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Art as life

Shobana speaks about her latest production ‘Maya Ravan’ and on why the epics need to be retold



Traditionalist and experimenter Shobana

“It’s a debonair Ravana,” declares Shobana. She pauses, sees my bemused expression, and quickly adds — “but it sticks to the traditional format.”

“Maya Ravan, in its detailing of Ram, also raises him (Ram),” she explains. What she is referring to is the fuller delineation of Ram, who ironically, might otherwise be left with a slightly flatter characterisation: good, virtuous, and handsome, but somewhat lacking in colour and suffering in comparison from the wicked, but exciting Ravan.

It’s one of the delicious ironies of casting, she informs us, that it’s easier to find people to fill the roles of Ram, Sita and Lakshman, than it is to find a Mandodari, Mareecha or Ravan, because the latter require more histrionic ability.

Ramayana on stage

The actor and danseuse is discussing her latest production, Maya Ravan, and her all-consuming passion, Kalarpana, the cultural centre. For those of you not in the know, Maya Ravan is a path breaking attempt to retell the Ramayana, on stage: but it’s not straight drama, or musical or dance; it’s all of these and more. As Shobana puts it, the Ramayana is a story that has to be told, retold, and told again an infinite number of times, for every retelling brings with it fresh insights.

The accomplished actress (she won a Best Actress Award for her role in the Malayalam film ‘Manichitrathazha’), and dancer (“I’ve always been a serious classical dancer,” she points out) is now taking the epic ballet on a road show across the major metros in India, after a hugely successful tour of the United States, where it was staged in 36 cities.

Conceived, interpreted and choreographed by Shobana herself, Maya Ravan is in a dance and theatre format with dialogues in English. The voiceovers have been done by actors such as Naseerudhin Shah, Mohan Lal, Jackie Shroff, Suhasini Maniratnam and Revathy, among others.

“Tabu called me to say that she wants in too,” says Shobana, underscoring how successful it’s been.

Most artistes would be content with just being able to bring to stage a two-hour show with such stunning backdrops, exquisite costumes and spectacular lighting; but not Shobana. Her sights are set higher: on Kalarpana, or rather Kalarpana as she would have it.

It already exists as a dance school, where Shobana is, in a sense, trying to give something back to the art that she so closely identifies with. Shobana is both a traditionalist and experimenter. She believes that classical dance need not be boring if it is packaged and presented right. In her defence, Shobana points to her blending of Bharatanatyam with Western classical music (setting a tillana to Bach, or the Mahabharata to Vivaldi) and its acceptance in the supposedly conservative Chennai sabhas as a pointer to what can be achieved.

But the ultimate aim is not a dilettantish wish to dabble in this and that: rather, “it’s an attempt to get deeper into our own traditional forms, and strengthening them,” she says meditatively. Maya Ravan then, as she sees it, is an expression of her experiences as an artiste in totality, a reflection and a culmination of Shobana’s learning process as actress, teacher and artiste.

SHIV S. KUMAR

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