She was 94 when I last met her at her apartment in Ballygunge. Though a bit frail (she had been suffering from fever for a few days), she was as gracious as ever and was ready for a chat. What was striking was how simple she was, with no airs and graces, despite being so renowned in her heyday as a danseuse and choreographer and having carried on her legacy till late into life.
As she departs this world at the age of 101, I remember her twinkling eyes, the joie de vivre she exuded and her razor-sharp memory as she reminisced about her childhood in Batajor in Jessore district, now in Bangladesh and even recited poems. Her family later shifted to Calcutta (Kolkata).
Amala Shankar found her métier in the arena of dance and later was an able companion to Uday Shankar who opened new vistas with his creative dance and introduced the Western audience to the richness of Indian dance.
Born Amala Nandy, she said that she was hugely influenced by her father Akshay Nandy’s liberal ideas. “He firmly believed that women should get an education; he opened a school and also edited a magazine.”
Inspired by Gandhi
Those were the days of the Swadeshi movement and taking the lead from Mahatma Gandhi’s call for self-reliance, she and other children were even taught how to make salt from locally available material.
At a young age, Nandy travelled to London in 1924 accompanying her father to exhibit his products, gold ornaments with a base of copper, to make it more affordable for ordinary women. “He was actually offered free passage and hospitality by the British government, but he refused and made his own arrangements though it was not easy,” Shankar said with pride. It was these values instilled in her that remained with her all her life, she said.
Six years later, she was in Paris for another exhibition where her father participated. The Shankar family, including sitar maestro Ravi Shankar, her brother-in-law, were there. It was a performance by Uday Shankar that changed her life.
“It was a divine experience. I felt proud to be an Indian when we were still ruled by the British,” she reminisced. The love of dance took over her and later she joined the dance school Uday Shankar had established in Almora in 1942. She later married him; he was almost two decades older to her. They danced together in Kalpana (1948), directed by Uday Shankar. The film was screened at the Cannes Film Festival in 2012 and recently restored by director Martin Scorsese’s World Cinema Foundation. And she walked on the red carpet too.
Shankar lived life to the lees, literally. She even performed at the age of 92, enacting the role of King Janaka in a dance drama Sita Swayamvar. She showed me the paintings strewn around her in the room.
“I was never trained as a painter but I loved it and started painting on my own. Many of these paintings feature as backdrops of dance-dramas produced by our company,” she informed.
She was the inspiration behind the Uday Shankar Cultural Centre, which her son and musician Ananda Shankar anchored until his untimely death. The legacy is being carried on by her daughter-in-law, who is also a dancer, Tanushree Shankar and Mamata Shankar, her dancer-actress daughter who has her own dance school.
Shankar was associated with numerous organisations, like ‘Soi’, a platform for women writers initiated by the late Nabaneeta Dev Sen.
With her death, a chapter has closed in the performing art arena, but she had also inspired many new talents in her lifetime. That is indeed the best gift a guru can leave behind.
TWF