Abhinaya Darpana
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Nandikeshvara ( sa, नन्दिकेश्वर​) (5th century-4th century BC) was a major theatrologist of ancient India. He was the author of the .


Influence on Bharata

Nandikeshvara seems to have preceded Bharata, according to Ramakrishna Kavi. Some consider him to be Bharata's master. The most concrete example of Nandikeshvara's teachings have survived thanks to Bharata. The poet and playwright Bharata who wrote in Sanskrit, scrupulously executed "in his stage direction a good number of theoretical instructions received from Nandikeshvara, overtly disregarding the strict injunctions formulated by Bharata as it is manifest in the spectacle of
kutiyattam Koodiyattam ( ml, കൂടിയാട്ടം; IAST: kūṭiyāṭṭaṁ; ) is a traditional performing art form in the state of Kerala, India. It is a combination of ancient Sanskrit theatre with elements of ''Koothu'', an ancient perfor ...
." Bharata’s plays had seemed, indeed, to ignore major inhibitions imposed by Bharata : for instance, that of fighting or inflicting capital punishment on the stage, etc. Even if it cannot be proved that the
Kutiyattam Koodiyattam ( ml, കൂടിയാട്ടം; IAST: kūṭiyāṭṭaṁ; ) is a traditional performing art form in the state of Kerala, India. It is a combination of ancient Sanskrit theatre with elements of ''Koothu'', an ancient perfor ...
is as old as Bharata's texts, nobody can disregard the considerable influence of this prince among playwrights on the traditional abhinaya we are speaking of, probably the oldest in the world.


The Place of Bharata

A few years before World War I, Pandit Ganapati Sastri, near Padmanabha-Pura in Kerala, found a bundle of about two-thousand-year-old palm-leaf manuscripts containing eleven texts composed by the legendary dramatist Bharata. They represented the Dravidisation of Sanskrit which had begun during the centuries preceding the Christian era. Although Bharata's texts had mysteriously disappeared, his contributions had been, however, remembered by
Kalidasa Kālidāsa (''fl.'' 4th–5th century CE) was a Classical Sanskrit author who is often considered ancient India's greatest poet and playwright. His plays and poetry are primarily based on the Vedas, the Rāmāyaṇa, the Mahābhārata and ...
himself in the 4th century in his play ''malavikagnimitra'', by Banabhatta in the 7th century in his ''
harshacharita The ''Harshacharita'' ( sa, हर्षचरित, ) (''The deeds of Harsha''), is the biography of Indian emperor Harsha by Banabhatta, also known as Bana, who was a Sanskrit writer of seventh-century CE India. He was the ''Asthana Kavi'', ...
'' and, early in the 8th century, by
Bhavabhuti Bhavabhūti (Devanagari: भवभूति) was an 8th-century scholar of India noted for his plays and poetry, written in Sanskrit. His plays are considered the equal of the works of Kalidasa. Bhavabhuti was born in Padmapura, Vidarbha, in Gond ...
(author of the play ''malatimadhava''). Thus, Bharata had remained not only a model for his posterity but, in the 4th century BC – out of the theme of Charudatta accredited to him -,
Shudraka Shudraka (IAST: ) was an Indian playwright, to whom three Sanskrit plays are attributed: '' Mrichchhakatika'' (''The Little Clay Cart''), ''Vinavasavadatta'', and a ''bhana'' (short one-act monologue), ''Padmaprabhritaka''.Bhattacharji, Sukumari ...
had recreated the famous play known as the ''mrit-shakaTika''. Even in the 12th century,
Jayadeva Jayadeva (; born ), also spelt Jaideva, was a Sanskrit poet during the 12th century. He is most known for his epic poem ''Gita Govinda'' which concentrates on Krishna's love with the '' gopi'', Radha, in a rite of spring. This poem, which presen ...
, author of the ''gita govinda'', had hailed Bharata as the "smile of the Goddess of Poetry".


''Abhinaya'' (Stage-craft)

Since about two thousand years, among the treatises on ''abhinaya'' known in India, there has been an uninterrupted flow of compilations containing the teachings and the reflections of several prestigious masters, with commentary by other specialists of successive centuries. Between the two land-marks – Bharata's ''
Natya Shastra The ''Nāṭya Śāstra'' (, ''Nāṭyaśāstra'') is a Sanskrit treatise on the performing arts. The text is attributed to sage Bharata Muni, and its first complete compilation is dated to between 200 BCE and 200 CE, but estimates vary ...
'' (2nd century BCE) and Matanga Muni's '' Brihaddeshi'' (c. 5th century) -, majestic stands out Nandikeshvara's ''Abhinaya Darpana''. Although the final penning of this work was known to have been completed after that of the ''natya-shastra'', Indian and Western historians place Nandikeshvara's school between the 5th and the 2nd centuries BC. After Matanga, Damodara Mishra in the ''Kuttini Mata'' (8th century),
Rajasekhara Rajasekhara may refer to: * Rama Rajasekhara/Cheraman Perumal "Nayanar" (''fl.'' 9th century), theologian, devotional poet and ruler from south India * Rajashekhara (Sanskrit poet) Rajashekhara (; ) was a Sanskrit poet, dramatist and critic. H ...
in his ''Kavya Mimamsa'' (9th century),
Abhinavagupta Abhinavagupta (c. 950 – 1016 Common Era, CE) was a Indian philosophy, philosopher, Mysticism, mystic and Aesthetics, aesthetician from Kashmir. He was also considered an influential Music of India, musician, Indian poetry, poet, Theatre in ...
in the ''Abhinava Bharati'' (11th century), Sharngadeva in the ''
Sangita Ratnakara The ''Sangita-Ratnakara'', सङ्गीतरत्नाकर, (IAST: Saṅgīta ratnākara), literally "Ocean of Music and Dance", is one of the most important musicological texts from India. Composed by Śārṅgadeva (शार्ङ ...
'' (13th century) – among others – have continued paying tribute to Nandikeshvara's specific contributions. A number of details in the staging of the Kutiyattam affirm first of all specialists' opinion that Nandikeshvara's influence had been deeper and wider on the concerned population than that of Bharata, at least owing to the geographical distance. Moreover, these very details refer so often to passages of the ''Abhinaya Darpana'' that there is no hesitation in recognising the proximity of this theatre with the place and the epoch that were Nandikeshvara's. It has been demonstrated that the actors of the Kutiyattam willingly learn by heart and put into practice instructions formulated by Nandikeshvara, without always knowing or acknowledging their source. This is, however, an unexpected yet irrefutable confirmation of my hypothesis about the relationship existing between Nandikeshvara and this traditional abhinaya.


Pleasure: its sources

Mammata Bhatta Mammata Bhatta (मम्मट भट्ट) () was a Kashmiri Sanskrit rhetorician noted for his text on poetics, the ''kâvya-prakâsha'' (light on poetics). Published works Poetry in ‘The Bloomsbury Bloomsbury is a district in the We ...
(11th century) defined ''rasa'' in his ''kâvya-prakâsha'' as "the great savour that uplifts our spirit by endowing it with a taste of true grandeur… Something that has to be felt, that throbs around us, that penetrates and altogether fills our heart (…), that completely rids of all other sensation.” Nandikeshvara distinguishes two sources of pleasure in the spectacle: first of all, a visual support; and another, auditory. The former is composed of dance, mimes, gestures, dramatic expressions of the eyes and the face. The second explores the innate and potential wealth of a language, phonic as well as semantic, and transfigures everything in contact with music : horizontally, owing to the rhythmic diversities (situated in Time) and, vertically, thanks to the ascending and descending impulses, as well as to the overtones on the scale of the microtones (situated in Space).


Object of the stage-craft: ''Rasa''

Describing the process of ''rasa'', as object of abhinaya, Kutiyattam adepts quote in Malayalam : "It is the mouth that utters the song, the hand outlines the meaning, the look enlivens the sentiment, the feet catch the measure and go on beating it. Where go the hands, goes the gaze; where goes the gaze, poses the mind; where there is mind, settle down the sentiments; where the sentiments rule sovereign, ''rasa'' arises." Closer to the poet Bhasa, they have been suspected of having certain distinct aesthetic principles that were, deliberately, not inspired by rules that Bharata had instituted. Guessing what that tradition is, the above quotation is exactly what the verse or ''shloka'' 37 of the ''abhinaya-darpana'' by Nandikeshvara describes in Sanskrit: Phillip B. Zarrilli, "Where the Hand s.." Asian Theatre Journal. Vol. 4, No. 2 (Autumn, 1987), pp. 205-214.


Works

*


References

* A.C. Woolner and L. Sarup, ''Thirteen Trivandrum Plays attributed to Bhasa'', London, 1930–31 * Gopinath and Nagabhushan, ''abhinayamkuram'', Madras, 1946 {{authority control Indian male writers Indian classical music Theatre in India 2nd-century Indian scholars Theatrologists Sanskrit writers Dance in India