Madness- lunacy, insanity, call it what you will- has always held a peculiar, even perverse, sort of fascination for those who think of themselves as Normal (fashionably enough, this blogger claims to be neither here nor there but somewhere in-between).
This fascination has, more often than not, become the inspiration for- and subject of- Great Art: Hamlet, for instance, wouldn't be half as interesting if he wasn't- how does Bloom put it?- 'a free artist of himself'. In our own time, popular portrayals of people who aren't quite all here- Jack Nicholson in One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest (and The Shining), Anthony Hopkins in The Silence of the Lambs, Geoffrey Rush in Shine and Russell Crowe in A Beautiful Mind- have all won Oscars.
More to the point, Normalcy (whatever that may be) has become infused with Madness; without it, we cease to be interesting. The corollary is also true: Madness now aspires to Normalcy. The Mad too seek- and as the above Oscars demonstrate only too well, are beginning- to be understood. Wittgenstein's somewhat confused prophesy of cats not being able to live in the world of dogs- or for that matter, humans- is no longer valid: the walls have broken down; we have all become each other.
Lo, a star is born
It is in this context that I wish to introduce this particular video. Madhur Devgan, a soft-spoken networking-engineer who spends his evenings at the National School of Drama, has, in my opinion, done a brilliant character-sketch of a similarly tormented soul: more than the comedic overtone, I am moved- indeed, disturbed- by his quietly simmering discontent, which towards the end of the clip, erupts into Rage; a rhapsody of primeval hunger.
And those of us who know Madhur, cannot but wonder: how far is it possible to divorce the actor from his character?
AJ
Very nice 'drama act' has been performed by talented, ever enthusiastic and jovial Madhur. Congratulations and Good Luck to him. Regards - Saibel
ReplyDeleteGr8 Work.. ! Day U VIl PRoove For Sure.. God Bless..
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