UGC NET Unit-2- Folk and Traditional Theatre Forms of India – Performing Arts

(UGC NET Performing Arts – Dance, Drama & Theatre)


1. Introduction: Diversity and Continuity

India’s cultural map is marked by extraordinary regional diversity — hundreds of folk and traditional theatre formsthriving as expressions of communal faith, seasonal rituals, and entertainment.
These forms are oral, performative, and participatory, often blurring the boundary between ritual and drama, devotion and entertainment.

They are the people’s theatre — rooted in local languages and dialects, using music, dance, costume, and dialogue to narrate myths, historical tales, and moral lessons.


2. Conceptual Framework

Category Nature Example
Tribal Theatre Performed by indigenous/tribal groups; ritualistic and animistic. Lai Haraoba (Manipur), Karma Naach(Central India)
Folk Theatre Community entertainment and moral education, performed in local dialects. Nautanki, Bhavai, Jatra
Traditional Theatre Sustained by hereditary performers or temple institutions; includes classical survivals. Yakshagana, Kutiyattam, Bhagavata Mela
Classical Theatre Textually codified and Sanskritic, based on Nāṭyaśāstra. Kutiyattam (borderline classical–traditional)

These are not isolated; they often intermingle — folk idioms energize classical art, and classical grammar influences folk expression.


3. Historical Background

The roots of folk theatre lie in ritual performance — agricultural rites, fertility celebrations, and epic storytelling.
With the Bhakti movement (6th–12th CE), temple festivals turned into open performances.
Later, royal patronage, colonial suppression, and modern revival shaped today’s folk-theatre landscape.


4. Regional Survey of Major Folk and Traditional Theatre Forms

Below are India’s key regional forms with distinctive traits and instruments used:


A. Northern India

Form Region Features Musical Instruments
Rāmlīlā Uttar Pradesh, Bihar Enactment of Ramayana during Dussehra; devotional, community-based, with narration and bhajans. Dholak, Harmonium, Manjira, Jhanjh, Nagara
Rāslīlā Braj region (UP, Vrindavan, Mathura) Depicts Krishna’s life; song, dance, and dialogue; performed by boys (traditionally). Flute, Mridang, Pakhawaj, Harmonium, Kartal
Nautanki Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana Folk musical theatre with love stories and heroic legends; exaggerated dialogue and melody. Nagara, Dholak, Harmonium, Sarangi
Swang Haryana, Western UP Musical folk play using satire and mythic episodes; participatory and humorous. Ektara, Dholak, Sarangi, Manjira
Bhand Pather Kashmir Satirical comedy-drama by Bhand (jester) communities; includes dance and mime. Nagara, Dhol, Surnai, Chimta

B. Western India

Form Region Features Musical Instruments
Bhavai Gujarat Open-air satirical folk theatre with stock characters (e.g., Patel, Thakur); social commentary. Nagara, Pakhawaj, Jhanjh, Shehnai
Tamasha Maharashtra Song-dance-dialogue format; Lavani songs, humor, and sensual expression. Dholki, Sambal, Harmonium, Manjira, Sitar
Powada Maharashtra Ballad narration of heroic deeds (e.g., Shivaji’s exploits). Dholak, Tuntuna, Lezim, Cymbals
Dashavatar Konkan, Goa, Maharashtra Religious folk play depicting ten incarnations of Vishnu; mask and costume rich. Pakhawaj, Tabla, Harmonium, Jhanjh

C. Eastern India

Form Region Features Instruments
Jatra West Bengal, Odisha, Bangladesh Melodramatic theatre with mythic and social plots; loud singing, declamation, and chorus. Khol, Dhol, Harmonium, Cymbals, Trumpet
Chhau Odisha, Jharkhand, West Bengal Dance-drama combining martial arts and myth; mask (Purulia), semi-mask (Seraikella), no mask (Mayurbhanj). Dhol, Dhumaša, Shehnai, Nagara
Bhaona / Ankiya Naat Assam Devotional plays composed by Sankardeva; themes from Bhagavata Purana. Khol (drum), Tal(cymbals), Sankari flute
Domni / Bidapat naach Bihar Folk drama of mythic episodes with musical narration. Dholak, Harmonium, Manjira

D. Southern India

Form Region Features Instruments
Yakshagana Karnataka Dance-drama combining classical music, folk vigor, extempore dialogue; performers wear huge headgear (Kirita). Maddale, Chende, Harmonium, Taala(cymbals)
Bhagavata Mela Tamil Nadu (Melattur, Thanjavur) Temple drama depicting Bhagavata Purana; devotional, with classical music base. Mridangam, Nadaswaram, Violin, Talam
Therukoothu Tamil Nadu “Street play” based on epics; colorful makeup, open stage, moral didacticism. Mridangam, Mukha Veena, Cymbals, Harmonium
Kuravanji Tamil Nadu Dance-drama combining classical and folk idioms; fortune-teller (Kurathi) central. Mridangam, Veena, Flute, Talam
Koodiyattam / Kutiyattam Kerala Sanskrit theatre tradition in temple theatre (Koothambalam); highly codified acting. Mizhavu (drum), Edakka, Ilathalam
Theyyam Kerala Possession ritual where performer embodies deity; elaborate costume, trance-dance. Chenda, Elathalam, Kuzhal (wind), Kombu
Krishnattam Kerala Temple dance-drama narrating Krishna Leela; precursor to Kathakali. Chenda, Maddalam, Elathalam, Shankh
Burrakatha Andhra Pradesh, Telangana Narrative theatre performed by three artistes — main singer, clown, and chorus. Tambura, Dakki, Harmonium, Castanets

E. Central and North-Eastern India

Form Region Features Instruments
Pandvani Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh Narrative ballad of Mahabharata sung with gestures by a soloist and supporting chorus. Ektara (tamboora), Kartal, Manjira, Dholak
Nachā / Karma Naach Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand Seasonal tribal dance-theatre linked to harvest and fertility. Mandar, Nagara, Bansuri, Kartal
Lai Haraoba Manipur Ritual theatre of the Meitei; enacts creation myths; dance, chant, and song. Pena (string instrument), Dholak, Mridang
Khongjom Parba Manipur Epic ballad singing of Manipuri heroes. Pung (drum), Pena, Cymbals
Bihu Naach Assam Spring festival dance with theatrical flirtation scenes. Dhol, Pepa (buffalo-horn pipe), Gogona, Taal

5. Dramatic Components and Aesthetic Features

Element Folk Expression
Theme Religious myths (Ramayana, Mahabharata, Krishna Leela), heroic legends, love stories, social satire.
Dialogue Improvised, rhythmic, and audience-interactive.
Language Vernacular/dialect; rhymed prose; mnemonic meters.
Acting Exaggerated expression; stylized gestures rather than realistic naturalism.
Music Integral — alternates narrative song (Gayan) with speech (Vachan).
Dance Rhythmic interludes mark transitions and express emotional states.
Costume/Makeup Symbolic colors: red (valor), white (purity), black (demons); headgear denotes role and rank.
Stage Temporary, open-air, circular; audience often surrounds the performers.
Audience Active participants — interject, chant, and dance, making performance communal.

6. Instruments and Their Significance

Instrument Type Common Forms Using It Function
Dholak / Dhol Percussion Nautanki, Ramlila, Jatra, Pandvani Base rhythm, energy for chorus
Maddale / Chende Percussion (double-sided drum) Yakshagana, Bhagavata Mela Drives dance rhythm and combat scenes
Khol Percussion (barrel drum) Jatra, Bhaona Accompaniment for devotional songs
Pena String instrument Lai Haraoba (Manipur) Provides drone, sacred tone
Ektara / Tuntuna Monochord Pandvani, Powada, Bhakti singing Solo singer’s instrument and rhythm marker
Chenda Drum Theyyam, Krishnattam, Kathakali Powerful percussive texture
Harmonium Keyboard reed Ramlila, Nautanki, Tamasha Provides melodic support
Shehnai / Nadaswaram / Kuzhal Wind Bhavai, Bhagavata Mela, Theyyam Auspicious openings, melodic phrases
Manjira / Taal / Kartal Cymbals All devotional folk forms Beat keeping, audience participation

7. Relationship with Classical Theatre and Bhakti

  1. From Ritual to Aesthetics: Folk forms retain the Nāṭyaśāstra principle of rasa and bhāva in simplified idioms.

  2. Bhakti Influence: The 6th–12th century devotional wave transformed performance into acts of worshipRaslila, Ramlila, Bhagavata Mela, and Ankiya Nat are all products of this synthesis.

  3. Interaction with Classical Arts: Yakshagana and Kuravanji integrate Carnatic ragas and Bharatanatyam gestures; Kutiyattam retains Sanskrit dramatic conventions but shares ritual ancestry with Theyyam and Krishnattam.


8. Performance Structure

A typical folk theatre follows a flexible three-part pattern:

  1. Invocation (Nandi / Ganesh Vandana): ritual prelude with music.

  2. Narrative / Main Play: alternates dialogue, song, and dance.

  3. Conclusion / Blessing: moral epilogue and audience benediction.

Improvisation, satire, and topical reference make every performance unique. The boundaries between actor and audience blur, sustaining a participatory aesthetic.


9. Modern Transformations and Preservation

  • Post-Independence revival: Sangeet Natak Akademi (1953) and state cultural academies began documentation and grants.

  • Urban staging: Directors such as Habib Tanvir (Naya Theatre – Chhattisgarh Nacha), Shambhu Mitra (Jatra), and B.V. Karanth (Yakshagana adaptations) reinterpreted folk idioms for modern theatre.

  • Threats: Commercialization, migration, shrinking patronage, language shifts.

  • Preservation efforts: Folk festivals (Surajkund, Shilpgram), inclusion in school curricula, digital archiving, UNESCO heritage listing (e.g., Kutiyattam, Chhau, Ramlila).


10. Analytical Summary for UGC NET

Topic Key Facts to Remember
Folk vs Traditional Folk = popular, oral, community; Traditional = hereditary, temple or ritual lineage.
Functions Ritual, didactic, entertainment, social commentary.
Major Regions North – Ramlila, Raslila; West – Tamasha, Bhavai; South – Yakshagana, Bhagavata Mela, Theyyam; East – Jatra, Chhau, Ankiya Naat; Central – Pandvani.
Instruments Dholak (North), Maddale/Chende (South), Khol (East), Pena (NE), Ektara (Central).
Themes Epics, Purāṇas, heroism, devotion, satire.
Influence of Bhakti Turned performance into worship; used vernaculars.
Modern Context Revival through institutions, academic study, theatre experiments.

11. Conclusion

Folk and traditional theatres of India form a continuum of living heritage that unites ritual, art, and social reflection. They preserve collective memory through song, story, and rhythm, offering a people’s interpretation of the same truths expressed in classical arts.

Each region’s instruments, dialects, and gestures create distinctive idioms, yet all affirm the Nāṭyaśāstra ideal:

“Natya is the imitation of life — a mirror that educates, entertains, and uplifts.”

By mastering the interrelations, instruments, and regional varieties outlined above, you can answer both descriptive essays and MCQs on Unit 2 confidently in the UGC NET exam.

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