Mahmood Farooqui | |
---|---|
Born | Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, India |
Alma mater |
The Doon School University of Oxford |
Occupation | Author and storyteller |
Spouse(s) | Anusha Rizvi |
Mahmood Farooqui is an Indian writer, artist and director. He specializes in a type of story-telling known as Dastangoi. In Besieged: voices from Delhi 1857 Farooqui published a series of his translations of texts representing the views of those besieged in Delhi in 1857. He was a researcher for White Mughals, a book by William Dalrymple.
Farooqui along with his uncle noted Urdu poet and literary critic Shamsur Rahman Faruqi have played significant roles in Dastangoi's revival in the 21st century.
Farooqui completed his schooling from The Doon School and went on to read History at St. Stephen's College, Delhi. He was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to read History at St. Peter's College, University of Oxford.
Farooqui began reinventing Dastangoi, the 16th-century Urdu oral storytelling art form, in 2005. Since then, he has performed thousands of shows across the world. Apart from bringing alive the old epic of Dastan-e-Amir Hamza, he has innovated Dastangoi by using it as a medium to tell modern tales. Some of his adaptations include stories on the partition of India; a retelling of Vijaydan Detha's Rajasthani folktale, Chouboli; an allegorical take on the trial and incarceration of Dr Binayak Sen; a collage based on AK Ramanujan’s scholarly essay, ‘300 Ramayanas’; a presentation on the life and times of Saadat Hasan Manto; and an adaptation of Lewis Carroll's world famous classics 'Alice's adventures in Wonderland', and 'Through the Looking Glass'.
He has over the years built a team of dastangos trained by him, including Ankit Chadha, Darain Shahidi, Poonam Girdhani and Himanshu Bajpai.
His publications include the award-winning 'Besieged: Voices from Delhi, 1857', translations of 'Habib Tanvir's memoirs' and 'Dastangoi', a collection of episodes performed by him and his team.
Farooqui is married to film director and screenwriter Anusha Rizvi, who directed the 2010 Indian satirical comedy film Peepli Live which explores the topic of "farmer suicides".