‘Chapal Rani’: An ingenious biography of queer actor Chapal Bhaduri, commercial theatre, and jatra

· Scroll

Many of us in Kolkata first learnt of Chapal Bhaduri through Naveen Kishore’s documentary, Performing the Goddess: The Chapal Bhaduri Story (1999). Of the many hats that Kishore wears, the best-known one today is, perhaps, that of publisher of Seagull Books. So, it is not surprising that he suggested that Sandip Roy write a book on the life and times of the actor Chapal Bhaduri, a jatra artiste who mainly performed as a woman. And so, we have Chapal Rani, the Last Queen of Bengal: The Life and Times of a Female Impersonator.

Visit umafrika.club for more information.

It would be wrong to say that the book is only about Chapal Rani. Roy captures the many facets of Bhaduri’s astonishing life in this biography – the young boy from an illustrious theatre family who becomes a jatra queen, enjoys immense fame but finally has to leave the stage, a person who was probably India’s first openly gay actor, an actor who plays Ma Sitala for countless devotees, and later in life, also becomes a queer icon. Roy skilfully brings together the contradictions, complexities, highs and lows of Bhaduri’s life in a well-researched, eminently readable book.

Born in 1939, Chapal, originally named Bhabesh, then Chapalesh, was one of many siblings. A sister was born several years...

Read more

Read full story at source