Putul Yatra
NATIONAL
FESTIVAL OF PUPPET
THEATRE
21 March
- 4 April 2003, 6.30 pm
Meghdoot Theatre Complex, Rabindra Bhavan,
Ferozeshah Road, New Delhi
Sangeet
Natak Akademi presents Putul Yatra, an event focussed
on puppet theatre in India through festival, discussions,
and an exhibition of puppets. Coinciding as it
does with the Golden Jubilee celebrations of the
formation of the Akademi, we celebrate the birth
centenary of Kamladevi Chattopadhyay (1903 - 1988)
and dedicate the event to her. The exhibitionm
comprising about two hundred puppets of traditional
forms from the large collection of the Akademi,
includes the string puppets from Assam, Karnatka,
Maharashtra, Orissa and Rajasthan; puppets manipulated
by both rods and strings from Karnataka and Tamilnadu;
rod puppets from Orissa and West Bengal; glove
puppets of Kerala and Orissa; and shadow puppets
from Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Orissa
and Tamilnadu. A number of puppets loaned by modern
practitioners of the art who are participating
in the festival from different states are also
exhibited. The puppets were largely collected
in early 1970s at the time of Dr. Suresh Awasthi,
the then Secretary of the Akademi. His team of
enthusiastic officers - Jiwan Pani, whose work
entailed surveying and documenting traditional
performance forms, Govind Vidyarthi, S.C. Bansal,
R.S. Malhotra, H.L. Veer and O.K. Sharma - went
aroung the country collecting, recording and taking
photographs and making films of the puppet forms.
What connects these puppet forms across the country?
Is it the structure of performance, the themes
of the plays, the use of narrative, the moral
messages, the ritual context, the manipulation
techniques, the crafting of puppets, the social
and economic context of hereditary performers,
their place in societal hierarchy or is it the
underlying aesthetic principles they share with
other share with other performance and visual
traditions or is it the underlying aesthetic principles
they share with other performance and visual traditions
of their regions? In othe words, do they share
the same world view and the concomitant sense
and feeling of time and space? A casual glance
is enough to convince us of the Natya tradition
forming the presentations of the modest puppet
theatre. The preliminaries of a performance, the
Sutradhara and the Vidushak under different names
and garbs, the typology of characters and roles,
the interweaving of text, song, rhthm and movement,
the evocation of Rasa and Bhava connect them to
the traditional theatre forms of their respective
regions. The connection of different styles of
Yakshagana of Karnataka with the string puppet
theatre of the same districts, Kathakali and Parvakathakali
glove puppets, Bhaona with the string puppets
of Assam and Jatra with the rod puppets of West
Bengal, comes to mind. The strong visual impression
of similar constumers, headgears, jewellery, facial
make-up and crafting and painting of face and
eyes makes one think of some of the puppet traditions
as miniature theatre performances. However, comparative
studies of texts, music and movement are required
to understand the relationship and distinctness
in depth. If we were to identify one distinct
element in Indian puppetry, It is the sense of
rhythm and dance that is inherent in the puppet.
Puppeteers with ankle bells dancing backstage
withe the dancing puppets in front, to the beat
of the percussion are common to several styles.
Another
connection is between the appearance of the puppet
and the visual art tradition of the region. The
treatment of eyes in the Lepakshi temple murals
and the shadow puppets of Karnataka, the Gopalila
puppets and Patachitras of Orissa, the Danger
Putul puppets plays revolve round teh stories
from the Ramayana, the Mahabharta, the Srimadbhagvat
and other Puranas in their regional variations
and tales of local gods and goddesses, heroes
and heroines. The magical world of puppets tranports
you to a mythical time which stands still. It
is in the stillness of eternal time that the narratives
are enacted. The known stories with no surprise
endings and no complicated props recharge ancient
memories of the community and convey significant
and symbolic messages at various levels of understanding.
The puppeteer is the conveyer and interpreter
of these messages. He can also bring down his
audience to earth - to the time now - with his
comments on the contemporary scene. Similar to
the situation in the visual arts, theatre and
literature, puppetry has also been exposed to
the trends prevailing in the rest of the world.
During the last fifty years, a large number of
exchanges of puppeteers and puppet groups have
taken place. As a result, a new kind of puppetry,
amalgamating various forms has emerged from the
encounter. There is now a considerable body of
experimental work, some interacting with the traditional
forms and others, with contemporary theatre. Some
of the puppets created by such puppeteers participating
in the festival are on display. The puppet has
been called a mask through which the nuances of
emotions and mundane realities of life can bee
suggested. Threatened, as it is, by technology
and mass media, this fragile art needs our nurture
and support for it to remain a part of our imaginative
experience. Kamaladevi Chattopadhyay was influenced
by both Rabindranath Tagore and Gandhi ji. She
said, "Tagore felt that personality can be
built through music; Gandhiji felt personality
is built up through craft - the use of hands."
An active participant in the freedom movement,
she ensured active involvement of women in the
Salt Satyagraha of 1930 and later in the historic
Quit India Movement of 1942. After independence
in 1947, Kamaladevi grappled with the problemds
arising out of the partition of the country. She
pioneered the cooperative movement, and later
chose to devote her time and attention to the
crafts and theatre of th rural areas and to the
concerns of craftsmen and performers.