HINDUSTAN TIMES OFFERS YOU... MAP YOUR DAY
Transcription
HINDUSTAN TIMES OFFERS YOU... MAP YOUR DAY
| 02 HINDUSTAN TIMES, MUMBAI FRIDAY, MAY 29, 2015 SWITCH OFF. UNWIND. EXPLORE The No TV Weekend is finally here. In the run-up, we suggest ways in which you can celebrate with friends and family. Don’t miss: HT’s exciting events and prizes. Join the celebration on facebook.com/htnotvday and twitter.com/htnotvday What’s your story? READ This No TV Weekend, swap yarns, host a book club meet, dress up as an anime character. Spend your time exchanging the books that have most touched you, with your literary soulmates We have lots lined up for you throughout No TV Weekend. Here’s a look at the schedule highlights ON FRIDAY, CHECK OUT Kanika Sharma ■ HINDUSTAN TIMES OFFERS YOU... OPEN-DECK BUS RIDES [email protected] Breeze through south Mumbai atop an open-deck bus. Collect passes at the Coomaraswamy Hall gate of the Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj museum between 3pm and 3.15pm. Hop on for an hour-long ride at 4.30pm One way to spend the No TV Day weekend is with soulmates — people who were as heartbroken as you when the Weasley twins died, and as exhilarated by Gandalf ’s return. Bring alive the storyteller in you. Move those piles of books that have been hogging the furniture and start a conversation with other readers. You can organise a book club yourself — pick a novel, or a theme, or both, and invite friends over. Or, if you’d prefer to outsource, spend the long weekend sampling the reading groups and book exchange clubs scattered across the city. Deepak Gupta, 33, works in the merchant navy and started one such group in August 2012. Called Book Exchange Club of Mumbai, it encourages members to swap their favourite reads and discuss the new books they have discovered. Meets are held on the weekends, across restaurants in Bandra, Juhu, Fort, Worli, Lower Parel, Nariman Point, Ghatkopar and Belapur. “It’s a great way to meet new people from different age groups and professions, pass on old books and take home something new,” Gupta says. It’s also a great way to come across books you might otherwise never have read. TREASURE HUNT Do you know your city well enough? Test your knowledge of Mumbai at 6pm, at Shivaji Park, Dadar MUMBAI CYCLOTHON Join us on a fun bike ride! Do bring your own bicycle and cycling gear. Assembly time is 6am, at Lucky Restaurant, Bandra STAND-UP COMEDY Get ready to laugh your heart out with Arzan Khambatta and Neville Bharucha. 8 pm to 8.30 pm, David Sassoon Library, Kala Ghoda ON SATURDAY, CHECK OUT HELICOPTER JOYRIDE Soar hundreds of feet above the city and see its stunning coastline from an all-new perspective. Noon to 1 pm, at Pawan Hans, Juhu BEER-AND-FOOD PAIRING ■ (Clockwise from above) Book Exchange Club of Mumbai encourages members to swap their favourite reads and then discuss the books they have discovered. Small Tales, the children’s chapter of storytelling group Tall Tales, organises yarn-weaving sessions on weekends. Super Readers Club organises interactive storytelling and book-exploration sessions ideal for children aged two-and-a-half to 12, with meets addressed by children’s authors too. Get tips from the experts. Entry based on availability of space. 1 pm to 2 pm, at Irish House, Kala Ghoda PIZZA-MAKING WORKSHOP Let Serafina show you how to roll out your pizza the Italian way. Entry based on availability of space. 5 pm to 6 pm, at Serafina, Kala Ghoda “With every session, we meet as strangers but books are the medium through which we open up to each other,” says homemaker Reeta Gandhi, 34, a member of BEC since 2013. “I was new to the city then and I yearned to find fellow booklovers. Because of the confidence I gained in the book club, I have even started conducting storytelling sessions for companies and for street children.” Gandhi says the club introduced her to PG Wodehouse and Brian Weiss, but if superheroes and heroines are more your thing, you could opt for the Mumbai Anime Club. Members here range from 20-yearold college students to 60-year-old retirees. “One of the best things about being in Mumbai Anime Club is the people you get to meet,” says Ankur Chakravarty, 23, a Mira Road resident, content writer and ardent fan of the Japanese Manga comic form. “I used to be so quiet, always keeping to a corner, observing silently. Through the club I found people who shared my interests, and I felt like I could be myself with them. These friends have changed me and become an integral part of my life.” Anime is also an ideal theme for a book-based costume party. You and your friends can attend dressed as Kakashi from the anime Naruto or a character from Dragon Ball Z. There are also storytelling clubs where you can preserve the oral tradition and take turns being creator and listener. Storytelling club Katha Kosa (which means Treasury of Stories in Prakrit) is one such platform. Started by professional storyteller Dhara Kothari in 2012, it invites people to weave and listen to narrations of stories based on real life, fiction, mythology and fables. “You can share stories from books or movies, things you heard or read about, anything, as long as it is a story to share and listen to,” Kothari says. “We usually pick a theme — seasons, travels, ‘once upon a time’ and so on. KICKBOXING WORKSHOP WITH LEENA MOGRE Get some high-intensity aerobics and resistance training for muscle-building and heart and lung fitness. 10 am to 11 am at Leena Mogre Fitness Centre, Bandra PHIR MAINE WOH SAPNA DEKHA - A HINDI PLAY Get a peek into the experiences of a soldier. 7.30 pm to 8.30 pm, at David Sassoon Library, Kala Ghoda The Guide MAP YOUR DAY We also create games and activities based on storytelling, to ensure that everyone gets to participate without feeling out of place or shy. There are no rules. You can even come and listen to stories, even if you have none to share.” And then there’s Tall Tales (for adults) and Small Tales (the children’s version), which org anises yarn-weaving sessions on weekends. “Small Tales helps give young people a deeper appreciation and understanding of stories, encouraging them to spin yarns and skip boredom,” says founder Gayatri Aptekar, a professional storyteller. ■ Fans of anime can organise a cosplay party where guests come dressed as their favourite character. Here, a cosplay fan dresses as Ryuk, a god of death. Pass on the love of stories to your children, or make new friends over old favourites BOOK EXCHANGE CLUB OF MUMBAI MUMBAI Juhu Andheri Small Tales session, Khar Bandra Ghatkopar Worli Lower Parel Nariman Point Fort Book Exchange Club of Mumbai This club has 1,150 members and holds meet-ups on weekends. Membership is free and open to all adults. In addition to exchanging books and discussing what you read, you can also join field trips to literature festivals and book donation drives for underprivileged children. This weekend, the group is organising a discussion of An Ideal Wife with first-time author Sanjay Grover, who will discuss the challenges of finding a publisher. ing from 10 to 40. Tanya Shringarpure, 26, a veterinarian and administrator of the group, also provides costumes, wigs and props on rent for cosplay. TO SIGN UP for free or organise a hangout, go to Facebook.com/ groups/macmum FOR COSPLAY SUPPLIES, go to facebook.com/syrinxscosplaysupplies SMALL TALES Small Tales, an offshoot of the Tall Tales storytelling platform, will hold an WHERE: Laugh Out Loud event titled ‘On Your Ventures, opposite Mark. Get Set. Story!’, Andheri (East) railway for children aged 8 to station, on May 30, from 14, this weekend. The 10 am to 1 pm. Book lovthree-hour event will ers can also exchange use story cubes, cards, books at the club’s open props and games to shelves in cafés across encourage the creativithe city (see map) THINKSTOCK ty of the young particiFOR MORE INFORMApants and get each of them to TION, or to register, log on to spin a yarn. The meet will be conmeetup.com/book-exchangeducted by founder Michael Burns, club-of-mumbai or facebook. a filmmaker, and professional stocom/bookexchangeclubofmumbai ryteller Gayatri Aptekar. MUMBAI ANIME CLUB From art competitions to cosplay, choreographed fights, auctions, quizzes, karaoke nights and card games, the Mumbai Anime Club is a dynamic club for lovers of the Japanese animation form. The club has 2,500 members on Facebook, in an age group rang- WHERE: The Hive, off Union Park, Khar (West) WHEN: May 31, 11 am to 2 pm CALL: 98205-86083; COST: Rs 1,500 per child (including lunch) TO REGISTER, go to talltales.in/ smalltales.html or on.fb. me/1JCLPIG, or email [email protected] ON SUNDAY, CHECK OUT HELICOPTER JOYRIDE Soar hundreds of feet above the city and see its stunning coastline from an all-new perspective. Noon to 1 pm, at Pawan Hans, Juhu RUNNING AND LIVING Run for 5 and 10 km, make new friends, explore your neighbourhood and your city. Assemble at 6.15 am at the Aarey Chhota Kashmir lake parking lot, Juhu Chowpatty or Mahalaxmi racecourse BMX STUNT BIKE SHOW Watch professional stunt performers perform daring stunts. 9 am to 10 am, at National Sports Club of India, Worli WINE TASTING BY ALL THINGS NICE Set out on a wine trail with sommelier Nikhil Agarwal and taste an assortment of varieties and styles from around the world. 7.30 pm to 8.30 pm, at Shiro, Worli TOTAL FOOTBALL AND CARD GAMES FOR KIDS Form teams, strategise and play on an astroturf football field and outdoor futsal facility. 4 pm to 6 pm, at Kick, Powai To register or view the full list of events, go to notvday.hindustantimes.com Printed and distributed by PressReader P r e s s R e a d e r. c o m +1 604 278 4604 • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • ORIGINAL COPY • CO PY R I G H T A N D P R OT E C T E D BY A P P L I C A B L E L AW