While the subject of Vagina Monologues was itself significant enough to make it post worthy, the fact that one of the two drivers behind the play actually getting produced at Oxford is a contemporary Indian Woman in her own right was another one. Gayathry Venugopal, a Masters student at the college, hails from Kerala and was brought up in Uganda, where her family moved for work.
In a freewheeling conversation
over coffee, we had an interesting discussion over what prompted her to take up
the play and her take on specific aspects of Vagina Monologues.
In talking about how the idea of staging
Vagina Monologues first came to her mind, she talks about how she had really enjoyed
watching a performance of the same a number of years ago and it stayed with
her. Funding from the college for the student play helped get the ball rolling,
and soon she and her co-producer for the play were doing auditions for the
roles. As someone who has been involved in theatre from an early age, and has
even been trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Arts, Venugopal
found the creative process involved in producing the play very energising. The
fact that many talented women stepped forward to play various parts, helped in
building a sense of community around it.
Venugopal does have one regret
though – of not being able to get the participation needed from the trans
community. Even though the play, by its very title, links womanhood to her
physiology, at a time of increasing acceptance and awareness of gender
fluidity; they were unable to get
proper representation to play the part of a trans woman’s experience with vaginas.
The one facet of Vagina
Monologues that has repeatedly come under criticism is that it indulges in a
fair bit of male bashing. A number of female experiences in the play talk about
their vaginas’ negative experiences with the opposite sex. Venugopal defends
the play against this criticism by offering the explanation that the point of
the play was to be provocative, which it needed to be, since it came out at a
time when feminism was not as mainstream as it is today.
They play by itself has evolved
overtime to include newer and fresher aspects to feminism, and there could be
changes in its overall tonality going forward as well as feminism becomes an
even more entrenched concept than it has become today. No matter, what though,
the subject will continue to remain relevant. Perhaps it might even extend to
the male counterpart!
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