| Ramanattam

Once the King Kerala Varma of Kottarakkara
requested Manavedan, Zamourin of Kozhikode to send the Krishnanattam
troupe to his palace for a performance.
Manavedan curtly rejected the request expressing
that it is meant to be staged only in the Guruvayoor temple and
also that the people of Southern Kerala have not yet grown intellectually
to understand and enjoy such an art form, citing the incident at
Tripunithura.
Belittled and humiliated King vowed to retort and immediately wrote
Ramayanam in the Attakkadha fashion with verses set to music and
prose dialogues. He named it "Ramanattam", opposing Krishnanattam,
and wished to bring in all the pomp and grandeur of Krishnanattam
to it
He composed the entire Ramayanam in eight
volumes in Manipravalam style (form of poetic composition in which
words of Malayalam and Snaskrit are blended indistinguishably like
pearls and gems studded in a golden necklace). It was a dance drama
and the actors were given special and tough training and rehearsals
with rich costumes and jewellery and premiered in the Kottarakkara
palace.
It could be the ancestor of Kathakali for
very many similarities in the presentations, costumes, acting and
background music could be cited. The stage decor, costumes, make
up, and mudras (formulated hand gestures conveying the text of lyrics)
as seen today are improvements bestowed gradually to this art form
by two veteran Namboothiris, Kalladikkodan and Kaplingadan.
Centuries down, there developed a branch
of literature known as "Kathakali literature" and compositions
of poet laureates like Kottayath thampuran, Unnayi Warrier, Koyithampuran,
Vayaskara Mooss are milestones in the history of Kathakali. |