Abstract:
A comparative, intercultural study of training the lover body in actor training processes in
Asia and to develop an actor training system through 'Dandiharamba ', a native Sri Lankan
dancer training methodology to fulfill the contemporary actors' needs.
Training the performer's body, particularly the lower body has been significantly prominent
in the dance and dance drama traditions from antiquity to the present in Asia. Kerala based
India's elaborate dance -drama named Kathakali is unique in this respect. Training the
performer's body and specially is lower body (including legs) is essential and integral part
of the long years of training process.
Similar to this tradition a contemporary actor training system is invented by a theorist and
a director called Tadashi Suzuki in Japan. This actor training system is unique in its nature
as all the basic principles of the system have been derived and developed from the major
theatrical practice of No and Kabuki. Today this method is known as Suzuki Method and it
is widely accepted method of actor training in some of the universities and acting schools
in the world.
Even though there are numerous actor training systems derived from Asian corporeal arts,
most of them have been explored and deployed in non-Asian context. It is a pity to say that
these knowledge and the practices have not been transferred or shared enough with the
same region. For instance Suzuki method is widely known and accepted system of actor
training in so called western societies than in Asian region. One of my intentions here is to
develop a link within the region and allow the brain drain to flow within the same region.
In taking these as a spring board, I would like to develop a research project of formulating
an actor training system, from old dancer training exercises called 'Dandiharamba 'in Sri
Lankan traditional Southern dance form or I would call it 'pole- exercises' very similar
to the approach of the lower body training system of Suzuki Method. In Asian corporeal
arts such as Taichi, kalaripayatthu martial art or Sri Lankan dance training tradition are
homogenous in one respect. I am of the view that all these corporal arts are entwined
with one philosophical thread; that is the unbreakable connection between the performer's
lower body and the floor; as Suzuki stated too ' ( ... . ) that the ground and the human body
are inseparable, as the latter is, in fact, part of the former' (Zarrilli, 2002). Therefore, apart
from the embodiment of the different body technology and exercising a new actor training
paradigm, my sole intention of this project
is to unveil the underneath philosophy, its commonalities and trajectories of actor training
systems within the region.