30 October,2018 07:31 AM IST | Mumbai | Snigdha Hasan
The road of the High School Chasseloup-Laubat in Saigon that Duras attended
In the late 1920s in Indochina, love blossomed between a pubescent girl from a French family of limited means and an older, wealthy Chinese-Vietnamese man. The contrasting racial and financial realities meant that the odds were stacked against the couple, and the love story lived a short life. But first love, they say, is unforgettable, and imbued with shades of colonial realities, it made a deep impact on French novelist, playwright and filmmaker Marguerite Duras.
Though she returned to France at the age of 17, the affair continued to surface in her works. Her fictionalised autobiographical work, L'amant, or The Lover, however, is based on the romance and recounts it in greater detail. An eponymous play based on the work - which has been translated into 43 languages, adapted to a film, and awarded the 1984 Prix Goncourt - will be staged in the city this Thursday.
Marguerite Duras/AFP
Brought to Mumbai by Alliance Française de Bombay in partnership with Cie du Barrage-Théâtre Marguerite Duras and Department of French (University of Mumbai), the play will be performed by French actor Maud Andrieux with English subtitles. Its music has been composed by Marco Gomes.
ALSO READ
With wide-leg jeans in fashion, here's how you can pick and style them
Why this new collection of detective fiction set in Mumbai is interesting
What is dopamine menu? Experts dissect the new trend, highlight common mistakes
A century of rebellion: Tracing FN Souza's artistic legacy
This booklet explores Mumbai’s Andheri West villages’ rich heritage
Andrieux, the programme director for Theater Marguerite Duras, tells us that she grew passionate about Duras's works when she visited Vietnam in 2003 and came face-to-face with the colonial past of Vietnam with France.
Maud Andrieux/AFP
From a deeply personal account to the writer's rejection of racism, the novel straddles the two worlds poignantly. "L'amant presents Duras's discovery of her femininity and body as a young woman beautifully," says Andrieux. "What makes it unique is that though it is set in her younger days, she went into flashback and wrote the novel at the age of 70 from a whole new perspective."
On: November 1, 3.30 pm
At: Pherozeshah Mehta Auditorium, University of Mumbai, Kalina, Santacruz East.
Register: communication.mumbai@afindia.org
Catch up on all the latest Crime, National, International and Hatke news here. Also, download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get the latest updates