Kalanidhi Narayanan

Kalanidhi Narayanan
Born Kalanidhi Ganapathi
(1928-12-07)December 7, 1928
Tamil Nadu, British India
Died February 21, 2016(2016-02-21) (aged 87)
Chennai, India
Occupation Indian classical dancer, dance teacher
Years active 1940-1944; 1973-2016
Current group Madras Music Academy [1]
Dances Bharatnatyam

Kalanidhi Narayanan (December 7, 1928 February 21, 2016) was an Indian dancer and teacher of Indian classical dance form of Bharatnatyam, who was the early non-devadasi girl to learn the dance form and perform it on stage in the 1930s and 1940s. After a brief career in the 1940s, she returned to dance in 1973 and became a notable teacher of abhinaya.[2][3][4]

She was awarded the Padma Bhushan Award, India's third highest civilian honour in 1985,[5] the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award for Bharatnatyam in 1990, given by Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy for Music, Dance and Drama [6] and Kalidas Samman (1998).

Early life and training

Born Kalanidhi Ganapathi [7] in the Brahmin household of Sumitra and Ganapati, her mother was keen on getting her dance education, and this was supported by her father. Thus starting at the age of seven she trained intensively under various gurus, this included Kamakshi Ammal, daughter of Veena Dhanam, for Padams and Javalis and Manakkal Sivarajan for vocal lessons. Noted guru Kannappa Pillai, from Kanchipuram was her main teacher of nritta (dance), he was also teacher to Balasaraswati, while Chinnayya Naidu and Mylapore Gauri Ammal taught her Abhinaya (Art of expression). Later was to add a new dimension to abhinaya herself.[2]

She made her stage-debut (Arangetram) at the age of 12 at the Senate House in Chennai, for the Madras Music Academy.[7][8] While still in her teens, she gave to two notable recitals, one with Dhanamanikkam and another with Nattuvanar K. Ganesan, son of the Kandappa Pillai.[3]

She died in February 2016.[9]

Career

She had a brief dance career in the 1940s, before she stepped out at the age of sixteen when her mother died and she was married into a conservative family. She returned to dance when in 1973, when noted art-patron, Y. G. Doraiswamy, who had seen her performances as a teen, asked to instruct dancer Alarmel Valli in abhinaya, to which she agreed, encouraged by her sons who had by now grown up. This started the second phase of her career after a gap of 30 years at the age of 46. She also started to reeducate herself in dance, luckily her books from her my younger days had survived, she started attending dance performances and Arangetram in the city, also enrolled in a course on dance theory on Bharatanatyam by Dr. Padma Subramanium..Gradually more students started coming to her and in the coming decades she became "the most sought after teacher for abhinaya".[2][3]

In December 7, 2003, various dance teachers and her disciples, celebrated her 75th birthday at Luz Community Hall in Chennai, it was marked by a two-day seminar on abhinaya, where in prominent gurus of Bharatanatyam participated. On the occasion, a set of 4 CDs on Padamswas also released.[3][8]

Disciples

Amongst her noted disciples are, A.Lakshmanaswamy, Uma Vasudevan (Montreal), Ramya Harishankar (California), Hema Rajagopalan (Chicago), Subashree Narayanan (Jacksonville, FL/Bangalore, India), Minal Prabhu (India), Priya Govind (India), [2] Sharmila Biswas (abhinaya)[10] Madhusri Sethuraman (Plano, TX) and Meenakshi Chitharanjan (abhinaya).[11] Among her disciples at her dance school Abinayasudha were Annapoorna and Chamundeeswari Kuppuswamy (UK)

Further reading

References

External links

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