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City Guide - Mumbai - Culture | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Culture Cultural Events: Culturally, Mumbai is probably best known abroad for its film industry, nicknamed Bollywood. Cinema in India is very popular and Mumbai is responsible for the majority of the Hindi-language films made in the country. While the cinema is popular - there are said to be in excess of 100 million paying cinema-goers a week nationwide - theatre, music and dance have long traditions in Mumbai and remain important cultural activities. Mumbai is also home to a large number of public and commercial art galleries - the leading public ones being the Jehangir Gallery (see the Key Attractions section) and the National Gallery of Modern Art, both of which put on regular exhibitions of contemporary Indian art. Theatre, dance and music: The most important venue for the performing arts in Mumbai is the National Centre for Performing Arts at Nariman Point (tel: (022) 283 3737; web site: www.tata.com/ncpa). This complex of five theatres of varying sizes puts a widely varying programme of plays, musicals and dance. Normally, there will be something on that is well worth seeing. Important, too, is the Nehru Centre Auditorium at Dr Annie Besant Road, Worli (tel: (022) 496 4680; web site: www.nehrucentremumbai.com), where there is an auditorium, as part of a modern complex that includes art galleries, exhibition halls and a planetarium. During the year, it stages theatre, dance and music; it also runs workshops for educational purposes. For plays in English and programmes of Western music, Sophia Bhabha Hall, B Desai Road at Breach Candy (tel: (022) 367 8550), is a good venue. Film: The centre of Bollywood is Film City, at Goregoan (tel: (022) 840 1755; e-mail: filmcity@hotmail.com), where the majority of the film studios are located. It is possible to arrange visits to some of the studios. The bulk of films made in Bollywood are sugary love stories or action dramas: the aim of the industry is to produce the entertainment and escapism that its audiences demand. The titles of two recent releases, Tell Me There Is Love and My Heart Is Next To Yours, give a sample of the type of film that dominates the market. Mumbai has many cinemas, the best-known one perhaps being the Art Deco Regal cinema in Fort, itself a Mumbai landmark. Cultural events: India, with its many religions, has a multitude of religious festivals. The two most important in Mumbai are both Hindu. Ganesh is the god of wisdom and prosperity and his festival, which falls in August/September, is celebrated with particular enthusiasm in Mumbai. Its climax is colourful and noisy and involves many tens of thousands of people converging on Chowpatty Beach to immerse themselves and their images of Ganesh - which resemble an elephant - into the sea. It is an unforgettable experience. Deepavali falls in October/November and is a joyous occasion, a celebration of happiness and friendship, marked in Mumbai with an ear-splitting cacophony of bangers and fireworks. Literary Notes Those who wish to immerse themselves in the spirit of Mumbai need look no further than Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children (1981). A dextrously handled cocktail of history, fiction and imaginative fantasy, the novel is partly set in Mumbai and provides a wonderful evocation of the city's geography, atmosphere and history in the years following Independence in 1947. 'What I can see: the city basking like a bloodsucker lizard in the summer heat. Our Bombay: it looks like a hand but really it's a mouth, always open, always hungry, swallowing food and talent from everywhere else in India. A glamorous leech, producing nothing except films bush-shirts fish ... .' But it is an affectionate portrait celebrating the 'highly-spiced nonconformity of Bombay'. A different view of the city emerges from Anita Desai's novel Baumgartner's Bombay (1988), which conjures up the crumbling fabric of the city, its humidity and pollution. Mumbai is home to a number of contemporary poets, including Arun Kolatkar. Nissin Ezkiel is often regarded as the founding father of modern poetry in the city; from the 1950s onwards, he did much to encourage young poets in their work. It remains as difficult here as anywhere else, however, to find firms who are prepared to publish poetry. In the field of fiction, the Mumbai novelist Kiran Nagarkar has recently published Cuckold (1998). |
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