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| Passion
in the Moonlight |
By
ROHIT KARN BATRA |
| They live for the
weekends. |
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At one point or another, the creative
types stumble upon a painful reality.
The creative life is a very difficult
one, often involving personal and financial
sacrifice, as well as little certainity
of success.
Most people faced with the dilemma,
let go of their creative ambitions and
take the traditional route, investing
in their education and securing a stable
job, which ensures, among other things,
financial stability and social status.
That we in the South Asian community
can respect.
As most transition into the “real
world,” they find little time
or energy left over at the end of the
day to pursue their artistic passions.
Most anyways.
Then there are those who just cannot
let go.
Laksh Singh is one of them. During
the day, he’s a civil engineer.
Nights and weekends, he is an actor.
“It is lot of work. They are two
very different lives, but they both
reinforce each other and keep me going
and energized. Also, having a good job,
in an area of my interest, helps me
be selective of what I would do in acting.
Whether it is developing and playing
a character from a different world in
a theatre or film, or standing below
a giant bridge structure looking at
a problem and wondering what should
be done next, I find both very creative
and engaging. I enjoy it,” Singh
says.
His hectic lifestyle is partly hardwired
in his personality. He’s always
had multiple interests and he’s
always done more than one thing at once,
so he doesn’t find what he does
out of the ordinary.
Singh grew up in Patna, Bihar, and
went to the Indian Institute of Technology,
Bombay, for his undergraduate education
in Civil Engineering. After graduation,
while working daytime as a design engineer,
he started acting in professional Prithvi
Hindi theatre, one of the most prestigious
theatres in Mumbai.
“I used to perform in plays in
College,” Singh says. “IIT
Bombay was celebrating its Silver Jubilee
and as a part of cultural program, we
put up a Hindi play Girgit that was
based on Anton Chekhov’s Chameleon.
I was playing the lead. The response
was very good and as soon as the play
got over, the director called to congratulate
and thank me. Sitting next to him was
a professor from Bombay University who
told me that I reminded him of one of
his earlier students from Bombay University
who is now a well-known theater actor
in Bombay. He asked whether I would
like to pursue it further in professional
theater and advised that I meet his
student and gave me his number. The
person was Shafi Inamdar and I went
to meet him at Prithvi Theatre the first
thing after graduating and taking up
a job in Mumbai.”
He acted in various theaters in Mumbai
for about 5 years, performing mostly
in Prithvi, earlier in small roles and
then the lead. He also has acted in
few advertisement films for Durga Khote
Productions; one of them directed by
the now internationally acclaimed Assamese
filmmaker, Jahnu Barua.
In 1991, Singh came to the United States
for graduate studies at Johns Hopkins
University in Baltimore, where he received
his Masters and Ph.D. degrees in Civil
Engineering. “The focus of my
research at IIT and much later at The
Johns Hopkins University remained large
span suspension and cable stayed bridges.”
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And his acting background? “The
last play I acted in was When It Rains
for Workshop Theater Company where I
played a high flying surgeon who is
blunt and opinionated, but quite a jolly
character. I’ve also acted in
several short films for NYU and Columbia
film school graduate students and couple
of feature films. One of the feature
films I did, Late Watch premiered at
Tribeca Film Festival last year.”
Singh has also done a TV gig on ABC’s
Hope and Faith with Kelly Ripa, Faith
Ford and country singer Clint Black.
While Singh straddles a line between
the two worlds, Roy Eappen, a government
worker/painter who also resides in New
York City, finds himself mending both
worlds as one.
Eappen explains: “A while back,
I was laid off from my job. I actually
saw the event as a good opportunity
to have more time with art. But surprisingly
enough, I did not want to spend my entire
day painting. I think work provides
me a lot of subject matter for painting,
but I really do not see my life as a
dual lifestyle. I genuinely enjoy both
my work and my painting. They are both
strong components of who I am, and in
many respects these lifestyles work
with each other rather than serve as
conflicts. But I do have a hard time
seeing myself abandoning one for the
other. For a while I really tried to
abandon art, but could not. I really
tried. I hate to call it passion, but
it is really is something that is a
part of me.”
He currently works in New York City
government working on the city budget,
one of the largest municipal budgets
in the country. He focuses environmental
health policy in the city. “I
have no interest in politics, but the
work I perform involves a good understanding
of politics and its impact on decision
making,” Eappen says.
He finds that working in government
has the advantage of affording him time
to commit his interest in art. “While
I could make more money in other fields,
I like government for this reason. There
are times I have to put painting off
to the side, but for the most part this
balance is very manageable.”
Unlike Singh, who found acting in college,
art is something Eappen has done ever
since he can remember. “When I
was young I used to make paper action-figures
to play with. I also used to draw naked
pictures of my sister taking a bath
and freak out my conservative dad when
I was six,” he jokes.
He did, at one point, consider art
school after high school, but ended
up studying architecture at Tufts University
in Boston. “I remember this choice
as being a real dilemma for me, but
a liberal arts college was for me. Eventually
I majored in architecture, which I thought
made perfect sense, since it combined
my interest in art with other areas
I was good at. But by the time I graduated,
I started having second thoughts in
a career in architecture. After college,
I worked for an environmental firm as
an urban planner and eventually my interest
in policy led me to my current job.”
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Debu Nayak, from Northern Virgina, took
his artistic interests a few steps further
than Eappen. Nayak is a semi-professional
tabla player, who also works as an information
technology specialist for the Department
of Interior. How does he do it? “I
don’t know the answer to that question,”
Nayak responds.
“To put it simply, if you love
something to the point of obsession the
balance comes from somewhere. I need time
for my tabla everyday and for me to compete
with other tabla players, I must put in
considerable number of hours to practice.
So I sleep less. I can go on with less
sleep and still get my work done at my
daily IT field of work sometimes better
than others. When I come back home I spend
time with my wife and daughter, but after
9 pm it’s my time. I spend that
time practicing till 1 or 2 am in the
morning. That’s the only flexibility
I have. But I don’t feel any pain
because of it. Rather I feel pain when
I don’t do it.”
Nayak is a former recipient of the Fulbright
scholarship (sponsored by the United Nations
Institute of International Education program),
who started out living out his passion
in college, playing in numerous cultural
programs.
His tabla career thrives during weekends
and over the last 15 plus years, they
have added up. He has performed with many
well known musicians of national and international
repute.
“These gigs are my way of expressing
my freedom at the end of the week. It’s
also an expression of my love for my instruments.
It’s also my way of expressing joy
and happiness through music. I come alive
at the end of the week. I live for the
weekend.”
How does he maintain his sanity juggling
the demands of work and his music career?
“Music has always been in my blood.
I can’t see life without it. I sometimes
wonder how life would be without music.
I shudder just thinking about it. My mother
is a sitar player and a fantastic vocalist.
Music came from my mother’s side
there was a whole lineage of musicians
from my ancestral home of Panchet Garh
in the district of Midnapore, West Bengal,
India. This house in Panchet Garh boasted
of musicians such as Jadu Bhatta, Ustad
Faquir Bux (Ustad Kader Bux’s father
and Alla Rakha’s guru/teacher),
Chowdhury Jadabendra Nandan and my grandfather
Chowdhury Kausallya Nandan.”
“I took vocal lessons from my grandfather
and my mother when I was young. I used
to be really fascinated by tabla when
my grandfather used to teach other students
in our ancestral home. I remember during
my childhood I would be constantly hitting
the table or the Chair or bang something
until someone would get really irritated
and give me something tangible to bang
on. That’s how I got introduced
to tabla.
“No one really taught me tabla,
it came to me naturally. It was only through
my grandfather I got indoctrinated into
the wonderful world of hand percussion.
When I was growing up in Calcutta I would
participate in different music festivals
and neighborhood shows. Those were wonderful
days.”
When he arrived in the United States,
Nayak was just another poor student living
off of his stipend at the Penn State campus.
A move to Washington, DC, changed all
that. He got his first platform at the
George Washington University’s Listner
Auditorium, to perform with one of the
most well known musicians from Bangladesh.
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This was a major turning point for him.
“Something wonderful happened in
this program. I met a guitar player who
happens to play guitar to satisfy his
soul during the weekend and does a day
job to survive.
“He taught me how to keep being
a musician and keep a day job. By now,
I have started studying computer science
and information technology and doing music/playing
my tabla during the weekend for money.”
What started off as something on the
side, became a parallel part of his life.
Wherever he went, he made it a point to
gain contacts, which, in turn, led to
more work. He found work easily because
people were always looking for a good
tabla player. Over the years his table
skills have improved and he has also learned
how to balance his professional life and
his passion for the tabla.
“After college, I was also competing
with full time tabla players in the area
as well as starting a professional career.
Somehow, I kept the tabla playing part
of me going in full swing. I would play
concerts all weekend long and come back
from out of town to get straight to work.“
Perhaps, what helps him with the everlasting
energy is the fact that he’s never
lost the energy to stop learning. “I
have been learning from Pt. Samir Chatterjee
for almost 9 years. I am one of his first
seven Ganda Bandh (with knot tying ceremony,
a ritual performed by Guru when a disciple
is accepted) disciples.
“I have also learned from Ustad
Zakir Hussain and Pt Anindo Chatterjee
whenever they are in my area. Learning
never stops. I learn form concerts, workshops
and films. It’s an ongoing process.
I perform almost every weekend all over
the country and sometimes in Europe.”
As much as he loves music, he doesn’t
plan to be a full time musician. “Only
if I win a lottery ticket. I do believe
in magic, so who knows, that might happen
too. I continue to believe in this principle
that if you work hard at anything something
is going to give.
“Who knows may be someone will
notice my music somewhere and offer me
something really big. Like I said, I do
believe in magic. After all, I am from
the land of magic and exotica.”
Bhavni Patel has already transported
herself to that world. After graduating
from University of Tennessee, she worked
in corporate America as an interior designer
for two years. “Dressing up in suits
and button down shirts and playing someone
who I wasn’t was not very comfortable
for me.”
As luck would have it, while working
at the architecture and interior design
firm in those two years, she found a gateway
to pursuing her artistic interests.
She explains: “When you design
convention centers most everything that
goes into them are custom designed. The
budgets for these multi-million dollar
spaces are huge.
“They represent the city and that
is why so much money and time is put into
them. In the financial plan there is a
large sum of money that goes towards custom
carpeting. That was my first opportunity
to attempt textile design. I fell in love
with the ability to be creative with very
little restriction.”
So she quit her job at the firm, and
went into designing textiles fulltime.
“The great thing about my job as
a textile designer is that it is corporate
America when it comes to the times I have
to work 9-5, but at this company I work
in an old historic house with two dogs
running around.
“They’ve created the environment
to be very laid back and relaxed. I also
work independently on the design patterns.
I don’t work in a team so what I
create is clearly my own interpretation.
“That’s the great thing about
what I do I am very true to myself and
I don’t have to live a dual lifestyle,
in the general sense of the word. I’ve
made my hobby her strength and occupation,”
she proudly says.
Along the way to finding this career
“sweetspot,” she’s had
opportunities she could only dream of.
She is on the design team, which includes
Vern Yip of Trading Spaces, to design
an extension to the High Museum of Art
in Atlanta, Ga.
Her team also came up with a concept for
the interior design of an Italian restaurant
(by the world famous Italian architect
Renzo Piano), which is connected to the
High Museum of Art, in which her team
ranked third from among 100 entries.
Sounds like she’s hit the lottery
Nayak has been banking on.
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..- End
Of Article..... |
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