Padmanabhan Nair

Kalamandalam Padmanabhan Nair (1928–2007) was an eminent Kathakali exponent, equally known for his capacities as a tutor, theoretician and author of a few authentic texts on the classical dance-drama from Kerala in south India.[1]. A son of the Kathakali guru Pattikkamthodi Ravunni Menon, Padmanabhan Nair was one of the early-batch students in Kerala Kalamandalam, where he subsequently joined as a teacher and retired as its principal in 1990. He died on April 3, 2007, at his home in Shoranur, near his alma mater, where he led his post-professorial life with wife and Mohiniyattam practitioner, Kalamandalam Sathyabhama.[2]

Early life

Padmanabhan Nair was born on October 7, 1928 in Kuruvattoor near the Kathakali village of Vellinezhi in the erstwhile Valluvanad territory, now in Palakkad district. After primary schooling, he joined Kalamandalam when he was ten years old. His master was his father, under whom he learnt the art form for over a decade.[3] Srikrishnan in the classical storyplay Subhadraharanam was his debut stage. Padmanabhan Nair also underwent Kathakali studies at the PSV Natyasangham, Kottakkal, before being recruited in Kalamandalam in 1951.

Publications

Padmanabhan Nair has co-authored a book on his father-guru Pattikkamthodi. But his more weighty works are 'Kathakali Vesham' (1980) and 'Cholliyattam' (2000), both two-volume tomes that deal with the grammar and aesthetics of classical storyplays in the highly evolved Kalluvazhi school of Kathakali of north-central Kerala. He was a winner of the Government of India's Central Sangeet Natak Akademi award (1994) and the Kerala government's Kathakali Purasakaram (2006).[4]

References

  1. ^ The Hindu : Kerala News : Greatest teacher of Kerala's own art form
  2. ^ http://international.zeenews.com/inner1.asp?aid=199149&sid=ART
  3. ^ Kathakali Encyclopedia (Vijnanakosam), page 379
  4. ^ The Hindu : Magazine / Tribute : A Kathakali immortal