Sanjana Kapoor

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Revision as of 19:40, 5 December 2017

Sanjana Kapoor

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Contents

Family

Sanjana Kapoor
Sanjana Kapoor
Sanjana Kapoor

See The Kapoors of Filmistan

Personal details

Born in 1967

Her life in cinema and theatre/ 2011

AINDRILA MITRA | 'Being a Kapoor doesn’t mean I’m rich'| Jan 10, 2011 | IndiaTimes/ The Times of India


Theatre is in her blood, but she loves scuba diving. She misses acting, but enjoys managing theatrical productions. The elusive Sanjana Kapoor opens up about her tryst with Prithvi Theatre and more

Her stature and almost tangible dignity are some of the first things you notice about Sanjana Kapoor, the face behind Prithvi Theatre. She successfully showcased one of international theatre's most renowned productions, Complicite's A Disappearing Number recently. "I'd seen the play three years ago in London and was moved by the concept-Ramanujan's mathematics and his quest to answer infinity," she narrates. Irresistibly, the play is a piece of incredibly brilliant theatre-a quality that Sanjana passionately wants to achieve among Indian productions.

The spark of energy heightens when she talks about theatre. "People here want events like the Edinburgh Festival. Organically, Edinburgh comes out of a huge mass of work that has existed for over 2,000 years. Indian theatre is only 250 years old! So, we are fledgling; we need government support, and that requires a change in mindset."

Sanjana had kickstarted her career-like her nieces, Karisma and Kareena Kapoor-as a lead actor in Hero Hiralal (1988). Then what made her take on the mantle of Prithvi? "I did a film when I didn't even know how to act. I went to New York Drama School right after, and that's when I realised that theatre is what I love!" She adds, "I have inherited theatre from both sides of my family-my father, Shashi Kapoor and mother, Jennifer Kendal, who was from Shakespeareana. People tend to forget that. So, it was only logical that this section of Prithviraj Kapoor's lineage would focus on this area." Nevertheless, she confides, "I miss acting at times, but I'm an extraordinarily lazy actor. You need at least eight hours of rehearsal everyday and I don't have that kind of time. I have a family (she is married to Valmik Thapar and has an eight-year-old son) and I'm based in Delhi."

Sanjana's tryst with Prithvi has come a long way, since she took over the reigns in 1993.

"I have watched every play at Prithvi since 1990. I initiated the trustee with a five-point plan: to restart the art gallery, revive the cafe that's essential to be part of a hub, start a production (Prithvi Players), a summer-time programme for children, and a library, which hasn't yet materialised," she marathons, adding, "When I took over, my family just asked me to go and find the money for all my plans. I learnt it the hard way."

So, did her second name help her cause? Sanjana is candid. "I wish my second name didn't matter actually. It's easy for people to pay attention to us rather than an anonymous person, which is probably also why we don't have another Prithvi-like establishment in the city. However, the problem areas have been miniscule compared to the incredible goodwill I've garnered. The only detriment of being a Kapoor is that people, especially government sources, think we are rich, and so we should pay from our pockets. That is shocking! Why should a private family put in their money for a public cause?"

She fortifies, "We haven't been able to articulate what we do. No one knows how we work, and that we need money all the time!" Yet Sanjana's hopeful, "In a strange way, the younger generation in Mumbai has a special feeling towards theatre. And if they could earn a reasonable living from it, their choice would be to do theatre full-time. That'll happen only if there are 10 more Prithvis in town! If we don't create a stabilised scenario in the next three years, we'll lose talented people from theatre," she continues, "Films are still okay because they demand a certain rigour. But television is the worst criminal because it breeds bad habits. Actors, writers and directors become sloppy!"

With Naseeruddin Shah as her superhero, Sanjana breathes and lives theatre. She claims, "Moving to Delhi has actually been a blessing in disguise. It's tough because I'm a control freak, but I've managed to establish a good team in the past eight years." As she breathes a sigh of relief with the completion of her momentous task of getting down Complicite, she says, "I want to go scuba diving with my son now."

She signs off, "If you want to be in theatre, you need to be tough on yourself. Do your riyaaz and don't be lazy."

2012: Leaves Prithvi for Junoon

Sanjna Kapoor: I have finally left home | August 16, 2012|Rediff.com Veenu Sandhu in Mumbai | Source: Business Standard


She has moved on from Prithvi, but Sanjna Kapoor's passion for theatre remains undimmed.

Actor Naseeruddin Shah, who makes no bones about how dreary he found boarding school in Nainital, once told Sanjna Kapoor that the only thing that kept him going was her maternal grandparents' theatre company, Shakespeareana, which would perform in his school once a year.

"My grandparents [Geoffrey and Laura Kendal] travelled around India with their plays for 30 years," says Kapoor. "I don't spend 10 days in my country without coming across someone whose lives they haven't touched through their theatre."

It's this bond with theatre which Kapoor hopes to recreate through her new project, Junoon.

It's been only six months since Kapoor launched Junoon after stepping down as director of Prithvi Theatre, a position she held for 22 years, but the calendar is packed.

Having wrapped up two months of intense theatre workshops with six-to-16-year-olds in Mumbai, she's in Delhi where her husband, tiger conservationist Valmik Thapar, lives. Sitting in her third floor office at her home, Kapoor is planning Junoon's next big step -- theatre workshops for schools in Mumbai neighbourhoods.

By year end, Junoon will bring Footsbarn Theatre's Tempest to Mumbai and in early 2013 it will take the Shaw Festival by Shah's theatre group, Motley's, to Delhi and Gurgaon.

Junoon has held 45 workshops, and put up 18 plays and 50 shows under its first programme, "Arts at Play". Among the plays was Kabuliwala, adapted from Bimal Roy's film, as well as George Bernard Shaw's Arms and The Man and By George, both directed by Shah.

"Ten of these were new productions," says Kapoor with pride. "Arts at Play" is what used to be, until last year, Prithvi Theatre's summer workshops for schoolchildren conducted by professional artistes. However, Kapoor made one change. "For the first time, we raised our fee," says Kapoor. "At Prithvi, we were oversubsidising it. So we had parents sending their children to the workshops for babysitting!"

It's a lesson she has learnt from her years at Prithvi. "Theatre is human-intensive and expensive, so it needs a strong financial model. Else its future is shaky, especially in the current economic conditions," she says.

At Prithvi, says Kapoor, everything "depends on sponsorship. This is a ridiculous financial model to live by."

Trimming Prithvi's losses is also a crucial agenda for Kapoor's brother, Kunal, who is now its director. Even though on an average Prithvi has 82 per cent of audience occupancy, it does not make profit. One of the options Kunal Kapoor is exploring is to raise the rental rates and the ticket prices. It was Kunal who had originally taken charge of Prithvi after their mother, Jennifer, died of cancer in 1984. Six years later, Sanjna took over as Kunal moved on to concentrate on his career in ad films.

Like Prithvi, Junoon too relies on sponsorship but Kapoor hopes that the dependence will go down over time. Registered as a not-for-profit company and public charitable trust, Junoon hopes to generate funds through donations, tickets and fees.

Many see Junoon as Kapoor's decision to do what both sets of her grandparents did -- run a travelling theatre company. But Junoon is not a travelling company, Kapoor clarifies. It is, as its tag line says,

Besides a school-connect programme and workshops for students, teachers and parents in Mumbai, Delhi and with time, smaller cities, Kapoor is also looking at taking theatre to the corporate world -- which is proving to be quite a challenge. Kapoor is also determined to mount one "magical production" every year.

Working with Kapoor on the venture is Sameera Iyengar, an MIT graduate with a PhD in theatre from the University of Chicago.

"When I joined Prithvi a decade ago, Sanjna was pretty much the be all and end all of things," recalls Iyengar. "After I came on board, she started creating a team, changing her personality to suit the times."

The name, Junoon, was Iyengar's suggestion.

"It has nothing to do with the [1978] film my parents acted in," says Kapoor.

Others in her team are Satyam Viswanathan, an MBA from Cornell University, Swati Apte, an Odissi dancer and Harvard Business School graduate, and Ayaz Ansari, a production manager in theatre. It's an unusual group held together by passion for theatre.

"Prithvi," says Kapoor, "was always larger than all of us."

She remembers her Sunday visits as a little girl to "Prithvi jhopda, as my grandfather [Prithviraj Kapoor] christened his little cottage in Juhu."

To her it seemed to be in the jungles, miles away from home. "The plot of land opposite this jhopda had a building which was meant to be a theatre, but was only used to store his props and costumes," she says.

This was later to become Prithvi Theatre. After her grandfather died, her mother would take her for picnics to Juhu where "we would play chor-police and dabba-I-spy in this ramshackle building. I must have been nine when Prithvi was being built." While her mother spent hours over architect plans, Kapoor ran around barefoot on the beach with her dog Yum-Yum.

She was only 23 when she took over as its director. Looking back, Kapoor admits, "I was a kid."

Which is why, she says, she never commented on the quality of productions. "I knew I didn't have the experience. How could I criticise someone with 40 years of experience in theatre?"

What she did instead was infuse life into Prithvi, turning it into one of Mumbai's most prominent cultural hubs with exhibitions, festivals, children's workshops and a lot more. But what she didn't pursue was acting, though she did do a few films like 36 Chowringhee Lane, Utsav, Hero Hiralal and Salaam Bombay and some plays.

It must have been hard to give up Prithvi. "I was this baby who wouldn't grow up," Kapoor says. "But now I've finally left home."

She would, however, like to see many more cultural hubs like Prithvi. "In Mumbai, we should have 20-30 Prithvis."

About six years ago, someone in the Planning Commission asked her to write a paper on Prithvi as an example of a great cultural hub. She refused. "I wish I could have said it's an 'example'... unfortunately, it's an exception."

Filmography

As an actress

1979 Junoon

1981 36 Chowringhee Lane

1984 Utsav

1988 Hero Hiralal

1988 Salaam Bombay!

1994 Aranyaka

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