A
Dance for Every Day
Beyond
the Story
Some
dances have a story, often based on the old Indian epics, the
is almost impossible for the new spectator to follow the plot.
Boys dance girls' parts, girls dance boys' parts. You can not
tell which are which; both wear heavy make – up. The same
person may dance several roles, and scenes change with the barest
of announcements. It's best just to sit back and enjoy the extreme
beauty of the movements, the expressions, and the dazzling costumes.
Lose your self in the subtle, intricate, percussive sounds.

Many
dances do not have a story, or at the most a very subliminal
one. The most famous Balinese dance , the legong, is a good example
- others are the pendet and gabor, which are dances to welcome
the deities to a ceremony. More than the story, it's the rhythm,
the atmosphere, and the feeling for space that bring the
magic. In such dances, faces are like masks, emotion is underplayed,
and even the gestures are abstract, although a few have dramatic
meanings – shading the eyes with the hand indicates weeping;
first and second fingers pointing at the end of a stiffly-extended
arm is a gesture of anger or denunciation. Eyes move quickly from
side to side to stress the rhythms and accents.
Because
the epics on which the dances are based have a deep symbolic meaning,
the characters exist in their own formal, spiritual world. There
are stock characters who represent respected or not so respected
qualities. The king and queen are refined or halus. The witches
and monsters are coarse or kasar . They all have their own stylised
movements and dress, and they speak in Kawi, an old language that
few understand. The only real individuals are the clowns, who
improvise, joke, and explain to the audience, in Balinese, what
is happening onstage.
strike
dance attitudes
own
stylised movements
favourite
among children