Down Syndrome News
in
the Arts and Entertainment
World
A
Special Performance by
a Special Child

iriya Narthana - 2, a
special performance by
a special child will be
held at the BMICH on August
20 at 6.00 pm. Kosala
Dullewa, a boy of 14 years
afflicted with Down
Syndrome, for the first
time in the history of
this country staged a
"one man show"
of oriental dancing in
January this year at the
BMICH. Kosala displayed
his inborn ability to
perform Bharatha Natyam
to the delight of all
those present. The proceeds
of the entire show was
channelled to fund the
setting up of the "Diri
Daru Piyasa" a centre
to assist special children.
The primary goal of the
centre is to help and
encourage special children
and also to unearth their
hidden talents like singing,
dancing and other artistic
abilities. Diri Daru Piyasa
which started in March
soon after the show has
100 special students today
who are trained under
the loving care and guidance
of veteran artist Miranda
Hemalatha and her staff.
Kosala's performance has
ignited the imagination
and the enthusiasm of
many parents of special
children. Though the response
has been very encouraging
the centre is run with
the minimum of facilities
for trainers as well as
students. Diriya Narthana
- 2 is repeated by popular
request to uphold the
special cause of Diri
Daru Piyasa.
Movie star with Down
Syndrome breaks
new ground for Russia's
disabled
Provided by: Canadian
Press
Written by: SARAH KARUSH

Sergei Makarov, 37 during
a rehearsal of a play
at the Moscow's Theater
of Simple Souls, a troupe
of actors with Down Syndrome.
(AP /Alexander Zemlianichenko)
MOSCOW (AP) - For most
of Sergei Makarov's 37
years, when people looked
at him they saw what Russian
society typically sees
in those with Down syndrome
- a helpless child.
Today they're looking
at a movie star. Makarov
played a leading role
in Little Old Ladies,
which took the top prize
at Russia's most important
film festival this year
- a groundbreaking event
in a country where attitudes
toward the disabled are
decades behind the West.
"What
he did is practically
the flight of (Yuri) Gagarin,"
the first man in space,
said Makarov's father,
Valery.
Makarov's modest fame
stands out in a country
with a history of pressuring
parents into placing mentally
disabled children in institutions
where abuse and neglect
were rampant.
Though attitudes are slowly
changing, activists say
that most children with
Down syndrome still end
up in the state's care
and that cruelty still
abounds in orphanages.
Even those who remain
with their families have
few opportunities to realize
themselves.
Makarov's parents refused
to give up Sergei, but
no school in their Moscow
suburb would take him.
His mother, Saima Makarova,
taught him herself - with
little encouragement.
Officials said it wasn't
worth educating him as
he was sure to die by
age 16 of the physical
complications associated
with Down syndrome.
"You
can turn him inside out,
but you'll never make
anything out of him,"
she recalled a doctor
telling her.
Three years ago, at 34,
Makarov got the chance
to prove otherwise when
his parents stumbled upon
Moscow's Theatre of Simple
Souls, a troupe of actors
with Down syndrome. Makarov
joined and took the lead
role in a play based on
a story by 19th century
author Nikolai Gogol.
"It
gave him an interest in
life. He went to rehearsals,
met other kids,"
Makarova said.
Igor Neupokoyev, a professional
actor and the troupe's
volunteer director, said
he founded the theatre
in part to help people
with Down syndrome become
"complete" people.
"The
ability to act is a very
human ability," he
said.
Gennady Sidorov was about
to embark on his directing
debut with Little Old
Ladies when he discovered
Makarov at a Simple Souls
performance and cast him
as a goat herder, the
only man left in a village
of about a half dozen
old women.
Makarov seems to relish
movie stardom. After a
recent Moscow showing
of Little Old Ladies,
he stood near the exit,
shaking hands with admirers.
Asked during an interview
about his music tastes,
he said, "I'm not
a bad singer myself"
- and demonstrated with
a rendition of Love Me
Tender - in English -
in his gruff baritone.
Before joining the theatre,
Makarov's main links to
the outside world were
television and newspapers,
which he reads avidly.
He rarely leaves the family's
Moscow apartment unaccompanied
because his parents fear
neighbourhood bullies
would tease him or worse.
Still, Makarov said he
considers himself lucky.
"I
have arms and I have legs,"
he said. "There are
people who have no arms
and no legs."
The 3½ months Makarov
spent on location in the
northern Russian countryside
changed his life, he said.
He forged lasting friendships,
learned about the movie
business and earned his
first wages, which he
used to pay for long-delayed
dental work. Now he hopes
publicity from the movie
will help the Simple Souls
acquire their own stage.
Nikita Romanenko, who
plays a flamboyant city
dweller who returns to
the village to bury his
mother, said he was initially
skeptical about working
with someone with Down
syndrome.
"He
turned out to be a very
disciplined, very responsive
partner who actually helped
me a lot in my own role,"
Romanenko said.
But Makarov's parents
say they are not holding
out for a continuation
of his movie career.
"Russian
society isn't ready for
this," Valery Makarov
said.
The significance of Makarov's
cinema debut for Russia's
disabled was largely ignored
in Russian reviews of
the movie and reports
from Russia's biggest
film festival, Kinotavr.
The movie has had only
limited showings in Russia
- in part because the
old women's cussing goes
beyond the norms of Russian
cinema.
Makarov said he would
welcome more acting opportunities,
though his main wish for
the future is closer to
home: "My biggest
dream is that my parents
live a long, long time
and never have any regrets."
The crowning moment of
Makarov's odyssey came
in June when he went to
the Black Sea resort of
Sochi to help represent
Little Old Ladies at the
Kinotavr festival. When
the master of ceremonies
announced the film had
won the Golden Rose -
the festival's top prize
- director Sidorov brought
Makarov on stage.
Makarov had not been expecting
to make a speech. His
father, who was watching
the ceremony on TV in
Moscow, recalled a pang
of fear: Would Sergei
know what to say in front
of all these people?
Taking the prize, Makarov
blew a kiss to the audience
and then planted one on
the Golden Rose.
"Thank
you, my friends,"
he said. "I love
you all."