickets.com (June 7 Dress Preview).
Ambassador Venkatesan Ashok, Consul General of India, San Francisco, will be a special guest at the show.

“I am delighted to attend, once again, the annual production of Ramayana! by Mount Madonna School,” said Ambassador Ashok. “This year is special as it celebrates the 40th anniversary show of this epic story of good over evil. My wife and I have been greatly impressed by the effort and attention to detail put in by students from across the school. What makes this so remarkable is the general transition, whereby parents who acted in the play in their school days now come to see their children and grandchildren bring alive a story which forms part of a living heritage and tradition, and which has provided comfort and solace to millions of people for thousands of years.”

With a cast and crew approaching 200, and involving every student in the school from preschool to grade 12, Ramayana! tells the story of Prince Ram and Princess Sita and her abduction by the demon King Ravana.

“Ramayana! has been central to Mount Madonna School since its founding,” said Head of School Mary Supriya McDonald. “It’s the culmination of months of work during the academic year and is a year-end celebration for our community embracing diversity and creative self-expression. With this show, we carry forward a tradition inspired by Baba Hari Dass and supported by the Mount Madonna Center.

The Ramayana is a timeless classic teaching the universal values of truth, duty, love and service to the greater good.”

Mount Madonna Center (MMC) for the Creative Arts and Sciences is a residential community and conference center founded in 1978 atop a mountain in Watsonville. Baba Hari Dass, a silent monk, teacher, and practitioner of yoga from India is the founder of the center, which shares a history and mission with the school, and the annual performance of the Ramayana! is part of this mission.

The well-known tale with origins in India was adapted into a musical by members of the Mount Madonna community in the 1970s. The original songs are part of the American rock musical theater tradition, with echoes of Hair and Jesus Christ Superstar, plus a contemporary nod to Hamilton, Broadway’s biggest musical in recent decades.

“Mounting a show that has been part of the fabric of MMS for four decades carries with it the importance of tradition as well as the benefits of familiarity,” commented faculty member Sampad Kachuck, currently in his 35th year directing the production.

“Some students have participated since they were in preschool. Although new songs, script changes and technical aspects are often inserted, the form stays mainly the same. As we approach a new year of Ramayana!, our purpose is not to merely re-create what has been done in the past, as brilliant as those productions and characterizations may have been. Instead, the true value of the endeavor lies in our willingness to be present, engaged, and, within our dynamic collaboration, open to new discovery.”

Indeed the directors guide and give structure, but more importantly, their mission is to enable and set an inviting table for young actors to instill their own creativity, imagination, and ownership of their parts, and their play. Ramayana! is an emblematic example of theater as community. The development of theatrical skills and strengthening of confidence to be bold in presentation are woven into the directing team’s time with the students.

“Over the course of four-plus months, we work and play hard, and through teamwork and trust, take the risks of engagement, experimentation and discovery,” added Kachuck. “This dedication is what makes each year’s production new. In the end, we create a play called Ramayana!, paradoxically both familiar and quintessentially unique.”

The current version of the show features choreographed fight scenes, monkeys and monsters, comedy, and deep introspection by many characters, including King Ravana (in his unique ten-headed costume). Also within the action are rousing choreographed dances from Bharatanatyam to hip hop, as well as plenty of stage combat and spectacle.

The costumes, demon and monkey masks, elaborate sets, props, and monster rigs (such as Kumbhakarna, a 25-foot puppet with a radio-controlled mechanical mouth and eyes) were created by Baba Hari Dass, as well as artisans associated with both the center and the school.

Every item in the show is a work of handmade art.
“I see Ramayana! as a beautiful amalgamation of tradition and community,” said Kachuck. “The power of theatre, and of this play in particular, is how it brings all kinds together. On the production end we work side by side and once the performance occurs, each of us as audience or participant can have our own experience, while acknowledging and honoring the efforts of the whole.”

Ramayana! is a Broadway-caliber production, unique in its ambition. Forty years running, the show is a major contribution to the artistic and cultural life of the San Francisco and Monterey bay areas, the expression of a living tradition with ties to India and the global Indian Diaspora, and a unique treasure for generations of students and theater goers.

India Post News Service

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