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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, December 14, 2000 |
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Rediscovering her roots
I SAW Sucheta Chapekar for the first time performing an exquisite
swarajati in Chakravakam, sung by guru Kittappa Pillai. Every
note in music and dance was fine-tuned. It was difficult to
believe that a Pune native could identify herself so completely
with a Thanjavur genre.
Sucheta continues to live in Sadashivpeth, the Mylapore of Pune,
in a house tucked into a lane, unassuming and gentle like the
artiste herself. The dance studio is flanked by a little shrine
with an orange god. I watch as Sucheta puts a student through the
Ganapati stuti in Hamsadhvani. The movements are pure
Bharatanatyam, but the language is Marathi, from the verses of
the 17th century Thanjavur ruler Shahaji. I recall how, in the
1970s, Sucheta had pulled out Shahaji's dance compositions from
dusty texts at the Saraswati Mahal Library, and presented them at
the Madras Music Academy, with Kittappa Pillai's musical score
and choreography. A pleasing challenge to Pillai, as Shahaji had
been the patron of his nattuvanar ancestors.
For Sucheta it was a pioneering journey, a rediscovery of her
roots in far off Tamil Nadu, where, under the Maratha kings,
local culture had been nurtured, and enriched by influences from
the North. Her initial guru Parvati Kumar had introduced her to
the compositions of King Serfoji. Kittappa Pillai used to visit
Parvati Kumar who experimented with new alloys for his cymbals,
"That's how I saw Kittappa Pillai for the first time, making the
room ring as he tested their resonance," Sucheta recalls. Her
father had already pointed out that though she had technical
skills, she lacked something essential. Watching Kittappa Pillai
made the young girl realise that the missing element was
musicality, the soul of Bharatanatyam. She also found that the
real grandeur of the genre was inherent in the slower
kalapramanam, not in reckless speed.
Thus began a 15-year association with "Vaadyar", starting in
1970, when Sucheta approached the Thanjavur doyen with the
request that he compose the music and dance for the Marathi,
Hindi and Sanskrit darus and padas of King Shahaji. Pillai's
family knew some of the old obsolescent ragas like Padi,
Gummakambodi and Gauri, mentioned in the text; he also decided to
set the tunes in Desya ragas like Behag, Kapi and Kanada, using a
gleamimg Begada like a Kshetrayya padam, when he thought the
verse demanded it. He was also familiar with the older forms of
dance compositions which were part of his family heritage.
Sucheta noticed how he always stressed the bhava of the lyric,
occasionally taking liberties with the sastra to retain the
impact of the words.
"No, communication was not hard, though I knew little Tamil and
less Telugu." They could always resort to abhinaya to get over
the difficulties!
Teaching methods differed. While Parvati Kumar had explained
everything in detail, Kittappa Pillai would say little, and dole
out small doses of teaching everyday. "Idu podum," he would say
unrelentingly. Having left her child at home and travelled to
Thanjavur or Bangalore for classes, Sucheta shed tears. "But he
was right. Everything he taught me then - whether "Sami ninne"
(ragamalika), "Sumasayaka" (Kapi), "Saminee" (Khamas),
"Yemataladira" (Huseni) - is still imprinted on my mind as
nothing before or since."
Pillai was also struck by Sucheta's knowledge of dance notation,
which made it possible for her to reproduce exactly what was
taught the day before. And she tried to learn not just
performance numbers from him, but his whole approach to composing
nritta and abhinaya. "His abhinaya inhered not in the hastas, but
in the musical expression, in the the variations he brought to
each line. His singing had an audio-visual quality that you
cannot find in a mere vocalist."
With such an accent on the music, how did Pillai react to
Sucheta's evolving a totally different kind of music for her
Nrityaganga productions, with Hindustani music for traditional
Bharatanatyam? "Actually, I was so groomed in Carnatic music that
this was quite a revolutionary move for me," Sucheta chuckles.
But the need to communicate to audiences in Maharashtra and the
northern States made her take that step. Pillai had his
reservations, but "He was touched by Hindustani music, and came
to accept my departures."
The disciple recalls not only the Vaadyar's severe discipline,
but his impish smile and sparkling eyes as well. Her lec dem on
the rare compositions of Pillai at the Natyakala Conference, Sri
Krishna Gana Sabha (16 Dec) is a tribute to the guide who helped
her explore a world of beauty, and find her own niche there.
GOWRI RAMNARAYAN
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