Posted in Wednesday Table of Urania

Wednesday Table of Urania 30.5.18 Sitara Devi

Sitara Devi (8 November 1920 – 25 November 2014) was an eminent Indian dancer of the classical Katthak style of dancing. Rabindranath Tagore described her as Nritya Samragni meaning the empress of dance, after watching her performance when she was just 16 years old.G:\l The epithet continues, and she is still described as the Kathak queen.

She gave performances in several parts of India, and in several other countries, including at the Royal Albert Hall, London in 1967; and at the Carnegie Hall. New York in 1976.

Sitara Devi was born in on 8 November 1920, the eve of the Indian festival of Dipavali. Being born around Dipavali, she was named Dhanalakshmi . She was born in a Brahmin family, originally from Varanasi and later settled in Kolkata. Her father, Sukhadev Maharaj, a Vaishnavite scholar of Sanskrit earned his livelihood by teaching and performing kathak dances in different parts of India. Her mother was Matsya Kumari, related to the royal family of Nepal. Sukhadev Maharaj, while serving in the royal court of Nepal had studied Sanskrit and had done an in-depth study of the Bharatnatyashastra; he also practised and performed Katthak dancing in which he excelled. Kathak became a source of his living, as also a passion, which he passed on to his daughters, Alaknanda, Tara, and Dhanno; and his sons, Chaube and Pande.

She had met Rabindranath Tagore, and was encouraged by him to revive the lost Indian performing arts (like kathak), after that he passed away, and ensure elevation of them to a dignified status. Sukhadev Maharaj decided to realise this goal by contributing to reforming the kathak style of dancing. At that time, kathak was being performed by nautch girls or boys, and girls of decent families were not expected to learn this style of dancing. He decided to give religious input to the content, which was quite different from the content used by the nautch girls. Moreover, he decided to teach this form of dancing to his daughters and sons. Elders of his community were furious, and Sukhadev Maharaj was virtually excommunicated.

Maharaj and his family members had to face the ire of the community members, and his daughters were called prostitutes. This did not deter him in his determination. Devi, recalling those moments, said: “My father used to say that when Radha could have danced for Krishna why not our girls? Why should men appropriate the right to dance?” Maharaj changed his residence, and came to another area of Varanasi. He established a school to teach children including his own daughters and sons dancing. He admitted children of prostitutes who came to the school to learn dancing. Once, the law enforcement authorities came to enquire about the affairs of the school, and Maharaj presented a performance based on the tales of the Mahabharata. Sitara Devi had been watching her sister, twenty years senior to her, learning dance, and she had managed to learn dancing well just by observation and own efforts.

Like the tradition of the time, Devi was to be married when she was a small girl of eight, and her child bridegroom’s family wanted to solemnise the marriage. However, she resisted, and wanted to be in a school. At her insistence, the marriage did not take place, and she was admitted into the Kamachhagarh High School. While at this school, a dance drama based on the mythological story of Savitri Satyavan was to be enacted in a cultural program to be conducted by the students of the school. The school was searching amongst the students for someone to do a dance sequence embedded in the dance drama. Dhanno prevailed upon her teacher by showing her an impromptu dance performance. The performance clinched the role for her and she was also assigned the task to teach the dance to her co-performers in the sequence. After the dance drama, a local newspaper named the “Aaj” reported about the cultural program emphasising that a little girl name Dhanno had enchanted the audience by her dance performance. Her father saw the news, and this changed his perception about his girl with the “twisted mouth”. Dhanno was re-christened as Sitara, and she was entrusted into the charge of her elder sister, Tara for imparting her dancing lessons. Incidentally, Tara is the mother of famous kathak dancer, Gopi Krishna. By the time Devi had turned ten, she was giving solo performances, mostly during the fifteen-minute recess during movies in a cinema of her father’s friend. Her commitment to learning dance left her with very little time, and she did not continue her schooling. By the time she was eleven, her family shifted to Bombay. Soon after reaching Bombay Devi gave a kathak performance in Atiya Begum Palace before a select audience, which included Rabindranath Tagore, Sarojini Naidu and Sir Cowasji Jehangir. She impressed Tagore who wanted her to give a special performance in Tata Palace of the Tata Group. There the eleven-year-old dancing damsel studied kathak, with all its nuances, for three hours. Tagore called her to felicitate her in the traditional Indian style of giving her a shawl and a gift of Rs. 50 as a token of her appreciation. Recalling those moments, Devi once said: “But as I thrust out my hand to receive gifts, I remember my father nudged me and whispered in my ear: ‘Don’t take only the gifts! He is a great man: ask for his blessings, girl!’ Obediently, I asked Gurudev to bless me that I would become a great dancer some day.”

Her debut was at Jehangir Hall (Mumbai), then the centre of metro’s cultural life. When she was a twelve-year-old girl, Devi was recruited by Niranjan Sharma, a filmmaker and a dance director, and she gave dance sequences in some Hindi movies. She stopped performing dances in movies, as they were adversely affecting her study in the classical dance, kathak.

Devi was married to Nazir Ahmed Khan then to K. Asif and finally to Pratap Barot, G:\lwith whom she had a son, Ranjit Barot.

Devi received a number of awards, including Sangeet Natak Academy Award (1969) and the Padma Shree (1973), Kalidas Samman (1995) and Nritya Nipuna.

She refused to accept the Padma Bibhushan award, declaring, “it is an insult, not an honor,” and as a report from the Press Trust of India quoted her saying: “is this government not aware of my contribution to Kathak? I will not accept any award less than Bharat Ratna.”

On 8th November 2017, Google showed a Doodle in India for Sitara Devi’s 97th Birthday.

Although her forte was kathak , she was also an accomplished dancer in many other styles of dancing including Bharatanatyam and many forms of folk dances of India. She also learned the Russian Ballet and other dances of the western world. With advancing age, her dancing activities diminished, and she was working on compiling a book encapsulating the research done by her father and her in the field of dancing, especially in kathak style of dancing. She taught kathak dancing to Bollywood celebrities such as Madhubala, Rekha, Mala Sinha, and Kajol. She envisioned formalizing her teaching, and planned to set up a Kathak training academy.
She died on 25 November 2014, at Jaslok Hospital in Mumbai, after a prolonged illness.

Article copied from Wikipedia.

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