The play
Nabanna in 1944 is said to be the birth of group theatres in Kolkata.
Nabanna was written by
Bijon Bhattacharya, who also co-directed it with
Sambhu Mitra. They were both active members of the
Indian People's Theatre Association, the association of
leftist theatre-artists. In the commercial theatres at that time, entertainment was the sole purpose. However, the time was tumultuous—the
Indian independence movement was strengthening against the backdrop of the World War 2, and the plight of
Bengal province was further worsened by the
Bengal famine of 1943. Activists and thinkers attempted to use the media of theatre to highlight the plight of the people, and to stage a form of artistic protest. Against this backdrop, the drama
Nabanna portrayed a group of peasants as victim of the famine. The peasants had to leave their village due to famine, and they traveled to Kolkata with the hope for survival in the big city. However, they faced a series of crises and eventually got "...reduced to the most abject acknowledge poverty in Kolkata, where they develop a political awareness of their suffering". Another production of the Indian People's Theatre Association was
Jobanbondi. ==Notion of group==