The Devi’s blessing: Yuvati
Geeta Chandran |
To help
Parichay Foundation [Bhubhaneshwar] raise funds for their seminal work with
skill development for poor girls, Bharatanatyam dancer, Padma Shri Geeta
Chandran, and her talented Natya Vriksha Dance Company presented Yuvati, a
creative Bharatanatyam group performance, at the Chinmaya Mission Auditorium,
in New Delhi on 25th August 2013. The chief guests for the evening
were Dr. Karan Singh and Dr. Sayeda Hamid, member, Planning Commission.
Geeta
Chandran is a renowned Bharatanatyam dancer who needs no introduction. She
started learning Bharatanatyam at the tender age of 5 years under the tutelage
of Smt. Swarna Saraswathy. She has learnt from a galaxy of eminent gurus. She
is also the artistic director of the Natya Vriksha Company, known for the high
aesthetic quality of its group presentations. She has travelled all over the
world with her performances and has danced at many prestigious festivals. She
was awarded the Padma Shri by the President of India in 2007.
Geeta spoke
thoughtfully about the production, “I have been to Orissa many times and I know
what the ground reality there is. It is one of the poorest states. I was very
touched by the work the NGO is doing there, so when they approached me to give
my time, I agreed readily. When I thought about the concept ‘yuvati’, I did not
think about the typically feminist angle, but instead, I applied it to a larger
context of nation, earth and spaces. The mallari was conceived vis-a-vis space,
since women are fighting for their place all over the world. So I used the
metaphor in the composition. Aya giri nandini has been with me since childhood,
since the chanting stays with you. Women look for energy to the mother, who
embodies it.”
Speaking
about Seasons, which was choreographed to 19th century Russian
composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky’s music, she said, “Sound has always inspired me. Some people
choreograph a piece and then conceive the music. I listen to the music first, and
then think of movement. Maybe that’s how I have been trained. I listen to the
music many times. It has a classical background and they share the same grammar,
so the effort has been to connect the two grammars. The soundscape is so grand
and beautiful, it lifts you to another experience. The first impulse is to
compete with the music. If the music is grand, then the movement has also to be
larger. So the challenge was to bring subtlety while retaining the mood. It
took me long since I had to divide the track into sections, since it was not
conceived as seasons. After the breaking down, it was interpreting it into Bharatanatyam.
Yes, it was difficult, but very enjoyable. There was not a single movement
which was not Bharatanatyam. Every movement was classical. Whether it was the
sun chariot with the ‘thaiya the hi’ beats or the metaphors of the lotus or a
flower. It was all very gratifying. People call it fusion, but it was not
fusion at all. It was just changing the soundscape, an experiment to push the
boundaries of Bharatanatyam. Because the body, the spine, the posture, the
footwork, the ‘hastas’, were all one hundred percent Bharatanatyam. I did not
have to move away from my genre. I was so happy since I did not have to give up
the vocabulary of Bharatanatyam. The soundscape was so grammatically there.”
After the
lighting of the ceremonial lamp by Dr. Karan Singh and Dr. Sayeda Hamid, the
evening’s performance began with a contemporary dance routine by the boys of
Salya Sahi, a slum in Orissa, which is one of the biggest in Asia. They were trained
by the volunteers of Parichay. They brought a lot of energy to their dance,
with lots of leaps, flips, somersaults and handstands. The dance exuded energy
and showed how this could be positively channelized.
Boys of Salya Sahi |
‘Yuvati’
began with a ‘mallari’. This was to highlight the need for society to be more
sensitive to the young girls of India, who are demographically more than a
quarter of India’s total population. The dance choreography highlighted the
need to make public spaces safer for young girls. It was a ‘nritta’ piece,
performed specifically to sanctify the performance space, with some excellent
group discipline and rhythm.
In the
second piece, Geeta interpreted our nation, our mother earth as the radiant
yuvati. This yuvati has a samadrishti towards all. The composition chosen was
‘Vande Mataram’ by Bankim Chandra Chatterji and sung by R Venkateshwara, to
describe this ‘yuvati’. Sujalaam, sufalaam, malayaja shitalaam, shasya
shyamalaam, suhasini, sumadhur bhashini, shubhra jyotsna, sukhadaam vardaam. It
was a beautiful solo nritya piece where every word was interpreted to bring out
the beauty of the composition. The grace and imagery left the audience
mesmerized. The choreography and the rendition of the song created the image of
a dazzling damsel.
The next
piece was a pure dance piece, a tillana. The gopis long for Krishna and he
meets their aspirations. Radha is portrayed as a ‘yuvati’ who has the strength
and conviction to make the choice of loving and longing for Krishna. The caliber
of their guru shows in the execution of the piece by Natya Vriksha students. The
energy, the rhythm, the synchronization – all of it was impeccable; there was some
excellent choreography with graceful movements.
The next
piece, Devi Mahatmayam, was a solo by Geeta herself. The Devi has many rupa.
She is the mother, the sister, the consort. She is endowed with many weapons.
The Devi Mahatmayam establishes her supremacy as she is navyauvana, or forever
young. She is constantly fighting the battles within - that of intellect and
conscience - and those with the outside world. Geeta started the abhinaya piece
with a shlokam, ‘ya devi sarva bhooteshu, shakti roopen sansthita’. For the performance,
Geeta wore a massive neckpiece that she had bought in Gujarat. It acted as an
appropriate ornament for the performance, adding to all its grandeur. ‘Aya giri
nandini, nanditamedini, vishwavinodini, nandanute’ is a prayer, and Geeta
portrayed the devi as the vishwavinodini, vishwavilasini, shailasute, bhagwati,
mahishasuramardini, tribhuvanaposhini, sindhusute, madhukaitabh bhanjani.
Through the abhinaya, Geeta depicted, on one side, the beauty of the devi, and
on the other, the ferocity of the devi and her steed, the lion. The final
stance in a sitting position, with the devi depicted with her hair tied up in a
knot and the naag swaying on her head, took the audience’s breath away. The
composition was sung by Sudha Raghuraman.
Finally,
Geeta presented Mother Earth as the ultimate yuvati. She is the eternal yuvati,
capable of rejuvenation and recreation. According to Kalidasa in the Ritusamhara,
the earth goes through a cycle of seasons in nature. All creation - the birds,
the flowers, the trees - go through this change. The surprise element in this
performance was that the music was that of 19th century Russian
composer Tchaikovsky.
Since the dance was purely Bharatanatyam, and the music purely western
classical, I would call it a Bharatanatyam ballet. The piece opened with human
beings going about their daily chores, with the sun as the prime source of
energy. But in summer, when the heat is intense and scorching, men are
miserably sweating, and the earth is parched. The dancers formed the sun
chariot as the music rose to a crescendo. The lights gave a red hue to the
stage. Then follows the rainy season, which is a happy reprieve. The droplets
of water fall gradually, and the peacock begins to dance. The peacock dance was
done by Geeta herself very gracefully. And then the rain comes in torrents. The
dancers depicted the pleasure of playing with the water. The earth takes on a
blue hue. The next season is the autumn. The colour of the earth is brown with
dried leaves, with the falling leaves being shown by the dancers through a
swaying movement of their hands. The winter follows, with people covering up and
huddling together to protect themselves from the cold. The hues change to white,
and then life springs anew in the spring, the season of love, tenderness and
togetherness. The ponds are filled with lotuses in full bloom, the bees are
hovering over the flowers, the trees are laden with leaves and fruits, the
blossoms are everywhere. The dancers created a beautiful imagery of a scene from
the forest, where the deer are frolicking, the butterflies and bees are
buzzing, and the maidens are collecting flowers to be strung together. The music,
the pace of the dance and the technique, all created a mesmerizing image. Not
once did you feel that the music and the dance were not meant for each other. The
delight was unspeakable. In the entire performance, the beat from the footwork
was pronounced as the dancers were not wearing their ghungroos.
The yuvatis
of Natya Vriksha with Geeta were Divya, Anjana, Sneha, Amruta, Rashi, Radhika
and Megha. The costumes were designed by Sandhya Raman. The costume for
seasons, a black sari with a copper fringe and coloured dupattas, was very
aesthetically done.
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