Bala | |
---|---|
Directed by | Satyajit Ray |
Written by | Satyajit Ray |
Produced by | National Centre for the Performing Arts, Government of Tamil Nadu |
Starring | Balasaraswati V. Raghavan Uday Shankar V. K. Narayana Menon |
Narrated by | Satyajit Ray |
Cinematography | Soumendu Roy |
Edited by | Dulal Dutta |
Music by | Satyajit Ray |
Distributed by | National Centre for the Performing Arts, Government of Tamil Nadu |
Release date |
|
Running time | 33 Minutes |
Country | India |
Language | English |
Bala is a 1976 documentary film made by Satyajit Ray, about a Bharatanatyam dancer, Balasaraswati, fondly known as "Bala".[1] The film was jointly produced by National Centre for the Performing Arts and Government of Tamil Nadu. The thirty-three-minute documentary features the life and some of the works by Balasaraswati in the form of narration and dance, starring herself. At the age of fourteen, Ray had seen a performance of Balasaraswati in Kolkata, then known as "Calcutta", in 1935, when she was seventeen years old.[2]
Ray had initially planned to make a film on Bala in 1966, when she was in her prime, however he could not start filming until 1976. Though Bala was often called "a revolutionary Bharatanatyam dancer",[3] she had never been filmed till she was 58 years old, in spite of having a career spanned over four decades.[2] Ray decided to make the film on Bala, "the greatest Bharatanatyam dancer ever" according to him,[4] to document her art for future generations with the "main value as archival".[2] When Ray filmed the then 58-year-old Bala for the documentary, she wore the same pair of anklets which she had worn more than fifty years before for her debut performance, at the age of seven.[5] Ray is reported to have said about the delayed filming of the documentary that "Bala filmed at 58 was better than Bala not being filmed at all."[6]
The film's script was included in a book named Original English Film Scripts Satyajit Ray, put together by Ray's son Sandip Ray along with an ex-CEO of Ray Society, Aditinath Sarkar, which also included original scripts of Ray's other films.[7][8]
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