Ardhendu Sekhar Mustafi

Ardhendu Sekhar Mustafi (25 January 1850 — 5 September 1908) was a Bengali actor, playwright and theater personality.[1]

Career

Mustafi was born at Bagbazar, Kolkata, British India in 1850. He studied in the Hare School. Mustafi first performed in 1867 in a satire drama Kichhu Kichhu Bujhi at Pathuriaghata Royal palace. He joined Bagbazar Amateur Theater group and performed in Sadhabar Ekadashi, written by novelist Dinabandhu Mitra. He was known as a rival and associates actor of Girish Chandra Ghosh.[2] Mustafi helped Ghosh to establish the National Theater in 1872. Amrita Lal Basu described Mustafi as 'An actor made by God' because he could perform different type of characters in a play. In Nildarpan, Mustafi played both male and female roles including the characters of antagonist Englishman, Wood Sahib.[3] He was also a successful drama teacher of Kolkata. Mustafi acted in various stages including Indian National Theater, Great National Theater, Emerald Theater, Arya Natya Samaj, Minerva, Aurora and Star Theater since 1872 to 1904. He also wrote a book named Binar Jhankar.[4]

Plays

  • Nabin Tapaswini
  • Durgeshnandini
  • Sirajddaula
  • Mir Kashim
  • Prafulla
  • Rizia
  • Pratapaditya
  • Buro Shaliker Ghare Ro
  • Meghnadbadh
  • Balidan
  • Hirakchurna
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gollark: (it actually does run expression simplification in parallel, which is neat)
gollark: Rust, so it can concur fearlessly.
gollark: It's very WIP.
gollark: An early copy has been distributed to baidicoot.

References

  1. "Mustafi, Ardhendu Sekhar". oxfordreference.com. Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  2. Partha Chatterjee. "The Black Hole of Empire: History of a Global Practice of Power". Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  3. Bipasha Raha, Subhayu Chattopadhyay. "Mapping the Path to Maturity: A Connected History of Bengal and the North-East". Retrieved October 29, 2018.
  4. Mustafi, Ardhendu Shekhar. "Binar Jhankar". Retrieved October 29, 2018.
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