The Panchakanya festival marked the return of five women from the epic on Koodiyattam stage
The Hindu
Panchakanya utsavam: The return of the five nayikas
It was a celebration of the return of five forgotten women — Ahalya, Tara, Sita, Mandodari and Draupadi — who had disappeared from the Koodiyattam stage over the years. Koodiyattam is perhaps the only theatre tradition where female roles have always been performed only by females. The restriction on depicting panchakanyakas in theatrical performances sprang from an oral edict handed down through generations , which eventually came to be accepted as common belief. And by the beginning of the 20th century, Koodiyattam had been reduced to a temple ritual, having lost its grandeur as a performing art.
The five-day Panchakanya festival, held recently at Thrissur, that featured performances, paper presentations, seminars and discussions on the five epic heroines, also marked a milestone for Usha Nangiar, who led the effort to bring back the five epic heroines and other female characters on to the Koodiyattam stage. But its main outcome was to throw the spotlight on the growth of Nangiarkoothu as a standalone artform.
Till 40 years ago there were only a few roles for women such as Subhadra in ‘Dhananjayam’ and Lalita in ‘Soorpanakhankam’. It was obvious that they were retained solely because of their significance in carrying the story forward. But they were not given scenes with any great acting potential. The two basic documents of the Koodiyattam plays — kramadeepika or stage manual, and attaprakaram or actor’s manual — provided meaty roles for women complete with purappad or entry and nirvahanam or retrospective, which are two of the three key parts of a Koodiyattam performance. It can be assumed that they were sidelined for various reasons including the prevailing social circumstances.
Usha, who started learning Koodiyattam in 1980 at the age of 11, saidl that when she began performing Nangiarkoothu and Koodiyattam, she felt frustrated at the bit roles that existed. Meaty roles and colourful costumes were reserved for men. Usha’s close perusal of Koodiyattam texts led her to believe there was never an outright ban on women; it was merely mentioned that they were not usually presented on stage. Usha’s persuasive arguments convinced her guru, Ammannur Madhava Chakyar to change his stance. Usha continued in his kalari for 17 years. He even trained her in male roles, prophetically telling her it will come in handy some day.
It was Mandodari that Usha depicted on stage first in 2003. Her research showed the role was being performed years ago but the shlokas or actor’s manual were not available. Usha had Sanskrit shlokas composed and she wrote a new attaprakaram for Mandodari lasting five days. Then in a span of over ten years, Usha presented ‘Draupadi’ in 2005, ‘Sita’ in 2007 and ‘Ahalya’ in 2013. Usha’s version of Tara is the only one she hasn’t performed herself. It was staged for the first time at the current festival.
What we saw at the Panchakanya festival was not merely a retelling of the epic stories, but imaginatively interpolating ideas from contemporary literature that reflect on today’s society and women’s status. The festival started with ‘Ahalyamoksham’ or Salvation of Ahalya. Usha’s rereading of the story of Ahalya, who was turned into a stone for infidelity by her husband Sage Gautama and liberated years later by the touch of Rama’s feet, was thought-provoking. It was called ‘Ahalya Vimochanam’, where vimochanam in Malayalam implies a shackled past and the promise of freedom, according to Devi Varma who introduced the character.
The performance starts with Ahalya’s life in the hermitage, with a fawn as her only friend, and her only job being to cook and collect prayer materials for her husband. In her garden, Ahalya watches the bees as they suck honey from flowers, and in a flash it reminds her of a life that could have been. Her trepidation as Gautama enters the hermitage, his indifference as she lovingly fans him, all strongly hint at the frustration of the beautiful Ahalya trapped in a marriage to an old celibate sage. But the highlight was the climax. After Rama liberates her she sits alone in the ashram as the curtain drops. Whether she goes back to her husband as epic texts say remains an open question.