The Wall Street Journal
Brooklyn
Phnom Penh's Royal Ballet of Cambodia, the country's exponent of
Khmer classical dance, has roots going at least as far back as the ninth
century. Like a crown jewel, the dance-and-music troupe's appearances
capped the Season of Cambodia, a two-month series of events and
exhibitions in New York. Performances of "The Legend of Apsara Mera,"
choreographed by Her Royal Highness Princess Norodom Buppha Devi, played
last week at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
The sculptor Auguste Rodin once noted that the perfection of Khmer
classical dance was equaled only by the classicism of the Greeks. It is
restrained and formal, in tone more contemplative than dramatic.
Physically, where Western classical ballet is grounded in five numbered
positions for the feet, Khmer's ballet has its foundation in four key
hand positions, all articulated by seemingly boneless fingers and named
for aspects of nature: tree, leaf, flower, fruit.
Keeping dance traditions as old and formal as these alive and of
interest to contemporary audiences can be complicated. For the Royal
Ballet of Cambodia, the complications were compounded by its country's
French protectorate status, which from the late-19th to the middle of
the 20th century resulted in a reduction of support for the courtly art.
Far more disastrously, from 1975 to 1979 the brutal repressions of the
Khmer Rouge regime all but wiped out the dance traditions and its
practitioners.
After the fall of the Khmer Rouge, the Royal Ballet was gradually
restored and has worked under royal patronage to reshape itself without
losing its connection to its historic ways of dancing and music making.
The current troupe toured with 21 female and three male dancers, as well
as five musicians and four singers. The approximately 90-minute
production shown here revealed both the strengths and weaknesses of
balancing tradition with modernization.
Act One of "Legend," which is itself divided into four episodes,
begins with a ceremony for the god Vishnu as an overture, followed by
short enactments of scenes from Cambodia's "Reamker," an epic poem from
the Sanskrit "Ramayana." Earlier "Reamker" stagings lasted all night.
These scenes, telling of battles between gods and giants, with
appearances by Vishnu and a goddess named Mohini, took about 30 minutes.
Arranged as a sampler of characters from Khmer classical dance, they
felt like compressed demonstrations introducing key figures such as the
giant Asura and the monkey Hanuman.
The most effective of the patchy first act's theatrical scenes
occurred toward the end, during an interaction recounting the possession
of the elixir of eternity. The beautiful Mohini, serenely performed by
Chap Chamroeuntola, toyed with a small mirrored ball, meant to blind her
giant foe and wrest the lotuslike elixir from him, in back-and-forth
actions as playful as they were decisive.
With the unfolding of Act Two, where the Apsaras—the celestial nymphs
of the dance form's heritage—dominate, the program hit its stride and
shimmered hypnotically, as if the subtle, sinuous and liquid ways of
these female dancers embodied the ever-changing waves of light on
watered silk. Crowned by a golden, winged headdress as detailed as the
spires on Cambodia's famed carved temples, the radiant Meng Chan Chara
portrayed Apsara Mera, who legend says mated with Prince Kambu to create
the kingdom of Cambodia.
Framed by six women as ladies-in-waiting, Ms. Meng's nymph showed
extraordinarily sublime control, creating silken, ever-so-slightly
changing postures as seamlessly and evocatively as wisps of vapor. With
incremental execution, the dance's signature flipped-up-and-back
flexed-leg-and-foot pose looked less like a kicked up heel than a pretty
and preened piece of plumage.
When, for the climactic union of Mera and Prince Kambu, portrayed by
two female dancers (Chap Chamroeunmina and Chen Chansoda), actual
physical contact occurred, the very act of touching was almost shocking
given the measured formalities of Khmer classicism's unemphatic methods.
While hardly overtly demonstrative, the unexpected shift from
pervasively iridescent and decorative presentation to hand-to-hand
interchange summarily shattered the fluidly built scene as it described
the nymph's spontaneous reactions to her swain's amorous advances.
A stage-filling harmony wrapped up the program, with eight pairs of
deities in symmetrical rows framing Mera and her Prince. With the
dancers' single-spire headdresses pointing heavenward like so many sharp
beams, and the predominance of golden hues in their sarongs (for the
goddesses) and draped trousers (for the gods), the finale of "The Legend
of Apsara Mera" had the look of a vista of towering temples all
animated as if visited by a gentle breeze. With the legendary prince and
princess at its center, Cambodia's classical dance was living radiantly
ever after.
Mr. Greskovic writes about dance for the Journal.
1 comment:
Royal Khmer Ballet Classic is almost the same as the Western Ballet or the Modern Ballet dance building structures.
The different is only, the modern ballet is fast, use a lot of power but is easier to control the whole movement and the scenery. All of their movement is like in a sport scene. It is an universal dance and not belongs to any country or have their real own identity.
Contrary the Royal Khmer ballet is not universal. It belongs to a country and has their own identity. Their movement for some not family with is hard to understand. It is too slow with a lot of gentles and supplest like a dolphin under the water. Their faces, heads and fingers show the character of a dancer and whole scenery of the dances.
All biomechanical movements of the Royal Khmer Classic dances are not easy to control. The dancer needed a lot of power for balancing their body, feet, fingers and head.
All Cambodian should be proud of their identity and heritages.
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