Mrinalini Sarabhai - The Voice of Heart
Mrinalini Sarabhai - The Voice of Heart
Mrinalini Sarabhai - The Voice of Heart
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THE V OICE
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rich with fruit, the slim graceful areca trees swaying in the morning
breeze and wondering what to do.
There was no one to help him make his decision. I do not know
whether he consulted Govinda Menon or the teacher Padmanabha, but
he sold the house and bought a smaller one for his grandmother,
mother and the other relatives dependent on his father. Then he went
back to Kozhikode to continue his education, supporting himself by
tutoring children from rich families, often going hungry himself, working
day and night to a gruelling schedule. He was only eighteen. Living
in a small room, he brought his eight-year-old brother, Ranganadhan,
to stay and study with him. For two years, they lived in piteous
conditions, cooking their food in the morning and eating dinner only
when they were leftovers. So thin did he become that he was nicknamed
skeleton at school.
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It was John Adams who found the office for my father and no sooner
did Swaminadhan return, that he set to work. His reputation grew rapidly
and there was no one to touch his eloquence and his proficiency in law.
Again there were many who helped him, as he helped them, with his
detailed knowledge of the intricacies of the judiciary system.
Eadley Norton, a well-known criminal lawyer of India, consulted him
frequently. As he walked down the corridors of the courts he often met
the young lawyer and asked, What does the learned doctor have to say
today?
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Gilchrist GardensMadras
(
)
around her waist and a mundu across her shoulder, formed her entire
wardrobe. Only prostitutes wear blouses, she told me once with disdain.
We were all rather in awe of her. As I grew older, the awe disappeared
and I would make her tell me all about the family and the history of our
Tharavad.
It was a strange romance between the studious man of thirty-five and
the child of thirteen. The courting was done with all the thoroughness
of a well-planned manoeuvre. Some of the family strongly opposed the
proposal and only one of Ammus brothers, Kutty Krishnan, (later to be
Principal of Zamarins College, Kozhikode), who was full of admiration
for Swaminadhan, helped him. Every day a letter for Ammu would come
by train from Chennai to a nearby station Kuttipuram. Here a special
messenger received the letter and practically ran the five miles to the
cliffs surrounding the Vadakath house. Kutty Krishnan waited there for
the letter and took it to his young sister. The letter was usually in English
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FATHER
and more instructive than romantic. Questions were asked and she had
to reply. The runner waited to take her answers back to Kuttipuram to
post the same day.
The objections to the marriage were soon overruled and Swaminadhan
married the fourteen-year-old Ammu at Vadakath house in 1908 in a
simple Kerala ceremony.
The red brick bungalow named Gilchrist Gardens was made ready for
the new bride. An Irish governess, Miss Jordan, came to teach her
English and stayed on as a permanent member of our family till she
died. My mother, Ammu, soon became a fashionable young lady. She
drove her own horse and carriage and was friendly with many of the
women who were in the forefront of society. Amongst them was Lady
Benson, who took her under her British wing. My fathers juniors
usually accompanied Ammu as he himself had no time and was
completely immersed in his work. Yet, in his quiet way, my father cared
deeply for his young wife and wanted her to have all the things he had
missed.
My father had an extremely disciplined life and his law practice and
his involvement with setting up premier institutions took up all his time.
After office hours he often walked back all the way from Armenian Street
or took the train, which would specially stop for him by the wicket gate
at the end of our garden. While he never took off any time for leisure,
he pampered Mummy. He loved and cherished her dearly, and perhaps
because she was so young, indulged her in every way.
One of his most brilliant juniors being debonair and immaculately
dressed and, no doubt, was deeply in love with her.V.L. Ethiraj, was a
handsome escort for my mother. My father, whom we called Daddy
thought his junior should be well educated and arranged for Ethiraj to
have a tutor. He selected a distinguished professor called Radhakrishnan
to whom I hear he paid fifteen rupees an hour, a handsome sum in those
days. Dr Radhakrishnan, much later became the distinguished President
of India! Mr Ethiraj also rose to great heights as a lawyer. One of Mr
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Ethirajs young friends who often engaged him as senior counsel was a
young man called Venkataraman whom he affectionately called my junior.
He too went on to become the President of India.
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and on the advice of his legal advisers was prepared to make his son an
approver for the purpose of saving him. A chargesheet was filed against
both the accused and the preliminary enquiry was to begin shortly before
the Chief Presidency magistrate. The zamindar of Singampatti engaged
two well-known criminal lawyers and on their advice Singampatti was to
turn approver. A High Court judge in a casual conversation with the
member about the case came to know that no arrangements had been
made by the Court of Wards for the defence of other accused, Kadambur,
and that the Court had no intention of having him defended. He suggested
that they engage Dr Swaminadhan, the best lawyer in Chennai.
My father took up the case and when he interviewed Kadambur, the
boy swore innocence and showed great courage, a trait my father admired.
Soon after, my father received a summons from the higher ups, to try
and persuade him not to proceed with the case. My father refused the
summons but invited them to visit him at his office if they needed any
counsel, while objecting strongly to his ward Kadambur being treated
as a common criminal. Singampatti, who had become an approver, repeated
parrot-like a cooked-up story and the preliminary enquiry was concluded
with undue haste. After the court closed, my father visited Kadambur
in jail and found he had been sent a letter in Tamil from his friend
Singampatti begging forgiveness for his false statement in court, which
he said he had been pressurized into writing by his father. My father
immediately took the letter to the registrar of the High Court. However,
as he felt that his client would not have a fair trial in Chennai, he asked
for the case to be transferred to Mumbai though the Court of Wards
threatened him against this decision. Things had come to a serious pass
and even my fathers life was in danger. He took the bold step of going
to Delhi to see the Governor-General, who, in spite of his busy schedule
met him for five minutes after lunch, due perhaps to the fact that his
private secretary was an old friend of my fathers from his Edinburgh
days. The Governor-General promised every assistance when he heard
the true facts of the case.
The case went for trial before the Mumbai High Court to the
surprise of everyone in Chennai, especially the Court of Wards.
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I was not a healthy child and remember the time when I was critically
ill with typhoid for three months. There was an excellent Scottish doctor
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who looked after me. One day when I was better but still not allowed
to eat anything not even a teaspoon of karaboondhi for the New Year,
Daddy sat in my room having his tea a rare event. My mother said,
Dont eat in front of her, and I said, No, no, let Daddy be here. I loved
him so very much. Did he even know that? He always called me child
and that to me is now one of the most evocative terms of endearment
in the English language. The only time he was displeased with me was
when I would not practice the piano. Somehow I did not like the
instrument. Since I loved movement, sitting still was torture. Whenever
Mummy suggested taking a family photograph he would promptly have
his head shaved, so there are very few photographs of him.
My eldest brother, Govind, left home when he was twelve, for my father
felt that the best education was in England. So I hardly knew him and met
him only when he came back, a young man of twenty, a few months before
my father died. His very Britishness frightened me, and it was almost a
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decade later that I could come to terms with my terror and admire the
fine personality he was. My brother Subbaram went to England when
he was only seven. It was one of the cruellest things my parents did,
as a matter of course, because it was a British custom. Strange that I still
see him on the upper bunk of the ships cabin, crying his heart out;. That
awful picture has never left me though I was then a mere infant.
Decades later, when my grandson, Revanta, had to take a decision
to leave home for higher education at fifteen, I remembered the pain
that my brother must have gone through. After a harrowing, sleepless
night I pleaded that Revanta should not be sent away and fortunately
everyone agreed. It was only when he turned eighteen that he decided
with his parents to join the University of the Arts in Philadelphia to do
a course in Multimedia.
All my life, my relationship with my brothers was rather formal
though Govinds wife Sulochana became a dear friend.
Govind soon established himself as a brilliant criminal lawyer and
later in 1969 was Advocate General of Tamilnadu. His tremendous sense
of humour, honesty and charm, became a byword in Chennai and soon
all over India. Subbaram was a young businessman in Mumbai, extremely
popular in social circles, a good sportsman, and well-liked by everyone.
Lakshmi, I watched with admiration, though at that time, the difference
in our ages did not allow for companionship, though later we became
very close.
My father was my entire life. Early mornings and late nights belonged
to me. Somehow we found time to be together, but for such a short a
time. He died when I was very young. We had gone to Kerala with
Mummy when the message came he had collapsed with a stroke. We
rushed back. It was awful to see him lying so still. He could not speak.
That was enough to bring home to me the terror of death, or more than
that, the terror of living death. He wanted to comfort me, his lips moved,
but no sound came. His hands twitched with a longing to place them
on my own. I waited beside him silently, not knowing what to say for
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I had not yet begun to learn the soothing comfort of words. On the third
day, exhausted, I slept by my mother, and woke again in sudden fright.
She looked at me and answered the fear in my eyes with a shake of her
head. I knew then that he was gone. It was December 31, 1930. I was
not interested in the comforting words of my relations. My father had
gone on a journey. He lay there calm and cold. I wanted him to talk,
to be with me.
Only someone who has been through such an experience, who has
lost a parent in their childhood, can understand the trauma it produces.
I had no one to turn to except my Ayah who understood my sorrow
to some extent. For one year I went to my fathers room and locked
myself in, just to weep and weep. It was a harrowing experience. That
year, I learnt that life doe not bring happiness alone; that sorrow is part
and parcel of living and that loneliness is something that has to be
accepted. After my fathers death I have never trusted life, even in its
happy moments. It took me years to understand and appreciate that
living in constant apprehension was wrong, that it was wiser by far to
think in terms of the now.
The fear, that if I loved someone, he would disappear and leave me
all alone, was deep-rooted in me. I had to learn to rely on myself. Years
later I found myself dealing with the same scars when Vikram died and
I felt my world come apart.
Missing my father desperately, I took to working a planchette and
constantly the words spelt out work, work child. Weekly fevers persisted,
perhaps because of my fathers death. The doctors decided on having
my tonsils removed, which was the usual remedy for all illness in those
days. Dr Cherian, a surgeon of repute, performed the operation. When
he came to see me the next day, he gave me a big thump on the back
and said, Now talk, and eat as much ice cream as you want! Years later,
when he was Governor of Mumbai and presiding at my dance recital he
gave me the same thump and said to the audience, I made her well
enough to dance!
Recently someone wrote to me, exclaiming on how the years roll
by. Reading the letter I began to wonder, when did I grow up? Was it
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Mother
A
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social life of Chennai. She was a member of the ladies club, she took
part in all the dramatics, usually as the heroine. She also played tennis
and was one of the first women to drive a car. She was a very talented
person, a gracious and charming hostess, but she had no time for her
children.
Mummy was away a great deal of the time and I wonder now why
she seemed to care so little for us. She was extremely sarcastic and never
encouraging. I always thought it was only towards me that she behaved
harshly. But Lakshmi told me years later that she had felt the same way
too. Lakshmi was so lovely to look at and I, at that age, a real ugly
duckling. What did not help was my mothers insistence on cutting my
hair short, so I looked like a boy! Though I hated it she had some idea
that it gave strength. I was presumed a weakling because I was very thin!
What I can remember most clearly are the scoldings that I used to get
and the beatings I suffered. I was often punished by my mother and
locked up in the bathroom. I now think my claustrophobia stems from
these chastizements.
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I hated eating too and Mummy used to always keep a stick with
which to rap my knuckles when I protested about the amount of food
on my plate. She swore she would make a gramophone record that went,
Mrinalini eat, Mrinalini eat! The servants understood my anguish and
often intervened on my behalf. Vadivelu, our butler, would snatch fistfuls
of food off my plate when Mummy was not looking. They all loved me
as I loved them.
In our society, at that time, there was no hugging or kissing of
children as it was considered not done. Perhaps this notion was due
to the influence of the British who believed that children were to be seen
and not heard. I had decided then and there (I must have been only ten!)
that if I ever married and had children, I would care for them deeply
and make them feel loved and wanted.
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awful experiences children go through because of their parents hangups. I wrote a letter to Mummy about all this years later but even then
instead of feeling sorry she was very angry. She never had patience with
any one of us, which was very tragic because after we grew up it was
too late for understanding or love, though we both tried.
My father was the only one who used to repeatedly say, This child
will do something worthwhile in the world. I was dark complexioned
and skinny both terrible social handicaps in my time. In India you have
to be round, fair and plump to be called beautiful. My mother always
emphasized the fact that I was not worth much. I dont think I have ever
got over that. Only my art gave me the courage to live, and through
the years, my marvellous friends and my audiences have helped me build
up my self-esteem. I like to feel now that there was something in me
that attracted people and made them trust me not just the women,
but the men too. Every little incident of kindness mattered to me. I
remember that once, a relation of ours, Gopiettan, who was an engineer
in Chennai, was sitting at our dinner table. We were all discussing
something animatedly when suddenly he said, Mrinal is going to be the
beauty of the family. That completely spontaneous remark gave me so
much happiness!
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Early in life I found an inner strength in God. Perhaps that faith saved
my sanity. My beliefs have never wavered. One does not know how these
things become so deep-rooted in ones soul. Where did my innate trust
in a Supreme Power come from? Perhaps it was an overflow from my
prarabda my past life. Our family was not particularly religious. At
home we had a small puja room, but then so do most people in India,
a place where they light a lamp and say a prayer to God both morning
and evening, almost by reflex! It is part of our heritage. But somehow,
I had a forceful awareness of Krishnas presence in my life. From that
day of realizing his presence to this, he has been my main source of
strength. And yet I cannot say I am religious in the normal sense of the
term. It is like having a very good friend, and the knowledge that the
friendship will last forever.
I have always felt surrounded by Krishnas love and it has been with
me all my life. I have written books about him and also choreographed
dance dramas based on him. Often when I have to make an important
decision, I talk to Him. He has guided me throughout my life. This
oneness has grown stronger over the years.
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went to school. Once the horse had an accident just outside Government
house and landed inside a tram! What a to-do there was with all of us
scrambling out, the Ayah, Lakshmi and me! We were rescued by some
friends and taken home. It was quite a lot of fun but the carriage was
discarded and much to our distress, the horse sold soon after.
We had a tennis court at Gilchrist Gardens and every Sunday evening
there were tennis parties. Many guests were local champions and I did
not mind picking up the balls from the sideline as they played. I remember
Balagopal, Krishnaswami, V.L. Ethiraj and others at our home. I practiced
regularly with the marker and became quiet proficient. Afterwards there
was always a delicious tea served in elegant china cups with an artistic
camel design. I still have some of them! In true British fashion we had
cucumber and tomato sandwiches, cakes and curry puffs. A huge mango
tree nearby gave the players plenty of shade.
I loved exploring Gilchrist Gardens. There were terraces all around,
some of which were only accessible by climbing the roofs. My cousin
Sarojini, Gopalamamas daughter, who was staying with us,often climbed
the fences with me. From the top we would jump onto the mattresses kept
for airing below and run away before we were discovered. Unfortunately
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our feet would leave their prints and Mummy would find out and what
a scolding we had then! We were always up to some new mischief.
Once,when everyone was away, we climbed through a high window
into the storeroom. The ladder slipped and our hands slid down the wall.
We told the servant Raman to clean up the mess but he did not bother!
What followed was an awful showdown. Sarojini was banished to her
home in Vadakath and I never heard the end of the story!
Ever since childhood, the sea has been my great love. The vast expanse
of blue-green water, the sky, the surf of the waves, the sands stretching
endlessly, so white and beautiful, the heavenly feel of the sand between
my toes. The tranquillity, the rage, all merging and forgiving the hurts
of our past.
And, of course, the fun at festivals. Deepavali was always an exciting
day at home. A cart filled with crackers would arrive in the morning for
the evenings spectacle. I hated the noise though it was very enjoyable
to meet friends who dropped in. I went around with my hands covering
my ears, trying to smile and talk to the guests dressed in bright clothes
and sharing delicious food with everyone who had come to visit.
Going to the Theosophical Society at Adayar with my mother was
a weekly occurrence, starting when I was three years old. There she
spent most of the time with Malati Patwardhan (later Navroji), one of
her closest friends, whom we called Akka.
Krishnaji (J.Krishnamurthi), his friend, Jadunandan Prasad, Bhagirati
Sri Ram, Dr and Mrs Cousins, were all part of my mothers intimate
circle. Often we travelled together to the same places, and I remember
a trip most probably made in 1929 to Varanasi. Everything was so dirty
by the Ganga that I refused to bathe in the filthy water. The burning
corpses made me ill and I developed a high fever. Mummy decided to
send me home. Krishnaji was leaving for Chennai, so I went with him.
I do not remember much of the return trip as I was burning with fever.But
Krishnajis cool hands on my forehead and his feeding me with carefully
peeled oranges, is a strong memory that has remained with me till this day.
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My mother, my grandmotherAmmuamme
(
) and my uncles and aunts
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mysteriousness, especially at night when the oil lamps cast huge shadows.
It was a home I loved, a home to which I felt I belonged. All these
happenings must have had a deep impression on me for they often
became creative forces in my dance dramas.
My grandmother, Ammuamma, (we were a matrilinear family) was
the most powerful person at Vadakath followed by my uncle Gopalamama
and his wife Kunhilakshmi Ammayi. Years later I learnt that my grandfather
had shot himself in the madham and that was why the pujas were always
held there. It was said that he had an incurable illness and was always
in dreadful pain. My uncle, Kuttiamaman, (the Kutty Krishnan who
helped my father) had found him lying there, and ever since suffered
from terrible nightmares.
Many famous women belonged to the tharavad of which perhaps my
mother was the best-known after her marriage. Because of her dedication
to womens causes she helped organize the Womens Indian Association
as early as 1917, later becoming its president. In 1930, deeply impressed
and inspired by Gandhijis call for engaging in the final conflict, she
joined the Indian National Congress. Her interest in education led her
to becoming a member of the Chennai Corporation and Chairperson
of the Committee for Education, from 1934 to 1939. A Swadeshi
emporium was started by her and other women in Chennai, to support
the boycott of foreign goods, and often as a child I used to help in the
shop. I have always instinctively loved old fabrics and this gave me a
chance to learn more about the weavers and their skills.
Later, in 1947, my mother was elected as a Member of Parliament
from Dindigul. It was Kamaraj Nadar who persuaded her to stand for
elections as she was already immersed in social welfare. Today Vadakath
at more than a hundred years old is still a wonderful, peaceful home for
all of us, but my cousin Susheela (the daughter of Gopalammama) is the
only inhabitant. Yet it is always filled with travellers passing by and
relations from many parts of the world, and Susheela continues the
hospitality and warmth that characterizes the Taravad tradition.
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Lakshmis long hair and she was furious. Brindisi doesnt give the visitor
a good impression of Italy.!
Going by train to Naples, sitting up all night, was tiring. We went
to bed as soon as we got to the hotel though not for long, for we didnt
want to miss getting a look at Pompei. The city is huge and it is pathetic
to see the destruction by the volcano, I noted in my diary. From Naples
to Rome, and on to Venice and Vienna where I saw an operetta for the
first time and was thrilled with the music and the decor. It was in Munich
that I heard the terrible voice of Adolf Hitler for it was on his birthday
April 20th , that we arrived, in the midst of a snowstorm. I wrote a long
letter to a journalist friend of the family, C.V. Pathy, who had reviewed
the play The Parrot in which I had acted.
Here, I wrote, everyone seems bewitched by a man called Hitler and
his voice blares out everywhere. I feel he is evil from the sound of his voice
but he has some uncanny hypnotic quality. Pathy published the extract
praising the perceptive letter from such a young girl! Pathy and I became
friends and our friendship lasted for many, many years till his death.
From Munich we went on to Paris. Subram or Suds as he was called
joined us from England. He was given charge of Mummys briefcase with
the passports, travellers cheques and other documents, while she looked
after the luggage. When we arrived at the hotel, the briefcase was
missing. Suds had forgotten it in the taxi!
For the next few days we were all in the doghouse. I can well
understand my mothers anger. She had to go to the embassy to get new
permits and to borrow money. It must have been a traumatic experience!
We did some sightseeing and them left for London and Birmingham
where Govind and Suds guardians in England, Dr and Mrs Pardhy,
welcomed us. He was Indian and she was British and my brothers were
to make their home with them and their children, Anand and Urmila for
many years, spending every holiday with them, as later I did too.
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for someone like me, who was suspected of having T.B. It was decided
to send me to Switzerland to the Ecole St. Georges in Clarens, Montreux.
The doctors there did not find anything wrong with me except that I
was frail and delicate.
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At first I was miserable, being the only Indian in the school. Fortunately
I soon made friends.
At the Lady Willingdon Training School in Chennai, the school I had
been attending up until then, I had been good at English and History
and all the sports. History interested me because it was about the past;
English, because I loved the language. Now sports helped to boost my
morale in a new environment! From our dormitory window we looked
out on to the Lac Leman and in the distance the Rochers de Naye
mountains. It was a wondrous landscape. But within the school, the
discipline was strict and there were too many rules.
Miss Hawtrey, an excellent though rather sarcastic teacher of English,
was related to Sir Charles Hawtrey, the famous English actor, and she
made Shakespeare very alive for me. She often taught us to act out the
dramas and I soon became adept at reciting the famous speeches of
Portia, Katherine and, of course, Juliet.
Our principal, Miss George, a lean tall woman with a twinkle in her
eye, was more human than her co-director, Miss Potts. But we were
always anxious whenever we were summoned to their office. There was
a really dreadful Irish matron, the complete antithesis of our dear Irish
governess in Chennai, Miss Jordan. A more cruel and sadistic woman
I have yet to meet. She loved giving us punishments; she would not allow
us to go to the doctor even when we were ill! She always tried to ensure
that we were starved as much as possible, sending us to bed with no
supper.
Pamela (Margetson) Blactie became one of my best friends and I was
soon part of a lively group. I was often the ringleader. The books of
Angela Brazil inspired me to hold midnight feasts and bunk classes
especially Latin in which I failed miserably. Today I like to say with pride
that Gandhiji, Winston Churchill and I all failed in Latin, though at
different times and places! I thoroughly enjoyed the Greek dance classes
and also worked on ballet. Nothing could stop me from dancing. There
was skiing in winter, skating, netball and lacrosse. I loved all outdoor
sports, and was on every team, winning prizes and medals. Skiing was
a favourite sport though trudging up the slopes to the high slopes of
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Caux often led to fainting fits. I won two stars out of three in skiing.
The last star was for jumping which we were not allowed to do. Years
later Jamshed Bhabha mentioned this to J.R.D. Tata who refused to
believe it till I produced my medal! Then, quite out of the blue, during
a routine medical examination one day a doctor decided that I had a
murmur in the heart and forbade me from sports for six months.
Fortunately my condition was later found to be congenital, and the
sentence was revoked!
Amongst the majestic mountains in Switzerland the traumatic childhood
memories of my past were partially soothed. I felt free for the first time
in my life. Breathing in that wonderful air, watching the snowflakes as they
fell, searching for icicles in deep blue grottoes, I felt re-energized! In the
early spring, the fragrant narcissus, the first crocuses, the hillside blue
with gentians never had I seen such beauty before. Even the quivering
blue wings of the kingfisher beside the lake stirred me deeply, almost
intoxicating me. I fell in love with Nature then and vowed to protect her
forever. Little did I know what a problem that was to become!
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is almost physical. I stop and look and think, here is a friend who thinks
the way I do. And that is the simple way in which I make friends, for
after that, I search for every book that my friends have written and
sometimes they talk to me clearly, answering the questions envisaged in
my mind. Perhaps that is why most of my men friends are writers!
In Switzerland, my English teacher was pleasantly surprised that I
knew so much English literature much more than her British students!
There were hardly any books I had not read in the school library and
had even read Daniel Deronda
in nine volumes! Then, out of sheer
New
Psychology
and the Teacher
boredom, I read
and a small group of us
which was to have disastrous effects which I only
became interested in analysis
learnt from Pamela years later.
After two years in Switzerland, the last day at school finally dawned! I
had excelled myself, participating in star gym, jumping over the Pommel
horse, changing into my Greek tunic and dancing. It was the end of term
and we broke up after singing the school anthem. The words were: I
will not cease from mental strife, nor shall my sword sleep in my hand,
till we have built Jerusalem on Englands green and pleasant land.
What a song for an Indian child! I preferred the words embroidered
on my flag Levavi Occulus I lift up my eyes.
It was a momentous moment in my life, being home again after two years
of exile! Back to my beloved home, Gilchrist Gardens, to my dear Ayah
and all the others. George, our driver, who took great care of us, Jesudasan
the wide eyed painter, Venkasheshiah the clerk who looked after our
accounts so diligently. On the ship I found myself travelling with several
charming Australian tennis players and cricketers, including Don Bradman.
They were very friendly and I was excited when I beat Bradman at table
tennis! Pathy heard of this later and immediately reprinted it as big
news! in Chennai. The headline read, The young Mrinalini beats Don
Bradman at Table Tennis!
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It was August and terribly hot and sultry in Chennai. While it was
wonderful to meet everyone, I felt miserable not knowing what to do
with myself. A tremendous restlessness seized me. At night, under the
mosquito net, I tossed and turned feeling alien and uprooted. The word
college came up. Mummy wanted me to go to Oxford. But for me, all
education had only one title and that was dance.
It was really very strange that I had wanted to dance ever since I
was a child. There was absolutely no tradition of dance or music in our
family. In the beginning, my mother did not know where to send me.
She heard that there was a lady called Louis Lightfoot who conducted
dance classes and I was sent to her. She was the partner of the talented
Kathakali dancer, Ananda Shivaram, and well-known in Western circles.
But that was not what I wanted and I found some local teachers of
Bharatanatyam on my own. Somehow I knew that the teacher was not
right for me. I had no one to guide me in my career. But I knew that
I was a dancer. My mother could not understand my fierce
determination and like the rest of the family, took it as a passing phase!
Restless and unhappy I even thought of going back to Europe, but
what would I do there? The dance I wished to learn was here. My
mother, not knowing what to do, arranged for me to go to the dance
academy Kalakshetra to study under Rukminidevi Arundale whom she
knew well. Rukminidevi was very kind and as she was directing a new
Light of Asia
play asked me to act in it. It was
based on the life of Buddha.
I was to be the queen Maya and also the disciple Sujata. I worked for
a while in Kalakshetra and became a great admirer of Rukminidevi. When
I saw her performances, the aesthetic values of her productions appealed
to me greatly. Dr Arundale too took an interest in me perhaps because
of the Englishness we shared. I was familiar with passages that he loved
to quote and we shared many jokes during rehearsals.
Once, in the scene where Buddha sees a dying bird (danced by
Rukminidevi) he remarked, I think Rukmini should stick to Bharatanatyam
and not do Pavlovas Dying Swan act.
But she is as beautiful as a swan, I replied.
He always spoke with good humour and I could see that he adored
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M
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Every morning at 5.00 a.m., while the dew was still fresh on the grass,
my new companions from our hostel, Sree Bhavan, and I would walk
around the ashram, singing the songs to greet the dawn, and to wake
the people of Vishwa Bharati. The dawn in India has always been a time
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for meditation, for the new day, a celebration of Gods gifts to us. It was
this emphasis on tradition in its finest aspects that drew people to
Shantiniketan, not only from India but from all over the world.
Rabindranath Tagore was in himself a living legend, a great poet, an
imaginative painter and fine connoisseur of music but, above all, a humanist
caring profoundly for the universe. It was natural therefore that to
Shantiniketan came those who sought eternal values in thought, beauty
and everyday living. I stayed in the girls hostel, Shree Bhavan, watched
over by a charming French matron, whom we called Didi. As I spoke
French, we got on very well. I was content.
In just two days, I was asked to prove my worth. Gurudev wanted
to see me dance! I had no music, no costumes, and I was very nervous.
Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore was a name to be held in awe. I went to
meet him with Nandita and stood before him this great man of whom
I had heard so much, whose poetry had stirred my inner being as no
other had done. I was fortunate to meet him through Nandita, for
between them was much love and devotion and I too became a part of
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that wholeness. It was on an evening at sunset time when the sky was
coloured an extraordinary green and pink, and the plains reached out
towards a never-ending horizon, that I went to meet the poet. The wind
rustled gently, a soft soothing music in the trees. Standing in his simple
mud hut, I touched his feet in respect.
I hear you are a dancer, Gurudev said to me. Tomorrow I want to
see you dance. And so without any musical accompaniment, I danced
all that I had learnt from Muthukumara Pillai. I performed in the beautiful
house Uttaran which Gurudevs daughter-in-law, Protimadevi, had
decorated with exquisite taste. She lived there with her husband,
Rathindranath, Gurudevs son. From that moment, I was truly blessed,
for Gurudev accepted me as one of his own. He gave me a leading role
in his dramaChandalika
and asked me to choreograph my own part. It
was the first time that Bharatanatyam was introduced in Gurudevs dance
dramas and he appreciated the style very much.
Here was a great artist asking me to choreograph dances! It was as
though something deep within me was liberated and given the authority
to be a real self! It was a moment of such intense joy that the radiance,
not of his words, but of his acceptance of my individuality, still remains
within my heart.
In Shantiniketan I studied with all the gurus who taught other forms
of dance. Kelu Nair enchanted me with the powerful technique of
Kathakali. Guru Amubi Singha, taught me the Manipuri form. He was
a fine teacher. As I was more interested in the vigorous dancing of
Manipuri he taught me the masculine aspects of it with its wonderful
leaps and whirling movements. At one of the annual festivals I danced
the role of Krishna and spoke in Manipuri in front of Gurudev. The
speech to me was far more difficult than the dance and according to my
friend, Anil Saha, quite incomprehensible! Gurudev would patiently
explain the Bengali words of his dance dramas and often read out his
poems to me. Bent with age as he was, at rehearsal time, his eyes would
light up as he hummed a new melody and Santidev Ghosh, the music
director, would pick it up at once and teach it to us. Santida had a lovely
voice which made the dance dramas come alive. Protimadi, was very
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understood and encouraged this creative urge. Once he threw off his
shawl and with it, his years, and stood up, a young man of vigour, to
show someone an expressive gesture. We saw him, in those magic
moments, as he must have been when he acted on the stage in his own
plays. Many were the hours I spent at his feet in his small mud hut
Shyamali of which he said: I have built it on that dust which buries
in it all sufferings and cleanses all stains.
From Gurudev, I learnt the beauty of Bengali. One evening a few
of us sat together outside his little mud house, under a Champaka tree,
us students on the warm earth strewn with white petals, he on an old
chair worn into comfortable angles. The fragrance of the temple flower
champaka was strong and the silence around Gurudev was ponderous
with unspoken thoughts. These are the moments one wishes could go
on for ever, when the mind is alert and yet calm. I think it was my friend
Amina who said, Gurudev, you promised to read us some poems. The
poet smiled, his eyes, twinkling, as he looked at us. What shall it be?
he asked, and I, stumbling in my eagerness, said FromThe Gardener
,
The Gardener
please. Then he laughed, Yes you are young,
is for you.
I brought him the book. As the years have passed, his voice and the lines
from one of the poems have never left my mind. In moments of turbulence,
in sorrow, in joy, I hear Gurudev reading:
This love between you and me is as simple as a song; no mystery
beyond the present, no striving for the impossible, no shadow
behind the charm; no groping in the depth of the dark; this love
between you and me is as simple as a song.
Surely the love between life and ourselves is as simple as a song, and
how soon we become forgetful. It is the heartrending purity of the simple
things that makes life meaningful. A few drops of rain on the parched
crust of earth and the fragrance in the heart of a jasmine. A miracle of
colours across the sky in a rainbow, a childs laughter, a distant flute, and
the beat of drums at night.
I wish we could feel the beauty of the colours and shades of life,
and not always emphasize its destructive side. Darkness and light, so
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wrongly associated with good and evil, distort the beauty of colours. In
our century, what a terrible indictment of a so-called civilized world that
to protect a great race, the slogan Black is beautiful had to be coined.
How tragic that white portrays colonial cruelty. Yet the colours of nature
are the greatest inspiration. Was it a deep subconscious desire to be with
my father that I cherished the colour green so much? He wrote in green
ink and I still prefer to do so. Green, I said, as a child, is my favourite
colour, because God loved it the most, and through all these years it
has remained so.
Gurdial Mallik, with whom I spent many hours, became my spiritual
guru and the deep search within me was something I could articulate
in his presence. Listening to his songs, so passionate with his love for
God, I felt a tremendous surge of longing. Many years later when my
son, Kartikeya, said to me, Mallikji, is the only really religious man I have
met, I knew what he meant. Once I presented Mallikji a copy ofThe
Hound of Heaven
by Francis Thompson. He was surprised and asked, Do
you think I am like that? No Mallikji, I said, but as a deeply spiritual
person, I thought you would enjoy it.
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The Hound
Many years later he called his book of devotional poems
of the Heart
. He sent me the book and wrote : To the MIRA in you, child.
When my son Kartikeya was five years old I wrote to him reminding
him that he had promised to teach my children when I had them.
Mallikji instead sent me a teacher from Gandhijis Ashram, Pratapbhai
Upadhyaya, a singer, a story-teller, and a fine human being. Kartikeya and
he were to have a lifelong friendship and he soon became part of the family
continuing to teach my daughter, Mallika and became a dear friend of mine.
At Shantiniketan picnics into the countryside armed with sketch
books and musical instruments were a frequent event. Nandlal Bose,
whose silent presence and exquisite drawings made us all wish to be
painters, took us on these outings. I could not draw, but had a sense of
colour and he showed infinite patience with my attempts. Walking with
him, we learnt to distinguish the hues of every flower and tree, and were
made to observe the shape of each stone to understand and appreciate
the unlimited designs of nature.
Then there was Suren Kar, an architect and painter, to whom we went
with all our problems. He called us Dusht Mandali for our group was
a boisterous one and we were often in trouble, but it was innocent fun
and we harmed no one. We were charged with energy, for the atmosphere
was one of creativity and freedom of thought. Our beloved Gurudev
watched over all of us, unfolding and guiding new vistas of awareness,
in our young minds.
In 1939, the Shantiniketan dance group, went on a dance tour all
over Bengal. In Kolkata we stayed at Joroshanko, the family house of the
Tagores. Nandita told me about its ancient history. What a magnificent
past and wealth of culture within those walls! Some of its magic lingered
on. Abanindranath Tagore (Aban babu) the great painter, entertained us
with anecdotes as he whittled on pieces of wood, creating fantastic
Shyama
shapes. Once dancing Utiyo in
(I often took the heros roles as
I was tall and slim) at the Kolkata theatre I changed the ending. When
a sword flashed, I staggered and fell realistically instead of keeping to
the set posture. Gurudev was pleased and asked who the young boy
was who danced so well! My mother, who had come to Kolkata specially
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for the performance, was seated just behind him said, Gurudev, thats
Mrinalini, and he smiled and nodded his head.
In Kolkata, we met Sri Vallathol, the celebrated Kerala poet. He told
me how proud he was that a young Malayali girl was making a name for
herself in dance. The next week he came with the Kalamandalam Kathakali
group to visit Shantiniketan. I was asked to interpret from Malayalam
to English and was naturally very honoured to sit between two great
poets.
The story was Rukmangada-Mohini, superbly enacted by the dancers.
It was the first time I learnt of Vallathols academy the Kerala
Kalamandalam and of the great renaissance started by the Mahakavi to
revive the art of Kathakali.
Chandalika
On another evening at Jorasanko,
was staged for Mahatma
Gandhi. Kelu Nair, Nandita and I essayed the three main roles. When
the dance drama ended, Gandhiji asked us: Can you teach me to dance?
It was Gurudev who laughingly answered, You are too old to learn now!
Gurudev often changed the songs or even the story during rehearsals.
In one dance drama, I think it wasMayerkhela
, four or five boys were
needed and I brought all my friends to audition but none of them were
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Shantiniketan was the heart and soul of Indias tradition and progress.
For me, at that time, it was the place, where I found my own real self,
and true friends.
There was Kamala Kapur, Rajeshwari Vasudev, a singer with a lovely
voice, Preeti, a tall handsome young woman, Amina, Zohra Sehgals
younger sister, Jaya Appaswamy (a painter, later an art critic), Soma Joshi,
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delicate and lovely and many others. Many have already left this world,
some died young Durga the sculptor and Harivadan, the painter. Yet
for me, the Shantiniketan of my life still lives. Kamla, my friend, was
practical and down to earth. Once we both went to hear C.F.Andrews,
Gandhijis English friend called the Christ of the Indian road, give a
lecture on Prophets and my diary records, Kamla and I have been
disputing and discussing God. She believes that man made God and I
vice versa. It is no use my quoting so many instances of the presence
of God to her. She just listens and smiles cynically. We can neither of
us convince each other however hard we try. How can I say I feel God
in everything I see when she replies Pooh! that is only blind faith in
nothing. You are frightened of life and so must have something imaginary
to hold on to.
I see Gurudev, in his mud hut, Shyamali, and Master Mashay bent
double over a painting. There is Mallikji laughing with all of us, and
Surendas eyes twinkling as we tell him of our visit to Sirul, the rural
village complex. The music vibrates in the air, and Santidas voice resounds
gently in Uttarayan.
Kelu Nair dances the Kathakali with graceful strength and Protimadi
rearranges our costumes. Kshitimohandas resonant Sanskrit verses and
his long talks with me on Mira, Kinkardas huge inspiring sculptures,
Marjorie Sykes talking at devoted length about village work. And
interwoven in the fabric of our lives was Nandita, the fiery wonderful
personality to whom I went whenever I was depressed or lonely and
whose friendship I cherished dearly and her husband Krishna whose
practical advice soothed me and whose understanding of human nature
taught me a great deal. This was the reassurance I had been seeking all
my young life.
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Y MOTHER WROTE TO SAY THAT SHE WAS LEAVING FOR A LECTURE TOUR
of the USA. and had decided that I was to accompany her. She was
disappointed that I did not want to study at Oxford or Cambridge, and
in a strange way, she still did not take my passion for dance very seriously.
The word hobby was always used for anything out of the ordinary
routine of studies and everyone was expected to have a hobby which
was looked upon with amused tolerance.
It seemed a good idea to go to the U.S. where I thought I could
resolve my own fears about myself and my future. Perhaps, being far away
from home, some clarity about my own future would reveal itself. And
so I said yes.
The first few days in Batavia and Bandoung fascinated us with the
beauty of the landscape, so like our own country and yet so different.
The batik lungis worn by the people were very superior to the Indian
ones, but the designs were similar. Always fascinated by textiles, in
Shantiniketan I had learnt how to weave fabric. I was surprised to find
in the museum an old framed relic of a cloth exactly like the mushroo
blouse I was wearing. So many of the old fabrics were Indian in character
and weave. Questioning everyone about dance, we learnt that at
Soerakarta, where we were going, we could see some fine dancing. As
we had letters of introduction from Gurudev Tagore, we were royal
guests of the Mangkoenegoro the VIIth and were invited to dine with
other visitors at the palace the day we arrived. His Highness, his wife
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Sriningdyah and two of the princesses of the royal family, dancing the
Serimpi. There was tremendous praise at the end of the recital and I was
overwhelmed with compliments. The Sultan sent a personal message
requesting me to stay for sometime longer and continue my work. Pangeran
Tedjoekoesoemo was elated with my success and that pleased me most
of all. Fifteen years later I came with my own group to Yogya and honoured
him as my guru, as he sat in the front of the audience. He had only one
criticism of Bharatanatyam that the dancers smiled too much!
It was a sad farewell to all the many friends I had made, especially Sri
who had adopted me as a younger sister, but we were on a long journey
and it was time to move on. It is impossible to describe the magic of
Bali, enchanting, mysterious, and truly magnificent. The temple of Devi
Sri at Bila, the sacred forest of Sangeh, the banyan tree of Bongkasa were
all fascinating. We watched Ida Bagoes Bode dance the Topeng Padjegan
a masked dance, which is a series of imitations of characters, the Barong
where the Rangda falls into a trance, so similar to the trance dancers of
Kerala. The graceful Legong, danced by young girls, was very beautiful.
Among the people I met was Mario, a magnificent dancer. He showed
me one of his dances, the Kebyar, in which he remained seated with his
arms and head darting side to side like the movements of a snake. In
his hands he held sticks, then a fan and wore a costume of pink and
gold with a long train. The dance, to the accompaniment of the gamelan,
with its varied sounds and rhythms, made the movements exciting. We
talked of the close relationship of our forms. I studied some of the
dances with him and unconsciously wove them into my own
choreographic pieces years later. We saw every possible performance
in Bali. The one that impressed me the most was the Ketjak. It is
performed in a circle by a hundred and fifty men, and is the story of
Hanuman and the monkeys from the Ramayana. The melodious harmony
Chk Chkof monkey noises,
of sound, the shivering, quivering group, the
the fluttering of hands, the mass movement of the sweating bodies,
made it an amazing experience.
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From Java, through Bali and Japan to New York, was like travelling
through centuries of history each one a chapter of experience and
education for me. Every night on the ship there was ballroom dancing
and once a gentleman called Dale Carnegie asked me for a dance. I told
him about my wanting to study drama and he said New York was the
right place. Years later, his books helped me through many a mental
crisis! In Los Angeles, we stayed at the home of Dr Jagan and Mrs
Sharma. Dr Jagan had fled India at the age of fourteen after the
Jalianwallahbagh massacre and had married an Englishwoman in the U.S.
New York was awe-inspiring, like being in a deep valley with mountains
of skyscrapers on either side. For a while it was a shock: the brusque
manner, the familiarity, the mad bustle and the noise! But soon I was
caught up in the boisterous zest for living, so much a part of American
culture! I stayed at the hospitable International Centre, where one made
friends in no time at all. My mother went on to the Merill Palmer
Institute of Education, Detroit for her six month course. I decided to
try and enroll at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, next to
th Street, one of the oldest drama institutions in the
Carnegie Hall, on 57
country, which had been recommended to me, and learn all I could while
I was in the USA.
I do not have much courage now, but at that time I had a real sense
of what might be called innocent super confidence. I went boldly,
though my knees did shake a bit, dressed in my best, up the stairs to
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see the principal, Mr Diestel. He was very kind, which helped a good
deal, and asked me to come for the interview. I read, I recited, I spoke,
and was accepted! I was in!
The first day my confidence got quite a blow. The other students
were so elegant, so mature, the girls exquisite, the men very handsome.
And the dresses! They looked as if they had stepped straight out of
fashion magazines. Compared to me, all the other students were
sophisticated, supremely sure of their attractiveness, and not shy at all.
What astonished me the first week was how familiar the boys and girls
were with each other. No doubt, due to my upbringing, I was somewhat
priggish and didnt quite approve of the way the girls sat on the boys
laps and kissed each other constantly. To my Indian mind, these things
only happened in American movies and never in real life! For the first
week, I made myself almost invisible though I was no doubt very
noticeable.
Everyone said Hi to me and tried to be friendly, but I was shy and
awkward. Slowly, however, during the classes, I became a participant. I
enjoyed every minute of it especially when we were asked to do something
like walk across a room or sit in a chair or speak ordinary everyday actions
but different in drama. Fortunately, I spoke English with ease though with
a British accent. I think I first felt like a person in my own right when
one day the professor shouted at someone else, Why cant you sit like
Miss Swaminadhan does? Watch her stillness and quiet. She never squirms
in her chair like you do. After that, I picked up courage and started
to talk.
I made friends with one of the most glamorous girls and went with
her to that famous institution, Bloomingdales, where I treated myself
to several dresses. The day I cut my hair I created quite a sensation in
the locker room. I began to try and be as pretty as the rest of the girls
and gained confidence after every class. Soon they teased me and said
that I was the best dressed girl at the Academy!
My social life was also becoming exciting and romantic, for I had
found a marvellous friend who was also very special to me. Ward was
blond and blue eyed and American to the core. He was, so he said later,
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best to show his disapproval though not to me, but to his eldest son.
But Ward was now deeply in love and told his father, She will not hear
of marrying me and unlike my other girlfriends does not approve of
affairs! Wards younger brother became a friend and it was a terrible
blow to the family when he was killed in the war.
Ward came to the Academy to fetch me in his sleek car almost every
day and I was teased endlessly by my friends. I was thoroughly enjoying
the attention, the hard work after the classes, the nights of dining and
dancing! I felt exhilarated, for I was young and carefree and the intoxication
of love made me feel vibrant and alive.
Earlier I had noticed a co-student, whose name happened to be Kirk
Douglas. He was in the senior class and I first saw him in a play his class
put up. He seemed older than the rest and very intense.
I often went to the home of one of the students to practice lines
for a new play and to memorize, memorize, memorize. Never ever had
I to remember so many lines in so short a time as I had to at the Academy.
Always eager to learn, with an insatiable curiosity for life, this seemed
the best way loving everything to do with the stage, enjoying the
studies there which involved voice training, fencing, and mostly
experimenting with plays. I was something of a curiosity, and everyone
called me Nalini. The mri is always difficult for foreigners!
Ignorance about other countries is phenomenal in America. First,
being Indian was Red Indian, then from India, meant tigers and
Maharajas. I soon became a princess for they thought all girls from India
were princesses! I spent the day reading and studying the plays available
in the library, and on the evenings I wasnt out with Ward I would go
with friends to see old and new theatre productions! In International
House, we were a big group from many countries and spent our time
discussing politics, and freedom and new thoughts everyone with
serious, individual points of view! Days often ended at 3 a.m. I was in
love with life itself, and New York was the right place to be in. Many
were the plays at the Academy I acted in and time just whizzed by.
As a student I was allowed to earn and worked hard doing anything
that came my way to make a living: serving at canteens, giving lectures
on India, posing for portraits. I even ran the lift for a week and of course
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Six months passed swiftly and it was time to return. I felt sad that I was
leaving so many friends. But I was more than ever determined and eager
to get back to dance. Perhaps some of us would become famous, some
fade away, some just lead ordinary lives, but at that moment each one
of us was poised on the mountaintop of expectancy! My mother was
strangely silent that evening as we went home. She never said a word
about the performance except to express her shock at the kiss! After
I left for India, I wrote and thanked the Director, Mr Diestel. He replied,
Because you have the heart of Understanding, youll know how deeply
gratifying it was to me to get your lovely letter. There are few that I have
received in the many many years I have been here that have pleased me
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more. And may I say, too, that there has been no one in the school in
all these years who was more highly esteemed by us all than Miss
Swaminadhan.
Ward was by now very serious about marriage. He wanted me to
decide before leaving for India, but I told him that if he had been Indian
I would have married him without a second thought for there was no
one I had yet met with whom I shared so rich a friendship. But I wanted
to live in India and to dance. I could never be away from my roots, nor
would I ever think of taking him from his. It was a sad parting, but we
were young and the future unpredictable. Ward refused to take no for
an answer. My mother had already left for Los Angeles and had sent a
terse telegram: Leaving for India. Join me at once. Evidently, she was
worried that I might not go back to India with her. I left New York by
plane for Los Angeles, an eleven hour journey. The day before we sailed,
Ward flew to Los Angeles to ask me once more. I promised to think
about it.
It was a harrowing time. The whole world was in turmoil. Europe were
being devastated by the Nazis. We had to return home via Japan though
we had planned to go back through Europe. In Singapore we spent a
few days with my sister Lakshmi who worked there as a doctor. At the
time we had no idea that the East would also be engulfed in war, and
that Lakshmi herself would be in command of a womens battalion of
the Indian National Army under the leadership of Netaji Subhash Chandra
Bose.
I was going back where I really belonged, to my beloved India, back
to the world of dance and my thoughts went to Shantiniketan. He wrote
that Gurudeva is looking very well indeed. The other day when he
conducted the Divine service in the temple and spoke with the fulsome
fever of heart, one felt he is one of those beings whom death cannot
conquer. I longed to go home to Shantiniketan.
We returned from the United States, and I went straight back to
Shantiniketan before starting my work in Chennai. I had heard that
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Gurudev had suddenly been taken seriously ill. We all felt there was not
much time left for him. I sat up nights with Nandita for she was nursing
him. Once or twice he would recite a poem and one day I remember,
he said, What is the word that I want, Mrinalini? I dont remember the
poem. I think, it was about some oranges somebody had sent him.
Suddenly the word came to my mind and I told him. He said, Oh, yes,
that is the right word. I was so thrilled that he should take even a word
from me into his poetry, it was as though I really belonged to him.
Another night he suddenly asked: What happened to the boy you were
in love with here? I remained silent and he smiled.
Gurudev died a few months later, on Augustth ,71941, in Kolkata.
It was the full moon day of Sravana. I heard the news in Chennai and
though we had known the end was near it was a deep shock. He was
my guru in every sense of the word and his dance dramas have been the
inspiration for much of my work. He was a prophet and when he speaks
through Gora in his novel, how relevant his words are, even today:
Today I am really an Indian! In me there is no longer any opposition
between Hindu, Mussalman and Christian. Today every caste in India
is my caste, the food of all is my food! a valuable mantra indeed!
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felt that I had trained enough with Muthukumara Pillai and I needed
more technical excellence. Thata himself used to say, You must go to
a new guru. You will be a great dancer: with your intelligence, devotion
and that something within you that compels you to take up this art.
Strangely, I felt almost frightened when he spoke like that.
Muthukumara Thata was a guru in the truest sense of the word.
When values were changing fast and many of our old ideologies were
being swept away, he was like an island of timelessness. There are no
gurus today of his stature, his knowledge and his discipline. And in his
simple life, he embodied the shastraic concept of the real teacher. Though
in the first few months in Adayar I was terrified by his stern discipline,
I soon began to appreciate his keen sense of humour, which showed itself
in the twinkle in his eyes and in the sudden laughter that bubbled up,
as innocent as a childs, at the end of a particularly hard lesson.
Lessons always began with exacting work. There were no preliminaries.
It was training of the severest kind. It did not matter whether my limbs
were delicate, or that I had been a sickly child. I had to go through the
dance pieces for three to four hours, the practice time increasing every
day. Nor was he ever content to sit down and teach, as so many nattuvanars
do today. He would work along with me, with such vigour and exactitude
that, even now while I dance and when I teach, his words and his
presence are constantly with me. It is that discipline that has always
served me well in the particularly exacting numbers of Bharatanatyam.
Sometimes, if I did something wrong, or was in any way heedless, he
would say, Ill stop the lesson. This was the biggest threat of all, for
dancing meant everything to me and it was the only discipline I loved.
And he knew well how to use that threat!
Ram was always very loving towards me, and when he was away in
Mumbai for a few days wrote enthusiastically, I have been dreaming
about you so often in dance and costumes and ballets. He often shared
his depression:
When are we to achieve the heights to which I know I am
destined. How much longer this suffering, hungering and pain
in a tragic country like ours. Do pray for our future in ART and
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always know that where other anaemic suckers amaze you with
their bluff and baloney in sweet nothings and love, I alone am,
and can make you SOMEBODY Divine remember this and
know I adore you darling!
But somehow I felt that he did not really understand what dance
meant to me.
An incident happened which perhaps helped me in my decision to
work on my own. The war was on and there were a lot of soldiers around,
mostly British Tommies. A number of them visited Ram at his home,
where I went regularly for practice. In the mornings we would have an
elaborate puja dedicated to the exquisite bronze images of Gauri and
Nataraja and to the Deepalakshmi. Once or twice, when I went in the
evening, I found the Tommies loitering around, using our beautiful images
as ashtrays with their booted feet perched on them. Perhaps I was
oversensitive, but it troubled me deeply. It was not only the spiritual
aspect but also my love and respect for the sacred sculptures. Another
thing that shocked me was Rams attitude on stage. While I was completely
absorbed when dancing, Ram often talked all through the performance
making uncharitable remarks about the audience, no doubt very amusing,
but I felt completely upset with these unkind asides.
Though there is a consciousness of the audience at the beginning
of a performance it soon vanishes and an invisible communication takes
its place. Rams flippant attitude was the real reason for my leaving him.
He never forgave me and many years passed before we met again. He
even wrote to my impresario, Leon Hepner of Peter Daubeny
Presentations in London, not to sponsor Darpana. His cruel attitude hurt
me, but I have had to face a lot of vindictiveness and jealousy of this
nature all my life. On the one hands, because I came from what was called
a respectable and well-known family, the Swaminadhans, people would
not take my work seriously. They thought that the minute I got married,
like other society girls, I would forget all about dance. There was a wellknown critic of art called G. Venkatachalam who had his own protg,
so he tried to discourage me at every stage. Perhaps he thought that if
I took to the art seriously, I would be a threat to his own favourite. He
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As a young girl, I had to search for my own gurus. This is where I think
Krishna propelled and led me. There was always a great invisible force
that directed me. Not that there were no friends to help. S.V.
Venugopalan who met me at Kalakshetra (he was the general secretary),
supported me constantly and helped me to find good musicians and
teachers for Darpana. An ardent devotee of dance, he was one of the
main organizers of the Indian Institute of Fine Arts in Chennai, at that
time the best of its kind, organising concerts and recitals and
Bharatanatyam classes under Pandanallur Chokalingam Pillai. It was
Venu who when he was working for Lever Brothers thought of signing
up Indian stars for the Lux soap advertisement. Years later Mallika was
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back in Ahmedabad because they felt that the situation in the country
was going to be very serious. They phoned constantly telling him to
come back and leave Bangalore. Do your work here, they urged. They
were apprehensive of the uprising in the country, especially as the entire
family were closely connected to Gandhijis movement and the women
were preparing to face arrest.
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used in Bangalore. I took one look at its huge, protruding eyes and
promptly sent it back! Later he sent me a Tibetan ring, which I later
declared was my engagement ring!
My sister Lakshmi had instinctively known that Vikram was the right
man for me, though I only knew it much later. Strangely enough, when
Mummy and I were away in Indonesia, on our way to the USA., Lakshmi
was in Chennai, preparing to go to Singapore. Our home was to be
rented out for six months, so she had come to tidy up. Vikram, on his
way to Bangalore from Ahmedabad, had unexpectedly came to the
house. Lakshmi offered him a cup of tea, but there was none in the house,
whereupon Vikram produced a flask and they had tea together on the
veranda. While they talked, Lakshmi, who is the most practical of persons,
suddenly thought: This is just the boy for Mrinal. When we got married
she was in jail in Singapore, a prisoner of the British. We tried to send
a message through the Red Cross but she heard only my name. She told
me later, Somehow I knew it was Vikram you had married.
I loved Vikram, but marriage and going away to a strange place
frightened me. I was nervous and hesitant because of my dancing. If
Vikram had lived in Chennai I would not have hesitated at all. At last
I said yes. It was August, 1942. The wedding was fixed for the first week
of September. Telephone conversations which were common for the
Sarabhais (they were the first family I knew who telephoned their sons
in Cambridge every week, a rare luxury in those days) went back and
forth, especially between my father-in-law, Ambalal Sarabhai, and Vikram.
There were preparations to be made. I had envisaged a grand wedding
with music and classical dance to entertain the visitors who were coming
from Ahmedabad. At that time, I was truly an innocent. I had not heard
of Calico Mills, and Vikram told me with amusement that Calico, the
family concern, happened to be one of the oldest mills in the country,
a pioneer in the textile industry and the most famous. None of the names
Vikram mentioned to me were ones I recognized. I had only been to
Ahmedabad for a day as Vikram wanted me to meet everyone. It was
then that I discovered the palatial residence and the overwhelming family
connections. I became even more unsure of myself. But it was Vikram
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The wedding was held without anyone from Vikrams side of the family
in attendance because of the tumultuous upheaval worsening everywhere.
We were asked to hurry to Ahmedabad. My mother was completely
flummoxed with all the changes and the telephone calls. She thought
of postponing the wedding but Vikram did not want to go without me.
His father was almost heart-broken that his youngest son should get
married without the family. In fact a whole train bogey to Chennai had
been booked for the guests from Ahmedabad.
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The morning after our wedding, we left for Ahmedabad. The situation
was deteriorating every day. Many of the people we knew were courting
arrest and being put into the already overcrowded jails. From Chennai
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to Mumbai, the train went very slowly, for many railway tracks had been
blown up by irate mobs. After Pune, high on the Western Ghats, the
train ground to a halt. There had been a major dislocation.
It was a beautiful spot. The valley stretched out in bright colourful
patterns and we sat on the steps of our carriage enjoying the view! A
strange honeymoon indeed in a first class coup! We had complete
privacy, except for a man in the next compartment who knew Vikram
and came for a chat every time we wanted to be left alone!
In Ahmedabad, the atmosphere in the huge marble mansion was
solemn. For me, used to a fairly articulate family, with a great deal of
laughter and noise, the solemnity was traumatic. The first words my
mother-in-law, Saralaben, said to me were, I always thought Vikram
would be a brahmachari. (celibate!). These words were to set our
relationship. She did not want to share her family with anyone. Later,
I was to learn that we, the in-laws, were all truly outlaws (a name my
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Ambalal Sarabhai belonged to the Shwetamber Jain community, wellknown for the construction of artistic places of worship. He was brought
up by his uncle, Chimanlal Nagindas, as both his parents had died when
he was only five years old. An extremely liberated young man, he had
married a Hindu girl, daughter of the Gosalia family. Harilal Gosalia was
the Dewan of Rajkot, and Ambalal chose his younger daughter, Reva,
later known as Sarladevi, as his bride. The Ahmedabad Jains were very
unhappy but Ambalal found the caste system suffocating and broke away
from them as had my Brahmin father. His younger sister, Kanta, married
a non-Jain, and his cousin, Nirmala, broke her traditionally arranged
engagement to marry a close friend of his.
Ambalal encouraged his sister, Anasuya, to work with him in the
business, and she often travelled alone to their sugar mills in Bihar.
Ironically, later she had to lead the 1918 textile strike as a representative
of the workers against her own brother who was president of the mill
owners. Anasuyaben found and ran the Ahmedabad Textile Labour
Association at a time when her brother, Ambalal, headed the Mill Owners
Association. She was only twenty-two, a strong, dedicated woman and
one of Gandhijis earliest supporters. So Mahatma Gandhi came to
arbitrate and went on a hunger strike. Historically, it was interesting
because this was the first time Gandhiji used fasting as a weapon for
change. Though brother and sister were on opposite sides, their love
for each other remained undiminished. This unique event later became
Gandhis Truth.
the subject of Erik Eriksons Pulitzer-prize-winning book
He refers to the Sarabhai family as a grove of tall trees, tightly linked
in family resemblance yet all strong and striving individuals in their
strength and their inner conflicts, true products of the individualistic
upbringing they received from their father. The dispute was settled by
an arbitration by Mahatma Gandhi and has stayed as such till this day.
Shankarlal Banker, a representative of the workers, became Anasuyas
dear friend and companion. He was perhaps influential in her dedication
to the trade union movement. Shankarlal was Gandhijis fellow prisoner
in the famous Ahmedabad trial in 1922. Both Anasuyaben and
Shankarlalbhai became very dear to me and often came to Bangalore in
the summer months. They loved South India: the people, the customs
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and the food. They even adopted their driver Narasimhans children and
treated them as their own.
Anasuyaben had a picture of Tolstoy gifted to her by the Mahatma
on the wall in her home, inscribed to Gandhi by Tolstoy and willed to
Motaben (as we all called her). Next to it, hung a photo of the Mahatma
himself, relaxing in the corner of a train bench, deep in thought. Often
my evenings were spent with her, watching with amusement the way she
treated labour union leaders as lovable young boys, amongst them
Khandubhai Desai, Gulzarilal Nanda (later our Prime Minister), Arvind
Buch and others, who came to see her frequently chiding them all as
only a loving mother could.
Ambalal and Sarlabens two older children were both girls. In those
days men often married a second time to have sons, which my fatherin-law refused to do. He was a devoted husband and father and had eight
children, five daughters, Mridula, Bharati, Leena, Geeta, Gira, and three
sons, Suhrid, Gautam and Vikram. Suhrid and Leena were the only ones
married when I came into the family. Leenas husband, Madanmohan
Mangaldas, was a young textile magnate. A daughter is not a thing to
be given away, said Ambalal and so both the marriages had been registered
as civil marriages. He insisted on equal rights for his daughters as well
as his daughters-in-law.
Ambalal Sarabhai and Saralaben were deeply caring parents who
looked after their children with devotion and care. Each child was
highly talented, trained by outstanding professors. Mridula joined
Gandhiji early in life and became a Congress worker, close to Pandit
Nehru. She was one of the kindest women I have known and it was
tragic that when she took up her fight for Kashmir and supported
Sheikh Abdullah in all possible ways, she became an enemy of the
state and was imprisoned by Pandit Nehrus government. Her solitary
confinement was a terrible punishment for a patriot of her stature and
hundreds of letters of sympathy were sent to her in jail from people
all over the world. After her release, she, single-handedly, continued
her fight for Abdullah and for all prisoners of conscience almost singlehandedly. It was no wonder that General Thimayya called her the
bravest soldier in the Indian Army.
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She and Gautam worked closely together and the National Institute of
Design in Ahmedabad was their joint effort. When I came to settle down
in Ahmedabad, Vikram and I chose an apartment on the third floor of
the original house, and Gira made a beautiful mosaic of a nayika on the
veranda, which I thought most exquisite and thoughtful.
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were arrested. The freedom movement was at its height. Shouting slogans
against British rule, the group went through the streets of Ahmedabad.
Vikram and I were at the edge of the crowd. The police were breaking
it up with tear gas. Then disaster struck. It all happened in a second.
A shell shot from a gun by the police burst in my face, like a ball of fire.
All I remember is a scorching flame burning my face and blood spurting
down. Everything blurred and I fainted. Quickly, strong arms lifted me into
an ambulance and took me to The Retreat. A doctor was called and while
I was still half dazed, he decided that one eye had to be stitched up
immediately, as there was a deep gash. There was no time to lose, because
it was a gaping wound. The doctor stitched the eyelid, which had been
split open, without an anaesthetic. To examine the eye was impossible, as
my entire face was battered and swollen. Papa called a doctor from Mumbai.
He insisted that the eye be removed because infection had set in. But Papa
stood firm and protested, for which I am eternally grateful. She is a
dancer, he said, we must try and save her eye at any cost.
Then began my long ordeal to recovery. For many days I lay dazed,
not knowing if I would ever see or dance again. I was not allowed to
cry any more. I felt terrified in the complete darkness. I would have given
up but for my belief in God, prayer and Vikram. I have been born to
dance, I consoled myself. this is a passing phase, a deep suffering in
order to test me. As I lay there, it seemed as though I had travelled
inwards into the deep recesses of my soul, almost as if I was reborn. I
retreated into myself. No longer could I identify with my family, or even
with Vikram who never left my side. Though I was surrounded by every
comfort and care, I suddenly felt that I was the loneliest person on earth.
We come into this world alone, we go out alone, I kept thinking.
Existence itself was so precarious. I had become aware of this when my
father died. Now the fear reasserted itself. But though all these thoughts
disturbed me, scattered memories of childhood, of the holidays in
Kodaikanal, the strong fragrance of eucalyptus, the walks into the depths
of the Bear Shola, an awareness of happy moments helped to ease the
pain, as though I was an observer watching the scene.
The nights were difficult, the feeling of isolation more profound even
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though I tried to pray. There was no way that the mind with its fears
could be silenced. Every minute became more precious, every loved one
more dear. Life becomes valuable only after such harrowing experiences.
It is a process of growing up inwardly. We are immortal, says the Gita,
the spirit never dies. Yes, I do believe these words. Yet my spirit can
never reconcile itself with the idea of rebirth. Those whom I loved will
be clad in other bodies, and the faces I knew will no longer exist. That
I must part from everyone sooner or later and go into the depth of the
unknown fills me with dread. Someday, I may believe like Spinoza that
Everything that is, exists in God. But today, I am not yet that wise.
Sometimes life is like the time before sunset, a time when there is silence
over the Earth, and the World hovers between Light and Darkness. It
is strange and inexplicable like a Picasso painting that uncovers something
unknown and terrifying, deep in its intensity.
At last, Sir Jamshedji Duggar, the Sarabhai family eye-doctor, who
had not been available earlier, arrived much to the familys relief. He took
me to Mumbai. Every time the train shook he would hover over me to
see if it had disturbed me. I continued the long and extremely painful
treatment in Mumbai under his care. For almost six months I had to stay
in bed. Fortunately, only my left eye had to be bandaged and the swelling
slowly came down. I tried not to think of myself but the treatment was
nerve-wracking. My cousin Susheela came to be with me and I stayed
at Dhan Masis house. The only things that kept me going were the wellwishes of all those around me and the letters of encouragement and care
received from my friends.
Another even more terrible event was to overcome our family. Suhrid,
who was also in Mumbai undergoing treatment, used to come and see
me almost every evening. I always had a packet of extra-strong peppermints
which he and I shared. He said that it made him feel better. I could not
accept the fact that his illness was terminal. Only once did he break down
and say, There is so much to do. I wish I did not have to go so soon.
He was, as I knew him, a gentle and kind young man and it tore me apart
to think that death was upon him. Very soon he was bedridden, and
nothing could save him. Papa and Sarlaben were heartbroken. Indeed the
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whole family was grief-stricken. Though he had been seriously ill, no one
thought he would die, at least not so soon. Mridula was in jail at that
time as were her sisters. She alone refused parole on principle and never
saw her dying brother. One can only imagine the anguish she went
through that night in jail.
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Returning to Bangalore
I
my limbs work normally. After the initial shock wore off, the terrible
pain began. I was sure I would never dance again, having been told that
part of my sight would never come back. Facing the truth was a dreadful
experience. While the treatment had been going on I was very brave,
but a year later it suddenly hit me and I became depressed, and
overcome by a sense of isolation from the world. For many years this
dreadful feeling was part of my life and even now has never really left
me. So many nights I would sit on the floor of our bathroom (so as
not to disturb Vikram) and cry and cry for no reason. Even when I
started to dance again I would be overwhelmed with dread and would
almost have to be pushed on to the stage. Once I was under the arch
lights I would forget my fears, but for hours afterwards my mind and
body would tremble. Only Vikram and a few close friends saw me like
this, cowering like a frightened animal. It took years of hard discipline
and treatment and Vikrams wonderful understanding and assurances
before I could face an audience with confidence. Even before the
accident I had suffered from stage fright. Analysing the feeling now,
I realize that it was a desire to live up to ones own idea of perfection.
I am always accused of being a perfectionist, as though it is a crime
against society! Within myself I question whether I am able to truly
communicate my inner joy. When I wrote my first novel,This Alone is
Truethe dancer heroine Parvati says to her friend, I want them to see
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Vikram decided to go back to Bangalore and continue his work with Sir
C.V. Raman. Almost a year had gone by. Gradually he helped me to begin
dancing again. He suggested getting a teacher to Bangalore to be with
me rather than my going to the village. Till that time I had studied the
Pandanallur technique of Bharatanatyam. Now I wished to focus on a
more lyrical style where music was important. I had heard Vidwan Ellappa
singing at some of the recitals and admired his emotional rendering of
the padams, and the softness and the graceful quality of the abhinaya.
I invited him to Bangalore and started working with him alongside my
performances.
Disaster struck that day on April 14, 1944. It was a show in aid of the
Malabar Famine Relief. I had selected the ancient storySilapadikarm
.
Nandita Kripalani was dancing with me as the heroine, Kannagi, and I
took the role of Madhavi, the courtesan. The group dances were performed
by Medha Yodh, a fine artist with her own company of dancers. That
morning I was at our family apartment in Kashmir House on Napean Sea
Road when a terrific blast shook the house and all the door handles fell
off. We realized something terrible had happened and soon found out
that the Fort Strike, a ship containing dynamite, had blown up in the
harbour killing over three hundred people, maiming in numerable others
and shattering buildings in the city. The roof of the theatre had also been
destroyed so the show was postponed till the building was repaired. It was
a week later that we were able to finally perform, with a makeshift roof.
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C.V. Ramans wife) had told me before Vikram and I got married. Shed
warned me about marrying a scientist. Much as I love Vikram, shed
said, scientists dont make good husbands. They are too engrossed in
their laboratories.
I did not take Lady Ramans advice and it was only years later that
I learned of her own traumatic family life. Her son Paapa (Dr
Radhakrishnan) was a dear friend of mine and we often went on picnics
to his fathers farm. He was very young and we enjoyed getting away
from the serious scientific discussions. Later he fell out with his father
and was away from the country for many years. He became a distinguished
scientist in his own right. In the meanwhile Sri C.V. Raman had set up
an Institute for which Vikram had collected a major part of the funds,
travelling all over the country with his dearly respected Professor Raman.
Dr Radhakrishnan came back to look after his fathers Institute only after
the latters death. When he returned, he visited us with his French wife,
Dominique, in Ahmedabad. I welcomed them with the traditional kumkum and sweets. He was very touched and said, This is the first time
that somebody has welcomed us so warmly.
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marriage. Many years later they were to run J. Krishnamurtis Rishi Valley
School, in Madanapalli.
My training with Vidwan Ellappa, was extremely valuable and we
both enjoyed working together. On one occasion I remember Ellappa
was singing Krishna ni begane baro a favourite song of mine, and I went
into a state of trance, or so I was told later. He often related this incident
to his students adding that he had never seen anyone express the padam
so well! I could feel Krishnas presence, he said. It was Ellappa who
taught me the abhinaya of music, and the emotional depth of padams.
His was more of the Lasya (graceful) style as opposed to the Tandava
technique of Pandanallur. Years later the great veena maestro,
Balasubramaniam, played the same song at the end of his concert when
I was in the audience, as a special tribute to me, a gift I acknowledged
with tears.
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Cambridge, England
V
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London and cooked for us! But I was constantly worried about Vikram
because he was working at such a pace. And sure enough, one day he
fell very ill, with a high temperature. I immediately took him to hospital.
It was a trying experience. Nobody knew what the illness was though
I suspected malaria. Finally I got through to a doctor, who had been to
India. He agreed with my diagnosis and I heaved a sigh of relief. There
were huge mosquitoes in Cambridge and it was Fenn country, where
ague was rampant at one time. I was sure ague was malaria!
Arnold Haskell, the great ballet critic and writer came to lecture
in Cambridge. He had written a book, Balletomania,
which I had read
and enjoyed. His most important contribution was making ballet popular
in England. We attended his lecture but I felt shy to go up and talk
to him. Fortunately, a friend introduced me, saying, She is an Indian
dancer. Haskell had known Uday Shankar and Ramgopal, and at once
said, Why dont you give a lecture demonstration in London and meet
the students at our Ballet School? Of course I was delighted. But I
had no accompanasts with me. We were put in touch with Dr Narayana
Menon, a friend of Mummys who lived with his wife Rekha in London.
Narayana Menon, a scholar musician was a very senior officer in the
BBC and Rekha too worked there. We invited them out to dinner and
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At last, after thirteen months, the thesis was finished and handed in. At
that time as there was not much cosmic ray work going on in the
Cavendish Laboratory, the University asked Professor P.M.S. Blackett to
act as one of Vikrams oral examiners and allowed him to conduct the
examination in Manchester instead of Cambridge. Prof. Blackett, who
became a dear friend, later in a letter to me wrote, I remember very
vividly your splendid red sari contrasting so strongly with the grey gloom
so characteristic of the old Manchester labs. When he was visiting
Ahmedabad many years later, we were on the lawns at Chidambaram
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waiting for Vikram when he suddenly took me in his arms and kissed
me and said, I have been wanting to do this since Manchester. It was
a lovely moment. (After working with Prof. Blackett, the eminent physicist,
Vikram was very excited and wanted to set up continuous monitoring
instruments to measure vertical muon. Upon our return to India, he set
up Geiger-Miller counter telescopes for continuous monitoring at a site
on Mount Kodaikanal in South India, and another one at Ahmedabad,
beginning in a shed in The Retreat.)
We felt greatly relieved when the thesis was finally over and Vikram
and I could return home.However we decided to stop over in Europe.
In Paris, we went to see many of the new theatres as Vikram wanted to
build a good one in India. Vikram took me to many of the well-known
cafes and restaurants. At the Cafe de Flore we mingled with many writers
and discussed at length the theatre project with Pierre Aime Touchard,
a famous drama critic. Dr Kuo who was the chief consul for education
at UNESCO introduced us to Monsieur Tcherepnin. As a young man
he had composed the music for PavlovasAjanta Frescoes
. The theatre
architect, Monsieur Sorrel, showed us his plans for a theatre he was
designing in Rio and some fascinating designs for the Old Vic.
In Amsterdam we met Mario Montessori, an old friend. His mother
(this fact was not known till after her death) Madame Montessori had
come to India at the invitation of my mother-in-law. From The Retreat
had come the first teachers of the Montessori method, which is still
popular in India. Mario travelled with her everywhere, and was to become
the godfather of my son Kartikeya in 1947.
In her book,Secrets of Childhood,
Madame Montessori wrote of Saraladevi
as the ideal Montessori mother, who has dedicated herself to the cause
of the child in India.
Wherever we went, Vikram went to meet the physicists, and I the
artists. We were both interested in visiting the Leiden University and
meeting Dr Vogel who was a well-known Sanskrit scholar. The fine
museum was stacked with treasures but we could only spend about two
hours; most of it taken up by looking at the splendid bronze image of
Nataraja which fascinated me.
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Darpana Academy
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isthe music! Finally, John came on to the stage and drank a glass of water,
gargling loudly. The piano we had found with so much trouble and carted
all the way to the Town Hall was only used to set down the glass!
When Merce began dancing with his group, I relaxed. However, to
me the music jarred with his movements and I preferred the classical
pieces. His partner fully agreed with me later and said, Do tell Merce,
which I did, though Im sure with no effect.
It was Gautam, in 1952, as Chairman of Calico Mills, who invited
Ken Rice from the Tavistock Institute to organize a project of research
in the interaction of social and technological change in a textile mill
employing over eight thousand workers, to help with adjustments
between the management and workers with new technologies. Ken came
to India in 1953 and later he stayed with us at Chidambaram. With my
background I have always felt very close to the English, and perhaps
expected every Englishman to know Chaucer and Tennyson. I could
quote endlessly from Shakespeare and Shelley and that became the basis
of my love for England. Ken and I became friends instantly.
We often had long conversations and I shared with him my own
problems of adjustment within the Sarabhai family. He once laughingly
told me that, because British men were susceptible to exotic Indian
women who were much more beautiful than their rather drab wives
he believed that it was the Englishwomen who first started clubs for
whites only. Because of their inferiority complex! He wrote two excellent
books on his work, and then a novel (well-disguised) on our family. He
graciously showed it to Sarlaben, but she felt everyone would recognize
the characters in it and requested him not to publish it. This was a great
pity as the book was very well written and I felt the decision unfair to
Ken.
Once I told him, I feel very uneducated at the Holding Board when
they use all those obscure words. He promptly brought me a dictionary
of psychology and said, Learn some of these words and keep dropping
them now and then, which I did.
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EXPERIMENTING
that I got to know him well. He was always very affectionate. Once, long
before my marriage, when he visited Chennai, we rode in our car down
the Marina and on all sides the crowds surged and waved back. I have only
a hazy recollection of that day but it was a tumultuous welcome to Panditji
who stood up to greet the crowds while my mother and I sat beside him.
Then again, in Shantiniketan, when he came to open the new Hindi
Bhavan Hall with his daughter, Indira, he made a few of us sit down in
the frame of an artistic window and took a photograph of Buridi (Nandita
Kripalani), Indiraji and myself. His laughter and gaiety at that moment
was of a young man and it still echoes in my heart. I hero-worshipped
him and thought that he was one of the finest persons I had met.
Whenever in Delhi, I telephoned Panditji as I had promised him to
do. However busy he was, he would invite me for breakfast. The first
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time Vikram and I went to a party at his home soon after our marriage
he made me sit beside him on his chair, put his arm around me and asked
me what I did. Dancing, I said and, writing when I have the time. I
wish I could do that, he remarked, almost wistfully, perhaps not dancing
but reading and writing certainly. Whenever I danced in Delhi in the
later years, I kept two corner seats vacant for him. He used to slip into
the hall, watch the performance and slip out before anyone except the
Manushya
organizers noticed. When I went to invite him for the premier
of
in Delhi he said, Please dont do Kathakali, it is so vulgar. He had just
seen one of Kathakalis finest dancers as Pootana, the rakshasi who tries
to kill Krishna as a child by feeding him at her breast. Seen out of context
and danced by a man dressed as a woman in the exaggerated costume,
it was probably neither pleasant nor aesthetic. I said, Panditji, I will show
you Kathakali in its basic form and I promise you, its wonderful.
Manushya
came as a great shock to everybody. I had choreographed
it using all the wealth of Kathakali movements with music by Subramaniam
Bharati and costuming it in simple saris for the women, and dhotis for
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the men. Most people didnt understand the stark simplicity. But Panditji
and a few friends liked it very much, and changed their views about the
dance form.
Charles Fabri, a well-known critic who lived in India and wrote for
The Statesman
did a long review:
I cannot think in the whole repertoire of all the Indian dancing
troupes of any modern ballet comparable in perfection and beauty
to Manushya
. Based on Kathakali, it contains innovations so
carefully introduced, with such exquisite taste that these
modernities fit into the general design to perfection. The mime,
of which there is a great deal, makes every scene intelligible to
the untrained audience, and the effect of this beautifully told
story of Man, from birth through childhood to Death and return
to limbo, is both dramatic and moving.
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night with the full moon over the Champs Elysees and Vikram and I
shivering in the darkness before dawn.
Though I had received an invitation to dance only in Paris when I
left India, after my performance there, I was besieged by invitations. I
got a wonderful and warm reception everywhere I went. When I came
to Paris, I was rather worried about how classical South Indian dancing
would be received by the audiences. Yet inside me was the great desire
to show to the West what to me was a most perfect technique. The
manner in which it was appreciated everywhere reaffirmed my belief that
Art is always able to transcend all barriers of national differences, whether
in music, painting or dance, and communicates without words or familiar
backgrounds. My belief became a reality on this tour and gave me the
courage to work towards a greater artistic understanding between the
Western and Eastern worlds.
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V.K. Krishna Menon was the High Commissioner for India in London
in those days and for the opening night at the St. Martins Theatre he
had invited ministers and ambassadors, to see that remarkable Indian
dancer who is the first woman to bring a company of Indian dancers and
musicians to Europe, as a newspaper reported. Krishna Menon was a
friend of my mothers and I had known him in my childhood. He was
an extremely thoughtful and kind human being, yet his caustic tongue
had made him many enemies. His thoughtfulness made itself apparent
when he came to see us at Claridges, where we were staying. He went
himself to see that the dance group had enough to eat and were
comfortable, something no Indian High Commissioner ever did! Almost
every night he would sit chatting with Vikram over a cup of tea, first
making sure that I was alright. Once, at India House, as I was curled up
in an easy-chair, he looked at me and said, You are such a little girl and
yet what a big name you have made in England!
Years later, when he was minister for defence in Delhi, Id go and
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see him late at night to chat and share the inevitable cup of tea. He was
a very lonely person and, I think, very misunderstood in our country.
Minoo Masani, the well-known writer and politician, told me and later
wrote in his book about how hed introduced Krishna Menon to Jawaharlal
Nehru and had regretted it ever since.
But to me Krishna Menon remained a lovable uncle!
From London we went back to Paris where we were booked for another
season at the Sarah Bernhardt Theatre. Paris fashions are famous and I
was amused by my unconscious contribution. I had created a semi-folk
dance dramaVasavadatta
which brought in some extravagant costumes
and jewellery. After the performance, I rushed to the green room to
change but had time only to put on one heavy earring. Next day this
was mentioned as a fashion trend! Now when my daughter Mallika does
the same, I tease her saying, I began the fashion before you were born!
I designed all the costumes for my new creative work myself, collecting
old saris and silver jewellery, roaming the streets in Ahmedabad, in
Chennai, inMadurai
. I searched for antique fabrics and cut them up for
costumes. These were always noticed and a critic in London, wrote in
The Dancing Times,
Never have we had performers more beautifully dressed,
nor colours displayed on stage in such perfect harmony!
Another love of mine was to design coats. As foreign coats never
weat well with our saris, I cut up shawls and made them into capes and
coats. Once when a journalist in Paris, asked me why I didnt wear fur
in this freezing weather, I quickly replied, Oh we are vegetarian and
dont like wearing dead animals! This was long before the save the
animals movement. This remark also made headlines!
The French Archives, Nationales de la Danse, founded in 1932 to
record the history and development of dancing, awarded me a medal and
diploma at a gathering of Parisian artistic and literary celebrities. I was
the first Indian to be honoured thus and receive this rarely awarded
medal. M. Pierre Tugal, curator of the library, said at the ceremony, Not
only has Mme. Sarabhai made Indian art better known and appreciated,
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but she has contributed to drawing closer the ties of friendship between
France and India.
The reception I got varied with the national character of the place.
In London and in Scotland for instance, the audiences never missed the
slightest touch of humour, however subtle. But in Sweden, they were
more moved by the emotional impact of the dance. So it was in each
country the different responses that always fascinated me.
In Copenhagen, after the performance, the audience clapped in a
slow rhythmic way, to the beat of one-two-three-four! We didnt know
what this meant and rushed to our Danish impresario for an explanation.
He was extremely pleased and told us that it only expressed the deep
appreciation of the audience, whereupon we breathed a sigh of relief.
Of course, the story of how perplexed we were appeared in the papers
and the following evening after the performance, we had similar clapping
but this time it was interspersed with plenty of laughter!
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The make-up for Kathakali, the technique with which we began our
programme, had to be specially ground everyday and this was undertaken
mostly in hotel bathrooms! It was no easy task especially leaving no
traces on the floor! The Max Factor people came to interview me in Paris
and I asked them if they could give me some green make-up that
resembled the Paccha (green) of Kathakali. They tried their best but
did not succeed. The manola of Kathakali has a special sheen which
could not be replicated! The rare afternoons we were free, we spent in
sightseeing and wandering around the lovely shops. At Annecy, I met
the Queen of Greece who was very interested in Indian Philosophy and
we were to continue our friendship over many years. In 1997 Princess
Irene of Greece was in India. She was a dedicated worker, promoting
peace and harmony, and we both were members of the Sarvodaya Trust
for promoting non-violence.
The whole trip was a landmark in a way, because we were probably the
first group to present Bharatanatyam in its purest Pandanallur style and
Kathakali in its traditional form to Europe on a professional tour. The
only difference I made in Kathakali was that instead of a performance
lasting the whole night, as is usually done in Kerala, we shortened it for
the professional stage.
Manushya
changed a great many peoples attitude towards Kathakali.
When they saw the beautiful movements without the costumes, the
vigour of the body, the superb abhinaya, they were deeply touched. I
believe that the whole body has to be the abhinaya. Angika Abhinaya
is very important to communicate to the rows of audience seated far
behind in huge theatres. The temple audience has now been replaced
by the theatre audiences and the ambience is very different. My need
for expression continued and exploring forms in Kerala like Kalari Payattu,
Bhadda Nrittam and others I have tried to icorporate them all in my
compositions.
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Egypt, S. America
I
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newspapers to the white rose in his hand when he entered the room for
the press conference. I like to think it disarmed everyone.
After Cairo we danced in Beirut and the utter beauty of the sea
and the hills was breathtaking. Vikram missed the performance and
drove up to see the famous Cedars and was I jealous! Today viewing
the terrible devastation in that region on television, I wonder how man
can be so unfeeling and cruel in the midst of all that beauty. What did
they lack?
Our first halt on our way to South America was Lisbon and only when
we got off at Vigo and walked around the city did I realize that I had
friends there. So I hastily sent them a telegram and in the morning, as
I got off the boat, we were greeted by the smiling face of the Minister
for India, Mr Achutha Menon and his wife, Padmini. It was so delightful
to see them and we drove straight to their beautiful home, artistically
furnished with superb Portuguese furniture.
My first glimpse of Recife was through the porthole of our ship and I
remember how I cried out in surprise. I thought I was looking at the
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coastline of Kerala: the same trees, the red-roofed shacks and the coconut
palms. It made me feel a little less frightened of the adventure ahead
this wandering into another hemisphere which was so different from our
own. We were met by a Russian gentleman, Mr Fidler who spoke no
English and by the president of the society who was to sponsor us
in Rio who spoke only French! Luckily, my French stood me in good
stead here. Otherwise, we would have been completely lost, though we
were to find a few Malayali words in Portuguese. In Rio, our performance
was a tremendous success. The first night people stood on their chairs
to cheer, and roses were strewn over us from all sides! Hats flew into
the air and we had more curtain calls than we could count! The next
day the eulogies in the press were overwhelming. Poets wrote about me
in lovely verse.
Thy beauty is like the sandalwoods scent
that Thou hast kindled for us:
vanished in the shade and the spell, and prayer
creature from Heaven and mysterious portals,
open onto the other shore.
Thy hands,
bewildering,
infinitely afresh
infinitely eloquent
burned by Krishnas divine breath
how can I sing them!
The shows in Rio were extended. Doris Barry, the sister of Englands
Prima Ballerina, Alicia Markova, joined as the manager of our group. She
tried to contact our impresario, Mr Cuesada, but he remained inaccessible
and was to remain so throughout the tour. Only some ineffective deputies
of his ever appeared. From Rio, we went on to Bahia where the famous
dance the Samba was created; so of course we went late at night and
were thrilled with the sounds of the drums, the wild primitive movement
of the bodies, the vigour of the dance and the costumes. I joined in and
felt as though Id been born again in some ancient civilization, where
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the world was still new and humanity was joyous at discovering the
wonder of music and rhythm!
Everywhere we went Nandita Kripalani (who had joined me), Leela,
Dhanalakshmi and I tried to fit in as many museums and art galleries as
we could and avidly read the guide-books for sights we did not want
to miss. Nandita had responded to my invitation to come with us as she
was well acquainted with Argentina when her husband Krishna Kripalani
had been cultural attache at the Indian embassy. Besides, it gave Nandita
and me time to be together, after so long.
The Sodre Theatre in Umguay was the first theatre in South America
and was wonderful to dance in. And the audiences too seemed not only
full of warmth, but deeply excited by our performances. After the curtain
fell, there was call after call for us to come out again. Men and women
waited outside the theatre, greeting us with deep reverence when we
came out, often kissing my hands and sometimes even kneeling before
me, much to my embarrassment, yet making me feel both humble and
fiercely proud of my culture. It was as though I was possessed by the
goddess Devi. In many cities we had made the people of India for the
first time and at one of the embassies, someone said to me, You have
done in two hours what no embassy is able to do in two years made
India alive and beautiful to these people.
At the last performance in Montevideo, which otherwise was such
a happy occasion, one of the musicians had a heart attack. Before we
could decide what to do, an ambulance and a doctor had arrived and he
was whisked off to a hospital. I was told that his condition was very
serious. We could do nothing till the heart specialist arrived in the
morning. Fortunately, his condition improved and he begged me not to
leave him behind. We left for Buenos Aires by boat.
Everyone who entered Buenos Aires had to undergo a strict medical
examination. A week before, we were told of an American with a
permanent limp, being removed to the isolation hospital for examination
as the authorities refused to believe that his limp was due to a childhood
injury. At six in the morning, after a nights trip in freezing weather, no
one looks well. The first man the medical officer examined was the sick
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the boy and the girl danced the Cueca to the strumming of the guitar,
they used their underachieves flirtatiously, waving them almost as a
challenge to each other. The rhythm was catchy and soon Chathunnis
fingers started drumming the beat on his knee. One of the girls saw this
and dragged him into the centre to dance with her. Shivashankar, another
dancer, soon followed and they swung with ease to the steps, the only
difference this time being that the young men were the shy ones!
Guayaguil was probably one of the most depressing towns in South
America. The city was filled with parks and statues (there was a famous
one of Bolivars meeting with San Martin) and as we walked along the
water front, the whole view of odd bamboo houses, corrugated iron
sheets, and rows of slums did not make us feel very enthusiastic. Here,
of all places, we found a young Bengali with an Ecuadorian wife. He took
us sightseeing but his general air of sadness and loneliness made us feel
very sorry for him. The only redeeming factor about Guayaquil was the
Hotel Metropolitana where we stayed. It was run by an Englishman who
had a reputation for turning out people he did not like from the hotel,
and refusing admission to many. In each room were a set of rules for the
guests and the rooms were furnished in great detail, even a supply of
needles and coloured cotton being provided. When we met the manager,
he proved to be very kind and considerate and when later I asked him
about the rules, he said, Well, you know, there are some types I dont like
and so I have to make it very clear. Thank goodness you like us, I smiled.
Some places we saw only at night because, after Brazil, the tour grew
more and more strenuous. Often, we went straight to the theatre from
the airport and from the theatre after the performance, back to the
airport. Normally, dance groups are given at least three days to get
acclimatized to the city and the stage, but our impresario, who had been
taking advantage of us all the time and who never showed himself, had
arranged performances one day after another. In the middle of one
performance I began vomiting blood and got very scared. Half an hour
later Chathunni was in the same condition. Somehow we managed to
finish the performance and called a doctor. He explained to us that it
was because we were at a height and the exertion was too much for us.
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Our plane took one hour to land and it was pitch dark outside. When
we landed and went to the hotel and as I sat down completely exhausted,
a message was brought to me: Please be ready to leave at 4 a.m. for a
tour of Mexico. It was already midnight. I just sat and wept, with
Nandita trying to console me till it was time to leave. Everyone in the
group was furious with me, as though I had ordered the extra tour. We
had been through a more than strenuous tour, had never had enough
to eat, and were utterly worn out. On a professional tour, the meals and
stay (I cannot call it hospitality) are usually taken care of by the impresario.
In South America, there was no concept of vegetarianism. So after
a hard nights work cold boiled vegetables were laid out on the table
for us! After a day or two the very sight of boiled vegetables made us
sick. I tried my best to get food and finally ended up with bread, butter
and bottles of Tabasco sauce! But that did not create a happy situation
especially with the male dancers!
The tiny plane in which we took off from Mexico City was filled
with smoke from two fat cigar-smoking men behind us. I requested the
steward to tell them that the non-smoking sign was on. He shrugged
and said, They own the aircraft. I gave up! We danced in Torrean,
Chiahuahua, Juarez, San Luis Potosi, Guadalajara, and at last arrived back
in Mexico City, more exhausted and depressed.
Fortunately we arrived in time for me to meet Vikram at the airport.
He lifted our little boy over the rails who hugged and hugged me. All
my tiredness vanished. Is there any greater joy than a childs arms around
his mothers neck? With Vikram who thankfully took charge of me and
the group, we moved into a Spanish hacienda which a friend Miguel
Covarubias recommended to us. The whole group were shifted to a
comfortable hotel and at last we all relaxed. The food in Mexico was also
palatable with tortillas and beans!
At the opening of my show in Mexico City, Smt. Vijayalakshmi Pandit
who was Indias representative in the USA, came to the performance. I
felt proud to introduce her to the audience. She wrote afterwards, My
dear Mrinal, I am writing to tell you how much I enjoyed your ballet the
other evening. The work you are doing to interpret Indias cultural life to
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the world deserves the highest praise. I feel very proud of you and my
blessings and good wishes follow you wherever you may be.
Dr Homi Bhabha was also attending the science conference in Mexico
with Vikram. I teased him and asked, What lovely lady are you bringing
tonight, and nearly collapsed when he arrived with one of my favourite
film-stars, Dolores Del Rio!
Island of Bali
Years ago, I had read Miguel Covarubiass superb book
and was very excited to meet him and his wife, Rosa. Through them we
met many of the dancers who were trying to revive the dances of
Mexico. Rosa took us to the old Sun Temples and there we found a
remarkable similarity between Indian culture and the Mayan and Aztec
civilization. Miguel and Rosa were so knowledgeable about the history
and culture of Mexico, that we learned an enormous amount from them.
I was especially interested in the handicrafts and went to visit the
weaving and pottery centres. Through them we met many artists, one
a beautiful painter Alice Rahon, who gifted me two of her creations
which give me pleasure even today.
On our way back from South America, the famous American impresario,
Sol Hurok, wanted to meet me to organize a tour in the USA. He had
arranged to have a private recital in New York. Here, we came up against
customs who would not allow our luggage of costumes and instruments
to be taken out at New York. We were already in trouble because even
though Nandita Kripalani, who was leaving and going to London, had
a diplomatic passport and was only passing through New York to Europe,
had to spend a night at a separate hotel with two American guards at
the door! It seemed so ridiculous to us but the Government was adamant
even though we pleaded that her ship was scheduled for the next day.
I rang up a good friend of ours and asked him what I should do about
the concert. He said, Leave it to me, and in a few hours we had our
instruments. How did you manage it? I asked curiously. Oh, he smiled,
It was only a matter of passing over a few dollars. This shocked me a
good deal. I had not yet met with this kind of corruption!
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We danced for Sol Hurok in a small rented hall. When Vikram joined
me from Mexico, we met him again and discussed terms for a tour. Mr
Hurok said, You know you should wear a crown when you dance and
have plenty of incense. Im sorry, I said but in Bharatanatyam we do
not wear crowns. Oh! he replied the audience will expect it. That is
their idea of India. Not mine! I replied. He asked me to return in a
few months, and I was surprised to hear, Vikram say, Not for another
year, as we are planning a baby. I dont know whose face registered the
greater shock, Huroks or mine! I hardly ever questioned Vikrams
decisions! But it was only after another tour in Europe that Mallika was
born and I never danced for Sol Hurok!
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sadly he did not have the form. But there was hardly a question on Indian
mythology or the traditions of dance that he could not answer. He knew
by heart all the dance dramas he had read, thousands of songs, and even
the science he had studied in his matriculation class at school! More than
any other quality, was his constant enthusiasm for the new experiments
I made, a rare thing in a classical guru. His greatest compliment to me
was,You are also mad like me about Nataraja. As a story-teller he was
enchanting! Kartikeya and Mallika owe much of their knowledge of Indias
myths to him for whenever I was away he told them innumerable stories.
It was always very difficult to leave the children when I went on tour.
Tours had now begun to follow in quick succession , especially in Europe.
In Paris we began to have regular seasons at the Theatre de Champs
Elysees and were soon well-known by the dance lovers of Europe. In
1954, we went to East Germany from Switzerland and it was as though
we travelled from light to darkness. In East Berlin we were required to
stay in a hotel fenced in by barbed wire, and were not allowed to go
out except to the theatre. At the gate were young armed Russians and
once, when we had forgotten our passports in our rooms, we were
threatened with guns. We hardly met any people. The only person I
remember from the trip was a policeman who acted as our escort and
became very friendly though we spoke no common language. In Dresden
we saw the terrible damage American planes and bombs had done in the
city, destroying all the old concert halls. When we bought postcards of
historical monuments to write home on , they were all stamped, Destroyed
by American bombs!
Dancing in East Berlin was an experience. On the first evening of
our performance, when I came on stage, the auditorium was in complete
darkness and plunged in absolute silence. I felt like I was dancing to an
empty space, a black cavern, a void. It was only after the performance
was over that the lights came on and we found we did in fact have an
appreciative audience, they just didnt clap between items.
After East Germany our next stop was Munich. We got out of the
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train with sighs of relief and as there was a two-hour stop we went out
of the station, revelling in the brightly-lit streets, feeling really free.
Suddenly we heard people running after us and were suddenly surrounded
by a group of men. For a moment my heart stopped. But then I realized
that they were asking us whether we had come from India. Yes, we said
Have you been there? Came the astonishing reply, We worked for a
year in a place called Ahmedabad!
When Bulganin and Khruschev came to India in 1959, Darpana was
invited to perform a dance drama, to entertain the honoured guests. The
woman in charge in Delhi, a so-called patron of the arts, wrote asking
us to please not include Bharatanatyam. This was typical of the jealousy
in artistic circles I was always faced with. She had a particular protg
but had been obviously forced into asking us to dance as we were wellknown. But Bharatanatyam was my strongest technique and I was not
going to let it be thrust aside. As the authorities had requested a dance
Gowri
drama, I created a new piece and called
it. The story was of a dancer
in the palace, an expert in her own dance style, who thinks there is
nothing to rival it. One day a Prince (Chattunni) passing by, sees her
and immediately falls in love with her. He speaks to her of his country
and its fabulous dance. She insists that her style is the greatest! So there
is a display of both the forms, each one depicting the superb qualities
of their art. Finally, they realize that there are many forms, all exquisite
and wonderful. It was a romantic story and brought in all the strength
of Bharatanatyam and Kathakali.
When we arrived in Delhi we found no arrangements for a dressing
room they had already been allotted, even though we were the major
group. I said nothing and rigged up some curtains in the corridor managing
somehow to do our make-up with our small compacts. Of course this
was a deliberate insult by the woman in charge but we took it in our
stride and decided to make our performance the best. And it was!
Khruschev and Bulganin both came onto the stage. Khruschev
whispered to me, You are the most beautiful dancer I have seen.
Sarojini Naidu who was in the audience, said to me that it had been a
superb piece, especially as the story element was strong and it was so
romantic and unusual.
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The gleaming silver thalis and delicious Gujarati food (with fewer spices),
the waiters dressed in white acchkans and traditonal headgear, the
beautifully tended lawns of Kasturbhais home, and the surrounding huge
trees, were all appreciated by Prince Philip who had not, he said, been
to a real Indian home before, nor eaten good Indian food.
In 1956 Vikram found a Director for ATIRA Dr Wakeham from
the USA. He handed over the directorship to him and busied himself
starting a new professional forum of businessmen called the Ahmedabad
Management Association. As the founder of the AMA, he served as the
President till he became involved in another institution.
It was in 1962 that the Indian Institute of Management took shape.
Vikram had to work very hard to bring the IIM from its earlier location
in Mumbai to Ahmedabad. IIMA (Ahmedabad) was a combination of the
efforts of Dr Jivraj Mehta, the Chief Minister of Gujarat, Shri Kasturbhai
Lalbhai and Vikram. Vikram worked very hard to collaborate with the
central government, the Ford Foundation and the Harvard Business School.
He served as Honorary Director of IIMA for three years till he found a
full-time young director, Professor Ravi J. Mathai, strangely enough the
son of my mothers great friends, Dr John and Achamma Matthai.
Vikram invited Louis Kahn, the celebrated architect, from the USA,
to design the IIMA. Many were the late nights at Chidambaram when
Kahn and Vikram, seated on the carpet, planned and re-planned the
building while I served endless cups of herbal tea. Kahn once said to me,
This is the epoch of the White light. Amongst our young people
wonder does not exist. They rely more on pay than prowess. Now
students keep questioning the competence of a teacher, instead of listening
to him. Why white light I asked. What is the reflection of white light?
Black shadow of course, he answered.
He was one of the architects I admired greatly as I felt that his work
merged aesthetically with the surroundings. I still think the I.I.M. is a
marvellous construction and reminds me of Mohenjo Daro! Vikram
wished to have Louis Kahn work with young Indian architects, to design
the capital of Gujarat Gandhinagar and had thought of a nation-wide
competition. In one of my letters to him, I wrote The latest news is that
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Morarji has turned down the proposal of inviting architects for the new
capital. Of course this is completely political, and I wonder what will
happen now. I hope it does not become just another P.W.D. town.
Chinubhai Chimanbhai of the Lalbhai family the then Mayor of
Ahmedabad, wanted to make Ahmedabad a modern city and invited the
famous French architect, Le Corbusier to design several buildings. These
included the museum called Sanskar Kendra, the Mill Owners Association
and two homes, one for himself and one for his sister, my sister-in-law,
Manorama Sarabhai. As I was the only one in the family who spoke
French, Le Corbusier gave his opinions to me, while I tried desperately
to make sense of his rather brusque conversation. I have to admit that
I was not enamoured of his work as it did not seem to fit in with the
character of our city. Only Manis home, which she made comfortable
and attractive by her personality and good taste, seemed worthwhile to
me! Corbusiers home for Chinubhai and his wife Prabha was not so
successful. The huge edifice, the kitchens far away, the massive structure
was not conducive to the ambience of an Indian home. It was Prabha
who bravely decided against it and with some trepidation told her
husband and later his uncle, Kasturbhai Lalbhai, that she could not live
in such a house!
Le Corbusier had really no idea I felt, of the Indian climate and the
Indian psyche. But his coming to India opened up a whole new vista of
architecture of which the leading figure was Balakrishna Doshi, who has
since done incredible work. Doshis architecture became part of the
landscape of Ahmedabad and his philosophy took deep roots.
Doshi and his wife, Kamu, Vikram and I dreamt many dreams for
Ahmedabad. The Hussian-Doshi Gufa is the latest addition to the
architecture of Ahmedabad. Not all of our dreams have been fulfilled,
but we still have aspirations for this ancient-new city.
Wherever Vikram went, he looked around for interesting business.
Swastik was a losing concern he took charge of and it soon flourished
with agencies like Max factor, Maya soap and Det. Swastik Hair Oil
became one of the most popular brands of its kind.
While at M.I.T one year, he wanted to lose weight (this was always
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When Mallika was born, she brought great joy into our lives. Children
are to me the greatest fulfilment of married life. And it has always
astounded me how there are women in the world who actually dislike
and debase their children. Here, I am not speaking of those who have
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problems of poverty or illness but of parents who are comfortably welloff. Vikram and I both loved our children and treated them with respect.
Love does not mean spoiling it means cherishing. We just made our
children feel that we were always there for them and that they were very
important to us. There is a difference between freedom and licence. We
always told them what we felt was right and we would discuss with them
what they thought. They shared our life and interacted with all the
distinguished people who were our guests, without any self-consciousness.
Many years later Mallika wrote in an article:
I recall hanging around with the musicians, all dolled up in my
pavade (skirt) feeling desperately proud of my mother dancing
on stage, sitting in her lap during speeches and being terribly
miserable when she went on tours. I used to howl every time
Amma went away. Papa was not very busy touring till he became
the Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission. Amma often
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For both Vikram and me, in spite of our busy careers, the children were
first priority. One day, Chathunni came to me in great distress as he had
received a telegram that his guru, who was more like a father to him,
had died. I tried to comfort him the entire day. Kartikeya, aged three,
was with me and that evening he asked me what death was. I tried to
explain that as some people go on long journeys, this too was a journey
to God. The sad part was that we would never meet again. But I said,
we would be reborn perhaps into some other family. The next day,
Kartikeya came to me and asked, Amma, do you know God? I replied
No Pu-pu, not in the way I know you but I do talk to Him everyday.
Will you talk to Him today and ask Him something? Yes, of course,
I said. Will you tell Him that when I die, could He put me back into
your tummy and nowhere else? he asked. This remark shook me. How
wonderfully perceptive children are and no amount of love that we give
them is ever too much! It is no wonder that my cousin Susheela often
teased me saying, You always glow as though you are the only person
to have produced a child.
Another time, when Mallika was just two, I left on tour. She promised
to learn a song for me from Papa so when I returned I asked her to sing
it for me. She immediately lisped: Oh sinner, why dont you answer?
Someone is knocking at the door. That was the song her Papa had taught
her! Vikram was always as mischievous as a child.
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to dance and took him to the train. He has never forgotten it. For years
he told everyone: Amma cancelled her performance for Panditji for my
sake!
Kartikeya and Mallika were growing up and between Vikram and me,
we brought them up with as much love and guidance as possible. Kartikeya
was always self contained, with a real sense of humour (I called it South
Indian brahmin genes) and was very close to both of us. Vikram considered
him a friend and they would have lengthy discussions together. While
I was away, he wrote me letters fully illustrated with cartoons and I felt
he could really be an excellent cartoonist, especially as his cartoons were
of political figures. This argument still goes on!
At home in Chidambaram the four of us used to have long discussions
at dinner. Kartikeya as a child was a great one for explaining and
questioning, and I called him the Why boy. He enjoyed dance and
music and painted the sets for our first Gujarati play, written by Pannalal
Patel. He and Mallika would sit on one side while the group rehearsed
and keep prompting everyone much to their annoyance!
As much as Kartikeya was an inward child Mallika was outward
one. She was boisterous, plump, lovely and affectionate, always full of
fun. But she had a marvellous capacity, even at an early age, to listen to
other peoples troubles and try to sort them out though when she
would come and weep over someones love affair it would make me
angry. Older people confided in her even when she was just twelve!
Noshir Kapadia ran a record shop in the city and Mallika spent many
hours there as she loved music. He was one of the young men who talked
to her about his problems and she often asked him to come home and
meet me, but he was too shy. It was during the Pakistan war when he
heard that I was having difficulties getting daily supplies that he arrived
and stayed on for dinner and has been a dear friend to all the family ever
since. In fact he is now part of it and jokingly calls himself our Hanuman.
His friendship is very valuable to me.
Whenever I was away Vikram wrote detailed letters about the children,
which showed a fathers loving care.
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7.11.59
I am really a much better father to them when you are away but
keep counting the days to when you will return.
29.9.59
Malli acts somewhat temperamental and has to be wooed every
now and then. Your hints to me about how this is to be done
are most useful and the technique works very well. Kartik is most
helpful and understanding but we are all going through a process
of readjustment. For two nights a three bedded arrangement
with the children jumping on me from both sides worked well
as far as they were concerned but I could hardly get a stretch
of sleep. Last night we could quite successfully put some gaps
between the beds. I go on wishing so much, almost praying in
my way, that this tour should be really satisfying to you, we are
really missing you but in a nice away but not pining way so please
try and be relaxed and peaceful and a prima donna.
29.11.59
Kartik is Amma-sick, so am I. We celebrated Kartiks birthday,
we got presents. Vikram Sarabhai went shopping with the children
at 4.00 p.m. in the afternoon on a working day!
11.1.60
A group has brought Kumara Sambhavan and a show was
arranged. I went but could not stand it for more than 15 minutes.
Dancing, like other things can be magic but it can be a frightful
bore if the spark is missing. Too many people are now doing it
in a manipulative way like exercise. This could be fine if there
was precision and discipline and no attempt to tell a story or a
mood!
31.3.60
The children have been most reasonable and made no protest
at my leaving them, (for Mumbai) though Malli is careful to avoid
farewells at airports. When I came home yesterday I was horrified
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to get a complaint from Malli that K had slapped her. After that
I felt more concerned and sad though by then the two of them
were acting as if nothing had happened. Of course Malli had
been teasing him but I have told K that there is an absolute
ban on physical retaliation.
2.10.63
My dearest Amrapalli,
It is wonderful to get your letters almost every day. We were
trying to telephone you for four days before we finally got
through. Kartik has really got his mind made up for the terminal
exams. His problem is that he had not read his Physics and
Chem. textbooks earlier. Then there are the problems to be
solved-plus the fact that he feels he should bring his marks upto
60% atleast!!
6-10-63
Almost four days have gone by since I wrote the above. Malli
had a severe bout of tonsilitis with fever for 4 days, but she
has been very good and listened to me about medicines. I spent
quite a bit of time with Malli and Master (Acharyalu) told her
half the Mahabharata and we did spellings and algebra. She is
now full of beans and has just gone out swimming with Mana
(Gautams daughter) and Kartik. One of her minor problems is
some trouble with her friends at school.
Kartik has done well at his exams. The only shock was when
he prepared for Chemistry and discovered that on that day there
was a Physics paper. Pratapbhai Upadhyaya (who was teaching
him) says there was a divine hand in the mistake.
The house runs smoothly. Malli takes over the menu sometimes
it is then asparagus and mayonnaise. The lawn is just sprouting
with a light shade of green like Kartiks beard before he shaved.
Lots of love and xxxxxxx Viki.
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1.4.70
Dearest Mrinalini,
Malli is amazing, the way she takes her exams in her stride. No
panic, enjoying life with her musketeers. She has done very well
if I understand her vocabulary except the very last paper in
Economics where she had consciously avoided reading parts of
the course in the expectation that she could dodge the question
in the exam. But this only makes a marginal difference and it
is a good lesson to have learnt.
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I too had wonderful men friends but mine were mostly cerebral
attachments. What has always drawn me is good conversation, shared
thoughts on literature and drama. But none of them ever infringed upon
my family life. In fact many of them were introduced to me by Vikram,
who knew how lonely I was, as he was away so much.
It was perhaps when Mallika grew older (she was about twelve) that
she showed her resentment of the relationship, and, deeply upset,
distanced herself from Vikram. Mallika doesnt love me, Vikram would
say constantly. She loves you too much, I would reply, but she resents
someone being forced upon us, our family. Mallika, fiercely protective
of me, would also speak to him frankly. She was never one to mince words
or be untruthful and while that is a great strength it has brought her much
criticism. Yet, I dont know anyone who is more loyal to her friends, and
will fight for their rights so commitedly as she. After all, her two aunts,
Mridula Sarabhai and Lakshmi Sehgal were great fighters and there have
always been strong women on both sides of the family!
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T
people may be surprised to realize that the deepest ties between countries
are cultural. That is what we found when we went on a Government
delegation to South East Asia in 1956. We began by being called a
delegation; but everywhere we became known as the Indian Cultural
Mission. We were, as Prithviraj Kapoor (the leader) put it, in his first
speech in Rangoon, pilgrims who had come from India with offerings
of dance and music.
We arrived in Rangoon on an auspicious day, the last day of the
Thingyan or Water Festival.
The streets were filled with laughing people throwing buckets of
water on passers-by, and overloaded jeeps made sure that no one escaped.
It was a happy day and towards evening gaily decorated lorries became
moving stages for dancing and music. Some of us, who were brave
enough, went out to be officially ducked. We sped through the streets
into a city where spaces are open and the foliage is much like that of
Southern India. In this mood we entered the Kabawaza palace where we
stayed as guests of the government. The carved Chinese looking gates,
and the decorated tower was reminiscent of some ancient century. But
inside all was planned as in a modern hotel, strangely reminding me of
Egypts Sheppards Hotel.
Overlooking Rangoon, stands the lovely Shwedagon Pagoda. History
tells us that this Pagoda has for centuries been a place of pilgrimage.
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Kings and monks have come here to propitiate the Gods and worship
before the Buddha.
The morning we visited the Pagoda was a memorable one. We gave
our offering to the Buddha, placing the flowers and incense in huge jars
kept for the purpose. I was struck with wonder at the power of the
individual. Here, in a country far away from his home was a young Hindu
prince being worshipped by men and women who devoutly pinned their
entire faith and dedicated their ideas to Him.
Our performances took place in the open and were watched by more
than five thousand people. To the scheduled two programmes, we added
a third an action which was to happen everywhere. The stage too was
crowded with people, and our dressing rooms were hastily put up with
matting. Children peered through the holes which made dressing a problem.
The weather was sticky and suffocating but the riotous reception we
received made up for any inconveniences. Prithviraj Kapoor, began by
reciting verses from his plays and later from Shakespeare but they were
not much appreciated because of the language, so he had to soon stop.
Once, while he was giving away prizes to girls in the big open air
theatre it was amusing to see him put in a sticky situation. One by one
the little girls came up to him and he gave them loud smacking kisses.
The embarrassment began when the girls kept getting older. The crowd
roared with laughter. Prithviraj with his inimitable charm overcame the
situation by clasping their hands instead. He was a very fine gentleman
with one of the most resonant voices that I have ever heard. At first,
he was a little wary of me being a Sarabhai but soon he left all the
decisions of the programmes to me. One night, at about 12 oclock, he
made an unexpected visit to the theatre and found me folding and
ironing our clothes. He put his hand on my head and said, Mrinalini,
you are a real trooper.
It was at a lunch given to us at the Burmese Translation Society that
we saw a lovely fragment of the Ramayana performed. Rama, Lakshmana
and Ravana wore masks reminiscent of Kathakali make-up, while Sitas
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While the temples and the bazaars retained the old world charm of an
ancient culture, Bangkok was in many ways a modern city. The wide
roads, the new buildings, the air-conditioned theatre where we danced,
were all indications of western influence. What seemed to me a great
pity was that the national dress of the people had been discarded almost
completely. Only Prince Dhani Nivat, one of the most fascinating people
in Bangkok, who was deeply interested in the culture of the country and
who helped me understand much of the dance and music, wore the
national dress a patola dhoti and a short ikat jacket! He took me into
a special room in the palace, filled with treasures and showed me pictures
of his grandmother who was a famous dancer. When I remarked that he
was the first person whom I had seen in Thai dress, he replied with
twinkling eyes, Oh, you think its wonderful, but most people think its
uncivilized! We had to wear crinolines to show we were not barbaric!
The King and
I met Yul Brynner, and even sent him
Years later I saw
and
a Banarasi sari as part of his costume as he told me his had worn out!
Yul wanted to visit us as he said he was a gypsy and needed to come
home to India to find his roots.
When we left Bangkok, our flights were messed up again; we sat at
the airport all day and finally at 6.30 pm the Vietnamese Government
sent two Dakotas for us. We bumped our way rather precariously to
Saigon, in terrible, turbulent weather. The lightning and thunder lashed
our planes. I was terrified, but as assistant leader had to get up and
comfort everyone. The girls from Manipur screamed and clung to our
Kathakali dancers who were as scared as they were.
Saigon was a city much like any other except that the cafes on the
sidewalks reminded one of Paris. The costumes of the women, the loose
trousers and long flowing silk dresses, were beautiful.
We danced in the garden of President Diem and later had supper
with him in the spacious grounds where not so long before, the French
lived in great style. I was sitting next to him and tried to make conversation,
but he seemed very depressed and distraught. There was such an aura
of despair around him that I felt very strongly a sense of doom, and spoke
about it later to my friends. His sister-in-law was very vivacious and
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charming, and seeing me admire her dress, sent me a whole outfit the
next morning. My feeling of tragedy around Diem was to prove true for
The
a week later he was killed. It was much later
in Economist
Nov 2, 1985,
that I read about Kennedys hand in the making of the mess in Vietnam.
In Vietnam, the C.I.A. egged on the perverse President Diems top
generals to mutiny and murder him.
We flew to Phnom-Penh in Cambodia which was the next stop.
Prince Norodom Sihanouk, whom we talked to after the performance,
was very thrilled with the dancing. It is so alive and intense, he said. This
was the response nearly everywhere. The Prince was outwardly quiet and
unassuming and when I told him that we had heard a great deal of his work,
he seemed surprised. The Prime Minister of Cambodia smiled and said,
Why dont you come back and help us revive our dancing, and I did not
hesitate in replying, Yes, I will come back to learn it first.
Their dance was similar in many ways to what we saw in Bangkok,
but here there was even more resemblance to the lasya of Kathakali.
India could learn much from the orchestras of all these countries, instead
of always turning to the west for inspiration.
We were put up by the organizers in a small dirty Chinese hotel,
and sat up the whole night as the room was bug-infested and built over
an open stinking drain. Such is the glamorous and exciting life of a
dancer! The next morning the Prime Minister invited me to breakfast.
He was furious when he heard where I was staying and shifted us to a
government guest house whose interior was covered with dust sheets.
We were all so sleepy that when I went to call on the Minister. of
Education I fell asleep while he was talking to me! This had never
happened to me before so you can imagine how exhausted I was. He
was concerned and, when I told him what our schedule had been, he
was very shocked. He immediately saw to it that we were made
comfortable and had proper food.
In Hanoi our first call was on the President, Ho Chih Minh. We entered
the lovely residence and hardly waited a few moments when he entered
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with the Prime Minister Pham Van Dong, both in simple rather faded
khaki suits. Ho Chih Minh came into the room very informally and the
first thing that struck me about him was his charm and warmth. He
immediately made us feel at home, dispensed with all formality, and the
sheer simplicity of his personality made a deep impression on every one
of us. We were to see him several times and it was always the same. I
felt that I was in the presence of a truly great man. There is no doubt
that he was a hero both in the North and also in the South. When we
returned to Saigon, even little boys asked us for photographs of Uncle
Ho and were eager to know all about him. He was almost worshipped
everywhere.
The Hanoi open air theatre seated about 15,000 people, who sat
patiently in the rain, waiting for our performance. Miraculously, as we
began, the skies cleared and the audience greeted each number with
tremendous cheering.
At a reception the Prime Minister Pham Van Dong specially came
up to me with a plate of food. We spoke in French. Later the interpreter
said he had vowed never to speak that language again, but there was no
other way he could talk to me. Under his stern exterior, I found him
very human. After our performance he spoke about our great art. Then
he came to me, held my hand saying, You are so exhausted and hot,
but your eyes are like stars brilliant and shining. I was very moved by
him, a feeling I know he reciprocated. He was later to become the first
Prime Minister of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam after its complete
liberation in 1975. Moments like that when two people connect can
never be forgotten.
We were welcomed with lovely jasmine garlands at Manila. It was
a modern and very American city. Somehow to me they seemed to have
lost their cultural moorings. There were a few dedicated people trying
to revive the handicraft industry and I found a shirt made of pineapple
fibre for Vikram, which he never wore as it was too ornate! The shows
somehow did not seem to have much of an impact as I think it was a
little too classical for the audience.
From Manila, we flew to Jakarta, the capital of Indonesia, where we
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happily found the ancient culture still alive. For me, it had special
significance, as I could pay homage to my guru Pangeran Tedjoekoesoemo
and meet my dear friend Sri Ningdyah, now his daughter-in-law. Outside
his house was a huge mandapam, and late at night a rehearsal was taking
place. The grand sound of the Javanese gamelan or orchestra had always
fascinated me. I stayed on to watch. Since I had been there last, the entire
world had changed, old customs discarded. Space in the palace where
I had danced for the previous Sultan was now cordoned off as it was
considered sacred ground.
The young Sultan met us informally and talked enthusiastically of
many of the new projects he had in mind. Yet, the old-world quality of
Jokya had not been entirely discarded, and the best traditions were still
retained. With Sui, I walked up and around the wonderful stupa of
Borobudur where terrace upon terrace is carved with sculptures depicting
the life of Buddha and many stories from Hindu mythology. Perhaps no
other monument exists today that is in any way similar to this unique
structure. We sat on the steps and I spoke to her of my problems and
the difficulty of managing a group, and this time being part of a delegation.
Soon we were to fly to Singapore and Malaya, the last lap of our
journey.
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were all the usual accompaniments. After the classical piece, I decided
to show the audienceManushya
.
At a press conference before our performance in Thiruvananthapuram,
there was a young man who kept asking me awkward and rather rude
questions. I was intrigued and answered him back as audaciously! He was
taken aback but his interest grew and so did mine. He was K. Balakrishnan
and edited a paper called theKaumudi Daily
. That night we sat on the
veranda of the hotel talking till two in the morning. He became a friend
and our friendship flourished mainly through letters and telephones. But
his was a sad life and he died in tragic circumstances.
Of the performance in Kozhikode he wrote to me:
Mrinalini Dear, I reached Kozhikode at about 3 p.m. The tragedy
was that my car went out of order. My only purpose in going
to Kozhikode was to see you. You can more or less imagine my
disappointment. It appears that you have taken Kozhikode by
storm. Even the leading Daily Mathrubhoomi commented on
your performance. Editorially. I remember nothing like that from
Mathrubhoomi all these years. It was a pleasure to hear people
speak so much in praise of you.
Critics in India early on were usually staff reporters and knew very
little about dance. When I met Sunil Kothari in 1957, he was just
beginning his writing career. We discussed the subject of constructive
criticism and I told him that a critic should study deeply and be a bridge
of understanding between the artist and the spectator. Also, that
everything should be signed by the writer so that he or she can be open
to questioning if the artist disagreed. Since then Dr Sunil Kothari has
become one of Indias eminent critics, a writer of many well researched
dance books and a dear friend.
Mohan Khokar, another well-known writer on dance who studied at
Kalakshetra was head of the Department of Dance in the University of
Vadodra. The two of us often used to discuss his writing, and in 1959
he wrote me a touching letter.
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You have been one of the pioneers and indeed one of our very
prominent artists today, to think that such a one as you thinks
well of my work certainly makes me feel a very privileged person.....
It is these words of encouragement that have given a purpose
to my life and a reason for me to strive. I thank you for reposing
so much confidence in me.
He wrote frequently and often very amorously. When I received the
Padma Bhushan, his letter addressed to me went Apple / Avacado of my
eyes Mrin and continued
You were always a padma, sure, but now a gilded one. I mean
this of course in the positive sense. Fine, congrats, kisses. But
Bhushani, what are you doing about your life story for the
benefit/detriment of posterity? A book it has to be. Or at least
a major chapter in a book. Whoever is doing it now is just not
qualified for this. I have told you again and again to let me jump
into this but you have not been impressed. Regret, regret. If you
care, ask me what I have been upto in 1991. Ill tell. Itll floor
thee. But yes, I still desire you, you woman. Oh boy/girl, what
fun to be in bed with a Padma Vibhushani! Game???? Your?
Mohan!
Today we have many distinguished critics and I feel there is much
more understanding and knowledge of the arts.
It was in 1958 that I first met Kailash Pandya at the Geeta Govinda
Dance Seminar in Delhi. He was leaving the Asia Theatre Institute, Delhi
and I asked him to meet me in Ahmedabad. Vikram and I had decided
to form a theatre group in Darpana for Gujarati theatre so as to contribute
to Gujarat something of its own heritage. Kailash Pandya was requested
to be head of our drama department.
He was part of the group of Natamandal artists who first welcomed
me to Gujarat. They worked with that extremely distinguished scholar
Rasiklal Parikh. Rasikbhai was very knowledgeable on Sanskrit and Gujarati
theatre (a celebrated writer himself) and had gathered round him talented
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young people like Dina Gandhi, Kailash Pandya, Jashwant Thaker and
actors of the calibre of Pransukhlal Nayak and the celebrated, veteran
actor Jaishankar Sundari whose female roles many years before, had been
so realistic that people even came from Mumbai to watch him, and
women copied his fashion in clothes! He was very supportive of my
work, appreciated my respect for the arts. Once at home, when my foot
touched a tanpura, instinctively I made a gesture of apology. He often
related this incident to his students. That, he would say, is respect for
the art. Years later, as vice chairperson of the Gujarat Sangeet Natak
Academy, I fought and succeeded for his name to be given to the new
theatre, when the powers that be tried to name it after a minister whom
today no one even remembers!
Darpanas drama department began with plays in Chidambaram,
and then full length dramas in regular theatre. While there were
outstanding playwrights like Jayanti Dalal, Chandravadan Mehta, and
others, Kailash and I felt that no new writers were as forceful. We began
by requesting a fine novelist, Pannalal Patel, to write a play for us. To
get the right atmosphere for the setting which was in a rural area, we
spent a few days in his village. Vikram, with Kartikeyas help, created
the sets and we produced a play on witchcraft. Its cast consisted of many
of those who made Darpanas drama department a success. Sumitra
a veteran actress, Vadilal Shah, Damini Mehta (who joined Darpana as
the leading actress), Satish Mahendra and many others. The veteran
actor Pransukhlal Nayak also took part, in many of our plays.
An appreciation group called Shatak was subsequently formed to
discuss various plays. Jayantibhai Dalal, a socialist and one of the pioneers
of the freedom movement in Gujarat was a leading figure in the city. His
wife Ranjanben became very fond of me and I frequently lunched at their
home in the heart of the city. She finally decided to adopt me formally
and we actually went through a ceremony at the Mahadev Temple in
Ahmedabad. Motiben as I called her has really been a mother in every
sense of the term, looking after all of us with love and care and her son
Jayant and daughter Pratibha call me Didi as does her daughter-in-law
Devi. For many years she ran one of the most successful schools in the
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heart of the city and none of the students and now their children have
ever forgotten her warmth and kindness. She has given me so much love
all through the years and asked nothing in return, a rare human being,
and a true mother. Destiny again?
The drama department through Kailash put me in contact with the
intellectuals of Gujarat. C.C. Mehta frequently visited and enchanted us
with his caustic wit. Umashankar Joshi, the great poet, was already a dear
friend of Vikrams and mine. At one of our arangetram ceremonies he
said, Princes of Gujarat always married princesses from other states.
Minaldevi came from the South and created huge tanks and reservoirs for
the people. This prince (Vikram) has married Mrinalinidevi who has brought
us the classical arts of the country. A lovely compliment from a great poet.
Niranjan Bhagat, a writer, who inspired a new creative form in Gujarati
poetry, became a close friend. I requested him to translate Tagores
Chitrangada
for Darpana, keeping as close to the Bengali poetry as possible.
It was a splendid translation which I thought Gurudev himself would
have approved of. At last I had found a friend in Gujarat whose knowledge
and love of English literature was akin to mine.
Vikram was happy that I had found someone to feed my hunger for
literature. Kartikeya and Mallika too were very fond of him and he
nurtured their love for English literature. His friendship brought me
many hours of happiness, but after a while his busy schedule as a professor
and later as an avid traveller and my constant tours made it impossible
to meet frequently. But friendships are often like exquisite patterns in
the tapestry of life, woven together forever.
Amongst the many young writers Madhu Ryes work appealed to me.
He was very outgoing and full of new ideas. We worked together on his
first play,Tell Me the Name of Any Flower
and it was a fine experience. He
was quick-witted, enthusiastic and contemporary in his thoughts.
We enjoyed his presence at Darpana and I felt sorry when he settled
in the USA, even though we still kept in touch.
We did many plays over the years, some original, a number of
translations and many socially oriented. Bhavai, the folkdrama, was also
a form which Kailash and Damini studied under the great artist,
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Leela
Chimanbhai Nayak. A delightful satire
with Kailash as the hero, a
humorous reflection of present day politics, played to appreciative
audiences. Surprisingly, we presented shows throughout the Emergency
and no one objected! As the years passed, serious Gujarati theatre
suffered a setback and the golden era came to an abrupt end with the
invasion of television.
Kailash Pandya continued to build up the Bhavai tradition and
persuaded the government to build a school for young artists in Mehsana
(Jai Shankar Sundaris hometown) providing them with scholarships.
This has proved an excellent idea for, in this way, the art will continue
its tradition.
Through or because of the drama department many outstanding
teachers and scholars came to us in Ahmedabad. Charles Elson, who
taught drama in New York, came and stayed with us and gave us many
new tips on theatre. He became a great friend over the years and when
I went to New York he came to meet me. Loving Indian handicrafts, he
had got a carriage decorated with old designs in brass made in Delhi and
taken it to his home in Salem, USA. In 1961 when he came to meet Minal
and me he drove us around in the carriage down Fifth Avenue creating
quite a stir! Everyone will think I have two beautiful Indian wives, he
said!
A C Scott was another good friend in the theatre and introduced
me to Anna Nassif who studied with us, creating beautiful western dance
pieces with the rhythms of India. Later she arranged for me to perform
in the University of Wincosin where she was head of the department
of dance.
Kailash has been my biggest mainstay at Darpana and we share our
ideas constantly, and now with Mallika our togetherness in creative vision
continues.
There is a music department Darpana also. South Indian music has
never been appreciated in Gujarat and so not many students come to
study but it is necessary for Bharatnatyam. Here too there was research
in old instruments and the Gottuvadyam is now a regular feature in our
programmes as is the veena. Purushottaman, who has been in Darpana
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for almost thirty years is another dedicated musician who is always ready
to respond to my new creative work though not always approving of my
compositions.
Through the years as the Academy grew, many gurus came to teach.
There was Kitappa, Andalamma, who came specially for Kuravanji as she
had danced the main role in the temple, Kalyanikueey Amma for Mohini
Attam and later many others for the martial and folk arts.
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NE SUMMER HOLIDAY, IN
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tall, lovely pine trees. We talked and talked about so many things
as if we were very old friends, and had met after ages. It was you
who had tenderly raised our conversation to the level of an art
and I was taken in. After three years or so I watched you dance
and read reports in foreign papers about your performances. The
then Information Minister, Dr B.V.Keskar had shown me some
clippings which he had received from France, commenting on
your performances there and he had forwarded them to the
Prime Minister, Nehru. A famous critic had observed in a
newspaper, A miracle has come from India. This sentence, I
still remember. Then I realized what a pearl of friendship, I had
got, just by chance.
Our friendship still continues and is one of the joys of my life. P.D.
has been a marvellous friend and written many articles about my work.
Only then is he poetic! Otherwise his comments on the politicians and
politics are highly critical, frank and bold. Once when he called me
darling I must have teased him. In his reply he said,
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In Sweden I fell ill and was in excruciating pain. Vikrams friends, the
scientists, Hannes and Alfven, called in a doctor who said that I should
be hospitalized immediately. He refused to give me any medicine saying
that without proper tests he was not allowed to prescribe anything. I
could not go into the hospital because of the performances and so I sent
a cable to Vikram in India explaining my predicament and asking him
to fly out some medicine. I could barely stand. After each item, Minal
Mahadevia and Rupande Shah, my two best students, used to dress and
undress me as I collapsed onto the theatre-basket that held our costumes,
crying in agony. Minal gave me some home-made remedies that she had
with her and she and Rupa sat up all night, literally ironing my body
to relieve the pain. This is where I think that some divine power helps
in our great time of need. By the time the medicines came (which took
three days), I was better and able to continue the gruelling schedule.
In between, Ward flew in from the USA. to see me. Our relationship
was as warm as ever. By this time he was married though not very happily,
and he poured out his heart to me. It could have been his overwhelming
sadness that also contributed to my illness. Though I know I have no
power over destiny, to see the suffering and pain of anyone dear tears
me apart. Knowing that Ward was still deeply in love with me and had
never really got over me made me feel very guilty.
Our Swedish impresario, Bengt Hager, and his Indian wife, Leela,
were very concerned about my illness but full of admiration for my
determination to go on. We danced every night in a different suburb of
Stockholm and all the theatres were excellent. Kewal Singh, the
Ambassador from India in Sweden attended every performance and
became a mascot for our group.
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greeted him saying, Im so glad you are here. You are the only one to
help us! Have you telephoned to Munich, what can be done? and I kept
on till he was bewildered himself and with a glance at the photographs
left, feeling personally responsible for the luggage! Sometimes there is
more acting off stage than on!
That night the show had to be cancelled. Such a thing had never
happened before in my career.
At noon, we heard that the luggage had finally arrived and the
customs officials took only five minutes clearing it as they were told it
was necessary for a show that night. Our spirits rose and we went out
for a stroll through the well-designed and pleasant streets of Zagreb. But
if we thought we would stroll along quietly, we were mistaken. In a few
moments we had become part of a procession surrounded by eager and
curious faces talking and laughing a universal sign language. Soon it
became too much and we beat a hasty retreat to the hotel. That night
our performance was much applauded. The representative of the Embassy
now had a smile on his face and hastened to telephone to the Ambassador
in Belgrade, that all was well!
Taking the train in the morning we were at a place called Tesna at 5.30.
p.m. It was already dark and we got down onto what seemed just a field.
In the distance stood the small bus which was to take us to Tuzla, a
mining town. Between us and the bus was a huge empty crevass through
which, with the help of two young boys, we managed to carry our
luggage. By this time all of us had become expert porters and constantly
joked almost the number of bags we could fit in under our arms, hang
from our shoulder blades and grasp in our hands. Susheela Minal, Rupande
and Darshini won easily for they carried an incredible amount which
increased in every city, especially where the shops carried tempting
wares.
We were deeply impressed with the spirit of the new Yugoslavia
which had broken away from Soviet influence. This was the country
where Tito had preserved independence and tried to live in the best of
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for the train journey from Belgrade to Sarajevo. She even packed whatever
fruit was available, including a few oranges. When we were lunching on
the train we invited the attendant to come and eat with us. I noticed
that he kept looking at the oranges and asked him if he would like them.
His face lit up and he said I wish to take one to my grand-daughter for
she has never seen an orange.
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Perhaps, I thought, they were angry at our behaviour and were cancelling
the rest of the tour. Instead the Minister was most charming and with
a twinkle in his eyes said I hear you have been having some difficulties
with the organisation. I am very sorry for the inconvenience. I explained
to him, that our bare feet had been badly bruised with the nails on the
stage and the rough surfaces, and showed him my own feet which were
almost covered by band-aids. Very shocked he gave a talking-to to his
subordinates on the phone. He asked me whether he could send us some
presents and I suggested books and records about the country.
You are going to the USSR. It will be very cold there, he said. I
should like to present the men with some warm caps if you would accept
them. We received a parcel of the books and records and handsome fur
caps. But what was most welcome and unexpected were warm
combinations for all of us placed discreetly at the bottom of the box!
All through the tour as it grew colder and colder, (upto -38. C) we
thanked him from the bottom of our hearts.
In Bucharest I made friends with many of the artists and every night
we would meet together and have lively discussions. There was great
interest in India and some of the Professors were Sanskrit scholars.
Whenever we had time we visited schools of folk and classical dancing,
trying to see performances of puppetry and drama and of course visit
museums and art galleries. I was fascinated by the old handicrafts and
bought what I could afford which was not very much! While the men
were not very interested in sightseeing, the girls and I would pour over
travel books so as not to miss anything.
It was Christmas time (Dec. 1959) and very, very cold. We were all
dreadfully homesick. Susheela and I missed our children terribly. To liven
up the spirits of the group, we decided to cook an Indian meal for
Christmas dinner. Minal and Rupa went to the kitchen and got chunks
of butter saying we needed it for medicine! The girls had just received
their food packets which contained khakra (dried chapattis) and masalas.
We bought rice and some vegetables from the market and Chathunni,
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acting as master chef, started cooking in the hotel room. Though it was
very cold we opened up all the windows to let out the aroma from our
cooking. A mouth-watering meal of pilav with vegetables and fried
roasted papadams was prepared and we took it to the dining room. When
the Minister who was dining with us that night saw what we had prepared
he smiled, So this is your medicine, he said. Yes, I said, please share
it with us.
Every night a special admirer would bring me orchids which Minal who
loves flowers collected and nurtured. The adviser told me that he knew
he was an Indian in his previous birth and perhaps my lover! Many people
in Eastern Europe had strange fantasies about India, perhaps gleaned
from the early books on our country, much of which was romantic rather
than factual! We were more and more curious to visit Russia whose
influence on this vast domain differed from country to country.
Our excitement mounted as the train drew into Moscow. It was bitterly
cold (22. below zero, we learnt later) and we all but skated across to
the bus, our eyes watering and our feet frozen. The huge and impressive
Hotel Peking where we stayed, with its draughty foyer, greeted us not
with the usual warmth of Russian hospitality, but with a determined
doctor and nurse who threatened to vaccinate us before we went to our
rooms! We saw people grimacing with pain as they were being injected
with the vaccine! Some were bandaged as they were bleeding! In
desperation we showed our WHO (World Health Organization)
certificates from India. They were not valid, we dont recognize WHO,
we were told. Finally, after several tiring hours of argument, the Indian
Embassy came to our rescue and we were allowed to contaminate the
dining room! It was our first experience of the one-track obedience of
these workers who had been told to vaccinate everyone. They would
listen to no other argument. It was also amising to see how, once the
word came from on high that we were alright and our certificates
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correct, there were no more questions asked. But at night a doctor came
to each bedroom to check our stomachs!
Many incidents, some amusing, some frightening, happened during
our stay, which brought home how strict the regime was. In Estonia
(Vilnius) two young men came to my greenroom at the theatre every
night. One was a handsome blond giant who looked like the Nordic
heroes of old, and the other, his friend, who came as an artist and
interpreter. While he was sketching me, the other would look on in
absolute adoration. After a few days the interpreter who spoke some
English said, He has fallen desperately in love with you and wants me
to tell you that we will come to meet you everyday just to talk if you
allow it. The day we left, they stood on the platform a little distance
away and the blond handsome giant showed the mudra (hand gesture)
of sorrow which he had learnt. He ran alongside the train and threw
me a bunch of flowers. I thought it was terribly romantic, especially so,
when I thought about the rigid regime.
On stage in Moscow the cold was devastating. There was only a coal
brazier to keep us warm. We were dancing in the enormous Tschaikovsky
theatre. While doing mudras on stage, my fingers would freeze in that
position as did my smile, so that I would have to turn my back on the
audience and loosen my fingers and manipulate my mouth. Even while
getting to the centre of the stage all our steps had to be doubled. The
men who are clad only in dhotis with bare bodies for normal performances,
had to wear kurtas under which they had pulled on thick woollen vests!
Sometimes, when I was really tired, for the burden of talks and
interviews was exhausting, I would send the dancers for a demonstration
which once resulted in a hilarious episode. To save our clothes (we had
been three months on tour), we would often wear our cardigans over
our underwear dispensing with the cholis (blouses). One day the three
girls Minal, Rupa and Darshini went for a television interview. As it
started, they were requested to remove their western cardigans in order
to show the Indian dress. They were very embarrassed but fortunately
managed to cover themselves delicately and were thankful that they wore
saris with nice long pallavs! When they came back and described the
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We had been away from home for nearly five months. Often we had to
travel by train at night. In order to liven our spirits we started playing
card games. Sipping iced tea (always available on trains) the three girls,
Chathunni and I would play till 1 to 2 a.m. Once on a train our drummer
,Gopal Panikker, thought that the girls were keeping me awake by
laughing and making too much noise.
He opened the compartment door to scold them, but when he saw
me his mouth fell open. I asked him to join in but he refused! Usually
we were too exhausted even to sleep and with my claustrophobia, I often
sat in the corridor.
Thankfully, we were nearing the end of our tour. We had originally
planned to be away for only six weeks but after nearly five months of
dancing practically every night, our costumes started giving way,
especially the beautiful delicate Banarasi saris. It became a permanent
feature to see Minal darning the torn costumes in the green room
before the programme. At the end of the tour some of the costumes
had become museum pieces as the original material had disappeared
and only the darning was showed. Minal, who became one of my
dearest friends and travels with me all over the world even today, is
still teased about her patchwork! But she is still a wizard at everything
she does!
During our shows we had many pleasant surprises especially from
students. In Paris at the request of the impresario, who felt that the
programme should be ten minutes shorter because they always started
late, I cut out one of my padams in the Geeta Govindam. The next day
I had a letter from some young students who asked me why that lovely
item had been omitted! In Moscow, the students of Sanskrit, hearing that
we were going to dance the Geeta Govindam; studied the poem and
after the show came and recited it to us.
When I dance there is a spiritual energy that emanates from the inner
depths of my being. Time and again critics have written and people have
spoken about this quality. In London, my impresario told me that the
reviews in the papers were too good and may keep away ordinary
people. He said that the tremendous spiritual quality they wrote about
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may make people think that the performance was too highbrow. I thought
of my father-in-laws letter so long ago!
In Leningrad we went to visit one of the finest ballet schools. We
saw their production of Fountain of Bakshisarai
and Romeo and Juliet
. It was
then that we realized the exacting discipline that made the dancers of
the USSR. technically the best in the world.
A very touching incident happened in Tashkent, which still remains
fresh in my memory. A man was standing at the stagedoor when I came
out after one of my shows. Clad in rough trousers a thick coat and high
boots he was a figure from the Tales of Turkestan! In his hand he held
a bunch of flowers, which he held out to me. His words came in broken
English, For you, most beautiful dancer woman. You come with me
now. I take you to see land of ancestors of Samarkhand to Kabul to where
your Babur was small boy we walk together by river of history. See
I have brought truck for you. And indeed there was a truck piled with
cushions, as elegant as he could make it. I was sorely tempted! Sometimes
one longs to forget everything and just follow an impulse, an unknown
star, a man. But after that, what? I smiled and shook my head. What
a wonderful idea! But I leave for India tomorrow morning. Thank you
for coming to see us, I said. The disappointment of something sacred
shared for a moment: a romance, a meeting, was in our eyes as we said
goodbye. I watched him as he turned, a majestic figure, his boots crumbling
the snow and walked away in to the foggy night.
I wanted to kneel and kiss the earth.
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AT
Mallike and Kartikeya with the Queen Elizabeth 1961, with House Mehta and
Mehdi nawaz Jung.
Bejewelled, they looked magnificent and so did the men in their stylish
angharkas and turbans.
The Queen was dressed in silver lame and looked more elegant than
when she rode on the back of the car in the morning. All along the way
people came close to the car (the hood was down) to throw flowers on
her lap, and she had a lovely smile for everyone. It was all extremely
informal, and later I heard that she had enjoyed it very much. Mallika
and Kartikeya presented the programme to the Queen and Prince Philip.
I dancedThe Fish Princess
and Prince Philip came to chat.The Fish Princess
was originally the story of Ulupi and Arjuna, I explained to Prince Philip
whereupon he remarked, He was quite a lad, wasnt he?
The whole visit was a delight and we could not have had finer hosts
than Nawab and Begum Mehdi Nawaz Jung with their impeccable
Hyderabadi culture. While the whole building was spruced up, the room
in which Gurudev Tagore had stayed was also restored and I was honoured
to help. Many years later, when the Government House was shifted to
Gandhinagar, the new capital, I requested the government to let me
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He as usual worked till the early hours and would ask Minal to drop him
at the University saying, I can go half an hour late and enjoy my
breakfast if you will drive me to my work, which she did happily.
Often we entertained, as Vikram loved having people in and so did
I. Minal and I devised a menu that repeated itself almost every other day.
We had very little cutlery, mostly borrowed, and Kartikeya and Mallika
became very efficient at snatching the cocktail cups from the rather
surprised guests and filling them with soup and putting them back in the
guests hand, before they knew what was happening!
Once Minal and I were giving an illustrated lecture on dance on live
television in Boston. Kartikeya and Mallika who sat facing us in the
technicians box were as usual trying to make us laugh. When we thought
we had finished, the producer frantically signalled that there were three
minutes left. I blurted out, Now Minal will say goodnight in Sanskrit.
Poor Minal hastily sang several slokas greeting the dawn and afterwards
we doubled up in laughter. Since then, any sticky situation that we
quickly try to bluff our way through is termed a goodnight in Sanskrit.
Another time Vikram insisted that we all attend an interesting science
lecture on computers. When I walked in with the two children everybody
looked astounded. I had threatened them both with dire consequence
if they dared to laugh. So they both (aged six and eleven) sat solemnly,
listening to how a computer functioned. We were then taken around and
Kartikeya was specially interested in a huge computer. The technician
showing it to us and asked Katrtikeya if he wanted to play noughts and
crosses saying that the computer always won. Kartikeya played for a
while and to the surprise of the technician, he won!
Leaving Vikram at M.I.T. we travelled to Philadelphia and Los Angeles
and gave recitals at some of the dance-studios there. Ray Eaemes whose
husband Charles had helped set up the National Institute of Design in
Ahmedabad, introduced us to the audiences. In New York I danced at
the Asia Society and also at a gathering of dancers amongst whom was
one of the greatest American dancers of all times, Ruth St. Dennis. She
came and embraced me after the show and gave me a snapshot of herself,
on the back of which she had written, Your whole being is the fulfillment
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AT
Theatre Art
of all I have spoken of, all my life. Later in an article in the
magazine she wrote, In one stunning gesture, Mrinalini lifts the use of
the dance from the ordinary to the sublime. As a Cultural Ambassador,
she is worth fifty statesmen.
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possess you for these nine weeks, I told them and they agreed happily.
Often lunch was forgotten, and at five in the afternoon we would be still
working unaware of the time, till John came to tell us, to break up.
When the choice of the cast was made both hero and heroine were
blond. Reid, whom I selected as the King Udayan said, I came because
I loved studying with you, never dreaming that I would get a role. Except
for one or two minor characters my instincts were right. When we played
in Washington, Mrs B.K. Nehru, the wife of the Indian Ambassador
asked Reid, How long have you been in India? And another visitor
commented, They are all Indians, arent they? Except for the costumes,
the make-up was normal. From your inner selves become Indian, I had
said to them, and they had. It was an amazing transformation.
During my stay in New York, many artists asked for lecture
th , 4
demonstrations. The only time available was midnight and on Oct
1963, I danced and spoke to a packed house of Broadway artists at the
Booth Theatre. After the one hour show, questions and answers continued,
and at two a.m., feeling really groggy I namaskared and said thank you
and then fainted in the wings! There was absolute consternation and John
Mitchell and the others were really worried. Next day, the then Consul
General sent a car to take me to a charming doctor who told me never
to eat salads in the United States which might have been treated with
pesticides as our delicate Indian stomachs were used to cooked food.
The play was to open in the I.A.S.T.A. Theatre in New York to
an invited audience on November nd
22
. Mrs Kennedy was due to come,
but her secretary wrote, Mrs Kennedy will be unable to attend the
performances due to the fact that she is going to Texas with the
President.
The 21st of Nov. was a memorable day for India. Vikram and his team
launched the first rocket from India into space, the beginning of Indias
space programme. He had written to me earlier (10.11.1963) Life is
st at
getting busier than ever with our rocket firing on the 21
Thiruvananthapuram, our conference at Jaipur with the influx of about
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Cosmic Rays Conference Jaipur 1963 Vikram with Prof. Blackett, Dr Powell and
Dr. Homi Bhabha.
100 guests, five scientific papers to prepare and Valentina (the astronant)
th and the Pugwash (conference) to prepare
coming for dinner on the 12
for!! So come back soon to hold my hand.
It was from Thumba in Kerala, that the first rocket was launched.
And India entered the Space Age. Geewhiz wonderful rocket shot came
Vikrams telegram. I rang him but could hardly speak. We were both so
thrilled.
The play The Vision of Vasavadatta
was opening in New York the next
day. But in the USA. a terrible tragedy struck the nation.
On Friday, the 22nd of November, 1963, someone burst into our
room in New York. The President has been shot, she shouted. What
should have been a joyous occasion turned into one of the saddest of
days. All night Rupa and I sat by the television, in a friends house, feeling
as though the tragedy was our own.
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The next day the play opened with the moment of silence and was
an immediate success. Beautifully dressed, the cast moved with grace on
the polished black floor under a heavily embroidered canopy. John
Mitchell, was very pleased and so was I. We received good reviews. For
IASTA, one of them said, this is an unprecedented occasion; the first
time American actors have been able to learn the classicial style of
Sanskrit drama from a master director of India.
All of us had become deeply attached to each other in the few weeks
and it was a tearful parting. Later I was to receive letters about individual
productions saying, Youll be surprised at how Indian they are! On my
return the artists wrote to me:
The American cast of The Vision of Vasavadatta wishes to
express their deep gratitude for your guidance in presenting this
ancient dramatic work to audiences in Washington, D.C. and
New York. Your patience with our awkward efforts has made all
of us wonder, your spiritual insight and dedication to the theatre
has inspired us, your artistry as a dancer has provided us with
memories we shall not soon forget, your warm humanity as a
teacher and a gracious Lady, has given us great pleasure and a
fund of remembrances which we shall treasure. For all of this
and more we extend to you our thanks. Truly your spirit will
remain with each of us. We would like to say, too, that you are
with us at a time of profound national sorrow, when we question
our direction as a nation, and wonder at the violence and hate
which has exploded in our midst with the death of our President.
And so, as you depart, you leave with us in our hearts and
minds this play of another culture, another world, thousands
of miles from our own. We hope that we can show to American
audiences the sorrow, joy, love, the beauty of a less complicated
society than our own; we hope to indicate again that those
fundamental values imbedded in every great work of art are
values which cross every boundary line, and touch the heart. In
attempting to transmit this spiritual insight into another time and
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personal concern in the midst of her more than busy life reflected an
amazing sensitivity.
When I was given the Chair of the Gujarat State Handicrafts and
Handloom Development Corporation Ltd. in 1975, she told me, Now
you can articulate your own vision into the creative work of our rural
people give them confidence Mrinalini, that is what they need. She
was a good friend through the years though I was critical of the Emergency
and told her so. I also disagreed with the foreign cultural festivals which
I felt did no good, especially to our artisans, with many foreigners
deciding what shape our crafts should take! I wrote to her whenever I
felt our art was being descerated or destroyed and her response was
always positive.
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him though we tossed around many. One day, while on a drive I spotted
the name of a village. It was spelt Mohal. What a lovely name, I said,
One who is desired and Vikram agreed. Actually it was not pronounced
like that at all but we felt it was just perfect, and decided to have a naming
ceremony.
Up and up we climbed into the snow-clad mountains of the Rohtang
Pass. Raju placed Mohal in the arms of his aunt Mallika in accordance
with tradition, while Vikram recited Sanskrit verses. We named Mohal
in the lap of the Himalayas. It was such a happy, carefree moment, all
of us together on a holiday after many years.
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MEXICO
AND
JAPAN
few days the whole of my right arm was swollen and horribly painful.
I went from doctor to doctor and was finally that told it could be a frozen
shoulder, for which there was no proper treatment but would disappear
a a dreadful predicament for a dancer.
One year passed in absolute agony. The helplessness of not being
able to do anything anymore wore me down. I went home to my Taravad,
Anakkara Vadakath for ayurvedic treatment. My aunt Ammayi (Susheela
and Vinodinis mother) had prepared all sorts of special dishes but tears
came to her eyes when I tried to eat the tasteless Kanji without salt. The
moosad tried his best to massage my arm with various oils but it still
remained painful and I went back to Ahmedabad without any significant
improvement.
Later in the summer Vikram took Mallika and me for a holiday to
Kerala. Out of the blue came a telegram inviting me to go to Mexico
City as a guest choreographer for the Ballets Folklorico Mexico. The
Olympics were to be held there that year and choreographers from five
continents had been invited for what was called the Cultural Olympics.
I was extremely reluctant because of my arm but Vikram who never
believed in passing up an opportunity insisted.
As it was holiday time no musicians were available. Darpana was
Tasher Desh
closed. I decided we would take the original music of
(The
Kingdom of Cards, by Rabindranath Tagore) and do the whole dance
drama in Gujarati folk style. Minal, as always, came to my rescue. She
worked with a group of musicians who specialized in the songs of Tagore,
and in a short while made a recording on tape. Meanwhile, I went to
the villages of Gujarat and bought costumes and ornaments for the men
and women. It was a hectic ten days. Minal and I had to take all sorts
of injections including the small-pox vaccination and to our horror, she
broke out in spots. We were afraid that the immigration authorities would
not allow us in so she wore a long sleeved blouse and covered herself
with her sari as best as she could. Fortunately, the reaction disappeared
in a week with homeopathic medicine and by that time we were safely
in Mexico City.
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AND
JAPAN
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that I noticed the four girls who were the princesses. They held their
fingers in a mudra called mushti but without clasping their thumbs. Only
then did I look at my own hand and realized that I still could not bend
my fingers properly and had taught them to do it that way!
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In our spare time we were taken to see the garden of the temple
Ryoanaji which is done in sand and stone, exquisite in its stark simplicity.
While I was walking, I heard a sound that was between a bell and a drum.
For a while I listened and then asked what it was. That is a sacred drum,
the guide told me.
Can I go in and see it? No one is allowed in there or even to touch
them, was the reply. Only the priests go in. So I stood still for a while
and listened.
That night after our performance, we were all astonished to see two
monks carrying brocade cushions on which were placed two exquisite
drums one of wood and the other of painted lacquer. They are for you,
they said. No one in all these years has ever remarked on the sound.
Please use them as you will. They are as sacred as your dance!
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time Mrinalini turns away from the Sringara Rasa the stock
emotion of classical dance tradition. and she replaces the comistress, in eternal dalliance with her divine lover, with the
woman of our time who seeks love but turns to death for
comfort. The shoddy, daily reports obscure the fact of the
destruction by the community. These women have made a mad
bid for freedom. But others, who die a natural death, have also
been destroyed. The dance, presented in aid of Vikas Griha,
the Ahmedabad home for destitute women is not the dance of
the court or the old temple. It is a dance for village streets. The
ballet has four short segments it presents the four seasons in
a womans life : the young girl in her animal energy, the shy
maiden longing for her lover, the woman cowering before the
harshness of the alien community she has come into. And then,
visibly, she shrinks. Somehow she has been cut off from the
source of life.
The community makes, awkward gestures of atonement but
they come too late. For a woman, Mrinalini says, death is not
the absence of life it is the absence of love. The method she
uses is lucid. It is a language without words. There is the flute,
the mridangam, the idakka and the bhol. The practised cruelty
emerges in the syllables of the bhol and in the variations of the
rhythm that now becomes harsh, now recedes and falls.
Alternating, they explain the interaction of the cruelty of the
community and the emotion of the woman. The veil is used to
denote the different seasons. The gunghat of the bride is changed
for the coarse grey of the fading woman. To a rural audience,
it will be an explicit gesture conveying both the status of the
dancer and her emotional condition.
All my dance dramas seemed to take up a universality of thought
and it was not strange that in many parts of Europe and America women
Memory
came to me and said that
reflected their own problems. I remember
especially in Sweden how a woman wept in my arms after the show. It
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creatures of Prometheus, that God who gave liberty and dignity to man?
One by one pictures appear; familiar pictures. There is Martin Luther
King, his wife, Coretta King. There is Ho Chi Minh and Krushchev.
Jonas Salk
There is Pope John and the discoverer of penicillin
. And, of
course, Mahatma Gandhi. There are many creatures of Prometheus,
trying to save mankind, to spell out freedom in their own way. But there
are those who still suffer. The terrible awe-inspiring picture of the
Vietnamese mother with her dead child in her arms flashes across the
screen. The Indian dancer cannot but respond. She dances the dance
of the suffering of women, her youth, her aspirations, her child, growing
up only to be snatched away and killed in a senseless war.
Let us destroy these people, the other dancers say to her. We will
avenge you. But she shakes her head. Violence can never be met with
violence. If we cannot love, let us be non-violent. That is the only way
to peace in the world. We have to learn to respect and tolerate each
other. Love may come later, but now it is imperative that all women
accept humanity as their child. Violence can never solve anything except
to beget hate.
But the prima ballerina protests and with a drawing of the hand of
Lenin behind her, she dances in protest, for nothing she says can be
solved except by protest. So both the creeds meet and decide that
dancers cannot exist only within the framework of their studios. There
is no solution, no quick answer, no easy Platitudes just the fact that
no one can live in isolation any more. The problem of existence is theirs,
and somewhere an answer must be found, if humanity is not to be wiped
off the face of the earth. Each one feels the horror of the crimes
perpetuated in the name of justice and can no longer blame it upon the
inexorable decree of the gods.
Representing two cultures, East and West, in angular circles, the
dancers moved, devastated, searching for an answer. The spaces between
the cultures slowly diminished and in the last scene, the dancers came
together, all sense of strangeness banished, both committed to find an
answer. An answer that would involve all of us in a liberation of the divine
in human beings. What was the message of the ballet then? The
togetherness of the East and West. For us to be Creatures of Prometheus,
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to realize the problems that are destroying the world and above all, not
be silent. To become human beings made in the image of God. To bring
peace upon the earth so that we may live in freedom. Prometheus has
been bound upon the rock too long. Let us free him forever.
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PARTING
WITH
V IKRAM
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pressure. He grinned and replied, Dont hassle me. Ive just got a clean
chit on my blood pressure. Bye, Papa, she said as she kissed him!
See you.
When Vikram left for Thumba on theth28
I was happy that he would
come home with me and spend sometime at Chidambaram over the New
Year and we could go for a holiday. I spoke to him on the phone later
and he told me that he had changed and rushed to the function with
Hanumanthiah a few minutes before the Minister arrived. The next day,
the 29th was taken up with project meetings and ended at one in the
morning. when he said, Lets go ahead, with his usual enthusiasm and
smile.
th I woke early and was reading his speech
On the morning of the 30
in the newspapers when the phone rang. It was Mr Murthy from Thumba.
I dont remember what he said but I shouted, Cant you try breathing,
resuscitation. No!, he said, He died last night in his sleep. Was there
anyone nearby? I asked. Did he ask for help? No, he said, no one
was there. He never liked anyone sleeping in the outer room.
Oh God! Oh God! I thought how can this be true. Suddenly the
flat filled with people, mostly his colleagues. They had already informed
the family and booked a call to Kartikeya and Raju in Cambridge. I rang
Saralaben and Kamala. The whole day passed in a daze. My friend Pratima
Parekh came, then Rekha Menon and Minal, and many many others. It
was a nightmare.
Mallika was at the studio. I rang Prabhat Mukherji, her director. He
stopped the film shooting immediately and told Mallika he was taking
her home as Amma was not feeling too well. Dreadfully worried, she
begged him to tell her what had happened but all he said was, I dont
know. When they entered she rushed to me and said, Oh thank God,
Amma you are all right. I held her and said, Its Papa, darling. Hes
gone. She was speechless. Weeping, we clung to each other. It just did
not seem possible.
Even now as I write this, so many years later, the tears pour down.
Vikram was brought to Mumbai that evening by plane with many of his
colleagues accompanying him and taken to an open place at the airport
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PARTING
WITH
V IKRAM
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PARTING
WITH
V IKRAM
After Vikrams death, tragedy after tragedy stalked the family. My dearest
Motaben (Anasuya Sarabhai) died in 1972. It was Ganesh Chaturthi and
I had sent Kartikeya in the morning to her, to pay his respects. In the
afternoon, a message came that she was dying and I rushed there but
she had already gone. Saralaben sat by her side and I joined her. My heart
went out to Saralaben who had the terrible experience of seeing her
children die. Mridulaben, who had become very close to me in recent
years (I stayed with her in Delhi) suffered deeply for her mother for she
felt that the family were not looking after her, with the care that she
needed. Please Mrinal do something, Gautam and Gira do not bother
with her, she told me. I felt helpless for she had never opened to me,
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but I sent Kartikeya to meet her often, as she was very fond of him and
he too felt a deep affection for her.
Mridula too was very ill off and on and in 1974 we knew she was
dying. We all went to Delhi to be by her side as she lay in a coma,
sometimes opening her eyes when we called her name. I telephoned
Indiraji through Usha Bhagat, as I knew she would like to be with the
family and she came to the hospital. Mridula opened her eyes and Indira
said, You are such a brave soldier and Im sure you will conquer this!
Sheikh Abdullah also came and I like to think that Mridula was aware
of his presence.
After she died, her body was laid out in the compound of her home.
It was so ironical that on either side of her stood Indira Gandhi and Sheikh
Abdullah, the two antagonists. She had given her life for Sheikh Abdullah.
And because of Indiras family she had been jailed. In death she had
brought them together. Leaving the house Indira wrote me a note, Would
the family like me to arrange someone to sing bhajans at the crematorium?
After Mridulabens death, Sarlaben become a shadow of her former
self. Ambalal Sarabhai had passed away in 1967. He had been the pivot
around which I felt the family stood united and was one of the most
remarkable men I have ever met distinguished, gentle, widely read,
always courteous and kind. His charities were many, but he never allowed
his name to be publicised. He treated all the children alike but I had
always felt that Vikram was special to him. This was apparent after his
stroke in 1959. He could hardly recognize people but when Vikram came
and in his usual boyish manner called Papa from faraway, his face would
light up and he would say Vikram. Sarlaben never left his side and
nursed him with utmost devotion. After his death, the family felt apart.
It was tragic and something I could not understand. These children had
been loved greatly by their parents and were also highly educated, taking
the best from both the worlds. However bizzare and unconventional,
their viewpoints and actions were never criticised but always understood.
A few months after Mridulas death, Sarleben slipped out of life, in
January. It was truly the end of an era.
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Moving on
A
loneliness. It is not because of the lack of good friends but the feeling
of not having someone around everyday. Vikram led such a busy life that
he naturally could not often come out with me. Mallika, after she grew
up, has been my closest and dearest companion. We seem to share one
soul and we both know that we need each other for wholeness. I had
many men friends, close and dear to me, but they had their own lives
to live. Even though many of them wished to marry me, I could not see
myself as a wife to anyone save Vikram. Even after Vikram died, I was
perhaps too independent to share my life with any one person. I was
deeply devoted to my own family, to my children and my grandchildren.
Yet, I had to be careful not to be possessive but only supportive. It was
difficult but I hope I succeeded at least in a small way. Only Krishna
was permanent in my life and I clung to him.
Perhaps because I lost my father early in life I turned to God as my
only companion: father, lover, guide. It was Krishna whose name was
constantly on my lips and it has been Krishna who has guided me
through the years. I am a believer in prayer and that there is always a
guidance open to us when we pray. It has always been Krishna to whom
I appealed when things around me became too turbulent. Sometimes I
was angry too and showed him that anger because we all want things
our way. But the real answer is complete surrender, the most difficult
action.
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MOVING
ON
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sat a friend of hers, the Judge Mia Bouy. Seeing me with her, he asked,
How is she? for it was a few months after Vikrams death, and everyone
in Ahmedabad shared my sorrow. He came and sat by me and said, I
want you to come with me to Ahmedabad to see Baba. He is a vehicle
for Shirdi Baba (who died in 1918) to talk to us. He will bring you much
comfort. A year passed before I was destined to meet him. It was in
Maninagar, a suburb of Ahmedabad, in a small temple to Shirdi Sai Baba
and outside sat this simple Gujarati man. Every Thursday he would be
possessed by Baba. Suddenly his face, his demeanour would change.
He would even smoke bidis as Baba had done.
All questions would be answered. I just sat there and felt comforted.
After that I went to him regularly and he told me to visit Shirdi, where
Sai Baba had lived. So I went. Much has been written of Baba, the strange
man who was both Hindu and Muslim and accepted by both communities
as a messenger of God at Shirdi. I touched the tree under which he had
sat, gathered the embers from the fire he had lit and prayed to his statue
in marble that had eyes that seemed to look into mine. One part of me
felt that all this was play acting. Yet I dismissed the rational mind and tried
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to merge into that faith and trust that I saw around me a great and
wonderful simplicity of utter bhakti, the surrender to the cosmic force.
But many happenings were strange and could not be answered logically.
Tragedy seemed to follow tragedy with Vikrams death in 1971. In 1973,
a great flood took place in Ahmedabad when the Sabarmati river burst
its banks. Our home, Chidambaram,was on the banks of the river and
below the garden were the thick walls of an old fort made of brick, where
Vikram had created for me a small open-air theatre using the walls as
they originally stood. We had many of our performances in this strikingly
aesthetic atmosphere. That fatal day, August 31, 1973, we went out in
the morning to help the slum-dwellers on the banks and when we
returned, found that we too were swamped. The river rose slowly but
steadily. Then brick wall smashed and fell into the swollen river. Soon,
the entire theatre was engulfed and swept away. We could not save even
a single brick. Above the theatre, on higher land, Vikram had built a small
work room for himself which we loved. It was a two-room building, fully
equipped with a music system (for he would never do without music),
a desk and a small library of his books. We took out as many objects
as possible which were movable. Mallikas friends from the IIM came to
help. We also had to empty our own sitting room which was near the
edge of the river. We sat at night on the bank and at 1 a.m., the entire
land, where Vikrams studio was, was cut like a cake and disappeared into
the furious waters. Mallika burst into tears and I could hardly restrain
myself.
Simultaneously, a very strange incident happened some miles away
at my sister-in-law, Manoramas farm. Vikram had been cremated there
and the river claimed that land at the same time. I wondered if this was
a message to me to stop mourning. Strangely enough, I met a woman
some months later who was psychic, and who knew nothing about me.
She said, Your halo is dark with sorrow you have lost a dear one but
you must stop trying to bring him back. Every year is a binding force
it is time you let him go.
Soon after, Swamy Dayananda came into my life. At that time, I was
president of the Chinmayananda Mission in Ahmedabad and had helped
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build a centre for Vedantic studies along with my friend Shakuntala Desai.
I requested her to look after him as I could not face anybody at that time.
But he insisted firmly that I take him personally to the talk and accompany
him everywhere. I can never forget the tremendous strength and comfort
that he gave me, never asking about my sorrow. Only once or twice, he
would say gently, Its bad today, isnt it? Just remember, it will pass. Slowly
I became calmer and could face the world once more.
Later, listening to him in Mumbai explaining the Brahma Sutras
with such a clarity and authority, I fell deeply in love with his insight
and perception and with him as the preceptor. Since then he has guided
me and spent time with all of us at Chidambaram.
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no more. The younger son of Suhrid who had been working many years
in the textile mill Calico was eased out in a most reprehensible way. Our
son Kartikeya had begun working part-time (as he was still studying at
M.I.T.) in the Operational Research Group in Vadodra. The Calico Mills,
which was my father-in-laws creation and in which both Gautam and
Gira worked had become one of the most famous textile mill in India.
Sarabhai Chemicals was entirely built by Vikram and had already acquired
a fine reputation for excellence. He had affiliations with Squibb in USA.
Merck in Darmstadt, Germany, and Geigy in Switzerland. Many of their
executives had often dined with us and become good friends. They were
very fond of Vikram and would sing his praises to me.
For some strange reason, Gautam almost stopped all financial benefits
from the family business. In what seemed like a scorched earth policy
be began to destroy the very foundation of the businesses. Perhaps it
was because his children were not interested in the business or perhaps
a it was because of a deep-rooted jealousy of a younger brother who had
excelled him in every sphere. Even our residence in Mumbai Kashmir
House which belonged to the family was locked up by him and we were
not allowed to stay in it. It was no use protesting that the sixth floor
had been built for Vikram by my mother-in-law and was actually partowned by us. Vikram had needed an apartment when he became the head
of Atomic Energy, and Sarlaben did not want him to live separately
though later he moved into another apartment because of Gautams
constant bickering and resentment. Kashmir House, was for us, a home
away from home. Gautam kept it locked and sealed for thirteen years
and eventually sold it.
Gautambhai had been a good friend, not very close, but if I ever
needed him, I always felt he would be there for me. That is perhaps why
his complete betrayal of the family came as a terrible shock and I have
never been able, to this day, understand his attitude, and fully reconcile
to this betrayal.
In 1993 Suhrid wrote us a confidential note:
In 1966, when Vikrambhai joined the Atomic Energy Commission
and the Space Research Organisation, instead of entrusting the
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could help. Destiny again! Vikram and I had always led an unostentatious
life. Both of us while living comfortably never had luxurious habits. All
the money we earned went to our institutions. One had always felt that
the larger family was there in the background in case of need, but now
things had changed.
Now it was desperate. It was fortunate, though sad, that my family
in Chennai decided that the property should be divided. Gilchrist Gardens
was financially impossible to maintain and so it was pulled down as also
my mothers smaller house beside it. The entire land was distributed as
was my fathers wish to the four children and I received a share which
literally saved us. We needed this money badly for immediate financial
requirement and to try and start a small business now that we were not
involved in the larger Sarabhai business. What I did feel bad about was
that even a small plot of land Vikram had gifted to Kartikeya had to be
sold. This was the only land we had outside our family home,
Chidambaram. A piece of land which Vikram had got for the Nehru
Foundation for Development was developed by Kartikeya after his return
from M.I.T. It was a completely barren patch and today it is a heavily
forested area. It was here that Kartikeya established VIKSAT in 1976 for
promoting more participation of people in development and the Centre
for Environment Education in 1984. VIKSAT today works in promoting
peoples participation in natural resource management and the Centre for
Environment Education that works in many parts of India and S.E. Asia.
Both Kartikeya and Mallika have inherited Vikrams gift of creating new
institutions of awareness. CHETNA a Centre for Health, Education,
Training and Nutrition Awareness for women, was also initiated by
Kartikeya and has now expanded under the excellent management of
strong, capable and dedicated women headed by Indu Kapur. Raju who
has become a fine designer with a clientele mostly in Europe, the USA.
and Japan, has been a great support not only to him but to all of us. Both
of them have kept good relations with the younger group of the family
and when Gautam died in August, 1995, Kartikeya was requested to take
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it back into position which probably saved not only my foot but the show
as well, and the audience was none the wiser!
The American CBS Television were very keen to have my creative piece
on the Rig-Veda
televized, but there was a strike in the USA. So from
Seattle we drove to Vancouver in Canada, and Faubion Bowers, the
writer, interviewed me. There is a postscript to this story. In 1982 Mallika
and I had lunch with the then C.E.O. of N.B.C. I told him about my
programme saying I was sorry I never saw it nor received a copy. Let
me see if I can find it in our archives, he said and sure enough in a few
days I had a copy!
Again in 1973 we danced at the Brooklyn Academy in New York.
In the audience was a young composer called Joel Thome. He was filled
with admiration for our work and had become spiritually immersed in Sri.
Savitri, Flame of theand
Forest
Aurobindos philosophy. He was writing
wanted
me to compose the dance piece. Years later in 1982, he came to India and
worked with our musicians in a very interesting fusion of Indian and
Western music, perhaps one of the first experiments of the kind.
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Even now, so many years later, there is not a single day that I do
not hear Vikrams name from someone who had been moved by his
demeanour and simplicity. Many older men felt towards him as a father
to a beloved son. Bucky Fuller, father of the geodesic dome, Eric Erikson,
who profoundly reshaped views of human development, Kasturbhai
Lalbhai and many others loved him dearly. Women too fell for him and
he often helped them in their work and always had time to solve their
problems, I wish to relate here an incident: Vikram was at a high
powered dinner in Washington and surrounded by many lovely women.
It was Estelle Ramey (her husband was head of Atomic Research and
she herself a distinguished doctor) who related the story to me: He was
so handsome and talked so well that all the women surrounded him. They
talked of fashion and suddenly he said you should see the beautiful saris
my wife wears. No American man (Estelles words) would have brought
in his wife at that particular moment she said. I determined then to meet
this marvellous paramour!
Vikram brought many distinguished men and women home. Once
he said Mrs Jonas Salk was coming to spend the day. I was thrilled as
Jonas whom I met later, was a hero of mine! She and I spent the whole
day together and when she left she gave me her exquisite book of poems.
It was only the next day that Vikram casually said, She was married to
Pablo Picasso before! What I said. You mean shes Francoise Gilot, why
didnt you tell me! Francoise was very amused when I told her this in
New York later.
Vikrams encouragement and advice to young men and women
inspired them to work in new fields. There were many who wrote to him
for advice. Once he wrote saying, Why do such nice women marry the
wrong men! I didnt! I shout back! He was always renewed when he
came home (it became only weekends as more responsibilities piled up),
and I laughingly said one day, Viki its always Deepawali when you are
home. He replied (how well I remember) Chidambaram is the place
I love most and the next is Thumba.
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herself in dance, and decided that it was in the performing arts that she
could find her own freedom. While she had studied with me, and had
taken part in all the academy perormances, the decision only came at
the tragic moment of her young life. She had faced her Indian Institute
of Management entrance exam bravely after Vikrams death, and was
doing exceptionally well in spite of snide remarks from jealous people
who said she had got in only because she was his daughter. She worked
desperately hard to prove herself. She went on to be chosen the best
student and got the prestigious Industrial Scholarship (the I-Schol)
which is given to students who make it to the first ten places, and has
since then applied her skills of management to the Darpana Academy,
a great blessing for me!
In 1977, she was invited to participate in a festival in Paris. She had
danced in Delhi for the Youth Festival and the well-known critic Subbudu
had written, The whole evening should have gone to Mallika. This was
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a great compliment as she was not thinking of a dance career at that time
though she practised for several hours along with all of us. The next day,
there was a lunch at the Sangeet Natak Academy and I told Mallika to
please wear a sari and some jewellery. her reply was, Why should I? Thats
not being true to myself. She came wearing a very short leather skirt with
high Gucci boots, which I had bought for her with Nathan Clarke advising
me when I was in Italy. Everyone looked a little shocked, but all the young
pressmen flocked around her and were enchanted! This non-conventional
honest attitude all through her career has caused her a great deal of pain
but she has always insisted on being truthful to her inner self. It has often
led to mild clashes in the family, but there is too much love between all
of us for these clashes to be more than honest arguments!
She danced in Paris at theth15International Dance Festival, and to
our great joy an announcement on All India Radio told us that she had
won the Golden Star award from amongst 400 dancers of twenty-two
companies from all over the world as the best soloist. She was the first
Asian and the youngest dancer to have ever received the award. I was
at home reading, with radio tuned on. When I heard that she had
received the award I literally jumped with joy. She had made it on her
own. It was later that I learnt that the receipient before her had been
Nureyev, the great Russian ballet dancer. My American dancer friend
Jean Erdman wrote to me later youd have been truly proud of Mallika.
She was spectacular, and one could see you through her. Strangely
enough, though Mallika looks more like Vikram in real life, on stage, she
is strikingly like me.
When she went on her first professional tour in 1979, she was very
nervous because she danced in all the same places as I had from 1949
onwards. She got rave reviews everywhere. An Italian critic wrote, We
have seen Mrinalini dance and we have loved her. And now here comes
the daughter. You can see she is not only a dancer but a student. But
whereas when you see Mrinalini dance you see Shiva inward, esoteric,
very serious, ascetic. when you see Mallika, you think of Krishna very
playful, very joyous, exuberant. That was surely one of the most perceptive
of reviews.
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To our great joy, Samvit was born in 1976. This time Raju and Kartikeya
(who were still abroad) felt that he could be born in the United States
because they were confident about the hospital and the doctor. As in
Mohals case, Raju hoped that the sun would shine on the day her baby
was born. Although it was April, the Boston air was still cold and she
thought that this time her wish would not be fulfilled. But when the
doctors came in to see her they greeted her in short-sleeved shirts. She
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was thrilled to hear that in eighty years it was the first April with a bright,
sunny morning! This time too, her baby Samvit came into the world as
she had wished!
Three months later I welcomed them in Ahmedabad and I cannot
forget the smile that Samvit gave me when he woke up in my arms. They
came back in July, and I was delighted that he looked so much like my
family the Menon clan! Mohal grew more and more like Vikram and
looking at the two lovely children, I feel sad that Vikram has not been
able to share this happiness.
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spent the entire day. Her blood was tested every hour. I stayed with her
throughout, dreading the doctors verdict.
Finally, I met with the doctors after several tests. They too came to
the conclusion that it was a brain tumour. I was devastated. I went to meet
Dr Wynn for the final result. He told me that it was a pitutary tumour
and an operation was imperative. I asked him whether we could go home
for a few months to decide, and consenting very reluctantly he told
Mallika, whom he had grown very fond of, that the minute she felt anything
wrong with her vision she should come back. He taught her how to
monitor it. We went home and I wondered how to get the money for the
operation, praying all the while that it would not come to that. Borrowing
from anyone, even friends, was something I just could not do.
Some months passed. Mallika felt she was not any better and back
we went to the U.K. This time we stayed with the B.K. Nehrus. Kartikeya
prepared to come at a moments notice, and Jina who hated travelling
kept his passport ready. I steeled myself for the worst. Again Mallika
went through the painful, tiring tests and the doctor decided on a brain
scan. Dr Wynn told me that the operation was a must. Unfortunately
Fori masi (Mrs Nehru) had gone out of town and I was alone in the
house. There was no one to talk to. The entire night I spent praying
Krishna! Help me out of this crisis, I wept quietly for I did not want
Mallika to know yet about the operation.
A year earlier when I had been at my cousin Vinodinis house in
Vadodra, she casually showed me a letter from a mutual friend who had
written about a healer in the UK. While we were waiting for Dr Wynns
final diagonsis I thought of going to the healer whose address I had
brought with me and who lived just outside London.
Mallika and I went by train to visit him. It was an astonishing
experience. He was a coalminer who spoke with the accent of his class.
With him lived a woman in whose house the healings took place. They
both welcomed us warmly and the healing session began. The whole
procedure was intriguing. The miner first shut his eyes and almost
immediately went into a trance. The woman who was a medium then
guided him to Mallika who lay like on a hospital bed. He ran his fingers
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A loving daughter.
over the psychic body. That itself was so amazing because his fingers
moved over the body very close, not even a centimetre away yet never
actually touched the physical form. When Mallika was being examined,
there was a strange fragrance of Muslim agarbatti in the air. When the
miner spoke in his trance-state his language was polished and accentless.
He told us later that it was a Muslim doctor with a team of specialists
who had come to diagnose Mallikas case. After several sittings he also
performed a small operation on her back. It is difficult to describe the
scene for he went through all the motions of an operation, like asking
for the instruments one by one from the woman assistant and his hands
were those of a skilled surgeon. After he stitched up the wound, all on
the psychic body, he told Mallika, I may have to turn you over at night.
So do not be frightened if you feel that movement. There is nothing
to worry about now. You may see a slight redness at the back! No
payment was taken for any of the treatment. All I could do was sometimes
bring food and drink and leave it in the pantry.
We waited anxiously for the final result of Mallikas tests and scans
and the date of the operation. After a week Dr Wynn called me urgently
to his office. I went with Mallika, my heart in my mouth. He sat there
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looking very serious with another famous consultant who had done her
head scan.
He asked us to come in and sit down. The dreaded moment for me
had come. A most extraordinary thing has happened, he said. Mallika
has no pituitary tumour. Hers is a case of one in a million. We sat up
all night looking through our books and realized its whats called an
empty-cellar phenomenon. The pituitary thinks it is a tumour and acts
that way! Nothing need be done!
Perhaps only a mother can understand my feelings. We flew home
and I went straight to Shirdi. Many years later, Mallika and I took courses
in Pranic Healing and use it constantly with success. To me the belief
in spiritual healing increases more and more.
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Tuang Chang
I
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unconsciously I broke the ice when I took the potent rice drink MaoTai in my hand to toast my companions at the table. Mr Yao Chung Ming
said It is not very strong, perhaps to reassure me, and I replied
spontaneously, Then whats the use of it? at which they all burst into
laughter. From then on we became good friends!
The entire trip was very interesting. Mallika kept a detailed diary
which is of great interest now, for then China was still very much under
the influence of Chairman Mao. At every meal I was requested to speak
and was constantly teased by the group never to repeat an idea or
sentence! The constant toasting with the words Kam-Tei (dry your
glass) reminded me of K.P.S. Menon, our ambassador in Russia. He once
told me that in the USSR. there was always a great deal of toasting,
and when suddenly he was asked what they said in India he replied with
the first words that came out of his mouth: Ek dum so that became
our toast too!!
I had choreographed a new dance drama for ChinaAhimsa
called
which
was the story of Sangamitra, taking Gautama Buddhas message of peace
Ahimsa
to foreign lands. We opened the show with
and from the applause,
felt it was appreciated. The costumes were based on Ajanta frescoes.
The next day, the ambassador, K.R. Narayanan, requested us to
delete the piece as it might be misconstrued as preaching. Such is
diplomacy!Tasher Desh
Tagores dance drama was also not appreciated by
the Chinese press. Mallikas photo made the front pages almost everyday
and she became the rose from India! One of them Madam Zhang Joen
is the Art Director of the oriental song and Dance Ensemble, Beijing
where she teaches Bharatanatyam to several hundred students.
My mother died the same year while I was away in the UK. On my last
visit to her she had been unwell. I was just leaving for London. As I kissed
her we both had tears in our eyes and I cried all the way to the airport,
partly for my own unhappy childhood and partly for a lost feeling, a
appreciation of her which I was only now able to realize. My mother
was a distinguished member of Parliament and was close to Pandit Nehru
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choreographSavitri
. Once when Dilip Kumar Roy, a friend of Ambalal
Sarabhai gave a concert in Ahmedabad, he asked me to do a dancepiece as (in his own words) more people will come if they know you
are dancing! It was he who later gave Vikram and me a letter of
introduction to Bertrand Russell. It was at that performance with him
that I first received a telegram of blessings from the Mother, which I
have cherished ever since.
Years later in Chennai at Mummys home, Seyril, a devotee of the
Mother came to meet me bringing books onSavitri
. I read and reread
the text and found it very difficult to create a dance piece, but she
persisted and met me many times. Finally I gave up but it haunted me
and the guilt that it was something undone bothered me. I finally used
Sunil Bhattacharyas inspirational music and the inspirational words of
Savitriand danced the piece but it was not really successful, as it had
not taken possession of my soul.
In 1982, I was invited with Mallika to talk and dance onShivain the
Philadelphia library by Stella Kramrisch for the exhibition Manifestations
Inside Outside
of Shiva. Mallika was then publishing a magazine called
,
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Revanta, my third grandchild was born in 1984. Mallika had been very
very sick with jaundice for many months. Suddenly out of the blue she
received a call from Delhi that the famous theatre director Peter Brook
wanted to meet her and was coming to Ahmedabad. She was still ill,
waiting for the baby to be born, when he arrived. She met Peter and
after he left, came rather dazed to my room saying, He wants me to
consider doing Draupadi in his production of the Mahabharata. And look
at me, yellow and ugly and waiting for my baby!
She left for Paris when Revanta was a month old, and for five years
lived and breathed the Mahabharata, first in French, then later in English.
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It was a difficult time, especially with the baby, but she struggled through
it with real courage and determination. She lived through all the crises
and made an international name for herself. When I met him in Paris,
Peter told me, She is an amazing worker and has not missed a single
rehearsal.
Bipin, Kartikeya and Raju went to Avignon in France to see the
opening of the Mahabharata there. Bipin wrote, It was a marvellous
performance especially the character of Draupadi. The atmosphere is
absolutely fantastic and the production superb. I had watched rehearsals
of the show and felt the same way as Bipin did. Kartikeya was so moved
by the performance that he wrote a poem on Draupadi which later
Mallika used as a dance piece.
Out of this experience with Peter Brook grew Mallikas own creative
work, a fact she always acknowledges. It has given me great pride to see
her experiment in dance and drama. She has also helped me a great deal
in expanding my horizons.
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she tried desperately for two years to make the marriage work. Bipins
entire family supported Mallika, and his sisters, all professional women
themselves, empathized with her. Bipins parents were heartbroken. As
a mother, I too suffered a great deal as we were all very fond of Bipin
and he was very much part of our family. Fortunately for all of us Bipin
and Mallika have remained good friends and work together at Mapin,
their publishing house. Both adore the children and, like Vikram and me,
take turns being with them, when either one is away on tour. To me Bipin
will always be a son of the family.
Mallika said in an article that as a child she fell over dancers at
Darpana; so did Revanta. He soon began to dance, and though not
particularly happy about practising, would blossom in any performance,
especially in the folk forms. Slowly he learnt Bharatanatyam and when in
November, 1995 three generations danced at the Bloomsbury theatre in
London, I felt very elated! In the childrens production of Krishna-Gopala
in 1996 Anahita also joined in, and they will, I hope, carry on our tradition.
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to know Nadine Gordimer, the 1995 Nobel Prize winner for literature.
We went on to La Jolla to dance at the Mingei International Museum
and then to Tuscon, Arizona where a close friend Prof. Tom Gehrels,
an atronomer at the University of Arizona, had arranged performances.
After our professional tour, there was a special request from the
Indian Embassy to dance for Indian organizations. We zigzagged, flying
all over the USA., which was torture for me. Shubha, one of my dancer
daughters who looked after me all the while, told me many years later
that she and Mallika used to crush half a tablet of Calmpose into whatever
I drank which was usually vodka mixed tomato juice. That was my saving
grace on all flights and still is.
In Atlanta Mrs Martin Luther King wrote me a lovely letter after the
performance:
In bringing Mrinalini Sarabhai to Atlanta, the India American
Cultural Association has provided our city with a unique
opportunity to enjoy one of the worlds finest dance troups. This
very distinguished group has won numerous international awards
and their performance is certain to be hailed as one of Atlantas
cultural highlights of the year. Atlanta and India share a common
heritage in the spirit of non-violence through Martin Luther
King, Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi and this evening we can enrich
the bonds of friendship between us as we share the wondrous
experience of Mrinalini Sarabhai.
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to use in his film so she referred him to me. He was a forceful character,
rather formidable in appearance but extremely sensitive. The film was
Shakuntala
danced to music written by Schubert on the same theme. In
Gujarat we hunted for empty palaces and finally found space in
Himmatnagar where there was an old palace and rocky hills beyond. The
film with all my dancers, Mallika as Shakuntala, Chathunni Panicker as
Dushyanta, Shashi and Shubha as Destiny was very different from the
usual productions. Shown on TV in Germany and other countries, it won
Jorn a lot of accolades. I still remember, whenever the sky clouded over,
Jorn would shout in his rather strong accent, Mrinalini! magic please
and I would pray for the clouds to clear!
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The dance group (without me) first finished touring the USSR. for
a month and then came straight to Japan. I left earlier, from India as there
were some lectures to be given. The Mahabharata
, directed by Peter
Brook, was already in Japan with Mallika as Draupadi playing to packed
houses. It was a real juggling of programmes! The first performance was
in Tokyo at the Aoyoma theatre and was received with immense
appreciation. The theatre was on the ground floor with a stage that could
rise 20 feet so I had to rearrange the choreography! The light arrangements
were done by a truly dedicated crew, who became so attached to us that
they accompanied us everywhere we danced and soon understood each
The Mahabharata
nuance and change.
light designer, Mike Wolt, joined
in to help with the lighting design. Many of the dancers Mahabharata
of the
group had become good friends when I sat, watching their rehearsals
in Paris, and now they were interested in mine.
The second day was made more interesting as some of the audience
wanted me to show how theMahabharata
, which they had seen, could
be interpreted into new meaning through dance. Show us something
in the process of creation, they requested. It was difficult to think up
something immediately but with four dancers and three musicians I
began to depict the nucleus of an idea, making it up as we went along,
talking and dancing. It is, I said, the battlefield after the great war. First
Gandhari the queen comes searching for her two sons Duryodhana and
Dushassana. She dances in great sorrow and takes the body of Duryodhana
upon her lap. Ashwathamma enters and swears vengence against the
Pandavas. He goes stealthily at night to the hut of Draupadis young
children and slays them cruelly. Draupadi enters mad with grief. Nothing
has left her more bereft than this loss. It is as though she is at the end
of her tether, she who has been so brave throughout the exile and war.
Arjunas daughter-in-law Uttaras child is still unborn. Ashwathamma
aims his arrow at Uttaras womb. [Here I changed the ending]. She runs
to Draupadi and they both cry out, Krishna, do not save this child. They
approach Gandhari, take her hand and the three women speak together,
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We will never allow children to be born in the world, till men swear to
give up war. It was an unexpected experiment, choreographed on the
stage and the audience were very involved.
Mallika danced with us wherever she was free and with her came
most of the cast from the Mahabharata who were very excited with the
performances. One day, they sat through the matinee and the evening
show and told me how they were moved by the power of our work. In
Chitrangada and Chandalika, both Mallika and I danced together and
these were the most popular dance dramas. For Mallika it was tiring as
sometimes she joined us after a marathon nine hour show of the
Mahabharata.
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In 1994, Mallika and John Martin, who had become a dear friend and
directed many of Mallikas new experiments, were both discussing how
to build a proper theatre at Darpana. We could not afford to buy land,
and had to make do in the small space available. The theatres in Ahmedabad
were rundown, badly equipped and had no proper amenities. For every
performance we had to put up our own curtains and lights, sweep the
floor, pull out hundreds of nails, and clean the bathrooms, in fact almost
rebuild the hollow structure! Unfortunately, audiences in India have no
respect for theatres. They rip the seats, throw paper everywhere, and
of course, as in all government buildings spit on the walls. For years I
had humbly suggested making all public buildings bright red, a suggestion
not greatly appreciated.
The problem of land was solved when it was decided to hollow out
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the land we already had and make an open air theatre. And that is how
Natarani came into being. Many were the kind friends who helped with
equipment and finance. All Darpanas (mainly Mallikas) earnings went
into the building of Natarani.
It was a truly marvellous and deeply emotional day for me when on
December 28, 1994, it was opened and dedicated to me for forty-five
years of work. Mallika had secretly invited many of the old staff and
students and forbidden me to enter Darpana for three days! I thought
she was decorating the place but when I was grandly escorted to my seat
in true Kerala style, the scene opened with a film of many of my past
photographs put together. Tears poured down my face as I watched. But
the real surprise was still to come. A huge charaka had pride of place
in the centre of the stage. One by one names of past teachers and
students were called out and I nearly fainted when many I had not seen
for years came and placed lamps in the vessel. Shivashankar, Haridas,
Rama Rao, Minaldevi, Rupande, Purnima, Pratiksha, Geeta. As my dear
friend Prabha later told me, many of the audience were also in tears. It
was a stirring experience, very sentimental but heartwarming.
Shadows
I danced my latest piece
and was on a real high. No mother
perhaps has ever had such a tribute from a loving daughter. At that moment
I thanked my Krishna, that in spite of all our tribulations, he had given
me love, the greatest gift of all, and children who cherished me.
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The wedding was quiet, as we had lost three young and very dear
friends that same year. Mohal wanted it in Udaipur and so it was held
there. It was one of the most beautiful yet simple weddings I have ever
been to. It took place in the Jagmandir in the evening. The building
needed no decoration, only the wedding pandal made of leaves and
flowers. The bride Christina looked very beautiful in a sari. The moon
rose as the ceremony ended and lit the sky in radiance. The Maharaja,
Arvind Singhji who had been especially kind about the arrangements,
blessed the young couple, as did all of us.
Raju, looking especially lovely, was surrounded by many of her
relations, who had all motored from Ahmedabad Kartikeya had supervised
the arrangements and taken the Lake Palace Hotel for the night. Many
of their close friends came and helped, and it was an intimate occasion.
Coming back from the ceremony by boat, Samvit, my second grandson
said, Amma, such moments have to be captured and kept.
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often invited into houses for a cup of tea or milk. The latter I swallowed
out of politeness! It was an inspiring task to discover treasures of
workmanship, revive the skills and renew forgotten designs.
An aspect of city life which worried me was the way young women
dressed. Some in jeans, others in white petticoats neither traditional nor
modern. So I thought of the Punjabi salvar kameez, but in a more modern
design. We had excellent designers Villoo Mirza, Laila Tyabji and others.
I spoke to them and told them what I needed. We have some lovely
embroidered yokes, I said. Can we not use them for kurta-like tops with
different kinds of pyjamas to match and make them fashionable and not
too expensive for young people?
So thats how it started, a new fashion, based on tradition as in my
dance compositions! These outfits caught on like wildfire all over India,
and as we opened outlets in many cities, the demand grew. Today, when
I see everyone wearing them (of course far more design oriented and
sophisticated) I feel a real thrill! Everything possible was created for
Gurjari. Bhasin was a wonderful managing director and we were in
complete harmony where taste was concerned. After he left for Delhi,
I had many other excellent young men who became friends and helped
develop the emporium.
In 1988, circumstances made me resign. I had always been deeply
involved with the environment and was aware of the disaster that huge
dams make, especially to the environment of the country. I had read in
the Times of India
of the major disaster of the Machu dam which killed
an estimated 2000 people in a relatively remote area of Gujarat. Also the
trend the world over today is not to build large dams, but to rely on
integrated water systems and developing groundwater resources. I
opposed the idea of thousands of tribal settlements being disrupted and
dispersed which to my mind meant the destruction of a whole culture.
What a furore it created. The Chief Minister, Amarsingh Chaudhary,
asked me to resign from Gurjari. Ironically, he himself was a tribal and
later used it as an excuse to marry a second wife! marry a second time.
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I have always loved reading and books have been my delight and solace.
Inspiration comes to me often through poetry. Many of my dance dramas
began as poems and sometimes, after the dance was produced, I wrote
poetry around the theme. While in Shantiniketan, inspired by Gurudev,
prose poems flowed into my notebooks. My first serious attempt was
a novel about a dancer that I wrote while at Cambridge. It had been sent
and accepted byMeridian Book
Ltd in London and I needed a foreword.
In 1949, Arnold Haskell brought the writer Maurice Collis to my
performance and he was very moved by it. Later, at a dinner party, I shyly
asked him if be could contribute the foreword. I quote a few lines of
his long introduction:
I first met Mrinalini Sarabhai in the wings after one of her
London performances: She was still in the fantastic costume of
her last dance, a small wiry, vital figure, her eyes enormous, very
serious and frank, and her hands animated as if by a life of their
own. I was much stuck by her collected air, the deft was she
spoke and by the quickness of her mind. The story is a true
romance, told with feeling and remarkable sure touch. It has
coherence and balance; the rise and fall of mood are delicately
suggested; the conversations are etched in with very great tact;
she has written a novel which brings her a reputation in this, her
second, field of the arts.
While I wrote mostly about dance, I also loved writing childrens
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to Themla
. She told us you are working hard for Tagore celebration,
if it is not over yet. I am sure that you are thrusting yourself
forward where tireless striving stretches its arms towards
perfection. Something that you knew how to do even before
you met Tagore and something which was reinforced in you after
you met Tagore. Yes thats what you are and thats what I would
like to be.
Some of the childrens books I wrote were centered around Indians
most exquisite paintings. I wanted children to see the best paintings
possible and to buy the books at a nominal price. The project was
sponsored by Tata Mcgraw Hill. I had spoken about this to Jamshed
Bhabha, requesting him to select these pictures (from the museum) for
their desk diaries and later letting me use them for the books. He
thought it a very good idea let me select the picture for the calendars.
They became very popular but are now unfortunately out of print.
My first publication in 1945 was soon after my marriage when the
entire country was aflame with Gandhijis call to freedom. I wrote a
verse-play called Captive Soil
The manuscript lay on my table in our apartment in Mumbai. A
friend of mine, Minoo Masani, had come to see me and while waiting
had picked it up to read. I had met Minoo at Lady Dhanvathi Rama Raus
place at the Mafatlal Park in Mumbai. I was delighted, especially as he
came immediately towards me and sat down. A little overawed at first,
I was by his book Our India which had a tremendous influence on so
many young people. From that evening we became good friends and met
often. He was someone I looked upto as a friend and was impressed when
I heard him speak in public. His amazing clarity of thought and his
memory for facts and figures was astounding. He joined me once for a
holiday in Kodaikanal and our long talks were mostly about the countrys
politics and its future.
When, after reading the play, he suggested that I publish it and show
it to Mr Tenbrock
of the International Book House in Mumbai. I was very
thrilled when Tenbrom
liked it. He was a fine man, an American, full of
good humour and after reading it he said, I would like to publish it but
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Dance was naturally a subject that most of my writing was about. I wrote
much about classical form, Bharatanatyam in particular. Our gurus always
taught us without explanation of the technique behind the art form. So,
when I was asked by the Vadodra University to give lectures on dance,
I thought it was time to write a textbook for young students of my own
academy, Darpana who had begun to ask questions. Even when I studied
from the great gurus like Meenakshi Sundaram Pillai and others, they
were not at all keen to impart the meaning of what we learnt, the shastraic
content, the stories and their spiritual content. It was only at Darpana,
when the Kuchipudi guru C.R. Acharyalu, came to Ahmedabad, that I
began to understand meaningfulness of our dance form and its background.
In the Bhagavata Mela Natakam or Kuchipudi as it is known today, there
is a great deal of emphasis on the canons of the dance technique. It was
perhaps because Brahmin boys studied the art and therefore had the
privilege of being able to understand and learn the Shastras, of which
the Natya Shastra of Bharata was one. In Tamil Nadu, the Pillais
propagated the art as Nattuvanars and the girls who danced were
devadasis who, whilst they preserved the art form, were not particularly
interested in the ancient texts.
When a Brahmin woman, Rukmini married an Englishman, George
Arundale, she was influenced by seeing the dancer, Pavlova, and began
to dance at the age of thirty. She was able to restore Bharatanatyams
technical beauty bringing out all the finer and stronger aspects of this
great art, with her guru, Meenakshi Sundaram Pillai, adding to it her own
sense of design and costume. At that time, she faced great deal of
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Prama
which mainly had articles on the Upanishads. To me the printing
and get-up was most important but soon I did not have the time nor
the finance to continue.
Running an institution like Darpana has been a hard task, though ofcourse
rewarding in many ways. While it was growing, the students were few
and the professional group with their varied emotional make-up could
be contained. As more and more departments were added there were
problems of individual egos and clashes of personalities. It was exhausting
yet challenging for me to get together a good troupe, work endless hours
physically and mentally and then tour all over the world. As most of my
artists came to Ahmedabad from South India, we arranged free
accomodation for them near by so they had no problems of housing.
Some have stayed for more than twenty years. C.T.Acharyalu, joined in
1951 and was still guru in the truest sense of the world till his death in
1998. Sashidharan teaches and is often invited for workshops abroad.
Guru Purushottam guides our music department and has revived the
gottuvadyam. Bharatanatyam is still taught in the tradition of Pandanallur.
Students have become teachers, and Bharat who came to us as a young
tribal boy looks after the folk group and is also an excellent classical
dancer. Mallika continues the fine tradition of Kuchipudi that she studied
under Acharyalu, who taught her for twenty years. Theirs was a guru
shishya relationship and she was able to revive ancient items from the
Bhagavata Mela Natakam.
Perhaps my greatest shock in Darpana came when Chathunni left so
ungraciously. He had told me once that when he was old he would retire
to Kerala, but never teach in any other institution or work with anyone
else. He was extremely proud of his integrity and his truly fine qualities
as a dancer made me put up with is devastating temper and tantrums.
Somehow I always managed to reason with him and we had a marvellous
rapport especially on the stage. He loved and admired Vikram and would
only take criticism from him. Unfortunately he never brooked a rival and
many were the gurus and dancers who left because of him.
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Suddenly, one day with no warning at all, in 1979 he left with his
family and luggage. He came into my office abruptly and said Im going.
Nothing had prepared me. Acharyalu and I were absolutely stunned.
Well I thought, He is going back to Kerala and perhaps feels he cannot
really dance-anymore. But I was very hurt when he started a rival school
under one of my very rich but hopelessly inept students! That really
pained me a great deal but after Vikrams death somehow nothing seemed
to matter. After a few months the institution could not contain him and
I felt sorry hearing stories of his being treated badly and without respect.
He was soon dismissed and had to go back to his home in Kerala.
It was a sad ending to a fine career. But it was also ironical. After
Manushya and other compositions of mine, where there were no heavy
costumes, he disliked donning Kathakali make-up or wearing the elaborate
dress. In China we begged him to participate with the Kathakali group
but he absolutely refused.
On our many tours abroad food was always a major problem, though
now it is so much easier to find vegetarian eats. There were some
hilarious incidents one of which concerned a women musician. Everytime
food was placed on the table she would say ugh loudly and make a face.
It was annoying and embarassing as I had always tried my best to get
a basic diet of rice and vegetables. Once in Amsterdam we went to a
Javanese restaurant, where I thought everyone could have a good almost
Indian vegetarian meal which I specially ordered, with plenty of rice and
hot curries. They served us delicious papad which my musicians ate
with delight, even asking for more. After the meal the woman musician
enquired how they were made. Take a basketful of fresh shrimp, the
cook began, pound and dry them, then...
In spite of many hard knocks over the years, I still have faith in the innate
goodness of human beings. There have been many instances of loving
relationships too with my students and teachers, who left for personal
problems of their own like the Mridangist, Ganeshan, the flutist, Shankara,
the singer, Haridas (now a film-star), Govindan Kutty, who with his
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What is meaningful, what is your fulfillment? people ask me now. You have achieved fame, you are
called the Goddess of dance, why do you go on straining yourself? I have no answer. How can I tell
them that I am only I when I dance. I am only that I AM when I dance. I am only Eternity when I dance.
Silence is my response, movement my answer.
What am I but an abstract from in time, born into a land of deepest symbolism, containing within my
work the past, the present and the future of a conscious force beyond time, beyond space, the echoes
of which may be heard and seen in later vision.
Again and again in the silence I hear the words, Who knows in truth? Who knows whence comes this
creation. Only that God who sees He only knows or perhaps He knows not!
Can anyone ever understand these words? There is no separateness in dance and my entire being.
It is the radiance of my spirit that makes for the movements of my limbs.
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