Tamasha Theatre Company
Tamasha Theatre Company is a British theatre company founded in 1989 by director Kristine Landon-Smith and actor-writer Sudha Bhuchar. ''Tamasha'' () is an Indian word meaning "spectacle". The company has brought contemporary Asian-influenced drama to the British stage, mixing naturalism with humour, and succeeding in attracting large Asian audiences.Tamasha's first production was a theatrical adaptation of Mulk Raj Anand's novel ''Untouchable''. ''Untouchable'' was performed in both Hindi and English, with action taking place around a large Indian village created within Riverside Studios. The company's second play adapted another novel, ''House of the Sun'' by Meira Chand. The stage set for ''House of the Sun'' depicted a large block of flats, including an on-stage working lift. The overall effect was "a sort of Asian take on the Australian soap opera ''Neighbours'', dealing with families in a block of flats in modern-day Bombay".
For six years the company toured small-scale UK venues with one production a year. However, the award-winning 1996 comedy ''East is East'' ensured them wider national attention. ''Tainted Dawn'' (1997), examining the effects of the partition of India on everyday people, played at the Edinburgh International Festival. In 1998 they created ''Fourteen Songs, Two Weddings and a Funeral'', a Bollywood-inspired musical. The show won the 1998 BBC Asia Award for Achievement in the Arts, and the 1999 Barclays Theatre Award for Best Musical. By the time of ''Balti Kings'' (1999–2000), a comedy set in a Balti restaurant, the company was playing larger venues nationally.
Among the many well-known British Asian artists to have worked with the company are actors Parminder Nagra, Jimi Mistry, Nina Wadia, Chris Bisson, Ameet Chana, Nabil Elouahabi, Ila Arun and Zohra Sehgal; writers Ayub Khan-Din, Abhijat Joshi and Deepak Verma; and composers Shri and Nitin Sawhney.
Since 2002, the company has run Tamasha Developing Artists – a professional development programme for emerging and established writers, directors, designers and performers. Provided by Wikipedia