http://www.calendarlive.com/stage/cl-et-prakash7jun07,0,6671867.story?coll=cl-calendar
DANCE REVIEW
Scion of Indian dance takes center stage
Mythili Prakash, a 22-year-old bharata natyam dancer, does her predecessors proud in a recital that shows her maturing.
By
Chris Pasles
Times Staff Writer
June 7, 2005
Toward the end of her long solo dance recital Sunday at the Wadsworth Theatre in
Brentwood, Mythili Prakash bowed deeply to touch the hands of one of the
musicians: her mother and guru, famed bharata natyam dancer Viji Prakash. Such a
gesture is never perfunctory. It signals a major difference between Indian and
Western dance. The dancer is acknowledging a spiritual connection with the
teacher, who in turn is a link in a long chain stretching back ideally to
heavenly sources.
This link is also the subject of much of Indian dance, whether playful, as in "Padam,"
in which one

woman chastises the Lord Krishna for spending the night with another, or deeply serious, as when
Arjuna, a hero of the Hindu epic "The Mahabharata," beseeches Krishna for weapons to fight that
apocalyptic war.
Never is such dance mere entertainment. It is about right relationship — humans
to gods, dancers to
teachers, or spectators to
dancers, their surrogates.
Both vignettes were part of Prakash's grueling, multi-part recital. At 22, she
does not yet have the
razor-sharp precision in shifts in position and in terminations as her mother did, and understandably
she showed some signs of fatigue. A bharata natyam dancer, after all, has to be able to sustain long
passages of rapid, rhythmically complex footwork as well as evoke a wide range of characters and
emotions.
But this daughter shares with her mother a sunniness and integrity in approach,
and her ability to shift among characters is quite accomplished and mature. In a
depiction of the infamous dice game in "The Mahabharata," in which the evil
uncle, Shakuni, cheats the Panduva king, Yudhishthira, out of kingdom, brothers
and wife, Prakash brought each individual to distinctive life.
Perhaps best was her ability to show their inner thoughts, as when Queen
Draupadi, utterly humiliated at her husband's gambling her away into slavery,
prays to Krishna for a miracle to keep her from being disrobed in public and
then rises to full stature to vow bitter, bloody vengeance on her tormentors.
In addition to vocalist Viji Prakash, the musicians included vocalist Hari
Prasad, percussionist Venkatesan Vedakrishnaram, flutist Mahesh Swamy and
violinist Krishna Kutty.
Venkatesh Krishnan came up with a simplistic lighting scheme, but doubtless he
did what he could with the limited resources available to him.