Yakshagana's Origin and style | Special review from COONDAPUR.COM
Yakshagana is a traditional theater which was founded by Sri Madhwacharya and popularised by Sri Narahari Thirtha combining dance, music, actor-created dialogues, costume-makeup, and stage technique with a distinct style. It is closely connected with other forms prevailing in other parts of Karnataka, and its neighbouring states of Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Tamilnadu and Maharastra.
According to noted theater artist and writer B.V Karanth, classical dance forms like Bharathanatya originated from Yakshagana.
A Yakshagana artist wearing pagaDe or kedage mandhale (Ketaki Mundhale), one type of headwear. PagaDe and kireeTa are worn by male characters, while females wear only small pagaDe.
Yakshagana, like many other forms, defies neat classification into
categories like folk, classical, rural. It can be included into each of
these, or all of them together, depending upon our line of approach.
Being a theater form, unlike a dance form, it is more plural and
dynamic. And hence it exhibits many types and varieties inside itself.
However, Yakshagana can be rightly called a traditional form. Primarily
it is a name given to the form prevailing in Coastal and Malnad areas of
Karnataka, though in fringe forms like Doddata are also called by the
same name often, especially recently. The traditional theater form Mudalpaya of Southern Karnataka, the Doddata of Northern Karnataka, the Kelike in the borders of Andhra Pradesh, the Ghattadakore of Kollegal in Chamarajnagar district – are such forms. Among them, the Ghattadakore is a direct branch of Coastal Yakshagana, while Mudalapaya is the most closely connected form. There is a form called Yakshaganamu in Andhra Pradesh also, which exhibits resemblance to the forms of Karnataka plateau region.
Yakshagana is a recent scholastic name adopted for what were and are
known as Kelike, Aata, Bayalaata, Dashavatara in Karnataka. Yakshagana
actually refers to a style of writing and to the written material or the
Yakshagana poems. There are questions on whether this writing system
originated in Telugu literature and used for poems enacted in Bayalaata.
Yakshagana performance is believed to have evolved from the now-extinct
Ghandharva Grama musical system. Earliest mention is in Sangeetha Ratnakara of Sarngadeva (AD 1210) as Jakka later called Yekkalagaana.
Yakshagana in its present form is believed to be influenced by the
Vaishnava Bhakthi movement. Yakshagana is a separate system of music
independent of Karnataka Sangeetha and the Hindustani music of India,
believed to survive as an indigenous phenomenon only in parts of
Karnataka and Kerala.
Stree Vesha or Female Role is also performed by male actors in Yakshagana
There is some resemblance among the members of the 'Traditional Theater Family' like Ankhia Nata (Assam), Jathra (Bengal), Chau (Bihar, Bengal), Prahlada Nata (Orissa), Veedhinatakam & Chindu (Andhra), Terukoothu Bhagawathamela (Tamil Nadu), Kathakkali (Kerala). Researchers have argued that Yakshagana is markedly different from this group.
Experts have placed the origin of Yakshagana from the 11th century to the 16th century. Earliest limit is fixed by a finding by Vidwan Bannanje Govindacharya
who says a legend goes to show that Sage Narahari Thirtha (c, 1300)
started a Dasavathara Ata performance and a troupe in Udupi and later
this spread to other places and grew into what we call Yakshagana today.
Yakshagana must have been an established form by the time of famous
Yakshagana poet Parthi Subba (1600) to whom Ramayana in Yakshagana is
attributed.
Shivarama Karantha in his research work argues that it is Subba son of
Venkata who is its author, rejecting claims by Muliya Thimmappa and
Govinda Pai citing procedural lapses in their findings.
Because he is said to be a Bhagawatha (singer) himself and is believed
to have founded a troupe, and probably he is the formulator of the
Tenkuthittu (Southern style) of the art. Troupe centers like Koodlu and Kumbala in Kasaragod District,
and Amritheshwari, Kota near Kundapur claim having a troupe three to
four centuries ago. So we can safely assume that this art form had taken
shape by about 1500. However, what we see today as Yakshagana, must
have been the result of a slow evolution, drawing its elements from
ritual theater, temple arts, secular arts like Bahurupi, royal courts of
the time and artists imaginations – all interwoven over period.
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