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Richard Drewmore | July 12, 2008 at 10:57 pm
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London. July 13, 2008. The dance form of first Asian Nobel laureate, Rabindranath Tagore, will be the subject of a major study and preservation in the UK. "The project entitled Legacy, supported by Britain's Heritage Lottery Fund, a body set up by the UK's Parliament, will research and document the history of Manipuri and Tagore dance forms in the UK," announced Nrityakala The Rhythm, a London-based organisation, entrusted with the work of implementing the project, Sunday, July 13, 2008.
Tagore became an admirer of the Manipuri dance in the early 19th century. As he wrote poetry and plays, and composed music, he evolved a unique form of dance, a combination of Manipuri, Bharatnatyam, Kathak and Kathakali, that later came to be known as Tagore dance. Tagore visited England on several occasions and also studied in Brighton and London for a brief period.
"It's an honour and recognition to get support from the Heritage Lottery Fund. For the next 18 months we plan to organise workshops and performances in some of the big cities of the UK, followed by a grand finale in London that will comprise performances and screenings of two new films on the subject," said Bithika Raha 'Basu', the director of the Legacy project. She is also the founding director of Nrityakala The Rhythm.
Nrityakala The Rhythm: School of Dance and Institute of Indian Culture, founded by Bithika Raha 'Basu' in 1986, is one of the foremost proponents of Classical, Folk & Contemporary Indian dance, music, art and culture in the UK. Nrityakala The Rhythm has produced and promoted many performances of national and international acclaim, with artists of the very highest calibre, from the Indian sub continent and from the UK.
Mrs Raha has created dance theatre based on the works of Tagore in English, Hindi and Bengali for the benefit of the Asian youth in the U.K as well as non-Asians.
Nrityakala recently produced 'At Home in London', a 50-minute documentary film in English, as part of a project “A glimpse of Bengal”. The film charts the lives of first generation British Bengalis and reveals how they came to be living in London.
The film is being offered to secondary schools across the capital in a bid to help the next generation of Londoners understand what makes their city tick. Directed by Tapash Sen Gupta and produced by Bithika Raha 'Basu', the film is made up of interviews with Indian and Bangladeshi Bengalis from all walks of life that came to Britain from the 1950s to the 1980s. They have been recorded talking about their memories and personal experiences as the film explores their language and cultural background.
After the success of 'At Home in London' followed a much talked about album 'In Many Moods,' consisting of two audio CDs, based on the writings of Tagore in English, produced and released by Nrityakala The Rhythm in 2006. The CDs contain acclaimed stories such as 'The Hungry Stones' and 'Karna-Kunti', and some memorable poems from 'Gitanjali'.
www.nrityakala.org
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (3)
at 23:20 on July 12th, 2008
Richard Drewmore, I like this story. It's good stuff.
Rabindranath Tagore is one of the great cultural heroes of all time. ...and the founder of the university system in India, which has helped overcome the oppression of the cast system.
at 03:43 on July 13th, 2008
Richard Drewmore, I like this story. It's good stuff.
he was also moderate who supported britishers on number of occasions
at 08:52 on July 13th, 2008
Hi Great News ..... just some more information ...
Maireid Sullivan : Rabindra Nath Tagore is one of the great cultural heroes of all time, I agree, being a Bengali, I learned his poems and novels from young days, however I do not agree that he was the founder of University System in India. Yes, he did founded Shantiniketan University, which is great. The world’s and India’s first University was established in Takshila in 700BC. More than 10,500 students from all over the world studied more than 60 subjects. The University of Nalanda built in the 4th century BC was one of the greatest achievements of ancient India in the field of education.
azzayindia : I agree that Rabindra Nath was moderate, but he only supported British policies relating to social reforms. Rabindra Nath never supported British politically, and he denounced his knighthood, after the Jalalabagh Massacre, where innocent people were killed by British Army.