Honoured with the Padmashri in 1999-2000 for her far-reaching contribution to Kathak, Shovana Narayan has imparted a philosophical and rich textural hue to the age-old tradition. She has taken it out of its narrow confines and imparted it gravity and depth in content, performed with dignity and ennoblement. Shovana's published works include, Kathak: Rhythmic Echoes & Reflections and The Dance Legacy of Patliputra.
I took up Kathak, much against my parents' wishes, for kathak for girls of 'good' families was an absolute no, no. They even went to the then director of Kathak kendra, Keshav Kothari, requesting him to throw me out. But thank God, Keshavji was able to convince them that it was not so bad after all and to let me continue. Still, my learning Kathak was something that was not discussed at home. I remember wrapping my ghungroos in a cloth bag before entering the house lest they make a sound! May have come nowhere near becoming a Tansen, but I sure became a good kansen!
The quest for perfection of the dance from ended when I saw the composite astiste, maestro Birju Maharaj, who has single-handedly altered collective perception about Kathak with the aesthetics of his personal andaaz or style. His style of Lucknow gharana has come to dominate the field to such an extent that performers of Jaipur, Banaras and Raigarh gharana acknowledge in private that they have to acquiesce to it order to stay afloat. He has become the veritable matrix through which all that is Kathak must pass. This and the fact that he has arguably the largest number of shishyas or disciples who have knowingly or unknowingly perpetrated this. There were days when I used to sit in his dance class just to see him teach others! He is truly an amazing artiste: Performer, singer, musician, composer, choreographer, guru - the Gods have really smiled.
The author of this book, Shovana, too is an artiste who has consistently endeavoured to explore the various dimension of the form - ever willing to try something new, hers has been a significant contribution in the intellectual pursuit of tracing the form's roots to the temple.
I daresay, Kathak remains my first love and this book is an offering to all those who think of Kathak as a dance of the courtesans. Hope it dispels some of their notions and puts this much- maligned form in the correct perspective.
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