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Indian Nutcracker

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Indian Nutcracker, also calledSwapna Vijayam, is an adaptation of the 1892 balletThe Nutcracker into theSouth Indian classical dance form ofKuchipudi, withTelugu lyrics. It was first performed on 15 December 2007 at theRobert Ferst Center for the Arts atGeorgia Tech, to raise funds for theEmory University Telugu Initiative.[1]

Production

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It was produced, directed andchoreographed by Sasikala Penumarthi,[2] the founder and director of the Academy of Kuchipudi Dance, which was established in 1997 inAtlanta,Georgia as anon-profit organization. The lyrics were written byIndraganti Srikantha Sarma, fromHyderabad, India. Music for the performance was composed by Atlanta-based singerSubhashini Krishnamurthy, and the dance choreography was by Sasikala Penumarthi.

The costume design sought to fuse Indian and Western "aesthetic sensibilities".[2]

The performance was presented with live orchestral support from Sujatha Rayburn (Female Vocal), Satish Menon (Male Vocal), Sastry Bhagavatula (Nattuvangam or Beat), Suresh Kodandaraman (Mridangam or Drum), V.K. Raman (Flute), Sandhya Srinath (Violin), Seshu Sarma (Veena), Subra Vishwanathan (Mridangam or Drum). More than 35 artists who have trained at the Academy of Kuchipudi Dance performed on stage. Stage direction was provided by Dr. P.V. Rao, Professor in Physics, Emory University and Ravi Penumarthi. The fundraising committee was led by Professor Joyce Flueckiger, incoming Director of the Program of South Asian Studies, Emory University.

Synopsis

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At a Christmas party hosted by her parents, Princess Swapna is given a nutcracker by the magician, Mayura. The toy actually holds Mayura's nephew, who will only be freed by "the love of a maiden". When Swapna falls asleep that night, Mayura transports her to a dream world. There, the nutcracker becomes the prince Sundara Rakumara, who battles the Mouse King Mushikasura. Sundara is killed in the battle, but Mayura resurrects him. The prince and Swapna travel to his kingdom, the Land of Spring and Everlasting Youth, where the residents greet them.

When Swapna awakes, she sees Sundara Rakumara has returned to his human form. Mayura blesses the couple.

Reception

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The 2007 performance played to a "packed" audience, with positive reviews from attendees.[3]

References

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  1. ^Ponangi, Ravi R."Sasikala Penumarthi to raise funds for South Asian studies".Atlanta Dunia. Retrieved30 August 2023.
  2. ^abDevarajan, Arthi; Kamath, Harshita Mruthinti (January 2009)."Victory of a Dream: Reimagining The Nutcracker in Classical Indian Dance"(PDF).Practical Matters.1 (1):1–20. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 27 May 2016.
  3. ^Mayani, Viren (June 2013)."Khabar: Spotlight: Kuchipudi Ambassador Sasikala Penumarthi".www.khabar.com. Retrieved30 August 2023.

External links

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