Astad Deboo | |
---|---|
Born | July 13, 1947 Navsari, Gujrat, India |
Astad Deboo (आस्ताद देबू; born 1947) is an Indian contemporary and choreographer, who employs his training in Indian classical dance forms of Kathak as well as Kathakali to create a dance form that is unique to him, and become a pioneer of modern dance in India.[1] Through his long and illustrious career, he has worked with various prominent performers such as Pina Bausch, Alison Chase and Pink Floyd, and performed in many parts of the world[2][3][4]
He has been awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award in 1996 and Padma Shri in 2007, awarded by the Government of India.[5]
Contents |
Astad Deboo was born in Navsari, though he grew up in Kolkata till the age of six years. Thereafter the family shifted to Jamshedpur, where father was employed with Tata Steel. His mother was a homemaker, and he has two sisters, sisters Kamal and Gulshan.
At the age of six, he started learning the Kathak dance, from the late Indra Kumar Mohanty and late Prahlad Das. He studied at Loyola School, Jamshedpur, from where he passed out in 1964,[6] after he moved to Mumbai and joined B. com. degree from Podar College, University of Mumbai, here while pursuing his degree he happened to see the contemporary dance of the American Murray Louis Dance Company, this changed the course of his life irrevocably. Shortly after wards, Uttara Asha Coorlawala who was studying dance in New York visited Bombay, and later help Astad get admitted to Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance. He left Bombay 1969, on board a cargo boat that set sail from Bombay port, and later hitchhiked his way through Europe to eventually reach New York in 1974.[3]
Over the next decade, he went to attend the London School of Contemporary Dance where he learnt Martha Graham’s modern dance technique and learnt José Limón’s technique in New York. He also trained with Pina Bausch in the Wuppertal Dance Company, Germany and with Alison Chase of the Pilobolus Dance Company, and travelled through to Europe, Americas, Japan and Indonesia. On his return in 1977, he studied Kathakali, under Guru E. Krishna Panikar, in Thiruvalla, Kerala, where he eventually performed at the famous Guruvayur Temple. All these explorations lead to the creation a dance style unique to him, an amalgamation of Indian classical dance and western group dance techniques.[6][7][8]
A turning point in his career came in 1986, when in 1986, when Pierre Cardin commissioned him to choreograph for Maya Plisetskaya, the prime ballerina of the Bolshoi Theater ballet company.[3] Over the years he has collaborated with people, Pink Floyd at the Chelsea Town Hall in London, the Gundecha brothers, with Pina Bausch of the Wuppertal Dance Company, Germany and with the Thang-Tathe martial art and Pung cholom dancers of Manipur. He has also worked for several years, with Tim McCarthy at the Gallaudet University for the deaf performing arts program in Washington, and the production "Road Signs" toured India in 1995, with a troupe drawn from Gallaudet and Deboo's Indian students.[2][9][10][11]
In January 2005, he along with a troupe of 12 young women with hearing impairment, from the Clarke School for the Deaf, Chennai and part of the Deboos Astad Deboo Dance Foundation, performed at the 20th Annual Deaf Olympics, at Melbourne, Australia.[12] He has also choreographed 2004 Hindi film, by painter M.F. Hussain, Meenaxi: A Tale of Three Cities.[13] In 2009, he performed his production, 'Breaking Boundaries' with fourteen street children from Salaam Baalak Trust, an NGO, who had trained with his troupe for six months [8][14]