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A 6-day Nepal-India Color Festival has started in Kathmandu under the auspices of the Nepal Music and Drama Academy. In the festival which started from Wednesday, a performance by Actors Studio, written by narrator Nayanraj Pandey and directed by director Dia Maske, was staged on Thursday. Which is a theatrical adaptation of Nayanraj's story 'Serpent Bite'.
The play tells the story of the life of the Sapera tribe in the West Terai region of Nepal. On the one hand, it exposes the complexities of Sapera people's life and on the other hand, it presents a list of dirty politics done by the state on Sapera. Director Maske says, "This is such a play, which is the first step of an artist who spends his life in drama." The festival was inaugurated with the play "Gachchami" directed by Sunil Pokharel.
The festival in collaboration with the National School of Drama in New Delhi is going on at the National Dance Hall Jamal. In the opening session of the festival, Nisha Sharma Pokharel, the chancellor of the Nepal Music and Drama Academy, said that the festival has made the cultural relationship between Nepal and India more alive for thousands of years.
Indian Ambassador to Nepal Naveen Srivastava said that the Nepal-India Color Festival, which was held for the first time, has deepened and deepened the relationship between the two countries and said that it should be continued. Similarly, Pradeep Kumar Mahanthi, Secretary of the National School of Drama, said that since the 26th edition of the festival, which has been held all over India since 1999, it has been expanded to Nepal and Sri Lanka as well.
