What can an ensemble of six actors, a handful of props, and a minimalist stage setting possibly achieve? As it turns out, a lot! Staged as part of the recently concluded IHC Collegiate Theater and Music Festival, Short Circuits was brought to life by The Players from Kirori Mal College at the Habitat Centre’s amphitheater.Adapted from British playwright Caryl Churchill’s experimental play Love and Information, Short Circuits breaks away from the linear structure of traditional theatre, embracing an open-ended, non-narrative form of storytelling. While Churchill’s original play consists of 57 micro-plays spanning seemingly disjointed themes, the adaptation selects a handful of scenes and weaves them together through a common thread, questioning the price humans pay for living in a rapidly changing world. Some of the short scenes that make up the play include Affair, Basuri, Schizophrenic, Small Thing, God’s Voice, Memory House, Fire, Stone, Wife, and Earthquake – each enacted after drawing a chit and performed until another member of the cast ends it with a clap, moving on to the next.Thematically, the play explores the need for genuine human connection in the digital age shaped by information overload, where interpersonal interactions are increasingly mediated by technology.As one scene blurs into the next with dizzying speed, without a clearly defined shape or form, one is forced to compare it with a cluttered Instagram feed, drawing the audience into an endless pit of doomscrolling before they even realize it. Some as brief as five seconds, the scenes deliberately compete for attention through fleeting exchanges between unnamed characters. With these vignettes of fragmented reality flickering in and out with hurried urgency, the paradoxes of connection and isolation grow even more stark.The play’s loose structure and fluid template replicating a theater workshop give the actors ample room to improvise on stage; ironically, however, this format also becomes its weak link, as the young performers at times seem to lack the experience and expertise the genre demands.
















