Updated On: 22 July, 2018 08:56 AM IST | Mumbai | A Correspondent
A dramatised reading of a German play hopes to make us reflect on the misogyny and homophobia that exists in society

Director Sheena Khalid guides the cast during a rehearsal. Pic/Sameer Markande
When director Sheena Khalid was first approached by Studio Tamaasha to do a dramatised reading of German playwright Thomas Jonigk's You Shall Give Me Grandsons, it took her at least three to four readings, before she could absorb and understand its shocking material. "It's a bizarre script. The language is misogynistic, harsh and anti-homosexual. The play in general is very dark and draws light to several social problems — and all at once," says Khalid. The reading is being organised in collaboration with Goethe-Institut Mumbai and Tamaasha Theatre.
Jonigk's play tells the story about a powerful and manipulative mother, who is obsessed with her sons to the point that it seems incestuous. She demands that her younger son, who is homosexual, marry and give her a grandson. "But he refuses because he is gay and detests women. Despite this, the mother is determined to get him a wife, so that he can procreate and carry on the family lineage. In the past, the mother has been harassed by her own husband. "She represents what happens when women are subjugated to such an extent that they turn around and become oppressors themselves," Khalid says.