With a minimum of fuss, a sprinkling of humour, some deftly delivered dialogues and props that tantalised the imagination, three actors -- Asmit Pathare, Santanu Ghatak, and Shaun Williams -- invoked history with a considerable measure of success. Watching 'The Bose Legacy' in a no-frills room that pretended to be an auditorium in Bandra, Mumbai, was an unexpectedly immersive experience. The relationship between Amiya Nath and his father Sarat and uncle, Subhash Chandra Bose unravelled slowly as the play progressed. Distance and time were negated by space as the voices and persona of the brothers, jailed for their anti-British stance, interspersed the reading of their letters by Amiya. Humour turned to sobriety with a hint of pathos now and then, as the years rolled by, and the young nephew suffered the news of his uncle’s journey across the seas and subsequent death and watched his father grow old. A moment of unexpected light shone through when he heard of a cousin, his uncle’s daughter, but that thread was not taken further in the play.