The official blog of the Kala Ghoda Arts Festival

Sunday, February 11, 2007
Mani musician magician

We started walking towrds the Asiatic Library at half past six, feeling smug at the thought of arriving early at the Sivamani concert, and finding great seats for ourselves. Early, did I say? And great seats too? We reached at twenty to seven (when the concert was scheduled to begin) and found the steps to Asiatic Library packed. Tightly packed, with people still squeezing themselves through the seated bodies, now stamping an unwary hand, now getting pushed away by the early birds. Grrr. Husband and I looked high and hard, and were about to go join the standees when we looked low for a change and found seats on the lowest step. Found seats is being a bit generous with fact - with our sharp scientific minds, we found that space for two large bodies could just be created by asking those already occupying the space around the desired spot to move and squeeze their elastic bodies just a bit more. Which they did quite cheerfully, bless them.

Seated comfortably, camera all set on tripod which I for once remembered to carry, we waited for the show to begin. The sound of drums being set in place, instruments tuned and strange strong voices humming into the mike. All but the actual show. What was the Mani man? And while we are waiting, will the security guys please ask that solitary man standing by the barriers to move away please so we the seated ones (who went there early, remember?) could watch the show in the peace that we deserve.

kgaf 254

And so we waited and waited. And watched in total horror as all empty space in front us - the space separating us from the stage, essentially - kept filling up with those who had timed themselves better for that vantage position from which to watch the show. And what security guys? Those who were busy escorting the VIPs (who were they anyway?) to the white plastic chairs in front? We sat and stared at the heads in front of us and gnashed our teeth loudly. The noise of course, got drowned in the sudden roar that erupted in the crowd. The Mani man was here! Finally.

White silk kurta gleaming in the yellow streaming lights, Sivamani walked on stage to a grand welcome. Hands folded in salutation. Rooooooar. Announcement welcoming the Mani man. Rooooooar. Mention of his association with the other Mani man (Maniratnam). Loudest roooooooar of all. Then Zakir Hussain. Mild roooooar. (Who is he, man? in filmsa?)

Like all good Indian performers, he started with a ganesh vandan. By this time, I had lost all patience with the oily heads in front. Impressive camera in hand, I pushed my way shamelessly to the front, just a couple of photographs please. The nice people there let me go through. And so I duly went click click. Position vantage but not vantage enough. Push my back through the crowd into fresh air. Find another position to the side of the stage, repush way through crowd, one hand firmly clutching camera. And the other hand, clutching extremely embarrassed husband’s hands, dragging him towards the front. Excuse me, the show is about to begin seriously.

Sivamani picked up steam quickly and enthralled the audience, playing on a hundred different instruments, sometimes seemingly all at the same time. Drums of all shapes and sizes all around him, a square steel thingy that looked like a large vegetable grater (ok I never claimed to be knowledgable about these things) hanging in front of him, something else that looked like huge grapes dipped in silver solution around his neck like a rudraksha string gone grunge.

So many instruments that Sivamani looked lost in the middle of them all. Lost physically. Not with respect to his music, let me stress. Drums, veg grater, grapes - his hands flew from one to the other like some magician performing conjuring tricks in front of a dumbfounded audience.

kgaf 258

Music that was electrifying and stimulting, sometimes soothing and caressing. Sometimes slightly strange and attention-grabbing. Like the time he rubbed a large piece of stone against the mike for that goosebumpy sound that strangely fitted well into the rest of the music. Or the time he took the mike and huffed and puffed, sounding like the long-distance steam train pulling into VT nearby - a hundred years ago.

kgaf 269

That astounding skill is one thing. That magical engagement with the audience is one thing. But what sets Mani apart is that sense of genuine pleasure and enjoyment he gets from his music - from sharing that music with others. He smiled through the hour-long performance, sweating in the mugginess of the February evening and that silk robe and the heat of the strobe lights all around…

kgaf 292

He stopped with a flourish exactly an hour after he began, and stood in front of his adoring audience for the appplause that refused to die. Encore. Back to the drums, this time with a clear eye on the gallery. On came bits of hits from everpopular movies like Rangeela and Rang de basanti. Half the piece on drums, and an abrupt stop with one hand raised, an impish smile on his face, eyebrows arched in a question… and the audience completes the music and words for him. By this time, I had wheedled my way to just below the stage, looking as adoringly at the musician magician, but through my camera. I even fancy he looked at me and smiled once but you never know, I do admit that he kept smiling through the hour. I do know that I left with a huge smile on my face, heart still thumping with the music that rocked through the speakers that stood very close to me, and feet still keeping time to the drum beat of the drummer who had vanished from stage into a sea of admirers.

Howzatt!

kgaf 288

Thursday, February 8, 2007
Kids and my camera at Kala Ghoda

Meet Nandini. She lives somewhere around this area. She is not very sure where. She can’t tell me anything more about herself and her family. But she knows one thing for sure - she likes pani puri. She has no idea what it is called; will she have dhokla? nahi. khandvi? nahi; she quickly dismissed these foolish offers I make in the assumption that the kid would like the less spicy things on offer. Yeh nahi, woh gol gol jo hota hai - her little fingers making whirring circles in the air… oh, the round things? realization dawns as I point to the kachori. She directs a withering look at me (how dumb can you get?, it says in loud tones and I duly wither), gives up attempts to explain and instead leads me confidently to the stall, her little hands in mine. She takes ages to eat the first puri - the tiny mouth can open only so big. So the panipuriwala fill the other puris, piles them up in a leaf cup and she takes them away to a corner by the tree to eat them in peace.

a candle.. and some hope...

It is not like Nandini is taking liberties with a stranger. We know each other from last year’s KGAF, you see. In fact, she was featured on this blog quite prominently a couple of times last year, the little admirer who seated herself on the first row of whatever performance happened to be on at the rampart row stage. I did not know her name then, Nandini was small and shy and refused to speak to me, just a shy smile and reluctant pose for me every time we met. From coy side glances to withering looks in a year is a long way to travel.

Oh, those eyes...The little admirer

I found her on the first evening of the festival among the bunch of kids lighting candles on the road as part of the street display by an NGO. She waved to me and posed with her candle, dropping it suddenly when the wax melted and flowed down her hands. Ouch. And my heart melted with it. Therefore the panipuri.

kgaf 112

I am a sucker for kids (others’ kids, i.e. - those who can be sent back to their parents), my camera likes them a little more than I do. And kids sense that and pretend to like me so I take lots of pictures of them. Like this one (also featured earlier on this blog this year) - he was playing with other kids inside the helikoptook, he took one look at my camera and went pose pose pose, now sitting, now lying down, steady modelly smiles plastered on his face.

[click for larger size]

kgaf 121kgaf 122kgaf 125

And then the unposed pictures… often the most interesting of them all…

When will the darned dance begin?

kgaf 066

rang diya basanti and now I can’t get it off

kgaf 197

And that is what I love about the Kala Ghoda Festival. Kids roaming around freely, loudly laughing at some of the sillier street installations (how I would like to do that!), peskily demanding kulfi and comic books, getting in everyone’s way and generally having a blast. I like to see them get bite-sized doses of culture watching classical dance performances, I like it when they get messy at the pottery and coloring workshops, when they listen to stories and watch people on stage wide-eyed and open-mouthed. Above all, I love the amount of work my camera gets at Kala Ghoda with the kids…

Wednesday, February 7, 2007
Bollywood ishtyle jhatak matak

Bright golden sequinned suits, colorful little saris wrapped fisherwoman style, spotless white kurta pyjamas soon to remain not-so-spotless, tiny birdies wearing pink, yellow and blue birdie dresses. The dance organized by NGOs with kids performing to Bollywood numbers on Sunday morning was easily the event I loved best among those I caught over the weekend. Crowds clapping and cheering, the kids on stage having a blast, their bright smiles outshining the miidday sun high above, spectators, among them some kids who were waiting for their turn to perform on stage watching open-mouthed, the NGO volunteers notepad in hand, steering the kids to the right place at the right time…

kgaf 190

kgaf 188

The show which went on for over an hour had these little kids dancing to popular Bollywood numbers starting with suno gaur se duniya walon. The kids came on stage, danced the way to an encore, followed by dus bahane and rang de basanti and more.

It is obvious that nothing captivates the attention of the audience as Bollywood - people stood in front of the stage trhough the performance and clapped themselves hoarse. The earlier evening at Horniman Gaden, just before Sonal Mansingh’s performance was to begin, a cop on duty came up to me (I was of course, standing row 1-plus, camera in hand) and asked me, ab kya honey wala hai? koi sonal woh naachne ali hai kya? (what’s up? is some sonal to dance now?) And that morning, before this dance, I walked into the museum gallery looking for the Jayateerth Mevundi concert - I had been waiting near the ampitheatre by mistake. Seeing the small room almost full, I asked a mother-son duo sitting at the back, is this the JM concert? Son ignored me and continued to paly with his mobile while Mother gave me a blank look and said - I don’t know - we are just sitting here because something is going to happen, so many people here. But Bollywood, never a vague “something is going to happen” - familiar, popular - you can never go wrong with Bollywood.

Dus bahane karke le gaya dil

kgaf 187

kgaf 196

The last perormance was the everpopular birdie dance - the stage a riot of colors, little birdies wriggling and jumping, sometimes performing with complete confidence, sometimes taking sneak peaks at each other in confusion - what is the next step now?

the birdie dance

kgaf 206

a quick pose in the middle of dance

kgaf 213

a little birdie told me...

Sunday, February 4, 2007
Toot from the past

Bright and bleary-eyed at the same time, I reached Fountain at 8 this morning. Yes, I know, Sunday morning and all that. The Fountain parking lot which normally houses cars of all shapes and sizes through the work week and stays empty and forlorn during week-ends was abuzz with activity. A hundred odd cars, none of them less than fifty years old. Proud owners posing next to their cars, the brilliance of their proud smiles going flash! along with the hundreds of camera out there. Personal mechanics, as proud of the car they maintain as the owners themselves, now tinkering here, now giving it a final polish.

Each one of these cars a classic beauty, some of them round and curvy, their generous fenders in front begging to be caressed, some of them slightly angular, regal and pretending to be aloof…

kgaf 130

The vintage car rally was about to begin and the pre-rally fashion show for cars was on. Never have I seen so many cameras out at one time in Bombay, never so many grown up men act like little children (I mean, so many at the same time). I imagine the entire family staying up all night giving it just that final rub of polish before they set off for the day. I imagine pesky children in the family being shooed away by irate fathers and uncles. I imagine the owners starting out early in the morning, dressed in their Sunday best, slightly sheepish wives on the passenger seat in front, and unbelievably energetic children at the back.

kgaf 138

Polished to perfection…

kgaf 134

Sometimes, there are wheels within wheels…

kgaf 135

… and sometimes, entire cars within cars!

kgaf 149

Here, the photographer (writer) does a mirror mirror on the wall act with the gleaming surface of this car…

kgaf 143kgaf 142

Vintage cars was all okay but what were not-so-vintage Premier Padminis doing there? And a new Hyundai Getz parked bang smack in the middle of the line (what kind of personw ould imagine that line-up to be an ordinary parking lot)? And vintage motorbikes? Not that my husband minded…

kgaf 154 kgaf 156

Preening done for the morning, the cars set off one by one by about 9. Set off is not to say they vroomed their way to hell on the roads; they moved at snail’s pace, partly because of the lengthy lines and partly because that proably was best speed for some of them (a quick peep over my shoulder here to hope none of the owners is actually reading this). We hitched a joy ride in a 1939 World War II relic - a Volkswagen-Tempo collab car. The owner, Mr. Badamikar had driven down all the way from Pune; one hears that truck drivers on the Expressway have gone into into severe shock on seeing this on their road.

kgaf 168

Mr. Badamikar owns not one or two but fourteen such vintage cars. He says he takes each of them out for a spin (er, slow drive) once in fifteen days; he does not say but I imagine he spends a bomb in mintaining each of these beauties. Husband and self felt like royalty (slightly foolish, but royal nevertheless), perched on the back seat of this “solid German guy” (someone else, not me), passengers from BEST buses craning their necks out for a look-see.

We hopped off at the entry to Kala Ghoda and watched the rest of the rally from near the booth where each car was registered before setting off on the actual rally. The police band was out in full force, welcoming each of these cars, now with the trumpet, now the cymbals.

kgaf 177 kgaf 176

The most endearing moment of the morning for me, was this Tibetan monk, standing in the shade some distance away from the hoots and toots. His mobile phone in hand, he kept clicking pictures of these cars as they passed by him, each time looking around a tad sheepishly after going click click.

kgaf 185

Truly a blast from the past!

Sunday, February 4, 2007
First evening images

Just got home after an evening at Kala Ghoda and need to wake up early, really early (especially for a Sunday) to get back there for the vintage car rally tomorrow morning. So here are a few pics from the events of the evening - detailed posts soon…

Performance by the Tibet India Foundation…

The snow lion yawns…. or is it snow dog?

kgaf 028

Dancing to the drum…

kgaf 011

Watching from the sidelines and waiting for my turn…

kgaf 014

The Naval band - started off vey well and then suddenly this young officer took to the mike with ‘tere bin mein yun kaise jiya…‘ Why, oh why this from the Naval band?

kgaf 036

At that I turned around signalling to my husband that it was time to leave.. and saw this…

kgaf 037

Sonal Mansingh at Horniman Circle Garden, Odissi, the life of Krishna, the butter thief, the lover, the lord of the universe, the savior of those who believe…

kgaf 094

kgaf 078

kgaf 099

And finally, to ward off the evil eye…

kgaf 060

Good night…

kgaf 124

Sunday, February 12, 2006
Going click click on Saturday

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesi

I come back from Kala Ghoda Saturday night and find that most of what I want to say has already been written here. Food, stalls, literature, dance. Here are pictures instead.

Grand old VT from inside the car, waiting for the signal to turn green.

The grand dame

The artists not featured in the festival but part of Kala Ghoda always.

bird 004

Photographing the photographer!

photographer

Splashes of colour from the stalls selling extremely pretty, tempting and now-what-do-I-use-them-for kind of things.

mirror mirror on the wall

And these extremely striking weird, wired faces. I wonder whether people really buy such things to keep in their homes. imagine waking up to see such a face staring at you.

Weird wired faces!

Wednesday, February 8, 2006
Impressions from Day 4

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesi

Yet another er, productive evening at Kala Ghoda. Art ingested in bite-sized bits and pieces. Which is just the way it should be.

First the ho, ho my puppets show at Rampart Row. Familiar face hands over small daughter to me and concentrates on taking down notes from the puppet show. (Does this man take down notes each time he visits the circus too?) Puppet show in German has me feeling as lost as the small daughter; we play with the red ball that all kids around Kala Ghoda are carrying and point and clap excitedly each time a new puppet arrives on stage. Faint memories of basic German classes in London smothered quickly.

Their puppets, our puppets.

kg 006

kg 008

Walking towards Cama, buy and carry in disgusting plastic bag, a tea-glasses-candle-set from the Salaam Baalak stall. One song and many scenes from Umrao Jaan later, walk back towards the Bollywood-is-also-art part of the festival near Jehangir art gallery. Chaat and coffee break near Chetna. Pass many crow.ds again on the way.

Elphinston college bubbling up

A few minutes at David Sassoon gardens for Fresh off the shelf. Note sparse attendance. Note man in black t-shirt on second last row taking down notes. Blogger? The lady is talking about her book based on Bengalis in Bombay but I have to leave; I hve a call coming in from office. No, the phone did not ring loudly and I did not say, hullllooo! haan mein kala ghoda mein hoon.

It is dark by the time I return to Rampart Row. A home video of sorts is playing on the screen; about a Parsi family and remixed . Justine Bhat’s filmi ishtyle dance show begins. Male dancers in tight satiny white pants, women in short sequined pink skirts. I walk away after exactly five minutes; note that the crowd is the largest I have seen at any performance at Rampart Row so far. Clearly, Bollywood never ceases to excite and interest.

As I walk towards my car, stop to think about how beautiful this part of Bombay is, especially at night, when the frenetic commercial activity of the day has wound down and the streets take on a calm sleepy look.

Bus in a rush

Wednesday, February 8, 2006
Why my heart, take my life

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesi

I walked into the Cama building for Umrao Jaan just as Asha Bhonsle’s throaty voice fills the airless hot room with justju jiski thi usko to na paaya humne, is bahane se magar dekh li duniya humne..

tip : ignore the English subtitles much as it is tempting to look at them, they are distracting. I came to know the ways of the world through this.

Umrao is abducted from her village, separated from her family as as young girl, sold to a kotha in Lucknow. She grows up to be Umaro Jaan, accomplished singer-dancer sought after by the indulgent Lucknowis. Her friend Ramrey also abducted with her, now married to her own love, the nawab. At their meeting after years, Umrao answering her friend’s question - if we had switched places as kids, this mansion would have been mine, and my brothel would have been yours. Oh, for what might have been.

A cast of great actors; Rekha at her sensual husky best, Farooq Shaikh in a much-too-understated role as the nawab who is Rekha’s justju, Naseeruddin Shah in those bumbling-scheming ‘marry me’ scenes, Dina Pathak, Shaukat Kaifi.

The ancient fans creak and move slowly on the high ceiling. The audience titters at Rekha’s barb at Naseer, kya tum apne liye paighaam leke aaye ho? The ubiquitous cellphone rings, arey mein picture me baitha hoon. Umrao Jaan. Haan, woh Rekha-wala.

Suddenly my mind wanders.

Umrao Jaan being remade by J.P.Border-Datta with *shudder* Aishwarya Rai in the lead.

Those magical Lucknowi-Urdu numbers, now to be rendered by. Alka Yagnik perhaps? *further shudder*.

And Anu Malik composing the score for the Umrao Jaan 2.0.

Dil cheez kya hai, dhinchak dhinchak dhinchak, come on baby.

*faints*

Tuesday, February 7, 2006
Some kids, crayons at Kala Ghoda - II

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesi

That’s enough, Sangeeta. You have painted your face on all the boxes now.

(She lives on the streets somewhere nearby. she has been here all day today and yesterday. And she is having such a great time.)

Sangeeta from the streets

Facing the paint. Or is it the other way round?

Note the Surf Excel sponsored daag acche hain t-shirts and caps. Dirt zone, the banners said, and dirt zone it was.

Facing the paint!

A happy bunch of kids, endless boxes of crayons, promising dreams, insignificant things like parents and shoes left behind.

shoes

We had nurses, astronauts, scientists, even a spiderman

The dream me!

dream_me

Monday, February 6, 2006
Some kids, crayons at Kala Ghoda - I

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesi

A hundred kids + two bright red tents + many boxes of waterpaints and crayons. Akanksha volunteers. A camera. A set of anxious and guiltily relieved parents. Two hours of rollicking fun.

Theme for the day: dream city.

Venue : the big red tent.

The children’s section is entirely being managed by Akanksha this year; the older Akanksha kids teaching and working with the other kids who come everyday to Kala Ghoda. In turn, the kids at the workshops having a blast, creative juices and water paints flowing freely and mingling with the red carpet inside the tents..

artist2

ink_spill

artist3

Some glimpses of the work-in progress.

Note the interesting things this kid has drawn as part of his cityscape: two hotels - the Oberoi and Taj, IIT and Pizza express. Clearly knows his priorities, this child.

cityscape

crayons

Comment

Comment by akshay on February 7, 2006 @ 8:37 am

Wow this must have been so much fun. I must catch one of the children events before the festival is over.

Comment by charukesi on February 7, 2006 @ 12:15 pm

Akshay, yup, it is great fun. keep your eyes open and ears closed. they can be so noisy :)

Monday, February 6, 2006
Not in their element

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesi

Another contemporary dance initiative, this time by Bharat college of fine arts & culture, exploring the five elements of nature. The choreography had its basis in Bharatnatyam infused with ballet movements, promising a new dimension to grace and fluidity in dance. However the dancers were not quite able to pull it off, looking unconvinced and uncomfortable as they all did throughout the short performance. I spent most of the time there wondering about their costumes and the significance of the colours of each dancer’s costume.

Here are some images:

dance5

dance4

dance1

dance6

And finally, I cannot resist adding this photograph, of the little admirer who stood by the stage through Saturday evening’s dance performance; here she is more comfortable seated and at a vantage point.

admirer1

Sunday, February 5, 2006
Nritarutya’s contemporary dance

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesiI admit that was not the best way to go in to watch a dance performance; wary and hoping it was not going to be yet another bizarre “experiment” in the name of contemporary art. I am glad to say that the two hour long performance by Nritarutya, the contemporary dance group from Bangalore left me stunned, and shorn of my impresisons about contemporary art.

From the moment the seven of them stepped on to the stage with a prayer invoking the blessings of the cosmic dance Lord Nataraja to the final piece Yantra depicting the monotony of the machine, Nirtarutya’s performance was spell-binding. And if you don’t believe me, ask this kid who stood at the foot of the stage for most of the evening, turning around only to stretch her tired little limbs from time to time.

admirer

The first piece in the performance - earth - was dedicated to the lower order creatures who inhabit the same earth we walk on every day. As the dancers came on to the stage, writhed and wriggled, the crowds started gathering all the way to the pavement on the other side, waiting for even better things to come.

earth

And the next one did not disappoint; Bhadrakali, the beautiful and the gruesome, the calm and the energy, the protector and the destroyer. Clad in red and black, the dancers exuded an energy that engulfed the audience, taking them along in the journey. Kali on stage was the many-armed, the destroyer of Mahishasura, messiah to the suffering; the huge red bindi of the female dancers, another eye through which her anger came out in flames.

Kali

Where the female form is, can the male be far behind? Or are they anyway always togeher, one where the other is, the yin where the yang is, the shakti where the shiv is? Ardhanareeshwara explored this question, with just two dancers, the male and the female in a perfect primordial rythm.

Does anyone remember Enid Blyton’s naughty Amelia Jane? Whose toys came alive in the night inside their box. For a few minutes, I went back to my childhood while watching the next piece on the secret life of puppets. Puppets celebrating their own life, perhaps laughing at the humans who believe that they control the life and movement of the puppets. Think about it, in life, who really controls what?

puppets

Following this was thak, a short and absorbing piece on movement and rythm, the twin principles of dance. Thak thakitta. And then an ode to Lord Vishnu, the presever, he of the ten avtaars, appearing on earth every time there was suffering and persecution. Dashavataara was the most traditional piece in the entire performance, based mostly on classical dance movements.

dasha

dasha1

The last two pieces were devoted to exploring the amalgamation of dance forms; while the third side of the coin was fluid and graceful, combining movements from Bharatanatyam with modern dance and the martial arts, yantra was the mindless monotony of a machine, sharp angular motion and dark weary forms.

The choreography of all the pieces was excellent and captivating, a testimony to what talented and imaginative minds not hesitant to explore can achieve. Throughout the performance, the dancers exhibited perfect control over their bodies and their art. It is only obvious that the seven dancers in the group are all trained and accomplished in some classical dance form or martial arts form. Nritarutya is an extremely talented group of young dancers; this is a group I will definitely watch out for.

Sunday, February 5, 2006
Impressions from Day 1

Retrieved via the Wayback Machine. Originally posted by charukesi

Make that night 1 actually; Kala Ghoda was already dark and crowded by the time I reached. The crowds were clearly divided into two categories, those who were there for the arts and those who were there for the food. I am not saying I was not torn, but duty beckoned; I was there for a purpose and that was to watch the dance performance by the Nritarutya group. Oh, but that deserves a separate post, so here is the rest of it from my wanderings after the performance, food and all.

A few things that made me really really happy at the Kala Ghoda festival:

- the reassuring idea that some things never change - like the way people made a bee line for the chaat counters, despite all the restaurants in the area having put on their best bibs and tuckers and fancy noddle-shoodle on offer as part of the street food festival.

eating

- the way the entire festival was of and for the city, free and open to all. I chatted with a few people sitting next to me; they live on the streets around the area and had never seen such performances before - and chances are, will not be seeing, in the near future.

kids

- the art installations on the street, some impressive, some funny and all of them, interesting.

feet1

- there were the arts being performed on the stage and in various other enclosures; then there were the everyday street arts, the bansuriwala, the magic maker and seller, the portrait painter.

magic

winds

- the fact that the Chief Minister dropped in in the middle of the dance performance; the policement around the area had started exhibiting signs of sudden nervous weakness; limbs twitching, arms flailing, hoarse whispers. The CM got off his car, stood at a distance from the stage ignoring the white plastic chairs had had been hurriedly placed in the front-plus row, watched the dance with a smile for a few minutes and then went on his way. Minimum fuss, minimum noise. I was very impressed.

- I particularly loved the way children were hooked. I missed the earlier sessions with kids, but here is proof that it happened, and meant a lot to someone.

crayons

Comments

Comment by Aditya on February 7, 2006 @ 9:19 pm

i miss the thali at chetana . :(