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Pandavani
an Indian Mythology story; Hindu Mythology story; Mahabharata story

Sound recording, story and song; Pandavani epic singing, sections of the epic cycle the Mahabharata, from Indian mythology and Hindu mythology told by Ritu Verna, with musicians at Phoenix Arts Centre, Leicester, as part of the Beyond the Border Festival Tour, 28th June 1995.

Continued from R1064 and 1065, a section of Pandavani epic singing by Ritu Verna accompanied by musicians, followed by closing statement and thanks from Ben Haggarty.

Pandavani means, literally, 'The singing of the story of the five brothers' and is the popular central indian traditional form of telling the epic Mahabharata. In India, pandavani singers all have day jobs, but if they are called to perform somewhere they have to go. Their payment was traditionally one piece of cloth, one coconut and one nutmeg, but today a contribution of Rupees is also given according to the generosity and wealth of the patron. The performers bicyle from village to village. Performances tend to start between eight and ten o'clock in the evening and last until three or four the following morning. The full Mahabharata takes eighteen evenings to perform, but usually stories from the epic are requested by the patron for one or two nights only. The storyteller has to be ready to respond to a call for any story from this epic. A section from programme notes describes, 'Of the many epic singing traditions to miraculously survive in a rapidly modernising world, central Indian Pandavani is perhaps the most dramamtic and accessible. A singer, wielding a single stringed Tambura emblemtically adorned with peacock feathers, delivers episodes from the great Hindu epic over the tremendously energised accompaniment of four backing musicians. The telling is in a mixture of prose and song rendered dramatic by a very rich style. One of the musicians takes the role of 'ragi', a ritualised audience representative, urging the story forwards with interjected questions and supportive vocal approval.'

audience:- adult
language:- Hindi
    recording quality
condition:- good
completeness:- complete
duration:- 0 hours, 11 minutes, 52 seconds

In 1995 the Beyond the Border Wales International Festival of Performnace Storytelling featured Pandavani singers Ritu Verna, Punaram Nishad and Jhadu Ram Dewangan. Their visit to England including this event in Leicester, The Word in Edgeways Festival in Milton Keynes (8th and 9th July) and the Rising Sun Festival in Newcastle (25th June)

Beyond the Border Festival was founded in 1993 by Ben Haggarty, Artistic Director of the Crick Crack Club, and David Ambrose, the then Director of St Donats Arts Centre, Wales. The Festival was founded as The Beyond the Border International Festival of Storytelling and Epic Singing, but became known simply as Beyond the Border. The festival ran from 1993 to 2006 co-directed by the two founders: with Ben Haggarty programming storytellers and David Ambrose programming musicians. Since 2007 the festival has been directed by David Ambrose. The festival is a weekend event running on the first weekend of July annually; attracting around 2,500 people from across Britain and from overseas. The festival is sited at St Donats Arts Centre and in the grounds of St Donats Castle in the Vale of Glamorgan on the South Coast of Wales. Beyond the Border was initiated as part of the UK Year of Literature in 1995. The successful bid submitted by Academi Wales, prominently featured a storytelling festival. The original Director of the UK Year of Literature was Maura Dooley, who had been at the South Bank Centre in London when Ben Haggarty ran the Third International Storytelling Festival there in 1989. Maura Dooley supported the proposal brought to her by Ben Haggarty and David Ambrose to hold an International festival and series of summer schools at St Donats Castle and to begin Beyond the Border in 1993 in order to build an audience and a core of Wales-based artists for the Year of Literature in 1995. However before the plan could be implemented Maura Dooley resigned from her post (the position was later taken by Sean Dorran). Despite this, St Donats Arts Centre was committed to the festival and Beyond the Border was launched in July 1993. The 1993, 1994 and 1995 festivals were accompanied by summer schools, which produced a number of storytellers including Megan Lloyd, Francis Maxey, Richard Berry and Michael Harvey.

storytelling; singing:- storyteller: Ritu Verna
female / Indian / Indian / Madhya Pradesh

storytelling; singing:- musician; singer; ragi: Uday Ram Gandharva
male / Indian

storytelling; singing:- musician; singer: Tulsi Das Manikpuri
male / Indian

storytelling; singing:- musician; singer: Sakhav Ram Nishad
male / Indian

storytelling; singing:- musician; singer: Chait Ram Sahu
male / Indian

storytelling; singing:- musician; singer: Lakhan Lal Verna
male / Indian

storytelling; singing:- Master of Ceremonies; Festival Co-Director; storyteller: Ben Haggarty
male / British / born 30.11.1958 / occupation performance storyteller; promoter

origin:- India
Hindu


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Images of the Pandavani group in performance during the tour

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Image of the Pandavani group with Ben Haggarty (left) and David Ambrose (right) in the grounds of St Donats Castle, Wales

Click to enlarge images


programming:- Festival Co-Director: Ben Haggarty
Festival Co-Director: David Ambrose


administration:- administrator: St Donats Arts Centre
administrator: Phoenix Arts Centre; Leicester Phoenix


storytelling; singing:- Leicester, England: Pheonix Arts Centre: Leicester Pheonix
28 Jun 1995
tour: Beyond the Border Tour
public performance: Pandavani singers with Ben Haggarty and Vayu Naidu


gift from:- storyteller: Ben Haggarty


©  The London Centre for International Storytelling: 2007
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