When she expressed her desire to take up dance full time, quitting her job, it was met with some resistance at home. “They know all the things that can go wrong in the arts field!” she laughs.Being the daughter of
Kalaimamani Thiru, Leo Prabhu,who is a
dramatist and cine actor it might look
like arts was the natural option for her. But, that was not the case says Smt.L.Murugashankari
B.Tech,PGDBA, M.F.A (Bharatanatyam),the
University rank holder in Chemical Engineering.
she
enrolled into the Masters program in Bharatanatyam in Madras University and now a
Junior Research Fellow, she is also doing her Ph.D. from the same university.
She also took formal training in Carnatic music and Natuvangam, which are
crucial for any dancer to take a step up as a teacher. Kalaikoodam, which means
the centre for arts, is the name of the academy she runs in two venues, with
over 30 students. Teaching has been a very enriching experience for her. She quips,
“I never knew I had so much patience!!! Teaching has made me learn so much
more, as I need to keep myself updated to answer the various kinds of doubts
the students ask.” Her students have also performed their Arangetrams, and she
says choreographing for them has been very enjoyable. A dancer, who knows her
responsibility, she does not go outside the boundaries of tradition, but tries
to be innovative within them.
She has recently done her debut in acting, in a
play written by her father, who is known for his natural acting, and the
experience was very fulfilling, she says. “My training in dance helped me a lot
as I know my body-language and am not shy on the stage, but voicing the
dialogues was the biggest challenge,” she says re-counting her rehearsals and
training sessions. “But just like with a new choreography, the role and the
part too grow in you and the 3rd time we performed the play, I was satisfied
with what I did on stage.”
Having performed at various
venues across the country and quite a few abroad, she says that the scenario
outside Chennai is quite good too, contrary to the popular belief. “Performing
in Chennai gives a dancer the maximum exposure one can get, and also
confidence, if one manages to impress, but I performed at many venues outside
Chennai too, and was very happy to perform there too. They respect artists,
take care of them and also pay,” she laughs. “This field, the dance field, is
like just others in the economic angle. One has to invest first, and only then
can one reap any benefits from it.” This is the practical side of
Murugashanakari, where she logically puts it without any qualms, that it is
only through teaching that a dancer can earn bread and butter.
A recipient of many awards and titles, among which are Natya Kala Vipanchee, Naattiya Thilakam and Nritya Siromani, these have only made her more humble and not think beyond the next performance. “It is the today and now that matters,” signs off Shankari, with a laugh and a spirit, with which she throws herself into everything that she does.
A recipient of many awards and titles, among which are Natya Kala Vipanchee, Naattiya Thilakam and Nritya Siromani, these have only made her more humble and not think beyond the next performance. “It is the today and now that matters,” signs off Shankari, with a laugh and a spirit, with which she throws herself into everything that she does.
No comments:
Post a Comment