The method and the madness What acting teaches about discipline, identity—and the patient pursuit of excellence From the torchlit stages of ancient drama to the algorithmic feed of OTT platforms, the craft of performance has always rewarded a single, unglamorous quality: the willingness to keep learning long after others have stopped The theatre has always been a humbling place. Ancient Athenians competed for the right to perform at the Festival of Dionysus; rejection was a civic verdict. Today the verdicts arrive more quietly—an unanswered audition email, a callback that never materialises—but the underlying arithmetic is unchanged. For every performer who works steadily, dozens do not. Understanding why requires separating the mystique from the mechanism. Begin with the medium. Theatre and film make demands that are, in important respects, opposite. On stage, an actor must carry an hour or more of continuous text without interruption or recourse to a second take; a single dropped lin...
The VCK's story is 44 years long. It spans riots, eloquence, betrayals, alliances, compromises, defeats, comebacks, and finally — a seat at the table of power. It is not a clean success story. It is a survival manual. And that is precisely why it is so instructive. Phase 1 — Birth in Blood: The Street Movement (1982–1999) The Dalit Panthers Iyyakkam was formed in 1982 in Madurai, Tamil Nadu, to seek protection of Dalits from caste-related violence, founded by a group of disaffected Dalits under the leadership of M. Malachami, emerging as a loosely organised group of local activists. Wikipedia The organisation was born not from ideology seminars but from the acute, lived experience of violence. Thirumavalavan, when working for the government's Forensic Department in Madurai, met Malachami. Following Malachami's death, he was elected as the leader of the DPI on 21 January 1990. He designed a new flag for the party and changed its name to Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi. Acc...