The folk tradition
Dances in the folk tradition are exceptionally numerous and widespread. Some are performed as religious ritual, others, particularly on the Indonesian island of Bali, by highly trained and respected artists, and still another kind as entertainment in which the community participates. Folk theatre is more complex than folk dance and thus less widespread, but it has deep connections with religious ritual. Although the origins of most folk performing arts lie in remote times, later court forms exerted important influence on many of the folk forms. Conversely, folk forms have been a source of inspiration to court artists.
The court tradition
The shadow play and masked and unmasked dance are court arts reflecting centuries of subtle refinement under the patronage of kings and princes. In Southeast Asia the shadow theatre is a major classic art. Leather puppets of mythological figures, the bodies intricately incised to allow light to pass through, are attached to sticks for manipulation. A lacy shadow is created by a flaming lamp as the puppet is pressed against the back of a vertical screen of white cloth. The flickering and insubstantial shadow seen from the other side creates for the understanding viewer a mystic world with deep symbolic meaning. In Java, Bali, Malaysia, Cambodia, and Thailand shadow plays and their techniques have been emulated by human actors and dancers and have been the models for marionette and doll-puppet theatre.
Dance troupes have been a part of court life at least since recorded history began. In the mainland courts of Cambodia, Thailand, Laos, and Burma, concubines of the ruler’s harem who performed female dances were segregated from male performers, giving rise to separate forms of female unmasked dance and male masked dance-mime. Although certain dances traditionally are performed only by men or only by women in Indonesia and Vietnam, mixed casts have a long history, especially in dramatic pieces. Court dance on the mainland and in Indonesia has been influenced by Indian dance style, and Vietnamese dance by the dance styles of Chinese opera, but they have acquired a distinctly Southeast Asian character. Court dance reached its greatest development when applied to mythological and legendary themes, often taken from the shadow theatre. The resulting dance-dramas and masked dance-mimes of Thailand, Cambodia, and Java are world famous for their magnificent scale and elegance of execution. Some of these court arts are no longer performed, and others face increasing difficulty securing financial support, yet they remain important.
The popular and Western traditions
In the popular traditions are those 400 to 500 professional troupes who perform, except in the Philippines, in commercial theatre buildings of major cities for an urban ticket-buying audience. Some forms of popular theatre are directly modeled on court dance-drama, but most are spoken drama in which court-derived music, song, and dance movements have been inserted. Local legend and history provide the subject matter for many of these plays. As in much of Asia, the performer in the popular tradition is seldom accorded status and may be despised as a vagabond.
The spoken drama, the ballet, and the modern dances are known only superficially in Southeast Asia. The sole exception is the Philippines, where amateur performances of Western plays constitute the country’s main theatrical tradition. Southeast Asian audiences generally find Western plays based mainly on dialogue to be uninteresting and deficient in artistic qualities. European and American films and television programs, however, are widely shown and appreciated, and popular Western dances are found in major urban areas. Undoubtedly the impact of these forms on local audiences will continue to increase, possibly to the detriment of the indigenous traditions.
Characteristics of dance
Dramatic and nondramatic forms
In the parts of Southeast Asia influenced by Indian forms—everywhere except for Vietnam and the Philippines—nondramatic and dramatic dance are both known. Nondramatic, or “pure,” dances that do not express emotional states of characters are numerous in both folk and court traditions. Among court dances, the Javanese bedaja is typical. Nine dancers move in unison, without emotional expression, in precisely fixed choreographic patterns designed to demonstrate sheer grace of movement. The maebot, composed as a Thai “alphabet of dance,” is used to train pupils in the basic movements of court dance. Other dances that include character impersonation yet are not explicitly storytelling dances lie between nondramatic and dramatic dance. In the Thai praleng, two performers wearing god masks and holding peacock feathers in both hands perform an offertory dance to the god before the main dance-play begins. The Balinese legong, danced by a pair of preadolescent girls, may have only the most tenuous dramatic content. Its interest lies in the girls’ unison rapid foot movements and fluttering movements of eyes and hands. Dramatic dance is seen at its best in full dance-dramas and in the excerpts from them that are sometimes danced in concert form.
Styles and conventions of movement and costuming
General characteristics of both dramatic and nondramatic dance are (1) slowness of tempo except in battle scenes, (2) controlled and reserved movements rather than expansive ones, (3) little of the leaping typical of Western ballet but, instead, a feeling of closeness to the ground, and (4) extensive use of arm and hand gestures. From Indian dance has come an open and flexed position of the legs, a side-to-side sliding movement of the head and neck, and a rigidly codified vocabulary of hand and finger gestures known as mudras or hastas in India. In most cases the Indian elements have been altered greatly over their 1,000-year period of assimilation. In Thai, Cambodian, and Lao dance, the 24 to 32 Indian mudras have been reduced to 9; in Javanese dance 7 can be recognized, and in Bali only 1 or 2. They have also been altered in their shape, and the many specific meanings attached to each in India have become fewer, while in some cases a gesture has no specific meaning. Such hand gestures as shading the eyes and tying the sash, which appear in Javanese dances, are unknown in India. Foot movements in India typically follow the rhythm of a drum, often with vigorous stamping sounds that are emphasized by bells on the ankles, but such movements are virtually absent in Southeast Asia. The exaggerated eye, eyebrow, cheek, mouth, and chin movements through which the Indian dancer expresses a broad gamut of emotions are nowhere to be seen. Balinese dancers use darting eye movements, but the court dancer’s face is composed into an almost unchanging expression of aloof gentility. Close contact between neighbouring countries has led to the development of two regional Indian-influenced dance styles, one for Thailand, Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar and one for Indonesia and Malaysia. Characteristics of the former style include the soft pi phat music of bamboo xylophones, drums, gongs, and oboe as accompaniment, bent-back finger positions not seen elsewhere in Asia, similar and often identical movements for male and female roles, courtship dances in which lovers touch each other and move in unison, and, in dance-drama, lengthy pure-dance pieces inserted solely for their beauty. In the latter style, the performance is accompanied by music of the gongs and metal bars of the gamelan orchestra. Scarves draped from the waist or neck are flicked for effect and manipulated to indicate strength or flying, and male and female dance are clearly distinguished by the powerful masculine lunges of the men and the tiny steps of the women, who also dexterously manipulate the train of the skirt with their feet. Visually, the mainland dance sparkles. Costumes of brilliant silk are covered with sequins and even jewels, and golden crowns and sparkling body ornaments glitter with reflected light. The male dancer in Indonesia wears a soft batik skirt of brown and white, the female a black velvet bodice. Arms and shoulders are bare and powdered golden brown, creating a subdued and warm effect.
The main style in Vietnam, apart from folk dance, is dramatic and highly pantomimic, like the movements of Chinese opera. In classical opera, the flowing white sleeves and the pheasant feathers bobbing from the general’s headdress are twirled and flicked by the actor in many conventionalized movements derived from Chinese forms. Battle scenes are choreographed into precise dance patterns, but the acrobatic movements common in Chinese opera are seldom seen.
Characteristics of drama
Thematic origins and materials
Most traditional plays and dramatic dances are derived from mythological and legendary sources. The tribal epics that relate the origin of the Ifugao and the Bicolano peoples in the Philippines and a number of animistic stories in Indonesian shadow theatre are indigenous myths of great age, while the widely used, romantic Pandji cycle from Java and the Thai King Abhai Mani and Khun Chang Khun Phan are more recent local legends. The most important dramatic sources, however, are borrowed from the Indian Ramayana and Mahabharata epics, from the Jataka Buddhist birth stories, from Chinese novels (such as The Romance of the Three Kingdoms) and Chinese operas, and from a host of Islamic stories, including the Thousand and One Nights and the Amīr Ḥamzah tales. These foreign stories are turned into local legends. For example, the Indian Prince Rama becomes a Thai, a Balinese, or a Javanese prince, embodying the heroic traits admired in each of these countries.
Plays are invariably extensive and have many scenes. It is not unusual for a play to present action over several generations, an indication of the value placed on cultural continuity. A recurring theme concerns restoration of harmony on earth by a ruler acting in accord with divine law. A kingdom is restored, a prince unjustly exiled returns to assume his throne, a usurper is punished, or the prosperity of the land is assured by consummating a particularly desirable marriage. As in Western drama, the hero gains his ends through struggle. Because he acts as the human representative on earth of the known cosmic will, however, his actions exhibit a natural sweetness and serenity, even in the midst of violence, that is foreign to Western drama. Meditation is often the means whereby the hero gains the power to achieve his goal. In more recent plays based on local history and on contemporary events, the assumption of cosmic harmony has been muted, and emphasis has shifted to depicting human conflicts—nationalist versus Western colonialist, modern daughter versus conservative parents, for example—that may or may not resolve happily.
Characters
Gods, demigods, kings descended from the gods, and princes and princesses are the heroes and heroines of traditional drama and dance. Powerful religious seers advise them, allies and ministers serve them, crude foreign ogres oppose them, and grotesque, slapstick clown-servants are their attendants. The clowns have been the subject of much speculation. Like the vidushaka clown of Indian Sanskrit drama, they are gluttons, practical and even cynical, and confidants to their masters’ passions and weaknesses. Scholars have theorized that the chief Javanese clown figure, Semar, is derived from an ancient Javanese god who was deposed from his supreme position by the introduction into the drama of the later Hindu gods. In the midst of mythological plays, the clowns comment irreverently on political or social issues of the day, seemingly as spokesmen for the common man in an otherwise aristocratic world. Comic and serious scenes alternate.
Dramatic materials
A written script may be used as the starting point for performance, but usually actors, dancers, musicians, and stage crew improvise from a brief scenario. Specific musical selections are matched to certain kinds of scenes, characters, or actions, and standard movements for entrances and exits are known. Standard descriptive phrases of the kind common in all oral literature are used to introduce the hero and his kingdom, and more than a dozen types of recurring scenes are identifiable. A major interest in playgoing lies in perceiving the skill with which performers rearrange and subtly vary these familiar elements from play to play. Narrative commentary accompanying the dances often interprets a specific action in its broad context, thus helping to universalize the theatrical experience.
Costumes, makeup, and settings
Costume and makeup have great importance in plays and dances. By means of elaborate systems of changing the cut, colour, and ornamentation of costume, the shape of the hairdress, the configuration of the crown, or the facial delineation and colour of masks, at least 300 different dance and dramatic characters can be identified. Doll- and shadow-puppet figures are carved according to similarly elaborate means of identification. Persons familiar with a dance or theatrical form can identify most characters by name or by type. Costumes, masks, and puppets may be works of art highly prized in themselves. Court and folk performances once used no scenery at all. Canvas scenery depicting stock scenes is now used by most popular troupes, but unfortunately it is often as inartistic as it is inexpensive. Only the Thai National Theatre, major troupes performing the popular cai luong drama in Vietnam, and troupes performing in the Western tradition throughout Southeast Asia attempt to design three-dimensional scenery for each play.