Culture

Taking Indian Theatre By Storm: Behind The Curtains Of 'Humare Ram'

  • Felicity Theatre's Humare Ram brings the Ramayana to urban theatre with grandeur, nuance, and a cultural honesty. This is the story of how this project came to be. 

Arjun NarayananJun 27, 2025, 05:35 PM | Updated 05:35 PM IST
From the play 'Humare Ram' - Hanuman in Ravan's court.

From the play 'Humare Ram' - Hanuman in Ravan's court.


The curtains go up and one can see Ram, seated with his mothers and brothers at the yagnashala, where the ashwamedha sacrifice is on. Suddenly, two young actors emerge from the audience and sing the glory of Rama. These are Lava and Kusha, students of Valmiki, performing the Ramayana before the very hero of the epic.

Felicity Theatre's Humare Ram begins its story pretty much where Valmiki does in the Balakanda. But then, the scene shifts to Sita's bhumipravesh and the angry outburst of the children who have tough questions for their father, before they can let him accept them.

The play, Humare Ram, is an attempt to answer some of the questions around the Ramayana that have run in the minds of sceptics for ages. These questions have been given utterances through the characters of Lava and Kusha. The silent witness of creation, Surya, himself appears to tell the story of Ram and explains his actions. After all, Ram offered a great benediction to Surya by being born in his dynasty.

The play has been written by Rahull Bhuchar, who has also played the role of Ram in it.


The press reviews have been positive. Some reviewers have called it a magnum opus and a grand theatrical spectacle, while some have pointed out that the play has become a super-hit while a big budget movie on the same theme has bombed (with obvious references to Adipurush).

Several celebrities have quietly gone to watch the play over the months and heaped praises on it. Online forums like Reddit are buzzing with positive word-of-mouth.

All of this led me to watch this play in Chennai (where it had sold a full house). Impressed by the scale and emotional depth of the production, I found myself curious about its journey, how it all came together, and where it began. Over the next few days and weeks, I got the chance to interact with many cast and crew members and hear their stories.

Stills from 'Humare Ram'.

Behind the stage.

The genesis

Rahull Bhuchar has been in the theatre scene for almost a decade and a half. Many years back, he had accompanied his friend and producer Bobby Malik to a press conference and was taken by surprise when he was chosen to play the role of Ram in Ayodhya’s Ramleela.


But Rahull did not cast himself initially in the role of Ram. His initial choice was Sonu Sood. Later, he went to Saurabh Raj Jain, who had played Krishna in the Star Plus Mahabharat. But things did not work out.

"I then thought, why not do it myself? I had done this for Ramleela over five times and I was devoted to Ram. But my portrayal of Ram was the same then and now. It doesn't matter if the person is a common man coming to watch a Ramleela or someone spending thousands on a ticket for Humare Ram. I believe they both should get the same experience of knowing Ram."

Ram.

The challenge of memory

Any dramatic retelling of the Ramayana has to keep in mind that it is retelling what is arguably the most retold story in India. Granted, many members of an urban audience might not have a personal memory of witnessing a Ramleela staging, or witnessing one in recent times, but the audience as a whole has a cultural memory of it. A play based on the Ramayana thus has to respect the fact that watching the Ramayana on stage is not a new experience for an average Indian.

In the Hindi-speaking parts of the country, Ramleelas are still a ubiquitous phenomenon in the months of September and October. While many attribute the origins of the Ramleela to Tulsidas in the sixteenth century, there is a view, not uncommon, that this theatre form predates even him.

In the twentieth century, by the 1980s, when television became the new thing in town, Ramanand Sagar's Ramayan created a storm not only in the drawing rooms but also in India's political landscape. The great poet and academician Shivmangal Singh Suman once profusely praised Sagar at a public function, where he said that when the nation was being torn apart by secessionist forces with separatist demands, Sagar's Ramayan unified the country like never before. He even went on to announce that four centuries after Tulsidas, it was Ramanand Sagar who ensured that Ramayan reached the common man in his home, making him a modern day legend.


Rahull Bhuchar was no different.

The casting call

Rahull spent over two years convincing Ashutosh Rana for the role of Ravan.

The entry of Ashutosh Rana was a game changer for the team. The play's director, Gaurav Bharadwaj, calls him a sea of knowledge.

Ravan.

Ravan offering his head.


Director Gaurav Bharadwaj.

Gaurav was known to Rahull for a long time. He came from an advertising background but was new to theatre. For that matter, Gaurav wasn’t even completely familiar with the epic, and spent a lot of time studying it before taking up this project.

"Rahul has been running a non-profit theatre organisation to promote Indian theatre and make it commercially viable. But this play has become a milestone for us," says Gaurav, who believes that devotion should involve surrender without any doubt about the one we worship.


Jatayu trying to rescue Sita from Ravan.

Ram and Ravan.

Sita's role has been played by Harleen Rekhi, who is also currently essaying the character of Mandodari in the series Kakbhushundi Ramayan by Sagar Arts, that's being aired on DD National. Danish Akhtar as Hanuman and Tarun Khanna as Shiva have also proven their mettle in these roles on television in the past.

Rekhi feels she's been lucky to play Sita but does not feel the pressure that comes with it.


The theatre background has helped her with Humare Ram as well and as she dons on the makeup and walks up to stage to live the role of Sita yet again, she feels she's getting closer to the character with each show.

"Both Ram and Sita lived their lives within the boundary of maryada and it requires a lot of discipline and patience to not let go of that. We need these qualities today more than ever before. I have played Mandodari on the TV show Shrimad Ramayan and now on Kakbhushundi Ramayan. Both these women have been venerated in our country. Mandodari is among the panch kanyas. Both Sita and Mandodari tried to drill sense into Ravan and had a clear conscience. Also, I share a few scenes with Ashutosh ji and that as well has been a learning experience. He is a much experienced actor but once on stage, we become the character. There he is Ravan and I am Sita."


Deep engagement

At a running time of 3 hours and 15 minutes, and without a break, the play might seem too long at a time when even a 15-second Instagram reel fails to hold the attention of people. But being from an advertising background, Gaurav knows the game of attention.


Shiva Pooja by Ravan.

Rahull has left no stone unturned for the play, be it in set design, costumes or music. The whole play was rehearsed for over eight months before it was staged for the first time and Rahull was particular about the finer aspects, right up to the pause taken during the dialogue delivery.


Ravan's entry.

The costumes have been done by Vishnu Patil, who had also provided costumes for Ramanand Sagar's Ramayan and B. R. Chopra's Mahabharat. Singers like Sonu Nigam, Shankar Mahadevan and Kailash Kher were roped in, and Ashutosh Rana himself sang the Shiva Tandava Stotram in Hindi.


Soorpanakha and Nikumbala.

Rambha.

Another portrayal

Another aspect where Humare Ram stands strong is that it doesn't unnecessarily play to the gallery of modern sentiments and political correctness, a case in point being the portrayal of Soorpanakha.


In fact, he uses an interesting story from the Kamba Ramayana to show the back story of Soorpanakha in the epic, which makes for an interesting insight and a galvanising act by Deepti Kumar. And you also get to know why Ravan chose not to violate Sita with the episode of Rambha and Nalkubera.

Shiva.

The sounds

Music can make or break a period drama. Belonging to a country where there is a rich musical tradition of Ram bhakti, Humare Ram invests a lot of effort into elevating the key moments of the play with songs and background music.

The songs composed by Udbhav Ojha and Saurabh Mehta sometimes enhance a given emotion and sometimes play a role in taking the script forward, as in a good musical.

While comparisons with the past masters might seem inevitable, Saurabh chose not to listen to works on this subject as he wanted to create his own trajectory.


Saurabh grew up in Ujjain, and the reading of Ramcharitmanas was a daily practice in his home.

"While I don't have any formal training in music. I composed several jingles, where you have to express the whole content in 10 seconds. It has to catch on and be hummable. While working on this play, I had it in my mind that the songs had to be hummable. And I think we have succeeded with that."

Pooja before the curtains go up.

Stage Pooja.

Walking on a tightrope

Humare Ram breaks from the traditional stage depictions of the Ramayana by including the Uttara Kanda (the post-coronation story of Ram and Sita, which contains portions of her second exile) in the story.

It begins its journey with a resolve to answer some controversial questions on the epic, mainly derived from the Uttara Kanda. But many scholars in the past have deemed the chapter an appendix added at a later date.

Poets like Tulsidas and Kambar did not write about Sita's exile and narrations of the Ramayana found in the Mahabharata do not have any mention of the Uttara Kanda nor is it found in the summary of the story narrated by Narada to Valmiki.

Contemporary scholars like Dr Rangan have also dismissed the possibility of Uttara Kanda being a part of Valmiki's epic. Swami Ramabhadracharya of the Ramananda Sampradaya even wrote a book titled Sita Nirvasan Nahi, where he refutes the authenticity of Sita's banishment.


And it is in dealing with the Uttara Kanda that Humare Ram might seem stiff and awkward. This writer’s main issue comes not with the inclusion of this episode in the play but with not cleanly tying up the loose ends.

While Humare Ram establishes the greatness of Rama and Sita without doubt, it still skirts some of the main questions.

However, this does not take away from the brilliance of the epic for the viewer, and that is where the play scores high.

Hanuman in Ravan's court.

By the end of Humare Ram, you realise that the actions and decisions of characters like Ram and Sita cannot be judged from a limited, utilitarian viewpoint. The play also pushes back against the long-standing intellectual skulduggery of quoting the ‘controversial’ portions of the epic out of context, and in doing this, the show stands tall.

For each show, before the curtains go up, the team offers prayers to Ram backstage so that their collective endeavour is blessed.


"I feel I have changed as a person and have begun traversing a different path in life. I can see empathy grow in me as I have continued living with the character of Ram and emotions like anger and jealousy have died down. My dietary habits have changed, and I am fully a vegetarian now. Spirituality has become an important part of my life and as we have been doing this weekend after weekend, I feel connected to Ram all the time."

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