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Balasaraswati

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indian Bharatnatyam dancer (1918–1984)

Tanjore Balasaraswati
Balasaraswati on a 2010 stamp
Balasaraswati on a 2010 stamp
Background information
Born(1918-05-13)13 May 1918
Madras Presidency,British India
OriginTanjore
Died9 February 1984(1984-02-09) (aged 65)
Madras, India
GenresCarnatic classical music
OccupationBharatanatyam dancer
Musical artist

Tanjore Balasaraswati,[1] also known asBalasaraswati (13 May 1918 – 9 February 1984), was an Indian dancer, and her rendering ofBharatanatyam, a classical dance style originated in theSouth Indian state ofTamil Nadu, made this style of dancing well known in different parts ofIndia and many parts of the world.

She was awarded thePadma Bhushan in 1957[2] and thePadma Vibhushan in 1977, the third and the second highest civilian honours given by theGovernment of India.[1] In 1973, she was awarded theSangeetha Kalanidhi by theMadras Music Academy. In 1981 she was awarded theSangeetha Kalasikhamani award of The Indian Fine Arts Society, Chennai.

Early life and background

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Balasaraswati was a seventh generation representative of a traditional matrilineal family of temple musicians and dancers (devadasis),[3] who traditionally enjoyed high social status, who have been described as the greatest single repository of the traditional performing arts of music and dance of the southern region of India. Her ancestor, Papammal, was a musician and dancer patronized in the mid-eighteenth century by the court of Thanjavur. Her grandmother,Veenai Dhanammal (1867–1938), is considered by many to be the most influential musician of the early twentieth century. Her mother, Jayammal (1890–1967) was a singer who encouraged the training of Balasaraswati and was her accompanist.[citation needed]

Balasaraswati created a revolution in traditional music and dance for Bharatanatyam, a combination of the performance arts of music and dance. She learned music within the family from her infancy, and her rigorous training in dance was begun when she was four under the distinguished dance teacher K. Kandappan Pillai, a member of the famed Thanjavur Nattuvanar family. Her younger brothers were the musiciansT. Ranganathan andT. Viswanathan who would both become prominent performers and teachers in India and the United States. Her daughter, Lakshmi Knight (1943–2001), became a distinguished performer of her mother's style. Her grandsonAniruddha Knight continues to perform the family style today, and is artistic director of Bala Music and Dance Association in the United States and the Balasaraswati School of Dance in India. Her son-in-law Douglas M. Knight, Jr. has written her biography with the support of a Guggenheim Fellowship (2003). Famous Indian film maker Satyajit Ray made adocumentary on her works.[citation needed]

Career

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Balasaraswati's debut took place in 1925. She was the first performer of her traditional style outside of South India, performing first in Calcutta in 1934. As a young teenager, she was seen by choreographerUday Shankar, who became an ardent promoter of her performances, and throughout the 1930s she captured the imagination of audiences across India. She went on to a global career that attracted international critical attention and the respect of dance greats such asShambhu Maharaj, DameMargot Fonteyn,Martha Graham, andMerce Cunningham. Interest in Bharatanatyam rebounded in the 1950s as the public became interested in promoting a unique Indian art form. Balasaraswati, encouraged by an administrator at the Music Academy in Madras, established a dance school in association with the institution. There she trained new dancers in Bharatanatyam as per her vision. In the early 1960s she increasingly travelled globally, with performances in East Asia, Europe, and North America. Later that decade, throughout the 1970s, and into the early 1980s, she visited the United States repeatedly and held residencies—as both a teacher and a performer—at Wesleyan University (Middletown, Connecticut), California Institute of the Arts (Valencia), Mills College (Oakland, California), the University of Washington (Seattle), and Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival (Beckett, Massachusetts), among other institutions. Through her international engagements as well as her activities in India, especially in Madras, Balasaraswati not only exposed countless audiences to the traditional style of Bharatanatyam but also trained many new practitioners of the art form.

An American student of hers, by the name of Luise Scripps, created the American Society for Eastern Arts, and from July 1965, for over a decade, outstanding musicians, dancers and other artists from India and Indonesia, in particular, had the chance of travelling to the United States to present their art.[4]

Awards

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She received numerous awards in India, including the President's Award from theSangeet Natak Akademi (1955),[citation needed]Padma Vibhushan from the Government of India for distinguished national service (1977)[citation needed] andSangita Kalanidhi from theMadras Music Academy,[citation needed] South India's highest award for musicians (1973). In a review in 1977, the New York Times dance criticAnna Kisselgoff described her as one of the "supreme performing artists in the world".[citation needed]India Today,[when?] based on a survey, classified her as one of the 100 prominent Indians who have shaped the destiny of India.[citation needed] She was the only non-western dancer included in a compilation of the Dance Heritage Coalition, "America's Irreplaceable Dance Treasures: The First 100" (2000).[5]

See also

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In popular culture

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Bengali film directorSatyajit Ray made adocumentary film on Balasaraswati namedBala (1976).[6]

References

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  1. ^ab"Padma Awards Directory (1954-2007)"(PDF).Ministry of Home Affairs. 30 May 2007. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 10 April 2009.
  2. ^"Padma Awards"(PDF). Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. 2015. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 15 October 2015. Retrieved21 July 2015.
  3. ^"Temple Dancer".Indian Express. 5 March 2012. Retrieved22 November 2016.
  4. ^Venkataraman, L (2017).Indian Classical dance: The Renaissance and Beyond [English]. Niyogi Books.
  5. ^"Library of Congress Joins Other Institutions and The Dance Heritage Coalition in Announcing the Identification of "America's Irreplaceable Dance Treasures: The First 100"". 28 July 2000. Retrieved10 October 2021.
  6. ^S. K. Singh."Bala: A film by Satyajit Ray".SatyajitRay.org. Archived fromthe original on 11 September 2012. Retrieved22 November 2016.

Other sources

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External links

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