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When the
history of this century of Indian dance is written, Protima
Gauri Bedi's name will be etched as the most dynamic dancer to
have created an institution which outlived her.
It all started
innocuously some twenty-five years ago, when bored with her
bohemian Bombay life, she took to Odissi, triggered by a chance
performance she saw of guru Kelucharan Mahapatra. Learning and
performing was not enough, not for Protima whose appetite for
life was larger than life itself. She created India's first free
gurukul for dance. In 1989, the Prime Minister of India, Mr.
V.P. Singh, inaugurated her gurukul, simply called Nrityagram, a
dance village or a village for dance.
Recalls
Daksha Sheth, India's leading contemporary dancer, who with her
Australian husband Devissaro left Delhi to help Protima set-up
this dance village : teachers came, students trained and the
national press supported this unique dance village. Gurus
(Kelubabu for Odissi, Kalanidhi Narayanan for Bharata Nathyam,
Kumudini Lakhia for Kathak and Bharati Shivaji for Mohiniattam)
came and taught there.
Protima soon
realised what she had to offer was far more than any guru could
- an environment to learn. Slowly she shifted the focus to
create ensemble (group) works, short ballets and train new
students herself. She arranged smashing debuts for her prized
pupils Surupa Sen, Bijayini Satpathy, Bharat Rao and showed the
world what was possible.
More
importantly, Nrityagram became a must for every visitor from
abroad, dance companies, choreographers and researchers in the
tradition. Nrityagram was on road to becoming not merely a
dance-training place but a meeting point for world dance
communities. It took the shape of becoming the Jacob's Pillow of
India (Ted Shawn and Ruth St. Dennis, the pioneering dance-duo
of America, nay its founding figures, took a barn outside New
York and created Jacob's Pillow in 1940s).
And soon a
Woodstock too. For Protima hit upon the idea of holding an
annual dance-music festival featuring the best names in the
country. Done on first Saturday of February to coincide with the
arrival of spring, it is called Vasanthabba. The Who's Who of
the dance and music world have performed for this festival. Its
ultimate test and tribute came in 1999 when after Protima was no
more, major gurus, artists and performers performed for free. So
Protima's dream for dance lives on at Nrityagram ...
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