Yudh: Three perspectives, one truth

Yudh

Three Perspectives, One Truth
Company Sai Shree Arts
Genre Solo Bharatanatyam Dance Theatre
Date of premiere 2 Feb 2013
Creative team
Producer & Writer AK Srikanth
Direction & Choreography Savitha Sastry
Music Rajkumar Bharathi
Technical Direction Victor Paul Raj
Costumes Joy Antony, Arun Tiwari

Yudh (the Battle) is a solo Bharatanatyam Dance Theatre production choreographed and performed by Savitha Sastry. It is based on a short story of the same name by AK Srikanth, and featured music by the Chennai based music composer Rajkumar Bharathi,[1] the great grandson of the veteran poet Subramania Bharathi . The production premiered on February 2, 2013 at Mumbai’s NCPA Auditorium, and has since played all across India. The presentation was received with critical and popular acclaim [2]

Plot

The central premise of Yudh is based on around the story of a young girl Pavitra, who is kidnapped from a park and never heard off again. Her grieving parents have spent their lives trying to come to terms with the loss of their child. The story then shifts to offering other perspectives to this incident, through the eyes of Satan and of God. In essence, the story implies that the war between Satan and God is now fought in the minds of humans, with both of them trying to exert their influence on the human. It concludes that the winner of this war between God and Satan is eventually determined in the human mind, even though humans may not be aware of this eternal battle, or the reason why they have to endure suffering for no fault of theirs.

Savitha Sastry performing Yudh at the Music Academy Chennai (2013)

Cast

The characters in the performance include Satan, God, the little girl Pavitra and her parents. Savitha Sastry plays all the characters.

Production

Yudh continued Savitha’s attempts at communicating original stories not based on religion or Indian mythology through Bharatanatyam, in the lines of her previous productions Music Within and Soul Cages. Like Soul Cages, Yudh too steered clear of traditional Bharatanatyam themes of the nayika (the heroine) pining for love or pieces based on Bhakti (devotion) alone. The production used several effects from theater such as special lighting, use of voiceovers and narratives in the soundtrack.[3]

Critical reception

Yudh received largely positive reviews from critics. In particular, the story-line, the music and the choreography was well appreciated. SD Sharma, renowned critic from the Hindustan Times called it a “scintillating solo dance spectacle.” [4] Critic Arundhati Pattabhiraman of the Sunday Herald wrote “her art, with its breath of fresh air, is promising and insightful.” [5] A review of Yudh in the Deccan Herald praised it highly with the words “The stunning act was an interesting amalgamation of dance, lights and music, and moved the audience to tears.” [6] Conan Mendoza, the art critic from Deccan Chronicle was laudatory of Savitha’s attempts at changing the traditional nature of Bharatanatyam, and wrote “ She is like a breath of fresh air in a circuit that focuses predominantly on adherence. She is no rebel, but charts her own course.” [7]

Credits

References

  1. Savitha Sastry’s webpage
  2. An enthralling performance by Suresh Kavirayani, Times of India Feb 21, 2013.
  3. True Talent by Mona, The Tribune, Feb 23, 2013
  4. Sastry rules audience’s hearts by SD Sharma, The Hindustan Times, Feb 24, 2013
  5. Creativity Unlimited by Arundhati Pattabhiraman, Sunday Herald, March 10, 2013.
  6. Many sides of an act, Deccan Herald, March 15, 2013
  7. The Drama of Dance by Conan Mendoza, Deccan Chronicle, April 3, 2013.
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