Balinese theatre
Theatre art and dramas of Bali
Balinese theatre and dramas include Janger dance, pendet dance performances, and masked performances of Topèng. Performances are also part of funeral rituals involving a procession, war dance, and other rituals before the cremation of the patulangan. [1] Balinese use the word sesolahan for both theatre and dance.[1]
- Arja (dance), Balinese dance-opera
- Barong dance performances featuring Rangda, a dancer with keris, Jero Gede (black masked figures), and Jero Luh (white masked performers)
- Barong Ket: lion barong, the most common Barong, is the symbol of a good spirit.
- Barong Landung: giant barong, the form is similar to Betawi Ondel-Ondel
- Barong Celeng: boar barong
- Barong Macan: tiger barong
- Barong Naga: dragon (or serpent)
- Gambuh plays with chanting and music including the use of long flute-like instruments
- Topèng, masked theatre
- Calonarang, performances at temples during times of danger or difficulty that involve stories
- Drama Gong, popular theatre developed in the late 1960s
- Sendratari, a group ballet form that emerged in the 1960s includes a dhalang puppeteer giving dialogue and often a gamelan (orchestra), Sendratari, or Kècak chant
Javanese Wayang shadow plays are performed in Bali.
Gallery
- Preparing the feast before a Pandan War performance in Tenganan village, Karangasem Regency, Bali
- Staged battle in Tenganan
- Actors dressed as giants and evil spirits for a Barong Landung performance
- Siege of a gate play in Bali (1910-1920)
- Balinese performance
See also
References
- ^ a b "About theatre and dance in Bali". Balinesedance.org. Archived from the original on 2015-08-10. Retrieved 2015-08-04.
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