Heavenly emissaries Royal Ballet of Cambodia descend on Long Beach
LA Times | 18 October 2014
The mesmerizing Royal Ballet of Cambodia has scheduled a single performance in Long Beach
With a past of dragons, goddesses and real-life slaughter, the Royal Ballet of Cambodia comes to Long Beach
Twenty-four
years ago, the Classical Dance Company of Cambodia astounded audiences
at the Los Angeles Festival with its ritual dances and stories of
fantastical demons and mythical goddesses.
The female dancers
appeared to float, thanks to their mastery of a grounded but flowing
heel-to-toe gait. Their elbows, toes and fingers were curved backward in
hyper-extended poses that defied nature and bone structure.
Now the country's leading
classical dance troupe, which is today called the Royal Ballet of
Cambodia, returns with eight dancers and five musicians for a single
performance Saturday in Long Beach.
Preservation of this
1,000-year-old art form is still the company's primary purpose, but much
has changed, says ballet master Proeung Chhieng, who helped spearhead
the revival after the Vietnamese expelled the Khmer Rouge in 1979. He was artistic director of the group that performed at the Los Angeles Festival.
That is, the days when dancers lived in the royal
palace, enjoying special privileges and performing only for the
aristocracy, are long gone.
Hundreds of years ago, these women —
men now have limited performing parts — were dedicated to the
magnificent temples that are decorated with their images in bas relief.
Their role was to be a bridge between heaven and Earth, sending prayers
to the gods for rain and for good crop yields.
The
classical dance once again enjoys an imperial association, as it is led
by the daughter of King Norodom Sihanouk, Princess Buppha Devi, who was
a star dancer in the 1960s. The current full troupe of about 40 dancers
are not spiritual emissaries, however, but cultural ambassadors — and
entertainers.
Cambodian dance, in general, is reaching new
heights, said Prumsodun Ok, associate artistic director of Khmer Arts — a
school and company with bases in Long Beach and Takhmao, Cambodia; it
is led by Sophiline Cheam Shapiro, who performed at the 1990 Los Angeles
Festival.
"At
the Royal Ballet, it's a really interesting dynamic because for so long
they were kind of the voice of preservation. Even today, there's a
recognition that tradition is something that's always moving," Ok said.
For
viewers making their first foray to Cambodian classical dance, it can
be a mesmerizing but also disorienting experience because the style is
so different from Western dance technique. In many instances, poses have
specific meanings; hand gestures can symbolize flowers or leaves. Ok
pointed out that it's not necessary to understand the significance of
each gesture but more important to appreciate the dancers' performance
quality.
Principal dancer Chamrouentola Chap began
training when she was 7. Her parents enrolled her in a special school
that offered dance lessons every morning and general subjects the rest
of the day. She was not so interested at first but soon became
passionate about it. Following nine years of study, she is now a leading
performer, a teacher at the Royal University of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh
and a choreographer.
She
said the hyper-extended positions the dancers achieve are accomplished
through years of consistent applied pressure: "We bend those fingers,
except the thumb, the four other fingers, we bend it every day, step by
step."
For all the work that has been done to ensure that the
technique is being passed on, the dance's long-term survival also
depends on other incremental steps — in this case, whether there will be
enough financing to keep it alive. Money is tight.
Said Chhieng,
the master dancer: "We cannot perform often [within Cambodia]. We try to
look for a sponsor or an NGO or a foundation abroad."
In 2003,
UNESCO designated the Royal Ballet an "Intangible Cultural Heritage of
Humanity." The hope is that the dance troupe that survived the Khmer
Rouge will keep the country's traditions alive for the next generation.
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