Eminent Theatre Personality Saoli Mitra Dies at 73

She had been suffering from heart-related ailments but had refused to be hospitalised and her condition worsened on Sunday, her close friend and theatre personality Arpita Ghosh said.

Kolkata: Saoli Mitra, eminent theatre personality and daughter of legendary actors Sombhu Mitra and Tripti Mitra died at her residence in South Kolkata on Sunday of heart ailments.

Mitra, 73, a gifted actor, director and playwright, died at her residence in South Kolkata at 3:40 pm and was cremated at Siriti crematorium on Sunday evening without much fanfare, her close friend and theatre personality Arpita Ghosh said.

She had been suffering from heart-related ailments but had refused to be hospitalised and her condition worsened on Sunday, Ghosh said.

The noted actress had wanted to be cremated without any fanfare in her last wish to her near friends, Ghosh said showing a copy of her last wish.

Mitra, who was the recipient of Sangeet Natak Akademi in 2003, Padma Shri in 2009, and Banga Bibhusan in 2012 would be remembered by her fans and critics alike for her solo performance as Draupadi in Naathvati Anaathbat (Five husbands, yet an orphan), which she also wrote and directed, and as Sita on Sitakatha.

She also wrote, directed and acted in the hugely popular Katha Amritsamman (Words that are like Nectar) another adaptation of the Mahabharata.

As an actress, she was cast as Bangabala in Ritwik Ghatak’s avant-garde film Jukti Takko Aar Gappo (Reason, Debate and a Story).

After spending years in Bahurupi, a famous theatre group, founded by Sambhu Mitra and Tripti Mitra, where she had immortalised the character of Amal in Tagore’s Dakghar, Saoli founded Pancham Baidi‘ which established a trailblazer repertoire by introducing widely acclaimed plays on women’s emancipation.

Mitra was among a handful of intellectuals who had called for paribartan (change) in Bengal ahead of the 2011 assembly elections when the Left was voted out of power and had supported the Nandigram and Singur agitations as people’s movements.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee noted in her condolence, that Mitra had stood steadfast in the Singur and Nandigram movements. “I will remember her as someone close to me, a long time colleague and well-wisher,” Banerjee said.

Theatre personality Bibhas Chakraborty recalled his association with Mitra for years since her younger days in Bohurupee. “She was ill for many years but never knew she would leave us so early,” Chakraborty said.

Ghosh, a theatre director, recalled how she became Mitra’s ‘own daughter’ and how the legendary actress had shunned any publicity about her illness.

Theatre personality Rudraprasad Sengupta said Saoli Mitra had been away from public view due to ailments for some time but she had mesmerised audiences with her stellar performances through the years.

(PTI) 

COVID-19: With No Financial Support from Govt, Performing Artistes Left High and Dry

“We never, ever thought that artistes[‘ situation] would come to such a pass. We never expected to be so let down by the government.”

It has become a cliché to laud India’s classical musicians and dancers as unofficial ambassadors of their country, but the description is not overly exaggerated, since they do represent cultivated image governments over the decades have been happy to endorse. It is ironic that having been officially placed on the pedestals of honour and adulation, they were seemingly forgotten when it came to welfare schemes for the lockdown-affected after the Coronavirus pandemic shut down all performances and other in-person activities.

While a large number of dancers — in a process of ‘natural selection’ brought about by the material requirements of today’s classical dance scenario, with expenses of costumes, jewellery, studio space, self-promotion — are seen to be from wealthy or highly educated families, the same is not the case with the majority of classical musicians. And even casual conversations reveal how immensely let down they feel by their governments both in the states and at the Centre. It is as if when not in the arc lights, they don’t exist.

Eminent qawwali artiste Ustad Abdul Hameed Sabri, who belongs to the famed Dilli Gharana of the Hindustani music and was a gandaband disciple of the legendary Ustad Chand Khan, paints a representative picture: “When the sarangi player is on stage, the hall resounds with applause. A little while later, he is at the bus stand, sarangi tucked under his arm, waiting for a bus to take him home. The organisers roam around in cars, however, the musicians, of whose art they make money, are on the road.”

Music director Rupendra Shridhar.

Delhi-based music director Rupendra Shridhar says, “There are no benefits from the government for musicians like us working in the freelance space. This is why we have been struggling for nearly two years now.”

Without work from the 2020 lockdown onwards, Shridhar says he survived thanks to the support of his son and daughter who have jobs in other fields. But for many, the curtain has come down in the form of hopelessness and humiliation.

Shridhar states, “I know musicians who have set up vegetable thelas (vending carts). Many have left the music scene altogether and gone back to their hometowns or villages.”

Says Siddhartha Roy Chowdhury, an eminent Kolkata-based exponent of sarod, sitar and tabla, “I know many in Kolkata who are selling masks and sanitiser on the streets. Because they don’t have any programmes, nor do they have tuitions.”

The stigma surrounding an artiste coming to such a pass prevents these seniors from revealing the names of any such musicians, even when promised the information won’t be published. Roy Chowdhury mentions, “This much I can tell you. Some of them are singers who used to have five-six programmes a month.” They are popular artistes, singing Bengali Khayal or Rabindra Sangeet, “but not Bollywood songs”, he clarifies.

Of himself, Roy Chowdhury says, “I have lots of students, they are learning from me online, so financially so far I’ve got no problem.” Similarly, he says, other well-established musicians have survived, but the young musicians are in great trouble.

“Lots of my students (who depend on performance and recording fees) are suffering. I and a few of my co-musicians are helping them. But this is the thing. Classical musicians, in a way, are dying. I talk to many young musicians. They say, ‘Kaku (uncle), it’s better we get COVID-19 and die.’ The situation is like this since last March (2020). It’s terrible for the classical musicians, especially.”

Sabri says, “We never, ever thought that artistes would come to such a pass. We never expected to be so let down by the government.”

His expectations from the country’s leaders stemmed in part from his having performed over the decades largely in government-sponsored festivals, “right from the Qutub Festival of Delhi, and from Kashmir to Kanyakumari,” and at the express invitation of dignitaries.

Also read: India’s Indie Musicians Struggle as COVID Restrictions Reduce Their Incomes by Half

The musicians make it a point of underlining the classical qualifications of the suffering artistes. Much of the reason for this lies in the lifelong commitment such training requires. Such artistes are often exceptional in the skills required by their art, but ill-equipped in other areas. Their academic education may be meagre — and also, it must be conceded, the mental makeup of performing artistes frequently leaves them unsuited to other mundane jobs.

And then there is the matter of prestige, both at the level of the individual and that of the gharana, guru or tradition. Considerations of going ‘up’ or ‘down’ in life — as measured by the fees one is offered or by the work one must do to supplement a dwindling income — are harshly real for these musicians, whose chances depend so much on reputation. It is part of a larger malaise in our class- and caste-ridden society and cannot be pushed aside as a simple matter of an artiste’s ego. So is it any wonder that musicians, highly erudite in their specialised field but not perhaps equipped with PhDs or other degrees conducive to ‘prestigious’ employment, baulk at the idea of picking up odd jobs to make ends meet?

Harrowing stories

Light designer Gautam Bhattacharya.

Musicians are of course not the only group confounded by the halt in performances. Light designer Gautam Bhattacharya, who along with Sanjoy Roy and several other influencers in the arts field strenuously tried to bring the attention of the ministry of culture and other official bodies towards this cause, citing an example of a Delhi-based dancer who had to temporarily work as an Amazon delivery boy. Others have switched from dance to teaching Yoga, a more lucrative trade these days.

Sabri’s situation is dire. “My rent is Rs 6,000 a month. For nearly two years, I have been unable to pay it. I am known as a great qawwal, but I am like Mirza Ghalib.” He refers to the great poet’s life spent in penury and the haveli he lived in becoming a heritage landmark over a century after his death.

“Now his spectacles are there and some clothes, but what’s the use? He spent his life in debt. That’s my condition today. I owe my milkman some 12,000 rupees. Poor thing, he has approached me several times sweetly saying, ‘Sabri saheb, when do you think it would be possible to pay up?’  I’ve told him as soon as I get some money I’ll first come running to you.  The landlord also came demanding his money, and I can’t even repeat the kind of words that were used. So we have managed our life till now somehow, by borrowing.”

The Sabris’ daughter and son-in-law, themselves not too well off, have been loyally helping out, he adds. And yet, he says, “Sometimes we just don’t cook for two days in a row. We are in real trouble. This is the fact. There’s nothing to hide and nothing to lie about.”

He is grateful to the private organisations that have supported him and others in need, mentioning Goonj and Shefali Khanna’s Dear Sunshine Foundation. “They distributed rations and also sent some four-five thousand rupees sometimes into people’s accounts. Although that didn’t help reduce the debt,  I’m telling you what they did for us,” he says.

The late Ustad Iqbal Ahmed Khan, khalifa of the Delhi Gharana, was Ustad Abdul Hameed Sabri’s nephew. Khan’s immediate family and groups under him too were helping their fellow artistes, especially in Old Delhi. His sudden death during the pandemic year was a blow to the music fraternity in every respect.

Ustad Abdul Hameed Sabri with Birju Maharaj.

But as Sabri recounts his tale of sliding into destitution, as also memories of performing with top artistes — Birju Maharaj, Amjad Ali Khan, Yesudas, Anup Jalota… those with whom he has shared a stage include all the contemporary greats, and influential names have showered him with praise and money in the past — his sonorous bass voice is steady and forthright, but numbingly sad.

“Anyway, all this is now but a dream for me, nothing more than a dream. My life is just about ground into the dust. I don’t have much hope now. When I have to go into the market, I go after it is dark, just to avoid meeting anybody who might ask for their money back.”

Indu Prakash Trivedi, another well-known Delhi-based vocalist with a musical lineage through his father Pandit Babu Ram Trivedi as well as illustrious gurus such as Ustad Naseer Khan, Iqbal Ahmed Khan, Amjad Ali Khan and Siddique Ahmed Khan, currently teaches in Mayur Vihar. Earlier he was associated with institutions like the Kathak Kendra and Bharatiya Kala Kendra. For some time, the internationally travelled artiste too had to depend on staples supplied by good samaritans.

“When the first lockdown started (March 2020), all my students went away,” he narrates. “My income came almost to zero. A few children did send payment despite not coming for lessons, but I was in a lot of difficulties.”

Vocalist Indu Prakash Trivedi

Not only did he struggle to cover expenses, he also felt as if he were “jailed” with the police blocking all entry and exit points around his residence, he laughs, sharing his imagination. Now he can afford to laugh, but not back then. He relates with great humility and honesty, “One doesn’t talk about these things, but in those days I actually queued up once to accept free rations.”

“Now conditions are much improved,” he says because he has been able to set up online classes, and also he goes out for an occasional tuition assignment.

“I feel the government may well have helped artistes, but I didn’t get to know. Government schemes are often good, but implementation is not,” he says mildly.

Private support

But Bhattacharya would disagree any government schemes were in place. Soon after the effects of the pandemic started being felt by financially unstable artistes, he along with Roy and others formed a WhatsApp group, ‘Creative Artists’.

“We collected data about some 3,000-4,000 artistes all over India and we kept telling the ministry (of Culture) and the Sangeet Natak Akademi,” he says. The data was submitted to these agencies and the group leaders tried multiple times to get support for artists in need, but, “nothing happened. They were absolutely not proactive. And the feedback we got was, ‘paisa nahin hai (there is no money)’.”

Also read: West Bengal: No End to Patua Artists’ Financial Woes As COVID-19 Rages

Again, individuals and private entities came forward. “Individual efforts were made, contributions were made, and we requested the artistes in dire need to approach and were sending money individually.” It was an artiste-to-artiste approach, he clarifies, “something like crowdfunding.”

Innumerable artistes have quietly supported their peers throughout the pandemic, and Bhattacharya notes, “Frankly it was so disappointing that there was absolutely no effort made by anyone from the government. Very sad.”

There were government officials connected with culture in the WhatsApp group too, but, says  Bhattacharya, they also did not respond or take the intentions of the group forward in their official capacity.

Bhattacharya says in his interactions he has been consistently quoting the kind of support other countries — he names Germany, the US and Australia — have given their freelance artistes during the unprecedented crisis brought about by the pandemic.

Sabri points out that nearly two years since the pandemic hit India, still, there are no programmes and in these circumstances, “The culture ministry has a budget of lakhs of rupees they can spend on artistes.”

Bhattacharya says cryptically, “The government is busy building the central vista. They have money for that.” He adds that SNA’s budget was heavily slashed last year. “But they should have been proactive in approaching the ministry and negotiating with them for the artistes. Which unfortunately they didn’t.”

He also points out the lack of strong leadership in the SNA which has not had a chairperson for nearly two years, and no permanently appointed secretary since Rita Swamy Choudhary’s term expired in June.

“Frankly the Akademi is in the doldrums. There is internal strife, it is pathetic.”

Says Roy Chowdhury, “The government could have done many things. Just as they are providing projects like Ayushman Bharat and others, they could have done something for the musicians.”

He highlights those immersed in the field for three-four decades, having given most of their life to serving society through music. “The government should have a budget, they should open a fund for them and make sure that the grant goes to the right persons.”

Bhattacharya was in touch with a spectrum of artistes — musicians, dancers, puppeteers, light designers — and it is hard to single out one group alone that has suffered. Paid online classes may be the solution for performers, but what about the technical folks such as light designers who depend on live shows, he asks.

A music class in progress. Photo: vistarmusic.org.

“These are major issues. That’s why we sort of held each other’s hands and tried to survive. Whoever requested help in paying rent or hospitalisation or whatever, we did raise money, and it is still going on, but it has eased off.” And naturally so. As individuals go on giving from their personal savings, and conditions hold out little hope of improving, they often find themselves rethinking their generosity.

Take Sabri’s case. He remarks, “You might ask, being such an established artiste, why doesn’t he have savings? The thing is I also tried to help those who were less fortunate than me. The ones living in [Delhi colonies like] Welcome and Seelampur, who do bhajans and qawwalis at a local level, whose condition I knew was worse than mine, I helped them out financially when the lockdown first began, but eventually I ended up in need myself.”

Adding to the misery are sporadic wild goose chases. “At the beginning of the first lockdown,” says Roy Chowdhury, “the Central government said that all musicians registered with the Sangeet Natak Akademi would get Rs 2,000 a month. I am registered with them, but I haven’t got a single paisa yet. And they announced that for those who are not registered with the Government of India or SNA, here is the website number [link], and they can apply from there. Lots of my co-musicians in Kolkata tried, but still that website is not opening.”

Bhattacharya feels such an announcement could have been spurious. The SNA had not yet responded to emailed queries at the time of writing this article.

This July, Shridhar lost his wife to cancer. “This too was due to lack of money,” he says. “If I had had access to more funds I might have been able to save her or prolong her life.”

Shridhar’s regretful statement underlines the complete absence of a safety net for freelance musicians. “There are neither any insurance policies [accessible to freelance artistes without regular, fixed incomes], nor any schemes from the government side,” he notes.

Even as they wonder if artistes can ever really unite, Shridhar, Trivedi and Sabri suggest forming an association of serious, senior artistes whom the government can consult on the genuine requirements of the community. The mood though is depressed.

Roy Chowdhury says he started his school Vistar in memory of his father Anil Roy Chowdhury, the eminent guru known for his contribution in moulding worthy performers, because as his son and disciple he felt he should also contribute to the wellbeing of future generations.

“But now I am thinking, why should I teach? Lots of [students] are playing really well, but if this is the situation, how can I ask them to take music as a profession?”

Sabri sums it up, “When the unfortunate labourers were suffering, walking to their homes, it was taken note of.  Some efforts were made, some thought put into how to help them. The sad thing is no one gave a thought to the artists.”

Anjana Ranjan is a Bharatanatyam exponent and teacher, and theatre practitioner.

Dance Historian Sunil Kothari Dies of Cardiac Arrest

The 87-year-old noted dance critic, historian and scholar tested positive for the coronavirus about a month ago.

New Delhi: Padma Shri dance historian and critic Sunil Kothari passed away Sunday morning at a Delhi hospital after he suffered a cardiac arrest a month after testing positive for coronavirus. He was 87.

“He had tested positive for COVID-19 almost a month back and was not in a good condition,” Vidha Lal, a family friend and herself a dancer, told PTI.

Kothari was recovering at home in Asian Games Village but was rushed to a hospital after suffering a cardiac arrest this morning, she added.

Born on December 20, 1933 in Mumbai, Kothari qualified as a Chartered Accountant before turning to the study of Indian dance forms.

He authored more than 20 books on the subject of Indian dance forms including Sattriya Dances of Assam, New Directions in Indian Dance, and also on Bharatanatayam, Odissi, Chhau, Kathak, Kuchipudi, and photo biographies of Uday Shankar and Rukmini Devi Arundale.

Dancer and long-time associate Anita Ratnam remembered the late critic for his “infectious enthusiasm”. Kothari had first met her at a dance recital in 1970 in Chennai when she was just a teenager.

Also read: Memories of Writer, Dance Critic, Journalist Shanta Serbjeet Singh

“After the performance, he rushed backstage and looked at me and said ‘apsara! apsara!(fairy) in his normal enthusiastic voice. He was not somebody who would just come for the dance, he would even come for the rehearsals, he would talk to everybody present, he wanted to know the whole process. He was part of a very important dance movement,” Ratnam said.

The dance scholar held the Uday Shankar Chair in Rabindra Bharati University, and taught in the Dance Department of New York University as a Fulbright Professor.

Kothari received numerous titles and awards for his contribution to Indian dance forms including the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award (1995); the Gaurav Puraskar conferred by the Gujarat Sangeet Natak Akademi (2000); the Padma Shri bestowed by the Government of India (2001); and the Life Time Achievement Award of the Dance Critics Association, New York, US (2011).

He was also an elected Fellow of Sangeet Natak Akademi for his contribution to Indian dance as a scholar.

Kothari was among the 27 artistes who were served a notice in November to evict their government-allotted homes by December 31. The dance historian had said he felt “humiliated” on being served the “get out” notice.

“I am a Padma Shri and Sangeet Natak Akademi awardee. I have written several books on Indian classical dance forms and allied art forms and have been part of many committees, and this is what my government gives me return.

“I feel humiliated that at this age I have been sent, what I call a ‘get out’ notice, and asked to leave the place which has been home to me for the past 20 years,” he had told PTI.

Dance Pioneer Astad Deboo Dead at 73

The dancer was renowned for marrying Kathak and Kathakali into a unique form.

Mumbai: Contemporary Indian dancer Astad Deboo, renowned for marrying Kathak and Kathakali into a unique form, died here on Thursday, his family said. He was 73.

“He left us in the early hours of December 10, at his home in Mumbai, after a brief illness, bravely borne,” the family announced on social media.

“He leaves behind a formidable legacy of unforgettable performances combined with an unswerving dedication to his art, matched only by his huge, loving heart that gained him thousands of friends and a vast, number of admirers,” it said.

The announcement said, “The loss to the family, friends, fraternity of dancers, both classical and modern, Indian and international, is inestimable. May he rest in peace. We will miss him.”

Astad Deboo and his troup of Pung Cholom drummers of Manipur perform ‘Rhythm Divine’ at the Annual Ananya dance festival at Old Fort in New Delhi. Photo: PTI/Vijay Verma

Deboo is noted for creating a modern dance vocabulary that was uniquely Indian.

He once said there was a time when most Indians saw his style as “too western” while westerners found that it was “not Indian enough”.

His innovative style of Indian dance may have raised some eyebrows in the 1970s and 80s, but the 1990s saw people embrace this new idiom.

Born on July 13, 1947 in Navsari town of Gujarat, the dancer, who studied Kathak with guru Prahlad Das from a young age, and later Kathakali with guru E.K. Pannicker, described his style as “contemporary in vocabulary and traditional in restraint”.

Also Read: India Still Lacks a Platform For Contemporary Dance: Astad Deboo

With a dance career spanning half a century, he had performed in over 70 countries, including solo, group and collaborative choreography with artistes, at home and abroad.

Known for his charitable endeavours, Deboo worked with deaf children, both in India and abroad for two decades.

In 2002, he founded the Astad Deboo Dance Foundation which provided creative training to marginalised sections, including the differently-abled.

Deboo also forayed into other art disciplines, like films, choreographing for directors such as Mani Ratnam, Vishal Bhardwaj and legendary painter M.F. Husain’s Meenaxi: A Tale of Three Cities.

“He has created a dance-theatre style which successfully assimilates Indian and Western techniques,” said the citation for the Sangeet Natak Akademi award he received in 1995 for his contribution to contemporary creative dance. He was also a recipient of the Padma Shri in 2007.

Eminent Artistes Receive Eviction Notices to Vacate Government Housing in Delhi

While authorities allege misuse of accommodation, occupants stare at homelessness.

New Delhi: Several eminent artistes, including Padma Shri awardees, have been asked to vacate the flats allotted to them by the government in Lutyens’ and South Delhi by December 31, 2020. The artistes say that this sudden eviction notice is inhumane as it has come amidst the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

The notice, sent by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs, was received by at least 27 eminent personalities, including dancers, musicians and other artistes in October.

The notice says that if they do not vacate their premises by December 31, “eviction proceedings will be initiated as per Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Act”.

It flowed from a November 8 decision of the Cabinet Committee on Accommodation, which took stock of what a senior government official told The Wire was “a series of irregularities by the allottees, which includes non-payment of rent and misuse of the premises.”

The official, who declined to provide any specific examples of misuse or non-payment, says the cabinet has decided to waive all punitive charges from 2014 to September 30, 2020, but would also move for the repossession of the accommodation.

On their part, the artistes say they have never been told about any of these charges or irregularities and have been paying rent and using the allotted premises as per what they claim are the agreed terms of the lease.

Housing ministry officials, in reply to a set of questions raised by The Wire, said that the decision to cancel the allotment came from the culture ministry and that all queries would have to be directed there.

Housing for artistes

Under the “artistes” pool, the Union Housing and Urban Affairs Ministry, through the directorate of estates, and on the recommendation of the culture ministry, allots houses to eminent artistes. Allotted for a period of three years initially, the artistes have been given extensions over the years. The last extension expired in 2014. According to the guidelines, artistes must be between 40 and 60 years of age and earn up to Rs 20,000 a month.

Among those who have received the eviction notice is Jayaram Rao, a Kuchipudi dancer and Padma Shri awardee, who has been staying at the Asian Games Village house allotted to him since 1987. Over the years, he has taught hundreds of students and made the country proud, he says.

Also read: Govt Asks Priyanka Gandhi to Vacate Lutyens Bungalow by August 1

“To ask us to vacate during the ongoing pandemic is unfair, unjust and simply inhuman…we are working from our home actively. We don’t have a house in Delhi. We request our PM Narendra Modi ji to interfere and help us in this matter,” he says.

Rethinking of life choices

Vanashree Rao, Jayaram Rao’s wife and co-dancer, says, “In our late 60s and 70s, we are forced to rethink the value of following our passion and love for art. There is no comfort in thinking of our remaining future.”

Jayarama and Vanashree Rao are recognised today as outstanding exponents of the Kuchipudi classical dance form.

Guru Jayarama Rao

Guru Jayarama Rao receiving Padma Shri in 2004 from President of India A.P.J Abdul Kalam. Photo: By arrangement.

Vedabrata Rao, the duo’s son said, “As the son of two artistes, growing up having interacted with all the artistes [affected by]  this eviction, being astutely attuned to the hardships as well as the patronage of pursuing art as more than just passion, as a livelihood, as a lifestyle –  it really saddens me to see the government strip that patronage away with such constant notices to vacate.”

Talking about his house, he says, “My parents never let me feel the lack of anything. I never felt lesser or more than my peers. I was able to go to a good school, a good college, do my MBA and now I’m working in Mumbai – and they still support me at times. But I come home and I look at the condition of the house, I look at them still toiling away every day.”

He adds that the coronavirus has negatively affected the fields of performing arts and entertainment.

“They are teaching online as much as they can. And it makes me think that besides the many shows, performances, tours that the artistes have done for the government as cultural representatives of India – their awards as recognition and this home is the only thing they have received. Everything else is their own merit. Money is important, yes – but artists thrive on patronage,” he says.

Talking about the eviction notice, he adds, “This eviction, or notices of the past…Just makes me wonder about the years and years of the contribution my parents and other artists have given to their artform and to the country.”

No other accommodation 

Sunil Kothari, an 88-year-old classical dance historian and Padma Shri awardee in 2001, is also among those who have received an eviction notice. He received a Sangeet Natak Akademi award in 1995 for his overall contribution to the Indian classical dance. He was awarded Kumar Chandrak in 1961 and Ranjitram Suvarna Chandrak in 2012.

Sunil Kothari

Indian dance historian Dr. Sunil Kothari receiving Padma Shri in 2001 from President of India K R Narayanan. Photo: By arrangement.

He says, “I don’t have any other accommodation in the city. Suddenly, in 2014, they decided to raise the rent, but without even telling us. With no notice or information for the next years, they suddenly sent a notice asking us to vacate our house.”

According to him, they have also been asked to pay the differential amount between the rent they have been paying and the market rent of the place.

Talking about the house he lives in, he says, “The house is anyway 35 years old.”

He has been living in this house for several decades now – and feels betrayed by this notice.

“At such a fragile age, it’s humiliating that we have to fight for our dignity.”

He is also worried that due to the coronavirus pandemic, finding a house will be all the more difficult.

“You give us awards, but is this how you treat us? Like we have been illegally occupying space? I even told them once, that I am 88 years old, I hardly have a few more years to live – why do you want to evict me now?” he asks.

He is quite confident that if brought to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s notice, their issue will be solved. “If he comes to know, I’m positive he will help us.”

May become homeless

Faiyaz Wasifuddin Dagar, 52 years old, is a classical singer of the Dhrupad genre and the son of Dhrupad singer Ustad Nasir Faiyazuddin Dagar. Since the death of his father, and later his uncle, Wasifuddin has been singing solo. He was awarded the Padma Shri in 2010. He has been living in Asian Games Village in his allotted accommodation since 1996.

“It’s difficult to afford any other place in Delhi mainly due to finances, but also because people don’t like to keep artistes as tenants in their houses.”

Also read: After Priyanka Eviction, Govt Clarifies that Advani Can Keep Lutyens Bungalow ‘for Life’

Elaborating on the financial difficulties, he says, “We are not very highly paid musicians. Yes, there are artistes who are paid highly, but they don’t represent us all.”

He adds that this will affect the state of arts in the country. “Artistes are people who calm others down. If you bring unrest into their life, it will be bad for all artists as it will dissuade them and their creativity will be affected.”

He says because he doesn’t have any regular income, he may become homeless if this house is taken away.

In the past, Kathak dancer and Padma Vibhushan recipient Birju Maharaj, who has been living here since 1978, had threatened to return all his awards if he is evicted from his Shahjahan Road house in Delhi.

Speaking to The Wire, a senior official has said that the government is taking another look at the issue. “This move was prompted by the need to end the abuse of the system,” he adds, raising the prospect of artistes against whom there are no charges of misuse getting some sort of soft landing.

Why the Solo Classical Dancer Needs to be Saved

Government apathy and commercial compulsions have led Indian classical dance towards group performances and away from where its true genius lies — the solo artiste.

Show me how a community dances and I’ll tell you if they are healthy or not.

– Confucius

The lack of a National Cultural Policy, poorly equipped cultural administrators and managers, and impaired comprehension of the cultural economics of Indian classical dance and music has made these traditions vulnerable.

On the surface, the large number of festivals and social media traction these get makes it appear as if these art forms are in great health, but below are complications that endanger the core of these traditions.

Central to the rupture is the pivotal nurturing of solo art in dance. Barring Manipuri and Kuchipudi where the solo format is still evolving, most Indian classical dance traditions are solo in character. The knowledge pool of trained solo artists are essential as breeding grounds for star performers, choreographers, thinkers, performing arts critics and the gurus of tomorrow. 

Failure of government institutions

Anita. Credit: Ram Rahman

Anita Ratnam performs contemporary dance in front of a portrait of Birju Maharaj. Photo: Ram Rahman

Indifferent government cultural institutions and offices in India, manned by ill-qualified cultural administrators and management is the most important reason for the crises as the state remains the single largest patron of the performing arts.

The legitimisation and identification of talent in classical dance and music is largely based on:

(a) the grading system instituted by government agencies such as the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, Doordarshan and the All India Radio; and

(b) the awards established by the state such as those given by the Sangeet Natak Akademi and the Central government’s Padma awards.  

The administrative and governing bodies in state institutions function with their own biases. Manipulation of results quite often result in the marginalisation of deserving candidates who could be young or established soloists, gurus or scholars. A system like this implies that even the awards organisers (state or private) end up promoting mediocre talent on several occasions. 

The inefficiently administered Sangeet Natak Akademi and its affiliated bodies such as the Kathak Kendra, Kalakshetra and Manipur Dance Akademi, have taken to promoting average talent. In addition, they have stunted vision statements and ineffective action plans. For instance, the mismanagement of the Kathak Kendra is evident from the fact that the administrative staff is larger than the community of artistes it serves and that most of the staff are relatives of the unproductive top administration. 

Instead of nurturing or promoting solo Kathak performers, the management invests in a production unit ‘repertory’ to churn out group performances, which are economically more attractive to the institute. The productions have become more about cloned performers and packaged products. 

The problem is further augmented by ‘pay to perform’ and ‘pay to write’ scandals where a solo dancer is asked to pay organisers so that he or she can perform and writers are paid to write previews or reviews. While the former forms a disreputable nexus between organisers and senior dancers, the latter advocates for advertisements – there are now elaborate previews and prepaid reviews. 

Economics and the guru

Most gurus have registered societies and schools under which nurturing soloists is less profitable than organising group productions. The government needs to come in to introduce and monitor incentives to gurus and establish mentorship programs.

Solo dance performance opportunities are few. The sustained efforts of the SPIC MACAY that provides opportunities for all age groups of performers, the month long performance season in Chennai, the Mudra Festival organised by the National Centre for Performing Arts in Mumbai, festivals only for young soloists like Aarambh by the Raza Foundation and Raindrops by the Sam Ved Society in Mumbai are lone examples.

Also read: Nurturing and Embracing Womanhood Through Dance

The cultural economics of these performance spaces comprise sponsorship, grants and tickets. Largely funded by government grants and private contributions SPIC-MACAY, for instance, “aims to build discerning audiences through lecture demonstrations and performances,” says its artiste committee national advisor Ashok Jain. For the Chennai performance season, however, subsidised ticketing is not enough and the hefty financial requirements necessitate private funding. 

Marginalisation in festivals

The 1980s saw the opening of the economy coinciding with a series of festivals of India. The latter was a new, hyped model to display Indian classical dance. The dynamic Keshav Kothari, former secretary of the Sangeet Natak Akademi, who was trained in Kathak and cultural management (about which he wrote a book) said, “While a few solo stars such as Alarmel Valli and Malavika Sarukkai were born in the course of performing in the festivals of India; the more prominent result was staging a group choreography to convey a polished, professional and global finished product which could be compared with the likes of the Swan Lake presented at the Bolshoi.”

The result was the creation of a new generation of avant-garde choreographers like Kumudini Lakhia (Kathak) and Chandralekha (Bharatnatyam). They brought professionalism and discipline in the creative community along with design, minimalism and an abstract element in their work that was appealing to the contemporary and the global market. At present, the Ministry of Culture is still frozen in the archaic model. 

Showcased displays of group dance are commercially viable but kill the instinctive element that soloists bring. Photo: The Wire

Thinker and  diplomat P.N. Haksar who wrote the Haksar Committee Report that studied the efficacy of the three art academies said, “The festival model will result in mushrooming of impresarios with little understanding of the dance. The spectacle, showcasing and money will dictate the patronage pattern impacting the core of these traditions. India requires cultural administrators who are both subject experts and educated in cultural management specific to postcolonial contexts.”

The dance company phenomenon

The prophetic observation by Haksar is evident in the rise of a number of event management companies who now are central to showcased displays of dance. The emergence of private dance companies is also something that was foreseen. Of the several listed companies just a few seem to function as ‘commercial’, professional dance organisations. Most ‘companies’ are registered societies engaged in the teaching of dance; their event-lists comprise self-produced or commissioned performances and random events. The Abhinava Dance Company by Nirupama and Rajendra in Bengaluru and the Dristikon company of Aditi Mangaldas are two examples of organisations which work as actual companies. Apart from teaching, they hire the services of artistes, professionally market performances and present group productions as a spectacle product. Their target audiences and platforms are generally the neo-Indian urban and foreign markets. 

Also read: Annapurna Devi, the Legendary Musician and Guru

The character of their productions are ‘contemporary’ and packaged. They do not factor in the essential spontaneity or openness which is the measure of individual genius marked by upaj and manodharma — impromptu creation and improvisation.  Recorded music, designer costumes, sound and lighting effects define the productions. This money-making product dazzles but on most occasions leads to camouflaging mediocre dancing and increasingly diminishing content.  

The solo performance is the ‘centre’ of Indian classical dance. Nav Pallava, a recently launched counter-movement against the ‘pay to perform’ model is being spearheaded by SPIC MACAY’s Ashok Jain. It is a collaboration of senior gurus and dancers of various regional cities. The programmes present promising individual talent and the audiences donate at the entrance to pay the performer. 

The indifference of the government too needs to be addressed soon. Replacing the current administrators with those who are subject knowledge experts and trained in culture will help. These positions need to be upgraded by offers of better pay, functional independence and higher official status. Only then will cultural policies and the effective ‘vision action’ be realised. This is what eminent poet, cultural administrator and patron of arts Ashok Vajpeyi meant when he said, “While there is a popular pressure or demand for the group, it is in the solo artist that the individual genius is seen, and the traditions of dance secured. The government has to rigorously promote the solo artist in dance.”

Navina Jafa is vice-president of Centre for New Perspectives, a think tank that works on intangible heritage, traditional knowledge through research and pilot programs for sustainable development.

Theatre Artist Raghunandana Turns Down Sangeet Natak Akademi Award to Protest Lynchings

He said that the “powers-that-be are directly, or indirectly, responsible for these deadly acts of murder and violence”.

New Delhi: Acclaimed theatre artist, poet and playwright from Karnataka S. Raghunandana has refused to accept the Sangeet Natak Akademi award a day after this year’s awards were announced.

In his statement, Raghunandana cited the prevailing atmosphere of hatred and the rise of “mob lynchings and violence in the name of God and religion”. He also added that the “powers-that-be are directly, or indirectly, responsible for these deadly acts of murder and violence”.

Raghunandana also said, “As a theatre artist, poet and playwright” he is unable to accept this award “when such injustice is being done” in the name of his country.

His statement said that the “very meaning of what it is to be an Indian” is being “distorted and erased” and attempts are being made to “teach lessons of hate and irrationality to students everywhere”.

He also pointed out that attempts were underway to “to silence the poor and the powerless” by throttling the voices of “conscientious intellectuals and activists”. Not attributing the trend to any one political party, Raghunandana claims that “this has always been so, regardless of the party, or parties, in power”.

Also read: There Is No Room for Religious Fundamentalism Among Us

He concludes by stating that his action is “not a protest” and that it is out of “despair” and “a helpless inability to accept the award”.

The full statement has been reproduced below.

§

The Sangeet Natak Akademi is an autonomous institution and has been, on the whole, upholding its principles of autonomy through the years. I thank the Akademi for giving me, along with others, its award for the year 2018.

However, today there is mob lynching and violence in the name of God and religion, and even in the matter of what one eats. The powers-that-be are directly, or indirectly, responsible for these deadly acts of murder and violence. They are directly, or indirectly, supporting the hate campaign that uses all means, including those offered by internet technology, to fulfil its unholy aims.

An attempt is being made to put in place systems that will teach lessons of hate and irrationality to students everywhere, from those in institutions of the highest education to those in schools and colleges. The very meaning of what it is to be an Indian, and the adage Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, are being distorted, and erased. But, is not hybridity Shivam indeed? Crores of people like me can only lament: Cry, the Beloved Country.

Young people such as Kanhaiya Kumar who should shape the future of India and the world at large are facing charges of sedition and criminal conspiracy. Others – intellectuals and social activists – are facing trial under UAPA. Most of them have not even got bail and are spending time in prison. These are people who have always stood up for the cause of the most exploited and downtrodden of our country and everywhere else.

They have argued on behalf of the exploited in the courts, have written books and articles about their suffering, have guided them to fight non-violently, have always followed the tenets prescribed by the Constitution of India, and have upheld its spirit and values. They have waged their righteous struggle with not a thought for themselves. Yet they are in prison.

Our rulers have decided that the best way to silence the poor and the powerless is to throttle the voices of these conscientious intellectuals and activists. This has always been so, regardless of the party, or parties, in power.

These wonderful men and women, young and old, are our truest patriots. They tread the path of true dharma and uphold its values. They want, work for, and live for nothing but the good of all beings, sentient and non-sentient. I cannot, as a theatre artist, poet and playwright, accept this award when such injustice is being done to these dharmamargis in my country, in the name of my country. My atmasakshi, my antaryami does not permit me to.

This is not a protest. It comes out of despair, a helpless inability to accept the award. I respect the Akademi, and all those who have received this award, now and in the past. I thank the members of the Akademi, and apologise.

May there be Shivakarunya.

Raghunandana

July 17, 2019

‘The Politics of Culture Is Also Political’: A Profile of Sunil Shanbag

Sunil Shanbag has worn many hats in the past four decades. His style of theatre, incorporating music, history and meta-theatre is being recognised by the Sangeet Natak Akademi’s decision to award him.

In the two weeks between the Sangeet Natak Akademi’s annual meeting held on June 8 in Imphal, where it was decided that Sunil Shanbag was to be recognised for his excellence as a theatre director, and on June 20, when the announcement was finally made public, a controversy regarding Shanbag’s selection gained momentum.

It was reported that the RSS and leaders of the BJP objected to the 62-year-old director receiving the award, owing to concerns about his criticism of the government. In addition, it was said that Shanbag’s deceased sister Anuradha Ghandy’s reported involvement in the Maoist movement tainted his credentials.

Eventually, the attempt to disqualify Shanbag failed and the Akademi refused to change its decision. But these events indicate how political considerations influence those of artistic merit.

To Shanbag, however, the news that he was being considered for the award itself came as a surprise. When questions about his patriotism came up, the idea of accepting the award seemed less fraught. “Then, it became a statement, a recognition not of the work I have done, but what it represents,” he said. Shanbag’s plays over the last decade have dealt with themes like disenfranchisement of the working class, censorship of art and the stifling of dissent.

This November in Mumbai, Shanbag will present his latest production, a reworking of Prithviraj Kapoor’s Deewar, an allegory written and performed in 1945, two years before the partition of the subcontinent became a reality. Kapoor’s play was an attempt to prompt reflection on the kind of nation its audiences wanted to imagine and to stir them towards an expansive vision. Fittingly, Shanbag’s reprisal of the play comes at a time when the populist idea of the nation and the debate around who can or cannot belong to it has little space for dissent.

During its maiden outing, Deewar was subject to censorship by the colonial rule. Referring to the controversy about his receiving the award, Shanbag says, “Isn’t it depressing that between 1945 and 2018, little seems to have changed?”

If Shanbag has been more vocal than ever about the government’s policies, especially in connection with theatre, it is because he sees himself as “an artist who has responsibility”, and with four decades of work behind him, he is certainly in a position to speak. “Theatre is not just about doing a play,” he said. “It is a way of life. You have to start seeing the connections. That is the essence of art.” The quest to understand the role of the artist in society has led Shanbag to inhabit several positions – from that of an actor and technician in his early years in theatre to being an organiser and director. He even worked as a journalist, a TV researcher and writer and documentary filmmaker. Finally, using decades of experience in theatre, he has been serving as an archivist and mentor.

A chance encounter

Shanbag’s entry into theatre in 1974 as a 17-year-old was the result of a chance introduction to legendary director Satyadev Dubey. Desperate to find a replacement to play an art-school dropout, Dubey invited Shanbag. Shanbag’s first role thus came to be a marginal figure called Pansy, an aspiring artist at the fringes of society. In the following years, while studying at Elphinstone College, directing street plays with his classmates in the wake of the Emergency, and engaging with the radical leftist ideas of his sister Anuradha Ghandy, Shanbag kept at theatre under Dubey. “Everything happened to make theatre possible,” he recalls of that time.

Satyadev Dubey. Credit: Prithvi theatre.

In interviews, Shanbag is often called upon to recount his experiences of working with a maverick like Dubey, of being in the orbit of his erratic genius and through Dubey’s company Theatre Unit, participating in the experimental theatre movement based around Chhabildas School Hall in the suburb of Dadar in Mumbai.

The narration of Shanbag’s first decade in theatre is a fascination with the guru-shishya system of another era and to a preoccupation with the protagonists of a golden age. Shanbag left Dubey in 1985 and co-founded his own company, called Arpana, a name bestowed on the new venture by Dubey himself.

However, only two decades after Arpana was established did Shanbag arrive on the scene with the 2006 production Cotton 56, Polyester 84. Set in Girangaon, the textile mill district in Mumbai, the play features two former mill workers as protagonists who meet at a newspaper stall and talk about past and present struggles. Much of what is considered ‘trademark Shanbag’ was first employed in this critically acclaimed play.

Rather than work on an existing script, Shanbag began correspondence with playwright Ramu Ramanathan while the text was still under development. Historical research and observation of the present were key to writing the fictional characters. As for the presentation, live music and singing were used as tools of narration. “It took me twenty years to find my own vision,” he said. “What can I say, I am a slow learner.”

Since Cotton 56, Polyester 84, Shanbag’s plays have become interdisciplinary collages in which music features prominently. “Indian audiences versed in folk traditions respond very well to live music,” Shanbag said, whose 2011 play Stories in a Song, conceptualised by Shubha Mudgal and Aneesh Pradhan, took as its subject the history of musical forms like kajri, thumri, dadra and khayal“I have used live music in so many plays, I think I should direct something without it now,” he laughs.

A scene from Arpana’s Cotton 56, Polyester 84. CreditL Flickr/Sunil Shanbag. CC BY 2.0

A layered narration

Shanbag also has a penchant for placing plays within plays, using theatre to comment on the history of the form. Walking to the Sun, written by Vivek Narayan, was based on Rabindranath Tagore’s Dak Ghar and an actual incident surrounding Dak Ghar’s performance in the Warsaw ghetto of Poland during the Holocaust. Shanbag first used layering in the 2009 production, Sex Morality and Censorship, written by Shanta Gokhale, which narrated the court case surrounding the censorship of Vijay Tendulkar’s play Sakharam Binder and commented on the sanitisation of lavani and tamaasha. In all of these works, Shanbag has paid close attention to accurate representation of historical details.

Speaking about the importance of research in his practice, Shanbag said, “I am not a fiction writer and cannot create stories out of my imagination. I need solid material.” However, Shanbag’s work is not entirely documentary – it uses fact to bring verisimilitude to fiction. This approach may be seen as a culmination of his work as a journalist and a TV writer, much before Cotton 56, Polyester 84.

In 1980, Shanbag joined C.Y. Gopinath’s Sol Features, an agency of freelancers where many of the employees were encouraged to undertake what Gopinath describes as “first person journalism.” One of the stories Shanbag remembers doing at the time was impersonating a shoe-shine boy outside VT station in order to write from personal experience rather than use second-hand accounts. “Of course, one questions the ethics of doing that kind of work now,” he said.

Experiences in other media

In TV, as a researcher and writer, Shanbag had to come up with different narrative strategies to tell stories accurately, whether it was the question of how to encapsulate large historical periods into short episodes for Shyam Benegal’s historical drama Bharat Ek Khoj or how to crystallise women’s struggles for legal rights through fictionalised situations in Manju Singh’s Adhikar.

From 1990, Shanbag worked as a researcher on Surabhi, a series that tasked itself with documenting various facets of Indian culture. A significant breakthrough came with the documentary Maihar Raag, for which Shanbag and his collaborator, filmmaker Arunabh Bhattacharjee, won the National Award for Best Non-Feature Film in 1994. “From documentary, I learnt how non-fictional material can be used to construct an argument and it seemed silly that until then, these worlds were separate,” he said, speaking of how his directorial strategies came to be influenced by his experience in other forms of media.

Shanbag’s varied interests, which have led him towards incorporating literature, poetry, music and the history of theatre itself in his work, have at times brought criticism from within the community. “When I did something like Stories in A Song, there were friends of mine who did not see any political aspect about it,” he said, referring to the play’s focus on the history of music in India. “The question is what constitutes the political. The politics of culture is also political. There was a time when these definitions were narrow.”

The importance of dissent

Yet, in the current political climate Shanbag has found himself talking about dissent directly with his 2017 production Words Have Been Uttered, featuring songs, poems, and excerpts of other plays. The description of the play opens with the following line, “Dissenting, or holding an opinion in opposition to a prevailing idea, is an integral part of the Indian tradition in which we accept that there are many ways of looking at and living in the world.” Now, it could even be read as a rebuttal to the arguments used to oppose Shanbag receiving the Sangeet Natak Akademi.

A scene from ‘Words Have Been Uttered’. Credit: Facebook.

Shanbag says that what preoccupies him at the moment is not only his own work but the larger idea of theatre itself. Shanbag has played an instrumental role in documenting an oral history project on historic experimental theatre spaces. This was published in the book Scenes We Made, edited by eminent theatre critic and writer Shanta Gokhale in 2015. The same year, he co-founded Tamaasha, with actor Sapna Saran, the company that produced Words Have Been Uttered. The company’s offshoot, Studio Tamaasha, aims to programme interdisciplinary events. Talking about the financial sustainability of alternative spaces, Shanbag said, “Why do we demand that cultural spaces must be sustainable? Even banks are not sustainable.”

One of the projects he hopes to oversee in the coming months is the mapping of new alternative theatre venues across the country. “I would not mind stepping down from my role as a director,” he said, “It is about enthusing people about the larger idea of theatre.”

Zeenat Nagree is an art critic and curator based in Bombay.

Despite RSS Pressure, Sunil Shanbag Gets Sangeet Natak Akademi Award

Veteran theatre and film person Girish Karnad had written to the chairman of the cultural body, urging him not to withdraw Shanbag’s name.

New Delhi: After an inordinate delay, the Sangeet Natak Akademi (SNA) finally announced the names of the 42 winners for the 2017 SNA awards this week.

Even as an “unofficial list” of the awardees was doing the rounds on social media for the last few days, creating confusion, many in the art fraternity expressed surprise on the official silence over the names even though the Akademi’s general council finalised the list on June 8 at a meeting in Imphal.

This week, when the country’s highest arts body finally put out the names of the prestigious annual awards in a press note, as finalised by the general council of the Akademi in Imphal, all eyes were, however, on one name in the list that reportedly caused the delay in the official announcement – that of Mumbai-based theatre director Sunil Shanbag.

Shanbag, who founded the theatre company Arpana in 1985, and has worked closely with veterans like Satyadev Dubey and Shyam Benegal besides being the co-author of the critically acclaimed TV series Bharat Ek Khoj, has been named the winner under the category of theatre direction. But not without an underhand attempt reportedly by political forces to compromise the autonomy of India’s national academy of music, dance and drama.

As per a news report on June 23, the delay was caused by the intervention of some senior leaders of the ruling BJP government and the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)’s cultural wing, Sanskar Bharti, which demanded that the SNA withdraw Shanbag’s name from the winners’ list. According to them, he was part of the ‘award wapsi’ campaign in 2015 which protested alleged intolerance during the Narendra Modi regime. As per a June 23 report in the Economic Times, “They (the leaders) said Shanbag had also publicly criticised the government’s hold over cultural institutions. Some people even complained that Shanbag was related to Maoist leaders Anuradha and Kobad Ghandy, ET has learnt.”

On June 24, in response to the reports, former SNA chairman and veteran theatre and film person Girish Karnad wrote a letter to Shekhar Sen, chairman of SNA, urging him not to withdraw Shanbag’s name, citing the role the Akademi should play in the field of arts. Calling the demand of the RSS and the BJP “ludicrous”, Karnad wrote, “The responsibility of the Akademi is to recognise and honour artistic merit. The artist’s political beliefs are his right. Shanbag has been working for over forty years on the Indian stage and the quality of his work has been consistently innovative and outstanding. That’s all that should matter.”

Karnad also pointed out that Shanbag “was groomed for the theatre by Satyadev Dubey, a self- declared member of the RSS, and yet that has not deflected Shanbag from his distinct ideals.”

Though SNA comes under the Ministry of Culture and is fully funded by the government, it functions as an autonomous body which is run by a general council headed by a chairman, with five nominees of the central government and one representative from each of the state governments.

Lauding Sen’s decision to stick to the general council’s decision to confer the award on Shanbag, Karnad recalled that during his tenure as SNA chairperson (1988-1993) “…Utpal Dutt’s play, Kallol, on the Naval Mutiny of 1946, was invited to Delhi to participate in the Nehru Shatabdi Natya Mahotsav of [1989] although it had dialogues which called Jawaharlal Nehru a ‘fascist stooge’.”

Karnad wrote, “…Utpal Dutt’s play, Kallol, on the Naval Mutiny of 1946 was invited to Delhi to participate in the Nehru Shatabdi Natya Mahotsav of 1989 although it had dialogues which called Jawaharlal Nehru a ‘fascist stooge’.”

Following is Girish Karnad’s letter to Sen:

Dear Shri Shekhar Sen,

The reported demand by certain ‘senior leaders of the RSS and the BJP ‘ that the Sangeet Natak Akademi award to Sunil Shanbag should be withdrawn because of his ideological beliefs can only be described as ludicrous. The responsibility of the Akademi is to recognize and honour artistic merit. The artist’s political beliefs are his right. Shanbag has been working for over forty years on the Indian stage and the quality of his work has been consistently innovative and outstanding. That’s all that should matter. The present Award has been long overdue.

 The debate whether an artist’s political views should matter when considering his artistic stature is one that the SNA has faced in the past. The great Bengali actor-producer Utpal Dutt, who was a member of the CPI(ML), turned down the SNA Award as he felt it was patronage offered by the capitalist establishment, but later he was gracious enough to accept the Fellowship – a higher honour – during my tenure. In fact Utpal Dutt’s play, Kallol, on the Naval Mutiny of 1946 was invited to Delhi to participate in the Nehru Shatabdi Natya Mahotsav of 1989 although it had dialogues which called Jawaharlal Nehru a ‘fascist stooge’. The ironic aspect of the present controversy is that Shanbag was groomed for the theatre by Satyadev Dubev, a self-declared member of the RSS, and yet that has not deflected Shanbag from his distinct ideals.

Perhaps this is too subtle a phenomenon to be grasped by doctrinaire activists. But the Sangeet Natak Akademi should be congratulated on its decision.

Warmest regards,

Girish Karnad

Interview: Folk Artiste Prashanna Gogoi on His Relationship With Assam’s Bihu Dance

In conversation with ethnomusicologist Prashanna Gogoi on his experiments with the Bihu.

In conversation with ethnomusicologist Prashanna Gogoi on his experiments with the Bihu.

Artiste Prashanna Gogoi playing the juria pepa at his studio in Guwahati. Credit: Sangeeta Barooah Pisharoty

Artiste Prashanna Gogoi playing the juria pepa at his studio in Guwahati. Credit: Sangeeta Barooah Pisharoty

Guwahati (Assam): As I waited for the door to be answered, my gaze fell upon the several identical-sized coconut shells left to dry in the courtyard of Prashanna Gogoi’s house in Guwahati’s Maligaon railway colony. “It is to make the resonator for the been,” he told me.

An advisor to Sangeet Natak Akademi, New Delhi on tribal and folk arts, 45-year-old Gogoi is known across Assam not only for modernising the been (Assam’s traditional string instrument that is also considered as one of the oldest traditional kinds in the region), but also for achieving something that many veteran exponents of Bihu dance and music felt just couldn’t be done for a folk form – codifying the bhangima or vocabulary of its dance and setting the musical instruments used in it to various scales.

Besides being a well-known ethnomusicologist and a top exponent of Bihu dance and music, Gogoi is also a maker of traditional musical instruments. A cramped studio at the back of his house, packed with folk instruments like the juria pepa, the gogona, dhol, been, toka – some ready for use, some half made – is testimony to his impressive skills.

In an interview to The Wire, Gogoi discusses his work and talks about what pushed him to do what he did, including developing new instruments, such as the cane drum and the Hansha been.

Excerpts:

Let me begin by asking how did a trained veterinary doctor end up as an exponent and expert on Bihu music and dance?

I was interested in Bihu music since childhood. I grew up in the Ziro town of Arunachal Pradesh where my father was posted in a government job in the mid 1970s. Since he was interested in music, our house became the centre of cultural activities. People would assemble and sing songs including Bihu songs, play the Bihu instruments, like the pepa and the dhol, etc. Though for Bihu, we would visit our paternal home in Lakhimpur town of Assam. In the run-up to the festival, as kids, me, my brother and sister used to learn Bihu songs and go down to the camps of the security forces placed in the town to perform Husori (a traditional group dance and singing of Bihu songs during the annual Rongali Bihu). I got my first pepa when I was barely 13. That’s when I began learning how to use the fingers on the wind instrument to play with the air and produce different sounds.

My childhood interest in Bihu music continued alongside studies. I wanted to join a medical college in Assam after my 12th standard. Having grown up in Arunachal, a state full of army men, I was attracted towards the disciplined life they led; I wanted to become a doctor in the army. However, the Assam government at that time came up with a rule that students would have to complete the last two years of their studies in the state itself to be able to join a government medical college. I couldn’t qualify because I studied in Arunachal. The Arunachal government, however, placed me in the Veterinary College in Khanapara, Guwahati, through its state quota. That’s how I ended up as a veterinary doctor.

During my time at the college, I took part in its festivals and cultural weeks and also in Bihu competitions across Guwahati. I began winning prizes. The judges took an interest in me because I stuck to the original, traditional tunes. Sometime in 1993, two such judges, Mukut Bora and Dilip Phukan  from the popular Rangpuria Xilpi Samaj Bihu Dal, Guwahati, asked me if I would be interested in  joining the group. I did, and began practicing with them to take part in competitions and festivals. Those days I was also in the horse riding team of the National Cadet Corps. So it was pretty hectic – go for riding sessions early in the morning, attend college and then go for Bihu rehearsals till late in the night. Slowly, I began to be called as a judge to the same competitions that I won because many organisers felt I would take away all the prizes. As a part of Rangpuria Xilpi Samaj Bihu Dal, I began to travel, not just within Assam and India but outside of it too. Till now, I have done performances in more than 25 countries.

When and why did you look at the possibility of codifying the musical instruments used in Bihu?

As I said, I have been singing Bihu songs since childhood, like so many others. I have also been playing various instruments used in the genre besides the pepa. Over the years, this involvement with Bihu songs led me to think that I should get a bit deeper in it and research on the subject, particularly on the possibility of codifying its musical instruments to be able to record the music in studios in a much more professional method, and to be able to create a far more refined melody on the stage that springs out of the right mix of the scales used in the instruments. Till then, if a pepa was being played in say, B flat, the dhol will be in C scale, the gogona and the bin invariably in some other scales. There was no uniformity, unlike in other musical performances. Though a dhol or a pepa player will be able to give you the notations orally, they can’t write it in matra. Though there is an order in the tune, say, in 16 beat taal, the dha falls on the 17th beat, same is with 32 beat taal, the dha falls on the 33rd.

Around 1995-96, I thought of taking up the challenge, even though many veterans by then had said that since Bihu is a folk form, its dance and musical instruments can’t, therefore, be given a formulaic treatment as is done in a classical form. But I wanted to give it a try. I felt that otherwise, it will remain just as a means of entertainment where the professional and the amateur are in the same bracket. Bihu songs will just be a way of our life and that’s it. I strongly felt the need for a systematic way of playing the musical instruments in a Bihu song.

Artiste Prashanna Gogoi at his studio in Guwahati. Credit: Sangeeta Barooah Pisharoty

Artiste Prashanna Gogoi at his studio in Guwahati. Credit: Sangeeta Barooah Pisharoty

You began by setting the juria pepa to different scales?

Yes, I am often identified with the juria pepa for this reason. Made of the horn of a buffalo, a pepa has four parts – hing or thula, reed pipe or the gofnola or nolisa, supohi or the reed and the mukhoni or the mouthpiece. In Assamese traditional music, there are three kinds of pepa. One is gutia pepa made of all four parts. Then there is jur pepa, where the player uses two separate pepas of four parts each to produce a single sound. Then comes the juria pepa, which is two separate pepas with three parts each and tied together with a single fourth part, the mukhoni. I use different pepas for different scales. It took me a while to set them to scales.

Also, since it is increasingly becoming difficult to procure buffalo horns in large numbers to meet the demand for pepa, I experimented with a local wood to make the juria pepa. The pepa made of Gamari wood produces equally good sound and scale.

So what changed in Bihu music after you set the scales of the instruments?

Well, till then, if you go to an instrument maker, say to buy a pepa or a dhol or a gogona, it could be of any length or thickness or size. It would produce sound but everything was approximate, not accurate. There was no set way of tuning it to produce a certain melody. So a player had no idea what exact sound will the instrument produce, to what height or depth he can take the sound. I began to make my own instruments following the science of acoustics.

Sound is physics. Take the pepa. Its sound and the scale depend on the distance between each part. Shorter the pepa, thinner the scale. Again, the thickness and tightness of the bamboo, the distance between the knots in the bamboo used in making a gogona, matter a lot for the instrument to be able to produce the correct vibration of sound. I began to choose the variety of bamboos carefully, to make gogona and toka, began thinking which bamboo will produce which scale better. There are about 50 varieties of bamboo across the Northeast.

Also, during my travels to different countries since the 1990s, I began buying strings, tuners, etc. to check how to restrict a certain instrument to a certain scale, like one does in guitar, sitar, tanpura, etc. I remember even buying coconuts of a particular size from Mauritius once to be able to experiment with the base for the Assamese been. Of course, now you can download from the internet a lot of information on how to tune an instrument. Those days such information was not easily available.

You gave a new look to the traditional been besides adding the option of different scales to the instrument.

Yes, though the raw material used to make a been – coconut shell and wood – is the same, I explored the possibility of modernising the instrument as the recipient of a junior fellowship from Union Ministry of Culture in 2005. I researched on scientific and acoustic improvisation of the traditional been which is the main instrument for our tokari geet, deh bisar geet, borgeet, also used in Goalparia geet and the Sattriya dance music.

Traditionally, the string of the been was made of muga silk, which failed to produce the same sound during the rainy season as there would be a lot of moisture in the string. In a state which receives a lot of rainfall, it is an impediment. So I changed it to stainless steel to maintain the continuity of sound. Our been is a mono-chord instrument played with a bow string; I added an additional string as a standby, though only one string is used at any given time to produce the harmonies. Like the violin, the tension produced by the bow on the string is used to produce different scales.

I also brought some structural changes to the been by adding the motif of a goose at the head of the instrument besides adding some ornamentation to make it stand out. Over the years, various string instruments, like the sitar, the tanpura, have also undergone changes to look and sound how it does now. The saat tari sitar was different from the present tarabdari sitar.

You also created a basic format for learners of the Bihu dance. What pushed you to do that?

I worked on the bhongima of the Bihu dance, its basic grammar, as a senior fellow of Union Ministry of Culture in 2014. It was a research project on the semantics and the semiotics of the Bihu dance with reference to its music and musical notations. I felt the need to research on the subject because till then there was no set dance vocabulary for learners. If a student goes back to a Bihu dance teacher, say, after a gap of a year, the teacher can’t recall exactly how he/she taught the student. But I can, because I follow a particular vocabulary for it, the basic steps for the beginners. So I felt there is a gap that needs to be filled. I worked out eight major bhongima and eight minor bhongima covering all the basic traditional steps of the dance.

After a student learns the basic moves, he/she can improvise depending on the ability and talent. But there has to be a base, a uniform vocabulary, a method, to begin with, which was largely missing in Bihu dance teaching. The SNA documented what I developed through the project.

In 2003, the SNA recognised you as a guru for Bihu dance for your contribution to the gene.

In 2003, I became the youngest guru to be named by the Union Ministry of Culture for Bihu dance. In 2005, my wife too was conferred the honour (Moushumi Saikia Gogoi is a popular Bihu and Manipuri dance exponent). There was a controversy then in the state because some people questioned how at the age of 31 I could be termed a ‘guru’ by SNA. But I didn’t file a tender for it; the national cultural body must have seen something worthwhile in my work.

SNA has archived my work. I say, let Bihu be a folk form but it should be somewhat systematic within its folk character so that anyone willing to learn it, be the dance or the instruments, can do so methodically, and that’s how its scope can be extended from a mere source of entertainment to a form of art that is presented on stage.

So what next?

I have long been associated in crafting instruments which has also led me to think of developing new instruments. Some time ago, I created a cane drum for a Naga music band which was played at the Hornbill festival and much appreciated by the crowd because it produced some amazing sounds.

I have also developed a new string instrument after working on it for about two years. It is called Hansha been, has 25 strings. I have played it in musical events in different countries. Recently, I have applied for a patent for it. If I am granted, then it will be the first patented instrument from Assam to be added to the rich folk culture of the state. Personally, I will feel extremely proud to be able to give our folk music something which has given me so much.