Terukkuttu
Terukkuttu is a
History
The term terukkuttu is derived from the Tamil words Teru ("street") and Kuttu ("theatre").[5] The word "Kattaikkuttu" is derived from the name of special ornaments known as kattai (or kattai camankal).
The writer M. Shanmugam Pillai has compared terukkuttu to the Tamil epic
However, historically, the terukkuttu is not more than two to three centuries old.
Many scholars note the similarity between terukkuttu and other neighbouring regional drama forms, such as Yakshagana and Kathakali.[9] However, unlike Kathakali, terukkuttu is less codified, and is generally considered a folk art rather than a classical art form.[10] In recent times, some terukkuttu groups have also started operating as professional troupes.[11]
Theme
Many terukuttu performances center around the enactment of Mahabharata story, with emphasis on the role of Draupadi. Terukkuttu plays on Ramayana are performed at Mariyamman festivals, and some of the plays also involve local deities.[9]
The terukkuttu plays form part of ritual celebrations including the twenty-one day temple festival starting in Chittirai, the first month of the Tamil calendar.[2] The terukkuttu performances begin in the middle of the festival, and continue till the morning of the penultimate day.
The core themes of the terukuttu plays include:
- Draupadi Kalyanam (The marriage of Draupadi)
- Supattirai Kalyanam (The marriage of Subhadra)
- Alli Arjunan (The Marriage of Arjuna with Alli)
- Pancal Capatam (The Vow of Draupadi)
- Arjunan Tapam (Arjuna's tapas)
- Krishnan Titu (The mission of Krishna)
- Abhimanyu Cantai (The defeat of Abhimanyu)
- Karna Mokshayam (The defeat of Karna)
- Patinettam Por (The Battle of the Eighteenth Day)
- Aravan kalappali ("Sacrifice of Aravan in the Battlefield")[12]
Style
The terukkuttu plays are a combination of song, music, dance and drama along with "clever stage tricks".[13] The actors wear colorful costumes. The musical instruments used by the terukkuttu musicians include harmonium, drums, a mukhavinai (an instrument similar to oboe), and cymbals.
An acting arena is marked at courtyard of a temple, open ground or any other convenient site and people squat on the three sides of the rectangular arena. The chorus of singers and the musicians occupy the place on the rear side of the stage, and the actors use the front side. Two persons holding a curtain enter the arena, with an actor in the guise of Ganesha, the elephant-headed Hindu god. The chorus begins an invocation to Ganesha, and prayers are also offered to many other deities. The actor playing Ganesha now moves out of the arena, and Kattiyakkaran (jester and sutradhara i.e. the narrator) appears on the stage. Kattiyakkaran relates the story of the play to be performed and introduces the characters. Sometimes, the characters introduce themselves. Kattiyakkaran links the scenes, provides context to the happenings on the stage and also jests in between the scenes. The actors sing themselves, supported by the chorus.
The text of a terukkuttu play is a series of songs related by a theme. Each song is rendered in a raga, structured in form of a classical song. It is preceded by viruttam, chanting of four-line verses in the same raga as the song.[14] After the song, an actor delivers a speech based on it.
The French theater group, Théâtre du Soleil, used elements of Terukuttu, including the two stories The Vow of Draupadi, and The defeat of Karna in their play, A Room in India.[13]
References
- OCLC 63859810.
- ^ OCLC 18270064.
- OCLC 46353272.
- OCLC 42312297.
- OCLC 29909259.
- OCLC 13876271.
- ^ W. T. A. Leslie Fernando (24 December 2003). "Daily Mirror". Archived from the original on 23 March 2004. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
- ^ W. T. A. Leslie Fernando. "Did Sinhala drama originate in Christmas?". Retrieved 21 November 2007.
- ^ OCLC 18739841.
- OCLC 20594132.
- ^ "From Street Theater to Kattaikuttu". 4 November 1999. Retrieved 21 November 2007.
- ^ [1] Symbol of sacrifice: Online edition of The Hindu, 17 August 2001
- ^ a b Green, Jesse (6 December 2017). "Review: 'A Room in India' Overflows With Astonishing Visions". The New York Times.
- )
Further reading
- Frasca, Richard Armando (1990). Theatre of the Mahabharata: terukkuttu Performances in South India. University of Hawaii Press. OCLC 21147946.
- Gentes, Mary Josephine (1987). Hinduism through village dance drama : narrative image and ritual process in South India's terukkuttu and Yaksagana ritual theaters (Ph.D. thesis). University of Virginia. OCLC 20052719.
- Frasca, Richard Armando (1998). "The Dice Game and the Disrobing (Pakatai Tuyil): A terukkuttu Performance". Asian Theatre Journal. 15 (1). University of Hawai'i Press: 1–44. JSTOR 1124097.
- Bruin, Hanne M de (1999). Kattaikkuttu: The flexibility of a south Indian theatre tradition. E. Forsten. OCLC 42312297.
- Shivaprakash, H S (2007). "Regional theatres (ix. Terukuttu)". Traditional theatres. Wisdom Tree. OCLC 85833550.
External links