The Asian Age

Focus How women entered a martial arts dance

Teaching chhau to young women in Calcutta was quite a learning and growth period for Krishna Chandra Naik. He developed not only his abilities as a teacher, but also his fertile imaginatio­n as a choreograp­her

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Recently I had a visit from Caroline Prada, currently one of the finest exponents of Mayurbhanj Chhau to chat about women in Chhau. As we spoke, I realised that this is linked to the transition from local royal patronage to performanc­e in urban theatres.

It is well known that the British ban on private armies in eastern India led some zamindars and maharajas to maintain these as martial arts based dance troupes. But when and why did girls, ie. women, enter this male performanc­e domain?

Pre-Independen­ce, my Mayurbhanj Chhau guru, Krishna Chandra Naik danced under the patronage of the Baripada royal court. Two competing teams rehearsed their new choreograp­hies on familiar themes and characters to win honours from the Maharaja. Barred from dancing for a year owing to some transgress­ion, young Krishna was too restless to cool his heels on the sidelines and headed to Calcutta to see what he could do to earn a living through as a dance teacher.

This was the heady times for the revival of Indian cultural traditions as part of reclaiming national identity in the pre and post Independen­ce era by the educated elite. Tagore’s Santineket­an was going strong and the Bengali bandralog embraced dance forms from around India.

Teaching chhau to young women in Calcutta was quite a learning and growth period for Krishna Chandra Naik. He developed not only his abilities as a teacher, but also his fertile imaginatio­n as a choreograp­her and respect for the abilities of women in a previously all-male form.

There was no going home to Baripada after the Maharaj banned all his dancers from performing Chhau after his support had to end with the new Indian government’s cancelling of his privy purse. During the low period, when to be a chhau artist was synonymous with being a rickshaw puller, an invitation from Shanti Bardhan to join his Little Ballet Troupe opened new creative opportunit­ies.

I consider the atmosphere, vision and production­s of the Little Ballet Troupe, establishe­d in 1952 and shifted to Gwalior phase in 1964, resonating with the heady collaborat­ive experiment­ations reminiscen­t of the Bauhaus in Europe. Its core philosophy was to draw on folk and classical traditions and work as an ensemble rather than an individual start performer.

The creative genius of Krishna Chandra Naik was given full expression as he also learned the various aspects and requiremen­ts of theatrical presentati­on. Little Ballet Troupe, Gwalior toured profession­ally but also became a center for training in theater arts, including dance.

Shanti Bardhan’s wife and LBT co-founder Gul Bardhan studied Mayurbhanj Chhau under Krishna Chandra Naik, along with other dance traditions. She carried on alone after her husband’s death in 1954, dancing and adding choreograp­hic works including the iconic signature production of the Ramayana.

Up until this time, Guru Krishna Chandra Naik was the only Mayurbhanj Chhau guru teaching women. Equally significan­t, he was the only one with extensive experience in theatre, which paved the way for him to be able to take a tradition of solo, duet and group dance compositio­ns to another level in creating full evening performanc­es for the stage.

Experience in the theatre was essential for the great gurus of Odissi to rebuild a classical genre out of gotipua and mahari traditions that could transition to the concert stage. Today when we see Gotipua troupes performing the fabulous banda nrutya acrobatic formations, the linking dance technique and performanc­e presentati­on is coming closer to the sophistica­tion of classical Odissi. As Odissi gained recognitio­n and respect during the 20th century revival, gotipua presentati­on style kept it out of the formal theatre venues.

Krishna Chandra Naik received the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in the year 1975 and SNA also paid his salary to stay on in Delhi at the Bhartiya Kala Kendra to teach Mayurbhanj Chhau and create Chhau ballets for their repertory

Experience in the theatre was essential for the great gurus of Odissi to rebuild a classical genre out of gotipua and mahari traditions that could transition to the concert stage

company. In the first few years, his major disciples were two women, Madhuri Bhatia and myself, along with Bharat Sharma. Madhuri was a brilliant dancer, approachin­g learning chhau with an extensive background in yoga, and was the featured dancer in the early BKK annual Chhau ballets choreograp­hed by Guru Krishna Chandra Naik, which included Jagdev, Konark, Kaling Vijay, Khajuraho, Yayati, Karna and Chaitra Parv. These were all under the direction of Shobha Deepak Singh who, sadly for me, wouldn’t consider allowing me to dance in her ballets or even annual student shows but has happily discarded this zenophobia for later generation­s of videshi students.

Just to connect a few more dots in the transition from gaon to city and the acceptance of women in Mayurbhanj Chhau that I have touched on in earlier articles, in 1976 Guru Naik insisted I perform in Baripada for his Chhau peers to prove that women were equally capable. This led to their later inclusion of girls from Baripada itself at the Mayurbhanj Chhau centre. In 1978 I had the opportunit­y to introducin­g Chhau to the Americas at the American Dance Guild/ Congress on Research in Dance held in Hawaii.

Other women who have made a mark in Chhau including Daksha Seth and Ileana Citaristi while Odissi performing artists including Padmavibhu­san Sonal Mansingh and Padmashri Ranjana Gauhar have incorporat­ed Mayurbhanj Chhau in fusion performanc­es.

Except for the Mayurbhanj Chhau ballets choreograp­hed by Guru K.C. Naik, no other Chhau production was seen on the formal stage in Delhi until my production of Jivan Rekha at Kamani Auditorium, with Chhau dancers from Baripada and Seraikella in collaborat­ion with Padmashri Gopal Dubey’s Trinetra Seraikella Chhau Centre. I only realised this when I heard of the outcry that government cultural bodies should have done this and not a foreigner. This delighted me to have played a part in “priming the pump” for Chhau to keep moving from the grounds of Trade fair state pavilions to the concert stage.

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 ??  ?? Caroline Prada (above, left) on stage, a Little Ballet Troupe performanc­e (above) and (below, from left) Guru Madan Mohan Lenka, Guru Krishna Chandra Naik, Guru Sri Hari Nayak and Sharon Lowen.
Caroline Prada (above, left) on stage, a Little Ballet Troupe performanc­e (above) and (below, from left) Guru Madan Mohan Lenka, Guru Krishna Chandra Naik, Guru Sri Hari Nayak and Sharon Lowen.
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 ?? Sharon Lowen ??
Sharon Lowen

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