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Tamil Nadu: Guru Mangudi Dorairaja Iyer

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Tamil Nadu: Guru Mangudi Dorairaja Iyer Empty Tamil Nadu: Guru Mangudi Dorairaja Iyer

Post by Guest Fri Nov 09, 2012 9:44 am

I got an invitation to attend a performance by a student of this guy. The article says the Guru's style of BN is called Mangudi style but i believe it is also referred to as Melattur style.

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Guru Mangudi Dorairaja Iyer (1900 – 1980)
Originally from Mangudi, a small village in Tanjore, the versatile exponent of the Melattur style of dance was a sanyasi who mastered the Srividya Upasana. As a music expert , he authored books on mridangam and dance, and, as an guru of Bharatanatyam, he re-established the Suddha Nrittam, Bhattasa Natyam and Perani Natyam.

Guru Mangudi Dorairaja Iyer's father was Ramanatha Bagavathar, a famous vocalist and a Hari katha exponent. The talented boy learned music from his father and the mridangam from Sri Anganna Naickar and Tanjavore Vaidhyanatha Iyer. He soon became an accompanist to many well-known musicians. His Tamil drama “Mithra Pasam” in the early 1932 was later adapted to a stage production which he directed. In 1939 he and his friend Sri P.K. Moorthy co-authored a handbook on mridangam, "Mirdanga Swabodhini"
Mangudi studied Bharatham and Nattuvangam with Melattur Natesa Iyer, a prominent figure among the Bagavatha Mela gurus of Melattur. Based on the dance drama tradition of Melattur, he developed a solo dance of this style, having learnt the theory. His work in the music and dance section of Gemini studios provided him with the opportunities to futher develop his style. Mangudi's attention now was attracted by the teachings of Sri Vidya Upasana and Bharatham. He introduced the “Chidanandha Natya Mandali”.

Guru Mangudi Dorairaja Iyer's book “Swabodha Bharatha Navaneetham” (1957) was based on years of research into rare works like”Kohaliyam”, “Nagarjuneeyam”, “Bharatha sastra Mooiam”, “Abhinaya Darpanam”, and “Natanadhi Vadya Ranjanam”. The book explored all of Bharatanatyam, and is an invaluable source of knowledge for both learners and experts. Some of his students were the famous Roshan Vajifdar, Pushpa Bhuyan and Yamini Krishnamurthy.

His style, exuberant and graceful, later evolved into what is known today as the Mangudi style, dominated by bhakti rasa. It lays emphasis on crisp adavus, accurate jathis, gathis, fluid variations or patterned korvais and perfect geometric poses. It stresses the dramatic elements, i.e. characterisation, as the themes of the performances are based mostly on stories from epics and puranas. Mangudi paid special attention to the right application of the principles of "loka dharmi" and "natya dharmi" at appropriate situations. He introduced a special protective cotton belt that the dancers are supposed to wear.

http://anindianart.blogspot.com/2008/07/guru-mangudi-dorairaja-iyer-1900-1980.html

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