Mumbai Diary: Sunday Dossier

10 May,2026 07:36 AM IST |  Mumbai  |  Team SMD

The city - sliced, diced and served with a dash of sauce

Pic/Satej Shinde


Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

Prepping for flight

A ring-necked parakeet was spotted next to a gargoyle carving at St Xavier's College.

Colaba sees Apparitions

Prerna SM Jain

Apre Art House inaugurates its new space within a heritage building on Wodehouse Road in Colaba. Defined by 25-foot ceilings, an exposed wooden log structure, and high arched windows, the space brings a heightened sense of scale, light, and material presence to the presentation of works.

Opening on 14 May, 6 to 9 pm, Apparitions brings together twelve artists from across South Asia: Naira Mushtaq, Rupaneethan Pakkiyarajah, Aakriti Chandervanshi, Chathuri Nissansala, Debashruti Aich, Kritika Sriram, Madhurjya Dey, Sarban Chowdhury, Sumaiya Sirin, T Krishnapriya, U. Arulraj, and Uditha Ekanayake.

Prerna SM Jain, gallery director of APRE Art House says, "Apparitions is bringing together twelve South Asian artists, the exhibition reflects a shared engagement with presence, memory, and the unseen. The works engage with histories of conflict and displacement, and their afterlives. The exhibition approaches the idea of the ghost not as metaphor alone, but as a condition of persistence, where images, archives, and lived experiences return
in fragmented and unresolved ways."

Hooves meet history

Fine equines at last year's event

Celebrations are on at Bombay Gymkhana, Fort as the SoBo Club founded in 1875, celebrates 150 years of sporting excellence. The horses seem to say yeah, not neigh to that with the third edition of the Standard Chartered Bombay Gymkhana Arena Polo Championship 2026 scheduled for today, Sunday, May 10, beginning 6.30 pm. Polo has been revived after nearly a century and brings with it nostalgia and old world charm on the club's historic green.

Talking about nostalgia, Sunday's action will see two teams named after two officers of the Royal Engineers , Captain EL Maryyat and Lieutenant CL Young who in 1875, drew up a blueprint on the formation of the Bombay Gymkhana. Sanjiv Saran Mehra, President said, "Few venues can offer polo with this kind of history and proximity to the action. This is an event that blends tradition with a modern, spectator-friendly format." To history, horses, and hooves then: polo bolo."

What could Hardik Pandya be thinking?

There are numerous Mumbai Indians fans who don't want to see Hardik Pandya continue as skipper after the kind of results the Indian Premier League team has been dishing out most of the time this year.

Their 3-7 win-loss situation on the points table before today's game against Royal Challengers Bengaluru at Raipur doesn't paint a rosy picture. Replacing Pandya in the hot seat will be looked upon in some quarters as an alarmist move, but a captain caught in such a spot will certainly be thinking what the future has in store.

We remember what then India captain Bishan Singh Bedi said on Day Five after losing the Karachi Test of the 1978-79 series which ended 2-0 in Pakistan's favour: "This could well be my last day as India captain." Bedi was right; replaced by Sunil Gavaskar for the
Test series against the visiting West Indies team.

Meanwhile, we hope Mumbai Indians fans see some better results today, May 14, May 20, and on May 24.

Andheri West goes global

Marcsgotiq is an ace at quirky lyrics. Pic/Instagram @marc.archivee

Gen Alpha loves brainrot music. And writer's feed is filled with lyrics like "Rest in peace my granny, she got hit by a bazooka" by musician Miami XO. Funny and jarring, and the Internet loves this genre.

A new album in this category is Andheri West, "cause that's where it all started," tells us 15-year-old Marc, better known as Marcsgotiq on the Internet, who now lives in Canada. His tongue and cheek Marathi lyrics have gone completely viral. "I started making music six years ago, when I was nine," he tells us. Now, his music is in the background of thousands of Reels. "It feels great," he signs off, as nonchalant on call, as he is in his music.

How bizarre!

Suchita Parikh-Mundul and her new poetry book, Absurd Theatre

This city is different things to each of us. For Byculla poet-journalist Suchita Parikh-Mundul, it is both home and muse; both a haven of familiar comfort and absurdity. And that is one of the themes she explores in her new book of poems, Absurd Theatre (Paperwall Publishing, Rs 399).

A section of the poems is anchored in Mumbai and urbanity, while other sections involve feminist themes.

"The collection's title refers to the absurdity of human existence," says Parikh-Mundul. "In the poem ‘Coastal road', for instance, I speak of the ‘blue tarp of need', and the ‘melding of gold and survival', referencing the chasm between the privileged and the poor. How bizarre that some of us win the birth lottery to find ourselves in comfortable apartments while others must survive homelessness."

"The absurdness is also in the language, the metaphors, and wicked humour, which I hope surprise and delight the reader," she adds.

"Exciting news! Mid-day is now on WhatsApp Channels Subscribe today by clicking the link and stay updated with the latest news!" Click here!
Mumbai Diary Mumbai Diary update Mumbai Dossier Mumbai Dossier update mumbai mumbai news
Related Stories