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Calcutta
Kosher, a poignant story that touches on the delicate bond between
a mother and her daughters and the even more fragile links between
land and identity, faith and culture, comes to Theatre Royal Stratford
East from Thursday 10 June. The cast includes: Seema Bowri, Shelley
King, Jamila Massey and Harvey Virdi and special guest appearance
by Madhav Sharma.
Set
in a crumbling house in the Indian Jewish community, Mozelle, a
formidable matriarch, has decided she is about to die. On her request,
her daughters Silvie and Esther return to their birth home. Although
the house is unchanged, the women are. They have long since settled
abroad, and their identities are marked by the need to belong in
the countries of their choice. Over a Sabbath supper of Indian Jewish
food, revelations are made. Silvie and Esther are forced to confront
the reality of their own lives in the light of a hidden past.
Shelley
Silas was born in Calcutta and grew up in north London. Theatre
includes: Calcutta Kosher (Kali Theatre) at the Southwark Playhouse
& UK tour; Falling at The Bush Theatre, where she was the Pearson
writer-in-residence 2002; Shrapnel (Steam Industry) BAC. Plays for
Radio 4: devising and co-writing The Magpie Stories, Calcutta Kosher
and The Sound Of Silence. She is co-adapting The Raj Quartet (with
John Harvey) and Hanan al-Shaykh's novel, Only In London also for
Radio 4 to be broadcast in 2005. Current work includes Moses Mohammed
for the Bush and Partitions for Tamasha Theatre. She has compiled
and edited a short story anthology, Twelve Days, to be published
in November 2004 by Virago. Shelley is the writer-in-residence for
Clean Break's 2005 production. Calcutta Kosher is directed by Kali
artistic director, Janet Steel.
Cast
includes Jamila Massey (who starred in Moti Roti Puttli Chunni at
Stratford East and is perhaps best known as Auntie Satya in Radio
4's The Archers) and Shelley King (who recently appeared as 'the
bitch' Kitty in Bombay Dreams).
Theatre
Royal welcomes the opportunity to work with Kali Theatre Company
for the first time and is delighted to be bringing Calcutta Kosher
to its stage after its sell-out national tour. Stratford East, set
in the heart of Newham, the most ethnically diverse borough in the
UK, is the most appropriate venue to present this tale that touches
on relationships between Hindus, Muslims, Indians and Jews.
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