Duration:
1 hr, 2 min
Sitara Devi represents the second generation of Kathak artists of
the Benares Gharānā, having been taught and imparted vidya by her father
Sukhdev Mahārāj. In conversation with Dr. Kapila Vatsyayan she says that
it was unusual for a girl to be a Kathak dancer, because those times were
different and there were only boys, who performed even the female roles in
Rāmalīlā. At the age of thirteen, she moved to Mumbai, where she received
her tālīm - teaching and initiation. She got some roles in films and at
the age of fourteen or fifteen, she had become a heroine. She performed in
various Puranic stories, which were depicted through Kathak. She had
lessons from Shambhu Maharaj in dancing.
Damayanti Joshi, another great Kathak exponent, in a lively
conversation with Kapila Vatsyayan is bringing out the best experiences
and different turns in her journey of the art. Damayanti Joshi spent her
childhood in devotion to Kathak. Her mother wanted Damyanti to receive
tālīm - theoretical knowledge of the art of dancing from the masters. She
did attend these sessions and had to do practice or riyāẓ herself. She
says that different gharānās
- schools or sects of musicians, who have their own style, do not pass on
the secret of riyāẓ those outside the gharānās. She says that she learnt it
from outside.