Roy answers this question by locating it within the rigid social morality of the time, when women were forbidden from acting because theatre was considered sinful and inappropriate for them. As he writes, “They needed men who could be women or purush Ranis, the male queens.” From this necessity emerged a remarkable generation of performers devoted to female impersonation. Through interviews with actors, directors, journalists, and scholars, Roy reconstructs the forgotten world of these male queens who, despite their immense contribution to Bengali theatre, were rarely granted dignity or recognition. They were mocked for their effeminate behaviour, excluded from respectable social spaces, and later interpreted through modern identity categories they themselves often resisted. Roy therefore presents them not as symbols, but as complex human beings who exceed fixed definitions.