University of Hawai'i Press Asian Theatre Journal
University of Hawai'i Press Asian Theatre Journal
University of Hawai'i Press Asian Theatre Journal
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The Rising Importance of
Indigenous Theatre in India
Sunil Kothari and Goverdhan Panchal
Goverdhan Panchal, Emeritus Instructor of Scene Design at the National School of Drama, has writ-
ten many books and articles on traditional Indian theatre. Sunil Kothari, Chairperson of Dance at the
Rabindra Bharati University, Calcutta, is the author of numerous books on Indian dance, including
the forthcoming Kathak.
Asian TheatreJournal 1, no. 1 (Spring 1984). ? by the University of Hawaii Press. All rights reserved.
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REPORTS 113
tional theatre from the state of Kerala. From kudiyattam he took the highly
stylized speech patterns and the detailed methods of acting the major roles
of Bhima and Ghatotkacha. The fighting scene used indigenous kalaripa-
yattu martial arts techniques, and the music was a blend of kudiyattam and
kathakali instruments and musical styles. Traditional modes of music (raga)
and hand gestures (hastamudra) were employed with imagination. Panik-
kar thus brought a classic more than 1,500 years old within the reach of
the masses who responded to it enthusiastically. Though Panikkar is ac-
cused of following an eclectic approach, all these elements were integrated
to create a harmonious, highly pleasing performance.
A young director of exceptional sensibilities, Ratan Thiyam, from
Manipur on the northeast border, staged another classical play of Bhasa's,
Broken Thighs (Urbhanga), to rave reviews. He transformed the play most
delightfully into manipuri form. The weeping queens wore traditional
manipuri costumes of gossamer white, complete with veils. Through gentle
manipuri dance movements they created the various elements of nature,
their bodies swaying like ivy in a soft breeze. When the men, dressed in
spotless white with bare torsos, danced vigorously, the traditional manipuri
music and song burst into a masculine roar of sound. The speech element
left much to be desired, yet overall this local adaptation of an ancient
drama was most satisfying. A production of Pitanga by the brilliant direc-
tor Kanhailal incorporated manipuri dance, song, movement, and mini-
mal use of props with lasting impact. Dance was also an integral part of
the action of the play Kuhuman Chakha Moirang Ngamba as directed by
A. Lokendra. In this case, the dance expressed a tribal ethos.
For the past twenty-four years, Sanskrit plays have been staged at
the Kalidasa Festival held in Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh. Until recent times
staging followed a Western realistic approach, and no one bothered about
the classical staging conventions as described so minutely by Bharata in
the Natyasastra (The art of theatre). But in 1982, three productions at the
Festival drew on Indian resources in staging Act IV of Kalidasa's Vicrama
and Urvashi (Vikramurvashiyam). K. D. Tripathi's interpretation began
with elaborate preliminaries (purvaranga) staged the day before the play
began. The Central Sahitya Akademi's version incorporated music with a
great deal of thought (although the dance element lacked care in prepara-
tion), while the performance from Kerala, under K. Narayana Panik-
kar's direction, created a world of images through symbolic gestures,
movements, and dance.
The Padatik Theatre in Calcutta produced Mohan Rakesh's mod-
ern Shakuntala in Hindi. The director, ShyamanandaJalan, brought in the
renowned expert of odissi classical dance, Kelucharan Mahapatra, to cho-
reograph the pivotal scenes in which Shakuntala meets King Dushyanta
in odissi dance movements. The attempt was to achieve a unity of classical
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114 Kothari and Panchal
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