As the Academy of Modern Danse in Chennai turns 25, we take a look at the years gone by

From tap, salsa and hip hop to Bharatnatyam, the Academy of Modern Danse has introduced Chennai to the synergy of modern dance forms

Updated - October 06, 2023 04:48 pm IST

Published - October 05, 2023 10:12 am IST

A glimpse from the recently held performance at the Russian Centre.

A glimpse from the recently held performance at the Russian Centre. | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

When dancers Kokila Hariram and her husband Gautam Sundararajan proposed to start an academy for modern dance forms in Chennai in 1998, they were refused even a sizeable space. Twenty-five years later, they have the city dance to nimble pirouettes and fearless hip hop. Former students of the academy have even gone on to study dance theory in universities abroad.  

The Academy of Modern Danse (AMD), started by Kokila and Gautam, is the city’s first formal Western dance school. As the academy completes twenty five years, its legacy traces the coming together of two individuals who wanted to gift their beloved city the language of modern dance. 

Tracing the years

Dancers sway and groove to the beats

Dancers sway and groove to the beats | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

When Kokila’s father was posted in Chennai for work, Kokila couldn’t resist the beckoning of the marley. On stumbling upon a ballet school at the Russian Cultural Centre, Kokila enrolled under an Anglo-Indian lady who taught ballet. In the months that followed, she met Gautam. “I used to be Gautam’s proxy when he used to go on dates with his girlfriends! Later along the way we fell in love, and I knew that sometime in the future Chennai might become home,” remembers Kokila.

The school was established in 1998 on January 18 at the Russian Cultural Centre. “Chennai in the Nineties understood only careers in engineering, law, or medicine. After a lot of rejection, we got a space at the Russian Cultural Centre at Kasturi Ranga Road which continues to be our address, “ recalls Gautam.

A still from the recently held performance at the Russian Centre

A still from the recently held performance at the Russian Centre | Photo Credit: Rj Kumar

“I wanted to create a space where students could take exams, understand the dance forms, take it forward, and celebrate it,“ says Kokila who has a bachelors degree in performing arts. “When we started, people would laugh at me and ask questions like, exams for dance? Why would you do that? Now I actually have people coming in and asking me if I have certificate courses in ballet or ballroom,” says Kokila as she talks about how the city has changed in the past 25 years. To get the academy up and running, Kokila specialised in modern dance in Singapore. Her two-year specialisation was followed by a certification by the Commonwealth Society of Teachers of Dancing, Australia.

Kokila grew up in Brunei where her mother has been running a Bharatanatyam dance school for 50 years. Her father, now 70-plus, flew down to Chennai recently to dance with his daughter at the academy’s first show held recently after the pandemic. Kokila and her father’s spontaneous jig at the show resembled John Travolta and Uma Thurman’s iconic ‘twist’ in Quentin Tarantino’s film Pulp Fiction. “Parents of students break away from the audience and join us to shake a leg at most of our performances. And this time, at the finale of our show, the audience screamed ‘once more’ ‘once more’,” says Gautam.

Young dancers immerse themselves in the act

Young dancers immerse themselves in the act | Photo Credit: Special Arrangement

As the academy grew, Kokila and Gautam have held dance workshops in Madurai, Tiruchi, Kerala and Coimbatore. Kokila also accompanies her students or “my kids” as she likes to call them to Asia Pacific Dance Championships, held outside the country.

“In the last twenty five years, half the city has walked through my doors and walked out. I have had students come and tell me that their parents learned ballroom and ballet at the academy and I am so proud of them,” beams Kokila.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.