
Rama Vaidyanathan explores the myriad facets of Sringara rasa
The Hindu
Love became the leitmotif as Rama Vaidyanathan reimagined classical Bharatanatyam repertoire at the Music Academy Dance Festival.
When love becomes the focal point of a dance performance, the experience is sublime. That was the feeling Rama Vaidyanathan’s performance on the inaugural day of the Music Academy dance festival evoked among the audience.
Senior Bharatanatyam dancer Rama Vaidyanathan during her performance on the inaugural day of The Music Academy’s dance festival. | Photo Credit: K. Pichumani
Three compositions were chosen to explore the idea of love in its varied facets. The first was the love of anticipation and disappointment, the second of surrender and devotion, and the third of passion and yearning. Shabdam, a composition that blends simple korvais and abhinaya, has become a rarity in the Bharatanatyam repertoire these days. Rama chose to perform a ragamalika shabdam by Thanjavur Arunachala Pillai as the opening number. A heroine confesses to her confidante her deep love for the lord of Chidambaram, and her doubts if he would reciprocate her feelings. Rama layered it with an imaginative expansion of ideas, elevating a simple conversation to something poetic.
The varnam, a composition of M. Balamuralikrishna in raga Thodi, explored a different facet of love towards the universal mother Devi, the benevolent benefactor who alleviates the fears and sorrows of her devotee.
Rama Vaidyanathan depicted creatively imagined moments through impeccable sancharis. | Photo Credit: K. Pichumani
What enhanced this presentation was how attuned the dancer was to the music. As Raghavendra Prasad played the flute, she came up with myriad postures to create a visual imagery of the same. The vibrant jathis composed by Sumodh Sridharan and rendered by Sridhar Vasudevan with finesse, the beautiful swara passages sung with rich musical intonations by Vishwesh Swaminathan formed a seamless tapestry of music and movement.













