Kuchipudi dancer Sumathy Kaushal was devoted to dance

Veteran Kuchipudi dancer, guru and choreographer Sumathy Kaushal was devoted to dance till the last

Updated - July 26, 2019 12:38 pm IST

Published - July 19, 2019 05:14 pm IST

HYDERABAD, TELANGANA, 28/02/2017: Bharatanatyam artist Sumathi Kaushal during an interview with February 28, 2017.
Photo: K.V.S. Giri

HYDERABAD, TELANGANA, 28/02/2017: Bharatanatyam artist Sumathi Kaushal during an interview with February 28, 2017. Photo: K.V.S. Giri

“It’s overwhelming to see people of Hyderabad telling me they still remember my portrayal of Satyabhama on stage. It fills me with joy to see young girls pursuing Kuchipudi here with passion,” Sumathy Kaushal had said while talking to us at her sister Vijaya Ramam’s Banjara Hills residence in 2017. She had come to the city from Los Angeles (where she’d been living for the past two decades) on an invitation from her students and friends who wanted to felicitate her on her 77th birthday. When she bid farewell to go back, little did one realise that it would be the last time.

Veteran dancer and guru Sumathy Kaushal passed away on the eve of Guru Purnima, at her second son Abhiman Kaushal’s home in Los Angeles. “She was ailing for some time. The death of her son (Adarsh Kaushal died last year due to heart attack) took its toll, though she took it in her stride,” shares her sister Vijaya Ramam, who had spent some time with her in the U.S. this April. Apart from her love for dance, Sumathy was fond of cooking and loved to wear cotton clothes, reveals Vijaya Ramam. “Living in the US, she used to find it difficult to wear saris all the time. She preferred to wear cotton salwar-kameez instead. She had sent all her beautiful Venkatagiri saris to be turned into salwar-kameez and I would get them stitched here,” recalls Vijaya Ramam.

Sumathy Kaushal By arrangement

Sumathy Kaushal By arrangement

 

While Sumathy’s deceased son Adarsh was a renowned photographer, the younger son Abhiman is a well-known tabla artiste. She was one of the first dancers to establish a dance institutes in the U.S. to train young Non-Resident Indians in the classical form. Her unique compositions and choreographies were significant for their purity of form and tradition. Never the one to rest on her laurels, Sumathy has been planning a ballet based on Hari Hara Sangamam - Ayyappa jananam, a literary work by their maternal grandfather, a poet and spiritual leader known as ‘Mahadeva Sambho’ , shares Vijaya. Sumathy Kaushal was keen that at least one song should be sung by K J Yesudas — who himself is a devotee of Ayyappa — for the ballet. She was also keen to revive the memory and hightlight Mahadeva Sambho who was also a great vaggeyakara of the late 19th -early 20th century.

Despite living away from the country, Sumathy Kaushal was a guide and mentor to many dancers in the city. Telugu people will always remember her as their ‘Satyabhama’ who took Kuchipudi to global stage and helped connect them to the traditional form on foreign soil.

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