Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Life

2017 Jessie Award Winner Rohit Chokhani Launches Project SAT

Darpan News Desk, 27 Jun, 2017 03:18 PM
    Award-winning producer, director, cultural leader and recipient of the 2017 Jessie Award for Significant Artistic Achievement (Large Theatre), Rohit Chokhani, is pleased to announce the launch of Project SAT (South Asian Theatre) - an initiative aimed at creating a network for developing, touring, producing, and presenting national and international South Asian theatre projects in Canada.
     
     
    “With Project SAT, I want to help train and educate the next generation of South Asian artists,” says Chokhani. “It’s important to me to be able to create opportunities and establish a new mainstream for them. This is unlike anything being offered anywhere else in B.C. and Canada.”
     
     
    Project SAT kicks off in July 2017 at the new Jim Green House Studio with free workshops, which will focus on grant writing and how to pitch project ideas to presenters and producers. The Grant Writing workshop is scheduled for July 22 from 10am to 4pm and the Pitch Presentation workshops are scheduled for July 22, 25, 26, and August 1st from 6pm to 9pm.
     
     
    These workshops will take a unique, culturally specific approach to training and will be tailored to those in the South Asian community who experience marginalization.
     
     
    Translators for Punjabi, Hindi, and ASL participants will be available upon request. Workshops on producing, playwriting, dramaturgy and Natya Shastra, an ancient South Asian text on the performing arts, will also take place in the upcoming months.
     
    For more information on Project SAT and workshop registration details, please visit projectsat.ca.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Sex good for health of species

    Sex good for health of species
    Researchers from the University of Toronto have found that species which reproduce sexually rather than asexually are healthier over time because...

    Sex good for health of species

    Men less likely to agree with gender bias in science

    Men less likely to agree with gender bias in science
    A new research has found that men are less likely to agree with scientific evidence of gender bias in science, technology, engineering and mathematics...

    Men less likely to agree with gender bias in science

    Men get more upset by sexual than emotional infidelity

    In the largest such study on sexual and emotional infidelity, researchers from Chapman University have learnt that men and women are different when it comes to feeling jealous.

    Men get more upset by sexual than emotional infidelity

    Weight-loss Resolutions Go For A Toss After New Year Begins

    Weight-loss Resolutions Go For A Toss After New Year Begins
    Resolutions to eat better and lose weight soon lose relevance as people end up buying the higher levels of junk food after the New Year begins, a study says.

    Weight-loss Resolutions Go For A Toss After New Year Begins

    Rape? No, It's Hypermasculinity, For Some Men On Campus

    Rape? No, It's Hypermasculinity, For Some Men On Campus
    Some men who do not have feelings of hostility toward women can still engage in sexual assaults on the campus, researchers report, adding that they consider their behaviour as an achievement rather than rape.

    Rape? No, It's Hypermasculinity, For Some Men On Campus

    Mindless Chatter Better For Improving A Child's Communication Skills Than Bedtime Reading

    Mindless Chatter Better For Improving A Child's Communication Skills Than Bedtime Reading
    Absent-minded conversations with your infants work much better at improving their communication and problem-solving skills than reading a book to them or showing them pictures, says a study.

    Mindless Chatter Better For Improving A Child's Communication Skills Than Bedtime Reading