Jasmine Simhalan
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Jasmine Simhalan | |
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Born | Jasmine Simhalan November 13, 1970 Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India (சென்னை, தமிழ்நாடு ,இந்தியா ) |
Residence | United Kingdom, India |
Occupation | dancer, martial artist, actress, movement analyst, choreographer |
Title | Kalarippayattu Gurukkal |
Website | Official Jasmine Simhalan website |
Jasmine Simhalan (born November 13, 1970 in Chennai, India) is a practitioner of the Indian martial arts and classical Indian dance. Her father, Simhalan Madhava Panicker, was a well-known martial artist from Kerala. Simhalan is an instructor in Silambam and a Gurukkal in Kalarippayattu. Simhalan is a performer and choreographer based in the United Kingdom and India. Simhalan has been a part of physical theatre and Indian contemporary form of dance, theatre and martial art forms for the past twenty years.
Background
Simhalan has trained in martial arts including Kalarippayattu, Silambam fencing and Marmam. She has also trained in Indian dance including Bharatanatyam, martial dance Chhau and Mohiniyattam.
Career
Since 1987, Simhalan has been part of most of the productions of the Indian Chandralekha (dancer) group (1988–1993)[1] and Shobana Jeyasingh dance company (1993–2003)[2] as a dancer and educational/workshop leader. At the same time, Simhalan has worked as a soloist and a choreographer. Simhalan has toured and performed in productions of Wayne McGregor (UK), Richard Alston (UK), Laurie Booth (UK), Roger Sinha (Canada), Mavin Khoo (UK), and was also part of the 2001 Basement Jaxx album and Emergency Exit Arts production RungaRung. In the summer of 2000, Simhalan both choreographed for and performed in the award winning production, Coming of Age, directed by Keith Khan.
Simhalan's work in television and film includes Check by Amarjeeth Singh, and Away Game, a BBC production. Chathi (meaning cheat in Malayalam), her physical theatre choreography based on the warriors of Northern Ballads like Aromal Chekavar, Chathiyan channthu etc. of 16th-century in kerala, has toured in the United Kingdom and Europe. Recently, she directed and performed Ghost, a street theatre act and video installation at the Somerset House. She art directed and performed SPILT, a video installation for London Mela. Football and Spare Rib were toured till end 2009 in South East Asia, Europe and the Americas. Currently, she runs awareness programmes across South India (setting up programmes for integrating good health through Kalaripayattu, yoga and pilates within the South Indian educational system as well as working closely with varied NGO's and government bodies).
Her recent award winning collaborative work, produced by Builders Association New York in collaboration with Motiroti, London is a multimedia theatre work on global communication culture and arts.[3]
References
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External links
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- Official Jasmine Simhalan website
- jasmine's kalaripayatt website
- Motiroti's website
- builders association website
See also
- Pages with reference errors
- Pages using infobox person with unknown parameters
- Infobox person using religion
- Articles with hCards
- Pages with broken file links
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- Indian martial arts
- Indian martial artists
- Living people
- 1970 births
- British Hindus
- Malayali people
- British martial artists
- People from Tamil Nadu
- British people of Indian descent